Wedgwood v. United States

7 Ct. Cust. 434, 1917 WL 20067, 1917 CCPA LEXIS 16
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedFebruary 2, 1917
DocketNo. 1735
StatusPublished

This text of 7 Ct. Cust. 434 (Wedgwood v. United States) 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
Wedgwood v. United States, 7 Ct. Cust. 434, 1917 WL 20067, 1917 CCPA LEXIS 16 (ccpa 1917).

Opinion

MONTGOMERY, Presiding Judge,

delivered tbe opinion of tbe court:

Tbe importation in question in tbis suit consists of imitation cameos, wbicb, unlike tbe genuine cameo, are not cut upon precious stones or shell but are produced by a molding process and imitate more or less accurately tbe genuine cameo. Duty was assessed upon tbe importation as earthenware * * * ornamented or decorated in any manner, and manufactures in chief value of such ware, not specially provided for,” under paragraph 79 of tbe act of 1913. They are claimed to be dutiable under tbe provisions of paragraph [435]*435357 as imitation precious stones'. The contention of the importer was overruled by the board and the importer appeals to this court, presenting for decision the question of classification, as-stated.

The questions presented are two: First, whether a cameo is a precious stone, and, second, whether the importation is an imitation of a precious stone. The latter question would seem t(o be wholly dependent upon the first, for if the cameo, whatever the substance upon which the cameo cutting has been done, is, by virtue of the process of cutting such substance, constituted a precious stone, the present importation sufficiently resembles such product to be properly classified as an imitation, so that the case must turn upon whether the cameo is, without regard to the substance furnishing its basis, a precious stone.

Murray’s New English Dictionary defines cameo as—

A precious stone having two layers of different colors, in the upper of which a figure is carved in relief, while the lower serves as a ground. For this purpose the ancients used the onyx, agate, etc., and especially the sardonyx, “a variety of chalcedony, consisting of alternate parallel layers of white and red chalcedony,” which was carved so as to leave a white figure in relief on a red ground. Thence extended to all lapidary’s work of the same kind; and in modern times (“by abuse,” Littré says) to similar carving in shells of mollusks, of which the inner stratum is differently colored from the outer.

This evolution of the meaning of the term cameo is discussed in an opinion by De Vries, General Appraiser (T. D. 24581). The articles there considered were imitations of cameos. It was said, after reviewing at length the dictionary definitions of cameo, and noting the extension of the term to include within'the term cameo cut or an article engraved upon a material other than precious stone:

These authorities indicate a chronological increase of the kinds of materials used to make cameos, from that of the precious stones, to include that of shells, ivory, stone, and other suitable materials. To such an extent has this change progressed that the precious-stone cameos have largely fallen into disuse and been assigned a specific definition of “cameo duro.” The authorities further indicate that the word is equally applicable to and descriptive of a process of cutting. * * *
While it is true, therefore, that an imitation cameo or intaglio made to imitate a shell or ivory or other such articles may not be classed as imitation precious stones, but should be classed according to the material of composition, yet it would seem that in such cases as this, where the imitation is not only of the cameo but also of a precious stone, and, to be more precise, is an imitation of a precious stone cut in a recognized way (cameo and intaglio), an article well known in the trade and made dutiable as a class by the tariff act, and plainly included within the articles referred to by the words “imitation precious stones” (cut), such articles must be held imitation precious stones within that language.

From this it will be seen that the lexicographic meaning of cameo does not depend upon whether the substance of which the completed article is composed is a precious stone or shell. It is-the product of cutting in a certain form,' wrought upon either shell or precious [436]*436stone. Nor do we think it should be said that the working upon the foundation of shell can convert that substance into a precious stone.

The converse of this question was presented in Hahn v. United States (100 Fed., 635). In that case the'merchandise consisted of small cups, shoe-hook and glove-hook handles, knife handles, paper weights, slabs for match boxes and for blotting papers, and similar articles. The articles were manufactured wholly of agate or of onyx. Precious stones of all kinds were made dutiable by the tariff act under consideration at 10 per cent, and agate, unmanufactured, was included in the free list. There was the usual provision for non-enumerated manufactured articles and also a similitude clause. The collector classified the importation as nonenumerated articles, and the importer claimed that they were dutiable by similitude at the same rate of duty which was levied upon precious stones. The Board of General Appraisers reversed the collector and sustained the importer’s claim. The Circuit Court reversed the board and sustained the collector. The case was taken by appeal to the Court of Appeals of the Second Circuit, and after discussion, showing that agate and onyx are commercially known as precious stones, and citing the brief of the Government conceding that the articles were made of the same material as precious stones, the court proceeds:

This court further held in Erhardt v. Hahn, supra, that the term “precious stones” applied only to the mineral substances embraced within it while they remained stones, and that articles like those in suit had been advanced beyond that condition, and had become completed commercial articles known and recognized in trade by specific and distinctive names other than the name of the material, and have been put into a completed shape designed and adapted for particular uses.

The court thereupon considered the question of whether the merchandise was dutiable as a nonenumerated manufactured article or by similitude as precious stones. Concurring with the Board of General Appraisers, the court held that the goods were dutiable by similitude as precious stones and said:

It may at first seem startling to classify a shoe-liook handle with a diamond for duty purposes, but when it is made out of what is conceded to be a precious stone, the conclusion is not so absurd. A somewhat different mode of cutting would have changed the handles, paper weights, slabs, etc., into pendants for earrings, or stones suitable for mounting in bracelets or brooches, or as sleeve buttons, scarf pins, or some other of the articles of personal adornment known as “jewelry,” and with which the idea of a precious stone is associated.

If the doctrine of this case be accepted and the conversion of precious stones into articles of utility can not change the character of the substance from precious stones, it would seem to follow that the process of conversion of a piece of shell into an article like a cameo can not entitle the completed article to be called in any just sense a precious stone simply because cameos may be, and often are, made of precious stones.

[437]*437In T. D. 25512 the merchandise consisted of shell cameos, which were returned by the surveyor as parts of jewelry. The importers claimed that the articles should be admitted as precious stones, and alternately that they should be held dutiable as manufactures of shell.

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Related

Hahn v. United States
100 F. 635 (Second Circuit, 1900)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
7 Ct. Cust. 434, 1917 WL 20067, 1917 CCPA LEXIS 16, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wedgwood-v-united-states-ccpa-1917.