United States v. Spingarn Bros.

5 Ct. Cust. 2, 1913 WL 19866, 1913 CCPA LEXIS 171
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedDecember 15, 1913
DocketNo. 1072
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 5 Ct. Cust. 2 (United States v. Spingarn Bros.) 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. Spingarn Bros., 5 Ct. Cust. 2, 1913 WL 19866, 1913 CCPA LEXIS 171 (ccpa 1913).

Opinions

De Vries, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court;

The sole question presented by this record concerns the respective duties of the collector and appraiser in assessing for duty items for [3]*3cartons or packing charges upon an invoice. The particular invoice was of nine cases of feathers, packed in 515 inside boxes, invoiced as follows:

S. B. 862-70. Francs.. 5,267.15
9 cases and packing.. .. 268. 85
515 inside boxes, 0.60 . 309.00
Certificate. .-N. D.. 13.00
Fres.. 5,858.00

The appraisement was as follows:

Appraiser’s notation. S. B. 870 correct. Case as noted; balance classified. April 13, 1910. GWS. A. L. Kline, assistant appraiser. Approved. Geo. W. Wanmaker, appraiser.

Duty was taken accordingly by the collector. Subsequently there came to the attention of the collector a private “debit note” sent importers by the commissionaire, as follows:'

Francs.
7 per cent commission on fres. 5,267.15. 368. 70
Add. charges on 515 inside boxes, 0.40. 206. 00
Fres.. 574.70

It appears from the record that the goods were purchased for the importers at a wholesale price by their commissionaire, to whom they were delivered and by whom the goods, which were feathers, were peculiarly packed in inside boxes, for which inside boxes, in part, this additional charge was made. It was therefore strictly a part of the cost orchargeof packing the goods in a condition ready for export shipment.

The collector upon being advised of this private memorandum, which was more than a year after appraisement and liquidation, having discovered fraud, as it was claimed, reliquidated the entry by adding 206 francs as additional packing charges, which this debit note admitted were omitted from the consular invoice. The importer protested, and the board, upon the theory that this constituted a reap-praisement of the merchandise by the collector, sustained the protest. The Government appeals. It is stipulated in the record that the time of the reliquidation, being more than one year after the original liquidation, shall not be here made an issue. The board said:

The invoice includes an item of 515 boxes at 60 centimes per box. The goods appear to have been appraised by the appraiser at the entered or invoiced value. Subsequent to the appraisal and after the original liquidation’ it appears that the collector added to the invoiced or appraised value of the goods the amount of 40 centimes per box for the 515 boxes. The value of the boxes is, of course, included in the appraised value of the goods.

It may be said in passing that the appraiser’s notation does not necessarily indicate that the value of the boxes was included in his appraised value of the goods. Certainly not as a part of their per se value, for he simply approved the invoice valuation which separately stated these values not as a part of the per se value of the merchan[4]*4'dise, but expressly as pacldng charges or “inside boxes” independently stated on the invoice. If there was an appraisement of these •charges by the appraiser, it was as noted on the invoice as “inside iboxes” or cartons and not as a part of the per se value of the goods. .If we subsequently find, therefore, that it is no part of the appraiser’s legal duty and consequent power to appraise such charges, his usurpation of the collector’s functions would not be of any legal force. As said by the Supreme Court in Oberteuffer v. Robertson (116 U. S., 499, 516) speaking of such action:

Although, in form the appraiser added the items for cartons and pacldng, the action of the customhouse was only a decision of the collector, under section 2931, that the ■cartons and packing were dudable costs and charges.

Of course, both the collector and the appraiser derive their respective powers and duties from the statute; and if the statute nowhere invests the appraiser with the power nor prescribes it his duty to appraise the packages, or costs, charges, and expenses of pacldng the goods in a condition ready for shipment, such are not legal items of his appraisement, and his inclusion of the same in such does not make them legally such or oust the collector of his duty or power under the statute to “ascertain, fix,” and “decide” what are, and in a proper place add such to, the actual market value of the goods in his determination of the dutiable value of the importation which under the statute he alone determines.

If any doubt exists as to the construction to be given section 18, the clear and precise distinctions observed in all other paragraphs of the law in pari materia conclusively indicate that that section defines and relates to dutiable value alone, is the sole paragraph enumerating and declaring all the factors upon which “duty shall be assessed” .and defining such, and when so read harmonizes all other provisions ■of the administrative law.

In almost every paragraph of the customs administrative law ■Congress has plainly evidenced the purpose to separate and hold dis■tinct the actual market value per se and the incidental cases and pacldng charges of imported merchandise, so that the performance of the respective duties of the appraiser and collector might be possible .and facilitated. And Congress has equally clearly empowered the .appraiser with the duty and confined his authority by express statutory words solely to a determination of the actual market value of the goods per se as bought and sold in wholesale quantities in the ■ country of exportation. Equally plainly has Congress empowered ■the collector alone with the power of determination of what are and what are not “costs and charges.” A fortiori, what an anomalous •condition would be presented if the appraiser may bind the collector ■<in making costs or charges a part of market value, when the legal determination of what are or are not such in the particular case is inot under the statute had until after appraisement.

[5]*5Whether or not costs, charges, and expenses of putting the goods in condition packed ready for shipment are items entering into the' actual market value and wholesale price of imported merchandise to be estimated as such by the appraiser or are separate items, which. though the same may be determined by the appraiser in form are, nevertheless, items of dutiable value and to be so included or excluded by the decision of the collector as the case may require, may be determined by a reading together of all of the provisions of the customs administrative law relating thereto and giving that effect to the whole, which will give some effect to each provision and harmonize all.

Section 2 in providing what the invoice shall contain states that it “shall contain a correct, complete, and detailed description of such merchandise, and of the packages, wrappings, or other coverings containing it.” <

Section 3 prescribes that the declaration upon the invoice shall set forth, of the invoice, certain matters and shall certify “if the merchandise was obtained by purchase, * * * the actual cost thereof, • and

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
5 Ct. Cust. 2, 1913 WL 19866, 1913 CCPA LEXIS 171, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-spingarn-bros-ccpa-1913.