In paragraph 297 of the tariff Act of August 27, 1894, c. 349,
28 Stat. 509, providing that "the reduction of the rates of duty
herein provided for manufactures of wool shall take effect January
first, eighteen hundred and ninety-five," the words "manufactures
of wool" had relation to the raw material out of which the articles
were made, and, as the material of worsted dress goods was wool,
such goods fell within the paragraph.
Page 169 U. S. 210
On the 30th day of August, A.D. 1894, John F. Klumpp and others,
doing business as a partnership under the name of Alexander Murphy
& Co., imported into New York certain merchandise, consisting
of women's and children's dress goods composed of worsted. The
collector classified this merchandise, and assessed it for duty
under paragraph 395 of the Tariff Act of October 1, 1890, 26 Stat.
567, c. 1244, at twelve cents per square yard, and fifty percent
ad valorem. The importers protested, claiming the goods to
be dutiable under paragraph 283 of the Tariff Act of August 27,
1894, 28 Stat. 509, c. 349, at forty percent, or fifty percent
ad valorem, according to the value per pound.
The board of general appraisers overruled the protest (G. A.
2769), and the importers carried the matter to the circuit court,
which reversed the decision of the board of general appraisers. 68
F. 908. On an appeal to the Circuit Court of Appeals for the Second
Circuit, the decision of the circuit court was affirmed. 72 F.
1008. The case was then brought here on certiorari.
It was admitted below
"that the classification of the merchandise by the collector was
worsted dress goods at twelve cents per square yard, and fifty
percent
ad valorem, under Schedule K, paragraph 395, of
the Tariff Act of October 1, 1890."
And
"that the merchandise in controversy is worsted dress goods,
made from the fleece of the sheep, which has been combed and spun
into worsted yarn, and is not composed of the hair of the camel,
goat, alpaca, or other animal than sheep."
Paragraph 395 of Schedule K of the Act of October 1, 1890,
entitled "Wool and Manufactures of Wool," reads:
"On women's and children's dress goods, coat linings, Italian
cloth, bunting, and goods of similar description or character
composed wholly or in part of wool, worsted, the hair of the camel,
goat, alpaca, or other animals, and not specially provided for in
this act, the duty shall be twelve cents per square yard, and in
addition thereto fifty percentum
ad valorem, provided,
that, on all such goods weighing over four ounces per square yard
the duty per pound shall be four times the duty imposed
Page 169 U. S. 211
by this act on a pound of unwashed wool of the first class, and
in addition thereto fifty percentum
ad valorem."
Paragraph 283 of Schedule K of the Act of August 27, 1894,
entitled "Wool and Manufactures of Wool," provided:
"On women's and children's dress goods, coat linings, Italian
cloth, bunting, or goods of similar description or character, and
on all manufactures, composed wholly or in part of wool, worsted,
the hair of the camel, goat, alpaca, or other animals, including
such as have India rubber as a component material, and not
specially provided for in this act, valued at not over fifty cents
per pound, forty percentum
ad valorem; valued at more than
fifty cents per pound, fifty percentum
ad valorem."
Paragraphs 280 to 286, inclusive, under this schedule, provided
for duties on articles made or composed "wholly or in part of wool,
worsted, or the hair of the camel, goat, alpaca, or other animals,"
except that paragraph 282, which referred to blankets, etc.,
omitted the word "worsted."
Paragraphs 287 to 296, inclusive, related to carpets, mats,
etc., and the concluding paragraph of the schedule read: "(297) The
reduction of the rates of duty herein provided for manufactures of
wool shall take effect January first, eighteen hundred and
ninety-five."
Paragraph 685, one of the paragraphs of the free list, was as
follows:
"(685) All wool of the sheep, hair of the camel, goat, alpaca,
and other like animals, and all wool and hair on the skin, noils,
yarn waste, card waste, bur waste, slubbing waste, roving waste,
ring waste, and all waste, or rags composed wholly or in part of
wool, all the foregoing not otherwise herein provided for."
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE FULLER, after stating the facts. delivered the
opinion of the Court.
Women's and children's dress goods, "composed wholly or
Page 169 U. S. 212
in part of wool, worsted, the hair of the camel, goat, alpaca,
or other animals," were dutiable under paragraph 395 of the Act of
October 1, 1890 at twelve cents per square yard, and fifty percent
ad valorem; under paragraph 283 of the Act of August 27,
1894 at forty or fifty percent
ad valorem, according to
value. But by paragraph 297, the reduction of the rates of duty on
"manufactures of wool" was not to take effect until January 1,
1895. And if that paragraph applied to worsted dress goods for
women and children, then the collector was right, and the judgment
must be reversed.
Was it intended that the words "manufactures of wool," as used
in this paragraph, should include or exclude worsted goods?
Worsted goods are made out of wool, and are necessarily a
manufacture of wool. The Century Dictionary defines "worsted" as a
noun: "A variety of woolen yarn or thread, spun from long staple
wool which has been combed, and in the spinning is twisted harder
than is usual," and as an adjective: "Consisting of worsted; made
of worsted yarn; as worsted stockings."
"Worsted is but wool spun and twisted in a particular manner,"
said Mr. Justice Story in
Whiting v. Bancroft, 1 Story
560. And in
Cohn v. Seeberger, 30 F. 425, it was found by
Judge Blodgett that
"worsted is made by combing long fibered wools so that the
fibers usually lie or are arranged alongside each other, while wool
is treated by carding it so as to interlock the fibers with each
other."
As between worsted yarns and woolen yarns, the Encyclopaedia
Britannica says that the fundamental distinction
"rests in the crossing and interlacing of the fibers in
preparing woolen yarn -- an operation confined to this alone among
all textiles -- while for worsted yarn the fibers are treated, as
in the case of all other textile materials, by processes designed
to bring them into a smooth, parallel relationship with each
other."
Volume 24, p. 658.
Although, through the introduction of improved processes of
manufacture, it gradually became possible to comb shorter and finer
varieties of wool, and thus to manufacture worsted
Page 169 U. S. 213
goods of higher grade and better quality, approximating worsted
to woolen goods, and removing the reason for any distinction
between them in the matter of duties, the tariff laws, prior to May
9, 1890, made a distinction in that respect between woolen and
worsted goods, resting on the difference in the process of
manufacture; but the raw material was, of course, always the same
-- namely, wool.
By the Tariff Acts of April 27, 1816, 3 Stat. 310, c. 107, of
May 22, 1824, 4 Stat. 25, c. 123, May 19, 1828, 4 Stat. 270, c. 55,
July 14, 1832, 4 Stat. 583, c. 227, August 30, 1842, 5 Stat. 548,
c. 270, worsted stuff goods were recognized as manufactures of
wool.
By the Acts of July 30, 1846, 9 Stat. 92, c. 74, March 2, 1861,
12 Stat. 252, Res. 15, July 14, 1862, 12 Stat. 543, c. 163, June
30, 1864, 13 Stat. 202, c. 171, March 2, 1867, 14 Stat. 559, c.197,
March 3, 1883, 22 Stat. 488, c. 121, "manufactures of wool not
otherwise provided for" were separated from "manufactures of
worsteds not otherwise provided for," and distinct duties levied on
each, while from 1861 distinct duties were levied on articles
specifically described, whether manufactured of wool or
worsted.
In
Seeberger v. Cahn, 137 U. S. 95, it
was held that cloths popularly known as "diagonals," and in trade
as "worsteds," were subject to duty under the Act of March 3, 1883,
as manufactures of worsted, and not as manufactures of wool; the
ground of decision being thus stated by MR. JUSTICE GRAY delivering
the opinion of the Court:
"In the interpretation of the customs acts, nothing is better
settled than that words are to receive their commercial meaning,
and that, when goods of a particular kind, which would otherwise be
comprehended in a class, are subjected to a distinct rate of duty
from that imposed upon the class generally, they are taken out of
that class, for the purpose of the assessment of duties."
"Of the two successive paragraphs in the customs act of 1883,
upon which the parties respectively rely, the first imposes a
certain scale of duties on 'all manufactures of wool of every
description, made wholly or in part of wool, not specially
Page 169 U. S. 214
enumerated or provided for in this act,' and the second imposes
a lower scale of duties on 'all manufactures of every description,
composed wholly or in part of worsted. . . .'"
"Though worsted is doubtless a product of wool, and might in
some aspects be considered a manufacture of wool, yet, manufactures
of worsted being subjected by the second paragraph to different
duties from those imposed by the first paragraph on manufactures of
wool, it necessarily follows that a manufacture of worsted cannot
be considered as a manufacture of wool, within the meaning of this
statute."
This decision was announced November 17, 1890, but the
controversy had been pending for a long time in the courts, and on
May 9, 1890, an act was passed, "providing for the classification
of worsted cloths as woolens," by enacting
"that the Secretary of the Treasury be, and he hereby is,
authorized and directed to classify as woolen cloths all imports of
worsted cloth, whether known under the name of worsted cloth or
under the name of worsteds or diagonals or otherwise."
26 Stat. 105, c. 200.
And since that date no distinction for customs purposes between
woolens and worsteds has been recognized by Congress.
By the Act of October 1, 1890, the same duties were levied upon
worsted and woolen goods. Paragraphs 375 to 387 divided all wools,
hair of the camel, goat, alpaca, and other like animals, into three
classes, and levied certain duties on each class. Paragraphs 391 to
398 provided for certain duties on described articles, whether made
wholly or in part of "wool, worsted, the hair of the camel, goat,
alpaca, or other animals."
By the Act of August 27, 1894, wool was put on the free list
(paragraph 685), and the paragraphs of the Act of October 1, 1890,
classifying wools, and levying duties on the different classes,
were omitted. Paragraphs 280 to 286, inclusive, of Schedule K of
this act, prescribed duties on certain enumerated articles, whether
composed wholly or in part of wool, worsted, the hair of the camel,
goat, alpaca, or other animal.
There was no distinction made by either of these acts
between
Page 169 U. S. 215
manufactures of wool and manufactures of worsted, for the
purposes of duty, and the word "worsted" seems to have been used
out of abundant caution, and as conducive to greater certainty.
The Act of July 24, 1897, commonly known as the "Dingley Act,"
omits the repetition of the words "wool, worsted, hair of the
camel, goat, alpaca, and other animals," and uses the single word
"wool." Paragraph 383 provides:
"Whenever, in any schedule of this act, the word 'wool' is used
in connection with a manufactured article of which it is a
component material, it shall be held to include wool or hair of the
sheep, camel, goat, alpaca or other animal, whether manufactured by
the woolen, worsted, felt, or any other process."
30 Stat. 151, c. 11.
Manifestly the distinction on which the decision in
Seeberger v. Cahn turned was done away with by the acts of
October 1, 1890, and August 27, 1894, as well as by that of May 9,
1890, and there certainly is no imperative ground for its
reinstatement by technical construction.
The reason for the postponing of the taking effect of the
reduction of duties obviously had nothing to do with the process of
manufacture, but related to the material of which the goods were
composed, which material had been relieved from duty by paragraph
685 of the act.
Congress undoubtedly concluded hat the manufacturers of goods
from wool had laid in a large stock of material, which equitably
they should be allowed a reasonable time to work off, and that
there was probably on hand a large stock of goods, to dispose of
which reasonable time should be allowed, rather than that the large
dealers should be induced to bring in foreign goods at a cost which
involved ruinous competition, while at the same time the wool
growers ought to have their original market until they could adjust
themselves to the new condition of things.
The specific rate was compensatory, and, when stricken out, and
the duty on raw material abolished, a postponement was provided for
in order to avoid injustice.
But the reason for postponing the reduction on manufactures
Page 169 U. S. 216
of wool, which, on the face of the act, we think properly
imputable to Congress, is as applicable to worsted goods as to any
other goods fabricated from wool.
It will be perceived that the acts of 1890 and 1894 did not levy
a duty on "worsted dress goods,"
eo nomine, nor on worsted
dress goods by commercial designation, nor on worsted dress goods
as distinguished from woolen dress goods; but a duty on dress
goods, whether made of "wool, worsted, the hair of the camel, goat,
alpaca, or other animals." The description is addressed to the
quality and material of the goods, namely, women's and children's
dress goods, made of wool, worsted, etc.
The principle, then, that the special designation of an article
by its commercial meaning should prevail over general terms used in
the same or a later act, has no application.
In
Barber v. Schell, 107 U. S. 617, the
words "cotton laces, cotton insertings," etc., used in the act of
1846, were held to be designations of articles by special
description of quality and material, and the general provision of
1857, transferring to Schedule C "all manufactures composed wholly
of cotton, which are bleached, printed, or dyed," whereby a
different duty was imposed on such goods, was held to apply. Mr.
Justice Blatchford said,
"The designations qualified by the word 'cotton' in the act of
1846 are designations of articles by special description, as
contradistinguished from descriptions by a commercial name, or a
name of trade. They are designations of quality and material."
Cadwalader v. Zeh, 151 U. S. 171,
151 U. S.
178.
It is argued that the same reasoning which brings worsted goods
within the words "manufactures of wool" would also compel the
inclusion of goods composed of the hair of the camel and other
animals, confessedly not covered by the phrase.
Doubtless, wool, considered as the sheep's coat, might be said
to be the sheep's hair, and fleeces of the hair of the Angora goat,
the llama, the alpaca, and other like animals, might be called
their wool. In the Encyclopaedia Britannica (9th ed., vol. 24, p.
653), under the title of "Wool and Woolen Manufactures,"
Page 169 U. S. 217
it is said:
"Wool is a modified form of hair, distinguished by its slender,
soft, and wavy or curly structure, and by the highly imbricated or
serrated surface of its filaments. The numerous varieties of the
sheep are the most characteristic, as they are also by far the most
important, producers of wool, but the sheep is by no means the only
animal which yields wool employed for industrial purposes. The
alpaca and other allied fibers obtained from the alpaca and its
congeners in South America, the mohair yielded by the Angora goat,
and the soft, woolly hair of the camel, are all wools of much
industrial importance, while the most costly wool in the world is
that yielded by the Cashmere goat, of the Himalayan Mountains. At
what point, indeed, it can be said that an animal fiber ceases to
be hair, and becomes wool, it is impossible to determine, because
in every characteristic, the one class, by imperceptible
gradations, merges into the other, so that a continuous chain can
be formed from the finest and softest merino to the rigid bristles
of the wild boar."
G.A. 2834;
Lyon v. United States, 55 F. 964.
But the acts of 1890 and 1894, as well as prior tariff acts,
distinguished the wool of the sheep from the hair of the camel,
goat, and other like animals, as raw materials. And there is
nothing in this record from which to conclude that Congress felt
obliged to make concessions by way of alleviating the effect of the
act of 1894 on the production of the hair of the camel, the goat,
the alpaca, and so on, in this country, or on manufactures
thereof.
We think that the words "manufactures of wool," in paragraph
297, had relation to the raw material out of which the articles
were made, and that, as the material of worsted dress goods was
wool, such goods fell within the paragraph.
Judgment of the circuit court of appeals reversed. Judgment
of the circuit court also reversed, and the cause remanded to that
court, with a direction to affirm the decision of the Board of
General Appraisers.