"White hard enamel," imported in 1884, and used for various
purposes when a smooth or enameled surface was desired, including
the making of faces or surfaces of watch dials, the form or
condition of it, as imported, affording no indication of tae use to
which it was to be applied, and it requiring to be ground or
pulverized and new processes of manufacture to be applied before it
could be made of any practical use, the article in this case having
been imported for use in making watch dials, and having been in
fact so used, was subject to a duty of 20 percent
ad
valorem, under § 2513 of the Revised Statutes, as enacted
by § 6 of the Act of March 3, 1883, c. 121, as an article
manufactured in whole or in part, not therein enumerated or
provided for, and not to a duty of 25 percent
ad valorem,
as "watch materials" not specially enumerated or provided for in
the act, under schedule N of § 2502 of the Revised Statutes,
as enacted by the same § 6.
In order to be dutiable as "watch materials," the article, when
imported, must be in such form of manufacture as to show its
adaptation to the making of watches.
The case of
Elgin Watch Co. v. Spalding, 19 F. 411,
distinguished.
The case is stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE BLATCHFORD delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is an action brought in the Circuit Court of the United
States for the District of Massachusetts by R. E. Robbins and
others, co-partners as Robbins, Appleton & Co., against Roland
Worthington, collector of customs for the revenue district of
Boston and Charlestown, to recover an alleged excess of duties,
paid under protest, on importations into the port of Boston in
Page 139 U. S. 338
March and May, 1884, of an article known and described in trade
as "white hard enamel."
The case was tried by the circuit court without a jury on the
following statement of agreed facts.
"The plaintiffs imported from a foreign country into the United
States, to-wit, into the port of Boston, in the District of
Massachusetts, in the months of March and May, 1884, two lots of
white hard enamel, in the steamships
Marathon and
Samaria, from Liverpool, and made entries of the same at
the custom-house in said Boston, for consumption. The defendant, as
collector of customs at said port, assessed, liquidated, and
exacted duties upon this enamel at the rate of 25 percent
ad
valorem as 'watch materials, not specially enumerated or
provided for.' Plaintiffs duly protested to the defendant against
the exaction of such rate of duty, and claimed that the lawful duty
due upon this enamel was 20 percent
ad valorem, as an
article 'manufactured in whole or in part, not herein enumerated or
provided for.' A copy of the protest is annexed and made a part
hereof. Plaintiffs duly appealed to the Secretary of the Treasury,
who sustained the defendant in his action. In due time and form,
plaintiffs instituted this action for the recovery of duties paid
in excess of twenty percent
ad valorem. It is agreed that
the merchandise is and was in 1883 known and described in trade as
'white hard enamel;' that it is used for various purposes,
including the making of faces or surfaces of watch dials, scale
columns of thermometers, faces or surfaces of steam gauge dials,
and for other purposes when a smooth or enameled surface is
desired. It is further agreed that the form or condition of this
merchandise, as imported, affords no evidence or indication of the
use to which it is to be applied. It is further agreed that this
merchandise, in the form or condition as imported, cannot be used
for any of the purposes above described, nor for any purposes
whatever of practical use to which it is adapted or ever applied;
that before it can be applied to any practical use, its present
form and condition must be changed by grinding or pulverizing, and
new processes of manufacture applied. It is further agreed, if it
would be competent to prove the same, that the plaintiffs are, and
have
Page 139 U. S. 339
been for several years prior to said importations, manufacturers
of watches; that the enamel in controversy was imported by them for
use in making watch dials and was in fact so used. If the court
shall be of the opinion that the duty lawfully chargeable upon this
merchandise was 20 percent
ad valorem, the judgment shall
be for the plaintiffs for the excess exacted, to be ascertained by
an assessor, with interest and costs. On the contrary, if the court
shall be of the opinion that the duty exacted was that lawfully
due, then judgment shall be for the defendant for costs."
The protest referred to in the statement of agreed facts was as
follows:
"Boston, July 3, 1884. Sir: We respectfully protest against your
decision, assessment, liquidation, and exaction of duties at the
rate of twenty-five percent
ad valorem upon our
importation of three packages of white hard enamel marked 1822/4 in
the steamship
Samaria from Liverpool, and entered for
consumption on the 12th day of May last, claiming that under the
existing laws of the United States this merchandise is liable only
either to a duty of ten percent or twenty percent
ad
valorem. This enamel is not enumerated by name in the tariff;
therefore must be classed for duty purposes under some general term
or description. It bears no similitude to any named article in the
tariff within the intent or provisions of § 2499 of the Act of
March 3, 1883, and cannot be classed under that section. It is a
crude article, only useful for any purpose by the destruction of
its present form and condition, and a complete process of
manufacture, and is provided for by section 2513 of said Act of
March 3 at a duty of ten percent
ad valorem. Should it,
however, be held that on account of its present condition, it is a
partially manufactured article, then it is provided for by said
section 2513 at a duty of twenty percent
ad valorem. It is
not a part of a watch or watch material within the description and
intent of the provisions of Schedule N of said Act of March 3. It
is adapted to, can be, and is used for various purposes, and is not
a part of any special article nor a material for any special
article. We submit, under compulsion, to get our goods, and shall
hold you and the government responsible. "
Page 139 U. S. 340
The court ordered judgment for the plaintiffs and referred the
case to an assessor to assess the damages. On his report, a
judgment was entered for the plaintiffs for $53.14 and costs. To
review that judgment, the collector has brought a writ of
error.
The question for decision is whether the article imported was
liable to the duty assessed upon it by the collector of 25 percent
ad valorem, under that clause of Schedule N of section
2502 of the Revised Statutes as enacted by section 6 of the Act of
March 3, 1883, c. 121, 22 St. 514, which reads as follows:
"Watches, watchcases, watch movements, parts of watches, and
watch materials, not specially enumerated or provided for in this
act, twenty-five percentum
ad valorem,"
or whether it was liable to a duty of 20 percent
ad
valorem, under section 2513 of the Revised Statutes, as
enacted by the same section 6 of the Act of March 3, 1883, which
reads as follows:
"There shall be levied, collected, and paid on the importation
of all raw or unmanufactured articles not herein enumerated or
provided for a duty of ten percentum
ad valorem, and all
articles manufactured in whole or in part not herein enumerated or
provided for a duty of twenty percentum
ad valorem."
It is contended for the government that the article in question
fell under the head of "watch materials." But we are of opinion
that this contention is unsound, and that the article was dutiable
at 20 percent
ad valorem as an article manufactured in
whole or in part, not otherwise enumerated or provided for.
By the statement of agreed facts, the article was, when the
tariff act applying to it was enacted, known and described in trade
as "white hard enamel," and
"is used for various purposes, including the making of faces or
surfaces of watch dials, scale columns of thermometers, faces or
surfaces of steam gauge dials, and for other purposes when a smooth
or enameled surface is desired."
It thus appears that it is not used exclusively for the making
of faces or surfaces of watch dials, and although it is states in
the statement of agreed facts that the enamel in controversy was
imported by the
Page 139 U. S. 341
plaintiffs for use in making watch dials, and was in fact so
used, there was nothing to prevent them from selling it to persons
who would use it for the other purposes for which it is state it is
used.
It appears further that the form or condition of the merchandise
as imported affords no evidence or indication of the use to which
it is to be applied; that in the form or condition as imported, it
cannot be used for any of the purposes mentioned, nor for any
purposes whatever of practical use to which it is adapted or ever
applied, and that, before it can be applied to any practical use,
its present form and condition must be changed by grinding or
pulverizing, and new processes of manufacture be applied.
It is apparent from the facts stated that the customs officers
could not determine from an examination of the article to which of
the uses named it was to be applied, or that it was to become the
material of a watch. In order to produce uniformity in the
imposition of duties, the dutiable classification of articles
imported must be ascertained by an examination of the imported
article itself in the condition in which it is imported. In order
to be dutiable as "watch materials," the article, when imported,
must be in such form of manufacture as to show its adaptation to
the making of watches.
The article in question was, to all intents and purposes, raw
material. If it were to be classed as "watch materials," it would
follow that any metal which could ultimately be used, and was
ultimately used, in the manufacture of a watch, but could be used
for other purposes also, would be dutiable as "watch materials." In
order to be "watch materials," the article must in itself bear
marks of its special adaptation for use in making watches. The fact
that the article in question was used in the manufacture of watches
has no relation to the condition of the article as imported, but to
what afterwards the importer did with it.
The government relies upon the decision of Judge Blodgett in the
Circuit Court of the United States for the Northern District of
Illinois in
Elgin Watch Co. v. Spaulding, 19 F. 411, in
which the question involved was whether an
Page 139 U. S. 342
article known in trade as "watch enamel" was dutiable at 40
percent
ad valorem under the last clause of schedule B of
section 2504 of the Revised Statutes, as "manufactures of glass, or
of which glass shall be a component material, not otherwise
provided for," or to a duty of 25 percent
ad valorem as
"watch materials," under Schedule M of section 2504, and it was
held that the article was not a manufacture of glass, but was
dutiable as "watch materials." But in that case it is stated that
the article there in question was known to the trade as "watch
enamel," and was used only, so far as was disclosed by the
evidence, for enameling the faces or dials of watches. It does not
appear by the report of that case whether or not there was any
earmark upon the imported article to indicate its proposed use.
That case was not, in its facts at all like the present one, and
this case must be decided upon the facts shown by the record.
Judgment affirmed.