Wiley v. United States

58 Cust. Ct. 216, 1967 Cust. Ct. LEXIS 2470
CourtUnited States Customs Court
DecidedApril 5, 1967
DocketC.D. 2945
StatusPublished

This text of 58 Cust. Ct. 216 (Wiley v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Customs Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wiley v. United States, 58 Cust. Ct. 216, 1967 Cust. Ct. LEXIS 2470 (cusc 1967).

Opinion

Landis, Judge:

The 11 protests enumerated in the schedule of protests, attached hereto and made a part hereof, have been consolidated for purposes of trial. They relate to certain merchandise imported from West Germany described on the various invoices as mathematical instruments, small size adding machines, and pocket calculating machines, in chief value of metal, not plated with gold, silver, or platinum.

The collector classified the merchandise under paragraph 360 of the TariJf Act of 1930, as modified by the Sixth Protocol of Supplementary Concessions to the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (T.D. 54108), as mathematical instruments, and assessed duty at the rate of 25% per centum ad valorem.

The Government, the defendant herein, maintains that the merchandise was properly classified under paragraph 360 as aforementioned.

The pertinent statutory provisions are as follows:

Paragraph 360 of the Tariff Act of 1930, as modified by T.D. 54108:

Scientific and laboratory instruments, apparatus, utensils, appliances (including mathematical instruments * * *), and parts thereof, wholly or in chief value of metal, and not plated with gold, silver, or platinum, finished or unfinished, not specially provided for:
Other __25%% ad val.
[217]*217Paragraph 372 of the Tariff Act of 1930, as modified by T.D. 54108:
Machines, finished or unfinished, not specially provided for:
Adding machines_ 12%% ad val.

At the opening of trial, plaintiffs moved to amend the protests to add a claim that the merchandise was properly classifiable under paragraph 372 of the Tariff Act of 1930, as modified by T.D. 54108, as adding or calculating machines, other than those specially constructed for multiplying and dividing, dutiable at the rate of 12% per centum ad valorem.

In view of our ruling on the motion to amend, hereinafter discussed, plaintiffs are deemed to have abandoned all other claims in their protests.

The Government, defendant herein, moved to dismiss the protests for insufficiency.

The court took the motions under advisement for later decision by the full division and allowed testimony to be taken subject to the motion to amend.

Subsequently, the Government withdrew its motion to dismiss the protests for insufficiency in order to proceed with the trial on the assumption that the court would grant plaintiffs’ motions to amend. The Government thereafter also withdrew any objection to the motions to amend. Both counsel then stipulated orally that the collector classified the merchandise in controversy herein as mathematical instruments under paragraph 360, as aforesaid. This narrowed the issue simply to whether the merchandise, represented by plaintiffs’ illustrative exhibit 1 herein, is properly classifiable under paragraph 360, sufra, aa mathematical instruments, or as claimed under paragraph 372, supraf as adding machines, and whether the plaintiffs have sustained the-burden of proof establishing their claimed classification.

The record is comprised of the testimony of plaintiffs’ one witness,, Syd L. Broder, and a sample of the merchandise in controversy, plaintiffs’ illustrative exhibit 1. Plaintiffs’ illustrative exhibit 2 is a duplicate of exhibit 1, opened to expose the interior parts and to show their arrangement of operation. Plaintiffs’ illustrative exhibit 3 is. a printed form of instructions explaining how to use exhibit 1.

Examination of plaintiffs’ illustrative exhibit 1, the article itself,, shows it as a vest pocket-size flat metal device, rectangular in shape,, approximately 5 by 2% by % inches. On its face are the words:

Pocket Adding and Subtracting Machine
Perfect 6
[There are a series of six slots, each showing figures vertically from zero to nine over what plaintiffs allege are “gears, operable by a stylus [218]*218which accompanies each article, and by means of which addition may be accomplished.]

ADDITION

The reverse side of the same article has the same arrangement, except that “Subtraction” is designated. A handlelike small bar at the top slides down and up to clear off any calculations.

Syd L. Broder, the sole witness in the case, testified for the plaintiffs substantially as follows:

. He was a partner in Opean-Broder, one of the plaintiffs herein, for about 5 years, until the partners sold out several months before trial, and they had imported pocket adding machines.

Prior thereto, from 1923 until about 1957, Mr. Broder stated that he had been in the jewelry business and had worked on electric clocks, spring clocks, watches, and mechanical repairs. Before that, he was with American Bosch Magneto Corp., manufacturers of generators, starting motors, and various mechanical machines. His duties included work as an engineer, having had this training by the company.

He stated that his position as a partner with Opean-Broder was importing and selling machines and seeing that they worked properly. He serviced them when necessary and appointed distributors for their sales. He had been bringing in such machines for about 5 years.

Mr. Broder testified that he had personal knowledge of the functions of the merchandise and that all the articles at bar had the same working mechanism. He described this substantially as follows: To operate exhibit 1, for addition, the point of a stylus is placed in a white slot opposite the number to be added and then pulled downward. To subtract, the stylus is placed in a red slot and turned around the curve which acts as a gear, modifying the force and motion to the next columns. A pull bar clears the machine for new computations. The moving parts of exhibit 1, the witness stated, were the stylus, slides, and pull bar.

On cross-examination, the witness admitted that the slides and pull bar moved only up and down and conceded that the force of one’s hand causes the stylus to move around the curve creating the action which moves the next bar.

On inquiry by the court, the witness admitted that the numbers move only to the extent that one pushes them with the stylus and that the numbers are not set back automatically but by use of the pull bar.

It is noted at this stage of the case that a ruling on plaintiffs’ motion to amend the protests is in order. Government counsel at the trial withdrew its objection to the proposed amendment. Since the amendment pertains to the same merchandise covered by the protests here in controversy and is merely a new additional claim which might have been made in the original protests, the instant motion to amend is well [219]*219taken and is hereby granted. See United States v. Machsoud Importing Co. et al., 25 CCPA 44, T.D. 49041.

By virtue of this amendment and abandonment of all other claims, the plaintiffs undertake to prove, and also have the statutory burden of doing so, that the “adding machine” is in fact a “machine,” classifiable under paragraph 372 of the Tariff Act of 1930, as modified by the Sixth Protocol of Supplementary Concessions to the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (T.D.

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Bluebook (online)
58 Cust. Ct. 216, 1967 Cust. Ct. LEXIS 2470, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wiley-v-united-states-cusc-1967.