United States v. Thomas Meadows & Co.

147 F. 757 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York | 1906

PLATT, District Judge.

The merchandise in suit consists of four exhibits. Exhibits A and C were invoiced as “Arctic and President Wafers,” respectively; Exhibits B and D as “Acorn and Philippine Biscuits,” respectively. The collector assessed them under Act July 24, 1897, c. 11, § 1, Schedule E, par. 212, 30 Stat. 168 [U. S. Comp. St 1901, p. 1647] at 50 per cent, ad valorem. The importers protested, and after a hearing, the Board of General Appraisers sustained the protest and placed them under section 6, 30 Stat. 205 [U. S. Comp. St. 1901, p. 1693], as unenumerated manufactured articles. The government seeks a review, and much additional testimony has been taken.

It is not an easy matter to draw an exact dividing line between candy and pastry. In early days an apothecary was called a confectionary or confectioner, because, he used sweets to disguise the nauseous taste of his medicines, and thus by analogy, wc have come to look upon the confectioner as the master of the art of making candy and confections. When the last tariff act: was passed the word confectionery had a rather broader meaning in England than in this country. The sugar waiers of neither country had, however, so attracted the attention of the Congress as to receive special recognition. They had been imported ever since the war in large quantities, and the proportion between the sweetened centers and the pastry envelopes had gradually changed in favor of the former, but they were always treated by the authorities and by the trade as products of the baker’s art until within the last year or two. There has been some effort of late in the trade to treat similar articles as confections, but even so interested a party as the National Biscuit Company has catalogued them under the general term of biscuits, and the merchandise in suit has been generally *758bought, sold, and listed in the wholesale trade as biscuits or crackers. The local interest has now become so -large and effective that an attempt is made to classify them, for tariff purposes, as a product of the confectioner’s art; and so the issue confronts us. Confections on the one hand, sweetened biscuits and sugar wafers on the other: Shall they all be classified as confectionery, or shall the latter two remain where they have long stood as products of the baker’s or pastr)' cook’s art?

In -both arts we cañ find considerable quantities of sweetening, and on the baker’s side may be instanced the sweet cookies of our childhood days. In one way, however, the line of demarcation is strongly emphasized. The confectioner uses practically no flour, and the baker always uses it; in varying quantities, it is true, but in every case to a substantial amount. As the sugary proportion increases in the baker’s art, the point will soon be reached where, if the flour shall be used at all, that use will be purely incidental. When its sole use shall be, as the government puts it, to form an envelope to contain a confectionery filler, it will be a mere trick, or subterfuge, to point out its presence. As I view the matter, that time has not yet arrived. The sweetened centers of the merchandise in suit would be disagreeable and nauseating without the disguise offered by the harmonious assimilation therewith of the pastry exterior. These reasons, as well as others, offer a satisfactory answer to the similitude contention put forward by the government. After the substantially uniform treatment by the trade and authorities for many years of merchandise very much like that in suit, though with possibly a trifle less sweetening, as products of the baker’s art, it would be, as I view the matter, judicial legislation to change the classification at this moment.

The decision of the Board of Appraisers is affirmed.

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