United States v. Tower

40 C.C.P.A. 14
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedMay 28, 1952
DocketNo. 4693
StatusPublished

This text of 40 C.C.P.A. 14 (United States v. Tower) 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. Tower, 40 C.C.P.A. 14 (ccpa 1952).

Opinion

Worley, Judge,

delivered tbe opinion of tbe court:

Tbis is an appeal from tbe judgment of tbe United States Customs Court, Second Division, rendered pursuant to its decision, C. D. 1337, sustaining tbe protest of appellee, importer.

Merchandise, invoiced and entered as “Abrasive Sludge,” imported from Canada and entered at tbe port of Buffalo, New York, was classified by tbe Collector of Customs as “Ferrosilicon, containing 8 per centum or more of silicon and less tban 30 per centum” pursuant to tbe provisions of paragraph 302 (i) of tbe Tariff Act of 1930, as modified by tbe Canadian Trade Agreement (T.D.49752) and assessed duty at tbe rate of one cent per pound on tbe silicon contained therein.

Tbe importer protested tbis assessment claiming that tbe merchandise was properly free of duty, under paragraph 1664 of tbe Tariff Act [15]*15of 1930, as “Metallic mineral substances in a .crude state, such as drosses, shimmings, residues, brass foundry ash, and flue dust, not specially provided for” or, alternately, to be dutiable at 7% per centum ad valorem as “Waste, not specially provided for” as provided for under paragraph 1555 of the Tariff Act of 1930, as modified by the Canadian Trade Agreement, supra.

It .was stipulated that the involved merchandise was similar in all respects to the merchandise involved in-the case of C. J. Tower & Sons v. United States, 19 Cust. Ct. 46, C. D. 1066; that it was made in both cases by the same process and was used for the same purpose and, by agreement of the parties, the record and exhibits in the Tower case, supra, were received in evidence as a part of the record in the case at bar. ■

A description of the character of the merchandise and the manner of its production was set out in the Tower case, supra, and adopted by the trial court in the instant case. It reads as follows:

* * * this so-called “Abrasive Sludge 81” is an unwanted byproduct resulting from the treatment of bauxite to produce an abrasive.
*******
The aloxite electric furnace, as we operate it, is a metal shell on the bottom of which is placed a coke and tar bottom approximately fifteen inches thick. It’s rammed in. The shell is iron, water cooled on the outside. The operation of the furnace is to feed in bauxite, establish an electric arc, two electrodes. The bauxite is melted with sufficient carbon there to reduce some of the impurities, such as iron oxide, silica, and a small amount of titanium oxide. These impurities when they are reduced, come out in the metallic state. These metals are heavier than the alumina, melted alumina bath settled out of the bath. This metallic material first reaching the carbon bottom through the settling, penetrates into the carbon bottom to the extent of possibly six inches. In other words, the carbon bottom acts as a sort of a sponge absorbing this material which is settling out.
After we have established this bottom consisting of these metals plus the carbon it becomes impervious and the remainder of the metallic material settles out as the furnace is filled up. This molten material collects on top of this bottom, metallized bottom, and forms what is ordinarily known as ferrosilicon. I’m not sure that’s the correct term for it. We call it byproduct ferrosilicon. It’s realiy a byproduct. The court then asked—
Judge Lawrence: What is the main thing you are trying to produce when this comes off as a byproduct?
The Witness: We’re producing abrasives and we do not control this metallic material at all. It’s absolutely a byproduct. We have no interest in it other than what little salvage we can get by selling it.
* ******
After the furnace is full of molten material the power is taken off and the bath is allowed to solidify. The furnace is then dumped and we have on the very bottom of this so-called pig ingot a layer of carbon which is formed, of course, from the coke which was originally put in. Just above that we have a layer of possibly three or six inches thick of this mixture of metallic material which has come.down and been absorbed by the carbon. I haven’t the analysis before me but I would say that the carbon in there might vary from something under [16]*16twenty percent to possibly over thirty percent; That’s my recollection. The metallic material also varies very considerably in content from time to time. Above this so-called sludge is a layer of this by-product ferrosilicon which might be four to six inches thick, and above that is the aluminous abrasive material.

The record reflects the following analysis of the involved merchandise:

Silicon_ 8. 92%
Iron___ 57.02%
Aluminum_ 1. 85%
Titanium_ 1. 30%
Phosphorus_ 0. 34%
Carbon_ 19. 0%
Aluminum oxide_ 4. 62%
Remainder 6. 95 % identity unknown, with the following important reservation:
* * * that there are variations in the analysis of different shipments;, that the carbon varies from slightly under 20 percent to over 30 percent; that the silicon content varies from about 6 percent to about 9 percent and that the other elements vary accordingly.

During the course of the taking of testimony in the Tower case, supra, and after the trial of that case had been transferred from Buffalo to New York City, Special Agents for the Government conducted an extensive investigation as to whether the involved .merchandise was in fact ferrosilicon and they concluded that it was not. Thereupon, counsel for the Government stated that the. merchandise had been improperly classified under subparagraph (i) of paragraph 302 of the Tariff Act of 1930 and claimed that the involved merchandise was properly dutiable under paragraph 302 (o) of that act which provides for “All alloys used in the manufacture of steel or iron, not specially provided for.”

In the instant case it is also the contention of the Government that the involved merchandise falls within the purview of paragraph 302 (o) of the Tariff Act of 1930.

The trial court, in the case herein, sustained the protest of the importer, hence the issues before us are whether from the facts of record the commercial meaning of the word “alloys” differs from the ordinary meaning; and whether the involved sludge is free of duty as a “Metallic mineral substance in a crude state * *

The fundamental error is alleged by counsel for the Government to be the holding that the involved merchandise is not an alloy.

The importer introduced the testimony of four witnesses.

The first witness for appellee, Wilbur G. Wellings, stated that he had been employed by the Titanium Alloy Manufacturing Co. of Niagara Falls, New York, for 29 years; that this company was engaged in the manufacture of ferro alloys, ceramin materials, and industrial chemicals; that at the time of his retirement from the company in 1948 he was chief sales manager of the alloy division of the company [17]

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Related

Tower v. United States
19 Cust. Ct. 46 (U.S. Customs Court, 1947)

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Bluebook (online)
40 C.C.P.A. 14, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-tower-ccpa-1952.