5 Ct. Cust. 322 | C.C.P.A. | 1914
delivered the opinion of the court:
Olive oil imported at the port of New York and classified by the collector of customs as “olive oil in tins containing less than 5 gallons each,” was assessed for duty at 50 cents per gallon under the provisions of that part of paragraph 38 of the tariff act of 19.09 which reads as follows:
38. Olive oil, * * * in * * * tins, or other packages, containing less than five gallons each, fifty cents per gallon.
The importers protested that the merchandise was olive oil not specially provided for and therefore dutiable at 40 cents per gallon under that part of said paragraph 38 which reads as follows:
38. Olive oil, not specially provided for in this section, forty cents per gallon; * * *.
At the hearing before the board the importers contended that the tins actually contained 5 gallons of oh, and that whether they did or not they must be so considered inasmuch as they were regarded and accepted by the trade as 5-gallon tins containing that quantity of oh. The witnesses produced by the importers in support of this contention testified in effect that the tins were known in the trade' as 5-gallon tins, and that they were bought, sold, labeled, advertised^ and represented to buyers as containing 5 gallons of off. Some of the witnesses testified that from time to time tests were made by them of the quantity of oil in the tins, but none of them, so far as is disclosed by the record, actually tested any of the tins which were made the subject of protest, and consequently none of them was in a position to say just what was the quantity of oil imported in such tins. The tests for quantity made by the importers of olive oils other than those imported were not made on the basis of the weight of a gallon of the particular oil tested, but on the flat basis of 7.56 pounds per
Inasmuch as the method pursued by the Government m determining the number of gallons contained in the tins was designed to secure an accurate result, and inasmuch as there was no evidence whatever produced by the importers showing that there was any error upon the part of the collector in ascertaining the -quantity of oil held by the tins of the several importations, we find ourselves unable to sustain the first finding of the board. It was of course wholly impracticable to open each tin and to measure the number of gallons which it contained by a gallon measure. Such a course would have caused serious, loss and would have necessitated the resealing of the tins, if not the repacking of the oil in new containers, a contingency which the collector was fully justified in avoiding if quantities might be ascertained by a method less prejudicial to the goods, especially if that method was sanctioned by the trade itself. As olive oils of the same brand had apparently the same specific gravity the collector was warranted in taking the weight of a single gallon of any brand as a basis for the determination of the quantity of oil in all tins of that brand. Some of the containers may have weighed more and some less than the sample container, but as the weight of the sample tins minus the oil appears to have been accurately taken, that weight for all tins of the same brand must be accepted in the absence of any showing to the contrary by the importers. We think, therefore, that the means adopted by the collector to ascertain the number of gallons per tin was designed to secure a correct result, and in this opinion we are confirmed by the fact that some of the importers testified that the weighing test was the method employed by them in ascertaining the number of gallons per tin. In making their test, however, the importers, instead of taking as the basis for their calculation the actual weight of a gallon of the brand to be tested, took 7.56 pounds as the weight per gallon of all olive oils, and to that must be attributed their difference with the collector as to the actual quantity of oil imported. In view of the fact that all olive oils are not of the
We find that on the basis of 7.56 pounds to the gallon, two sample tins out of the 15 examined reached 4.97 + gallons to the tin, three 4.96 + , two 4.95 + , one 4.94 + , two 4.93 + , one 4.91+ , one 4.89 + , and three 4.83 +. From this it is evident that even on the importers’ incorrect basis of calculation, none of the sample tins examined measured up to 5 gallons and that less than half of them came within 1 per cent of containing 5 gallons. Taking the actual weight of a gallon of oil of each brand as the basis of calculation, the more accurate method of ascertaining the contents of the tins without opening them, not one of the sample tins tested contained 4.95 gallons of oil.
The board found, however, that the tins were, commercially, speaking, 5-gallon tins, and from that it was deduced that the several importations were excluded from the operation of the last clause of paragraph 38. If we sustain that conclusion, we must sustain it either on the theory that the duty of 50 cents per gallon was laid on tins of less than 5 gallons capacity or on the theory that what constituted 5 gallons of olive oil might be determined by trade usage and-custom. We can not agree with either theory. Had paragraph 38 imposed a duty of 50 cents per gallon on tins of less capacity than 5 gallons, it is possible that evidence might have been properly given as to what was the commercial understanding of a 5-gallon tin. No such construction, however, can be placed on the paragraph and this court so declared in two cases, in which it was held that the duty of 50 cents per gallon was not laid by the paragraph upon tins of less than 5 gallons capacity, but on tins containing less than 5 gallons of oil. United States v. Palma (4 Ct. Cust. Appls., 140; T. D. 33412); United States v. Sprague, Warner et al. (4 Ct. Cust. Appls., 358; T. D. 33532). In other words, whether a duty of 40 cents a gallon or of 50 cents a gallon should attach to oil in tins must be determined by the quantity of oil contained in the tins and not by the size of the package. That brings us to the consideration of whether the expression “five gallons” used in the paragraph was intended by Congress to mean a trade 5 gallons or 5 gallons measured in accordance with official standards.
It is a matter of history that most of the weights and measures in common use in the United States are of English origin and in colonial times were the legally established weights and measures of this country. The colonies having accomplished their independence, the Congress Was authorized by the Constitution to “fix the standard of
The standards of weights and measures adopted and in use in the customhouses were so far recognized by the Congress that they were ordered to be sent to the governors of the States or such persons as they might appoint for the use of the States and “to the end that an uniform standard of weights and measures may be established throughout the United States.” (Joint resolution of June 14, 1836.)
Under these circumstances, we think there is no escaping the conclusion that the gallon for customs purposes was a vessel of 231 cubic inches capacity, and as appears from the official documents and records was the equivalent in volume of 8.33888220 pounds avordupois of water weighed at its maximum density at 30 inches and at a temperature of 62° F. (See “gallon,” Century Dictionary, and report of Hassler, supra.) That gallon having been recognized by Congress as a standard measure, and being in use in the customhouses of the United States at the time of the passage of the tariff act of 1909, it is evident, we think, that the term “gallon,” as used in the act, meant the quantity measured by a vessel of 231 cubic inches capacity and not a lesser quantity which the trade might accept as a gallon of some particular commodity.
But even if no standard gallon had been officially adopted for customs purposes, the evidence adduced by the importers wholly failed to establish the existence of a commercial gallon measure for olive oil different from that in general use for the measurement of
Reversed.