United States v. Seattle Brewing & Malting Co.

1 Ct. Cust. 362
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedMarch 27, 1911
DocketNos. 263 and 264
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 1 Ct. Cust. 362 (United States v. Seattle Brewing & Malting Co.) 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. Seattle Brewing & Malting Co., 1 Ct. Cust. 362 (ccpa 1911).

Opinion

Barber, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

The Seattle Brewing & Malting Co. imported by the vessel Hyson at the port of Seattle, June 2, 1904, 1,689 bags of broken rice, containing approximately.370,000 pounds, commonly-known as “brewers’ rice,” and by the vessel Tremont at the same port on the 9th day of August, 1904, 2,328 bags, containing approximately 490,000 pounds of the same kind of rice, all of which it is conceded was dutiable under paragraph 232 of the tariff act of 1897, the pertinent provisions of which are as follows:

232. Rice, cleaned, two cents per pound; uncleaned rice, or rice free of the outer hull and still having the inner cuticle on, one and one-fourth cents per pound; * * * rice broken which will pass through a sieve known commercially as number twelve wire sieve, one-fourth of one cent per pound. * * *

[363]*363At the time these importations were made there was in force a regulation of the Treasury Department providing that the wire used to form the meshes of the No. 12 wire sieve mentioned in the quoted paragraph should be No. 24 brass wire, either Stubbs or Birmingham gauge (T. D. 22528, T. D. 22680). The diameter of this prescribed wire is 0.016 of an inch.

The Ilyson importation was first assessed at one-fourth of a cent per pound, no test with anjT sieve apparently having been made by the collector or his subordinates, and the merchandise liquidated accordingly. Later and within some 60 or 90 days a Government examiner tested a sample of this importation with a sieve, and upon the basis of such test duty was assessed on 81i per cent thereof at the rate of 2 cents per pound and on 18f per cent thereof at one-fourth of a cent per pound, and reliquidation had accordingly. There is no direct evidence as to the gauge of the wire in the sieve used in making this test. A protest and appeal from this reliquidation was made on the 28th day of September, 1904.

A sample of the rice, weighing about 11 ounces and which was certified by the examiner as a representative sample of the rice, was sent with the papers in the case to the board. It appears that this sample was obtained in the following manner: About 40 bags of the importation were opened and a handful taken from each; the amount thus obtained was all put in a bag and mixed and from it the sample sent to the Board of General Appraisers was taken.

The board in its decision, dated December 29, 1906, stated that the importers had not introduced any evidence in support of their protest, and that a careful test made by the board of this sample showed that 24 per cent thereof passed through the standard No. 12 sieve in use in the appraisers’ office at New York. The gauge of the wire of this sieve is not stated, but may be presumed to be that required by the regulations then in force.

The board held that this sample was inadequate to determine the proportion of broken rice in the importation. The importers in their protest, which was sworn to, claimed that this sample was not a sample of the rice covered bj^ the importation, but was an entirely different grade and quality. The board, because of this claim and because of its finding that the sample was inadequate in amount, said in substance that it would hardly be justified in finding in favor of the importers that the difference between the amount passing through the sieve in New York and the amount assessed by the collector as broken rice, which would be ot per cent (but is stated to be 3£ per cent in the printed case), should be classified at the lower rate, and further, that as the case stood the findings of the customs officers had not been successfully assailed and overruled the protest.

[364]*364The Tremont importation was assessed at the rate of 2 cents per pound. . The protest was filed September 2,1904. It appears that one sample thereof was taken, composed of specimens from several places in the cargo, but from how many bags or what amount was taken the record does not show.

This sample was tested by the collector or his subordinates with a No. 12 sieve, the wire of which was 27 gauge. Under the regulations of the Treasury Department the sieve should have been composed of 24-gauge wire, as before stated. The 2'7-gauge wire is 0.006 inch less in diameter than the 24-gauge wire, and as a No. 12 sieve concededly contains 12 meshes or apertures to the inch, it is obvious that the mesh in the sieve used in testing the rice was larger than it ought to have been to comply with the regulations of the department, and equally obvious that this would result in a greater amount of rice passing through the sieve used in making the test than would have passed through it had the regulation sieve been used. The test as made resulted as follows: Seventy-six percent of the sample passed through freely, and by shaking and rubbing the rice continuous!}7 until it seemed apparent that no more would go through the sieve, the total amount passing through was increased to 87 per cent of the sample tested. Notwithstanding this test, duty was assessed by the collector at 2 cents per pound, as before stated, upon the entire importation. The collector apparently made such assessment in good faith, relying upon what he deemed the controlling effect of certain court decisions. He states in his letter, transmitting the protest to the Board of General Appraisers, that ho had since the liquidation been advised by the Secretary of the Treasur}7 that only the rice which would not pass through the sieve should be held for the higher rate of dut37.

With the papers in the case a sample of the importation was transmitted by the collector to the Board of General Appraisers, and it also appears that he sent another sample, by express, to the board, pursuant to the instructions of the Treasury Department, all in the latter part of 1904. Evidence was taken before the board. One of the samples sent to the board, as before stated, and which weighed a little less than a pound, was tested by the examiner of rice for the port of New York. He found that 33-¿- per cent of this sample would pass through the regulation sieve. The importers contended before the board that the samples were too small in order to determine therefrom the proper classification of the importation, with which contention the board agreed, and, there being no other evidence upon that question, the board held, in view of the rule that the burden was upon the importers b}7 a fair preponderance of evidence to show what proportion of the rice was dutiable at the lower rate, that the protest must be overruled, although it said that “with some regret” it reached that conclusion.

[365]*365Appeals in both cases were duly taken by the importers to the Circuit Court for the Western District of Washington, and the papers in the cases with the official exhibits were seasonably forwarded to the clerk of that court.

Such proceedings were had in each case in said circuit court that further evidence was taken by way of deposition, by both parties, at Seattle on the 20th day of March, 1909. This evidence, so far as is material here, relates to an examination on the lYth day of March, 1909, of the official samples of these importations by three witnesses on behalf of the importers. These witnesses testified that they tested the official samples in each of these cases by ascertaining what percentage thereof would pass through such a wire sieve as was prescribed by the said Treasury regulations and gave the results of such tests.

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1 Ct. Cust. 362, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-seattle-brewing-malting-co-ccpa-1911.