United States v. Salomon

22 C.C.P.A. 490, 1935 CCPA LEXIS 6
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedJanuary 7, 1935
DocketNo. 3805
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 22 C.C.P.A. 490 (United States v. Salomon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Customs and Patent Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Salomon, 22 C.C.P.A. 490, 1935 CCPA LEXIS 6 (ccpa 1935).

Opinion

Bland, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court.

A certain bleaching clay was imported at the port of New Orleans, La., and was classified .for duty under paragraph 207, ■ Tariff .Act of 1930, at one-fourth of 1 cent per pound and 30 per centum ad valorem as “clays or earths artificially activated with acid or other material”. The collector in his report referred to it as “fuller’s earth”, and stated that his action was in accordance with the chemist’s analysis of the clay made by the “New York office”. Said report of the chemist, states: “An earth artificially activated with acid or other material. * * *”

The importer protested the classification of the merchandise and claimed it to be dutiable at $3.25 per ton or $1.50 per ton under said paragraph 207.

The United. States Customs Court sustained said protest and the Government has appealed here from the judgment of said court.

[492]*492Paragraph 207, Tariff Act of 1930, reads as follows:

. Tar. 207. Clays or earths, unwrought and unmanufactured, including com:mon blue clay and Gross-Almerode glass pot clay, not specially provided for, •$1 per ton; wrought or manufactured, not specially provided for, $2 per ton; ¡bentonite, unwrought and unmanufactured, $1.50 per ton; wrought or manufactured, $3.25 per ton; china clay or kaolin, $2.50 per ton; crude feldspar, $1 per ton; bauxite, crude, .not refined or otherwise advanced in condition in any manner, $1 per ton; fuller’s earth, unwrought and unmanufactured, $1.50 per ton; ■wrought or manufactured, $8.%B per ton; clays or earths artificially activated with acid or other material, one-fourth of 1 cent per pound and 80 per centum ad valorem; silica, crude, not specially provided for, $3.50 per ton; fluorspar, containing more-than 97 per centum of calcium fluoride, $5.60 per ton; containing not more than .97 per centum of calcium fluoride, $8.40 per ton; sand containing 95 per centum or more of silica and not more than six-tenths of 1 per centum of oxide of iron and suitable for use in the manufacture of glass, $2 per ton. (Italics ours.)

In this court it is not disputed that the imported clay has been artificially activated with acid. The importer contends that activating a clay with acid is a process of manufacture, and that the imported merchandise has been clearly proven to be fuller’s earth, and therefore falls within the specific term “fuller’s earth * * * wrought or manufactured”, and that it is more specifically provided for there than under the activated clays and earths provision under which it. was assessed.

The Government contends: (1) That the merchandise has not been sliown to be fuller’s earth; (2) that if it be assumed that the importation is fuller’s earth, wrought or manufactured, it has been artificially activated with acid or other material which compels assessment at the higher rate of duty under the artificially activated provision.

There is no substantial disagreement as to the characteristics of the merchandise, or as to its manner of production and treatment. The following is shown by the testimony: The winning and extraction of the basic material, raw fuller’s earth or fuller’s clay, takes place in the district of Landshut and Mainburg in Neiderbayern, Germany. The raw material is brought into a cleaning apparatus and there mixed and beaten up with water. It is then let into a tub and there combined with mineral acids. In this tub the oxides, which hinder the bleaching process, are boiled out. The material is then pumped into filter presses where the acids are removed. The clay is then dried and ground. The processes are for the purpose of getting out undesirable portions, including oxides, which hinder the bleaching proc-eses for which the clay is intended. • It is stated by the witnesses that the resulting product is not chemically changed by the acids, but that a chemical effect on the oxides is had and they are removed; that the result is a physical change in the resulting product brought about by the chemical action; that the acid process brings about the ¡removal of the oxides. The use of the acids on the clay unquestion[493]*493ably artificially activates the same and. makes the resulting product accomplish from four to eight times what the unactivated clay would accomplish in removing the color from oils. Fuller’s earth gets its name from the fact that its principal use once was for fulling cloth and wool in cleansing these materials of grease.

As to the first contention of the Government, we think the weight, of the evidence supports the finding of the trial court that the imported merchandise is fuller’s earth which has been artificially activated with acid. In fact, as we see it, there is little, if any, evidence in the record nor is there any authority to the contrary.

A consideration of the context of the paragraph involved alone, we think, prompts the conclusion that the importation was properly assessed under and falls within the provision “clays or earths artificially activated with acid or other material, one-fourth of 1 cent per pound and 30 per centum ad valorem; * * * Moreover, the correctness of this conclusion is made clearer by a consideration of the rather unusual and unique legislative history connected therewith.

In the hearings before the Committee on Ways and Means of the House of Representatives, vol. II, p. 1201, concerning paragraph 207,, the committee was told by interested parties that: “In the tariff fuller’s earth is classified as unwrought (or lump) and wrought (or powdered) fuller’s earth”. This was before any suggestion was made to Congress that activated clays or'earths should, have a separate tariff treatment.

When H. R. 2667, which later became the Tariff Act of 1930, passed the House, it contained, as paragraph 207, substantially the same provisions as were in the Tariff Act of 1922, and was as follows:

Par. 207. Clays or earths, unwrought or unmanufactured, including common blue clay and Gross-Almerode glass pot clay, not specially provided for, $1 per ton; wrought or manufactured, not specially provided for, $2 per ton; china- clay or kaolin, $2.50 per ton; crude feldspar, $1.50 per ton; bauxite, crude, not refined or otherwise advanced in condition in any manner, $1 per ton; fuller’s earth, unwrought and unmanufactured, $1.50 per ton; wrought or manufactured, $3.25 per ton; silica, crude, not specially, provided for, $4 per ton; silica, suitable-for use as a pigment, not specially provided for, $7.50 per ton; fluorspar, $8.40? per ton.

American producers of activated clays, used for the same purpose as the activated fuller’s earth at bar, appeared before the Committee on Finance of the United States Senate and urged a special provision, for activated clays. The committee was informed that it was a new industry and that the product was principally used by producers and refiners in decolorizing, refining and otherwise purifying all kinds and. grades of animal, vegetable and mineral oils, and that in the western-, part of the United States it had been discovered that-the properties, of a certain claylike mineral changed when given a certain chemical-treatment, producing a material of unusual power in purifying sucfii [494]*494oils. It was represented that the activated product was much stronger and more effective than either imported or domestic fuller’s earth, and that fuller’s earth was being imported from England and elsewhere. The committee was also informed as follows:

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Bluebook (online)
22 C.C.P.A. 490, 1935 CCPA LEXIS 6, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-salomon-ccpa-1935.