10()
sEPoRTER,vol. 62.
ground tbat, wbile paragraph 116 in ter:m.s covers looking-glass plates,_ p!:lragraph 118 does not refer to them.' The evidence shows that;the glasses in question are used for making looking glasses. It is not denied that they are "cast polished plate glass," and there is no evidence that such glasses are commercially known as "looking' glass plates." As congreSs has recognized ''looking glass plates" as di-sdnctfrom "cast polished plate glass silvered," and as the articles in question are clearly embraced within the latter class, the> decision of the board of general appraisers is affirmed. In re IRWIN et aI. (Circuit Court, S. D. New York. June 22, 1894.) 1. CUSTOMS DUTIES-BAUXITE-AI.UMIKA.
white powder known to the trade as "l'efined bauxite," which is· manufactured from bauxite by removing from the crude ore the impurities of iron, silica, and titanic acid, is not bauxite, within the meaning of paragraph 501 of the free list of the tariff of October 1, 1890.
2. SAME.
The white powder known to the trade as "refined bl!-uxIte" or "hydrate of alumina" is made by heating in a furnace a mixture of crude baUXite, groundfi1}e,and soda ash, until the carbonic acid of the latter is expelled. Tbe l1lixture is then cooled and treated. with water, which dissolves the resulting aluminate of soda, leaving behind the sillca, iron, and titanic acid Of the bauxite; and the sOlution Is treated with gaseous carbonic acid. which converts the soda into a carbonate, and allows the precipjtation of the alumina. From this precipitate, when washed and dried, results the pOWder question. Held. tllat this is alumina. within the meaning of paragraph 9 of the tariff act of October 1, 1890, and is dutiable as such at six-tenths of a cent a pound.
was. a protest by Thomas Jrwin & Sons, before the United S:tates board of appraisers, against the decision of the co} lector as to the rate of duty to be paid on certain imported merchandise. The board sustained the contention of the importer, and the collectOl'appeals. James T. Van Renssell1.er, Asst. U. S. Atty., for collector. Stephen G. Clarke and Henry A. Wyman, for importers. COXE, District Judge. Tbe collector classified the merchandise· in question under paragrapb 9 of the act of October 1, 1890, which is as follows: "Alumina,' 'alum, alum cake, patent alum, sulphate of alumina, and aluminous cake, and alum in. crystals or ground. six-tenths of one cent per pound."
The importers protested, insisting that it should have been admitted free under paragraph 501 of the free list as "Bauxite, or beauxite." 'l'be board found the following facts: "First. The merchandise under consideration is a white mineral powder, resembling alum in appearance. second. It is, chemically considered, hydrate of alumina, or alumina and water combined. Third. It Is known and dealt with in trade under the name of 'refined bauxite,' and dif· fers from Cl'Ude bauxite only in the fact that it has gone through a process of manufacture by which the impurities ot ,ron and silica. have been mechanically removed trom.the crude article. Fourth. It is used for the same pur-··
IN BE IRWIN.
151
pose as the crude bauxite, namely, for the manufacture of alum or aluml· nous product, such as the sulphate of alumina or alum cake. Fifth. We fur· ther find that the article is relined b'auxite, which is nothing more than crude bauxite, with the impurities of iron and silica removed, without affecting the chemical composition of the article or its chief utility. There are sam· pIes of this mineral found in nature which are about as free from impurities as the refined article, and a trihydrate may be reduced through the application to a dihydrate by an expulsion of an eqUivalent of water."
The protests were sustained and the decision of the collector was reversed. Subsequently the collector took additional testimony in this court. The question then is, is the imported mer'chandise bauxite? The testimony seems very clear that the word bauxite means, and prior to October 1, 1890, meant, when used commercially, the crude mineral, and the weight of testimony is to the effect that it meant only that. The word bauxite alone would not describe the imported merchandise. That word alone, when used in trade, indicated the crude ore, which, when taken from the mine, resembles lumps of coarse earth or clay, and contains iron, silica, titanic acid, besides other substances. When business men spoke of bauxite they meant this substance, and not the manufactured white powder free from iron, sand and titanic acid. No business man would have thought of filling an order for bauxite with the imported article. Again, taking into consideration the testimony in this court, it is thought that the proposition that the article in question is not bauxite when considered from a chemical point of view is also sustained by a preponderance of testimony. The article imported is known as "hydrate of alumina" or pure alumina. Its analysis is as follows: Aluminium oxide, Al 2 0 a, 65.05 per cent. Silica, Si0 2 , 1.8.0 " " Carbonate of soda, 3.60"" Water, balance, 29.55 " " The processes, called the "wet" and "dry," by which it is manufactured are very complicated, requiring chemical knowledge and skill. When the latter process is used the crude ore is ground very fine, and, generally, it is bolted. It is then mixed with, at least, a small quantity in weight of soda ash, and the mhture is put in a furnace and heated to a bright red heat until all the carbonic acid of the soda ash is expelled. When this stage is reached it is with· drawn from the furnace and left to cool. After cooling it is put in a leaching apparatus and treated with water, which will dissolve the alumina in it as an aluminate of soda, and leave behind the greater part of the silica, all of the iron and all of the titanic acid. The mixture, then in liquid form, is placed in large cylinders with paddles in them to keep it in motion. The gaseous carbonic acid is introduced into this liquid through a pipe, and when the soda is converted into a carbonate of soda, all of the alumina will fall out as a powder in a wet state. The carbonate of soda is withdrawn, the powder is washed several times and dried, and the result is the hydrate of alumina in question. The original water of combination is entirely expelled by the roasting process and a new water of com·
152
FEDERA,L REPORTER,
vol. 62.
bination added. The product is a new chemical combination from which the silica of the crude bauxite has been nearly expelled, the ferrouspxides and titanic acid entirely expelled and 3.60 per cent. of carbonate of soda added. The product of this elaborate process is worth eight or nine times as much as the crude bauxite. To refer to the manufactured article as being either chemically or commercially the same as the coarse clay from which it is made is an inaccurate use of language. As well might one allude to flour or bread as being the same thing as wheat because they are made of wheat. Bauxite is the name used to designate the ore as it comes from the mine. This is 'conceded on all hands. That it means anything else is doubtful; that it includes such a product as the hydrate of alumina in question is disproved by a preponderance of evidence. It must be assumed that congress used the word in its commercial sense as it was known in the market, as it was understood in trade by importers and large dealers, at the date of the tariff act. When this meaning is ascertained it must control without regard to the scientific designation of the ,article, the material of which it is made or the use to which it may be put. Twine Co. v. Worthington, 141 U. S. 468, 12 Sup. Ct. 55; Arthur's Ex'rs v. Butterfield, 125 U. S. 70, 75, 8 Sup. Ct. 714; Robertson v. Salomon, 130 U. S. 412, 9 Sup. Ct. 559. It is not important to consider how it was known in the laboratory, but even if its chemical nomenclature should be considered it would not, as before stated, aid the importers. The court is of the opinion that the new evidence establishes the follOWing propositions with sufficientcleamess: First. The merchandise in question has never been known as bauxite commer· cially, chemically or in common parlance. It is not bauxite. Second. It is a manufactured article, the product of an elaborate and difficult process which radically changes its nature so that it has lost all but one of the ingredients found in the original ore and has added an ingredient never found there. In short, it is changed into a new and different article having a distinctive name, character and use. Hartranft v. Weigmann, 121 U. S. 609, 7 Sup. Ct. 1240; U.S. v. Semmel', 41 Fed. 324; Erhardt v. Hahn, 5 C. C. A. 99, 55 Fed.,273. If additional argument were needed to sustain this view of the legislative intent, it will be found by a comparison of the imported merchandise with the articles mentioned in paragraph 9. These articles may all be produced from the mineral bauxite. Many of them are much nearer to crude bauxite than the imported' hydrate of alumina. Can it,be that intended to levy, a duty on "aluminous cake" and permit the merchandise here involved to enter duty ,free? Aluminous cake is the crude mineral simply treated with acid. It contains all the undesirable ingredientsof ,bauxite, namely, iron, silica and titanic acid." Aluminous cake pays duty, but this much more finished prOduct, under the impQ'.trteri'l', construction of the statute, escapes by hiding behind the of bauxite. It is thought not only that congress did not intend to admit it free, but did intend to levy duty upon it under ,the name of alumina. It fonows that the decision of the board should be reversed and that of the collector affirmed.
VARINE tl. LYON.
153
MARINE, Collector, v. LYON et at {Circuit Court of Appeals. Fourth Circuit May 22, lSM.J No.70.
1.
ApPEALS-TIME OF TAKING-CUSTOMS DUTIES CASES.
The provision of the act 01 June 10, 1890, requiring appeals In customs cases to be filed within 30 days from the date of the decision, applies only to appeals from the board of appraisers and to the rulings of the circuit CQurt thereon. It does not apply to a decree 01 the circuit court upon a question of costs and interest made after a reversal of a former decree in the circuit court of appeals and a remand of the cause. An appeal from such a decree is governed by the general rule. Costs do not go, as a matter of common right, with a judgment agaInst the government; and a party suing the United States cannot recover costs unless he shows by the act under which he sues that the United States has consented to pay costs. In. cases appealed from the board of general appraisers, under the act of June 10, 1890, neither the costs of the circuit court, nor the costs of & subsequent appeal to the circuit court of appeals, are recoverable aga.Inst the United States.
I.
COSTS-WHEN RECOVERABLE AGAINST THE UNITED STATES.
8.
SAMll:"""-CUSTOMS DUTIES CASES.
.. INTEREST IN CUSTOMS DUTIES CASES.
In cases appealed from the board of general appraisers, under the act of June 10, 1890, interest is not allowable In favor of the importer, for the suit is practically one against the United States. U. S. v. Sherman, 98 U. S. 567, followed.
Appeal from the Circuit Court of the United States for the District of Maryland. This Is an appeal from a decree 01 the circuit court of the United States fo," the district of Maryland dismissing the petition of the United States that the judgment In the principal cause be reformed so as to exclude interest and costs. Lyon, Hall & Co., importers, having been dbsatisfied with the rulings of the collector of the port of Baltimore, appealed from him to the board of general appraisers, under the provisions 01 the act to simplify the laws In relation to the collection 01 taxes, approved 10th June, 1890 (26 Stat 131). The board reversed the ruling of the collector, and thereupon, under the fifteenth section of the act, application was made to the circuit court of the United States for the district of Maryland for a review of the questions 01 law and fact involved in their decision. The court affirmed the ruling of the board of general appraisers, but, on appeal to this court, the decree of the circuit court was reversed. 5 O. C. A. 359, 55 Fed. 964. No provision was made in the body of the mandate 01 this court as to the costs of appeal. This was explained by a footnote of the clerk, stating: "No costs. See section 4, rule 31." 1C. O. A. xxiil., 47 Fed. xlv. This rule provides that no costs shall be allowed in this court for or against the United States; and It also provides that, when costs are allowed In this court, it is the duty of the clerk to insert the amount thereof in the body of the mandate or other proper process sent to the court below. and annex to the same the bill of Items taxed In detaIl. When the mandate reached the court below, that court, on 28th June, 1893, entered an order following the mandate, in so far as it reversed the former decision, and then proceeded as follows: "And it Is further ordered, adjudged, and decreed that the appellants, Lyon, Hall & 00., have judgment against the appellee, William M. Marine, collector 01 the port of Baltimore, in the sum of three hundred and sixty-six dollars and twenty-four cents, paid in excess of proper legal duties upon said importation, together with their costs expended in this behalf, to be taxed by the clerk, and Interest thereon from October 26, 1891, until paid. The judgment entry Is for $366.24, interest from October 26, 1891. The costs are taxed as follows: Plaintiffs' costs in circuit court paid by them ................·· $ 6746 Plaintiffs' costs In U. S. circuit court of appeals paid by them... 104 95 $17241"