United States v. Hori Bros.

Graham, Presiding Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

The appellee imported, at the port of Los Angeles, certain articles entered as toys. These were classified by the collector as toys, undel the following provision in paragraph 1414, Tariff Act of 1922:

Par. 1414. * * * all other toys, and parts of toys, not composed of china, porcelain, parían, bisque, earthen or stone ware, and not specially provided for, 70 per centum ad valorem.

The importer protested, claiming them to be dutiable as swords, under paragraph 363 of said act, which is as follows:

Par. 363. Sword blades, and swords and side arms, irrespective of quality or use, wholly or in part of metal, 50 per centum ad valorem.

There were alternative claims under paragraphs 1469 and 1460 of said act.

On the hearing below but one witness was called, M. M. Mullin, the appraiser at the port. He testified that the merchandise consisted of 200 pieces of toy Japanese swords, made of metal. Counsel for the protestant then made the following concession:

I will concede that they are used by children in play. •

The case was submitted on this record. The report of the appraiser to the collector was not offered in evidence. There is no sample in the case.

On this record the court below sustained the protest and held the goods to be dutiable under said paragraph 363 as swords. From the resulting judgment the- Government has appealed and now insists that the court below committed error in not holding the goods to be toys.

We cannot so find on this record. This court has no knowledge of the size, character, or material of the imported articles, except to know that they are swords, made of metal, and that they are used by children in play. What other use is or may be made of them is not disclosed by the record.

In 1907, under the Tariff Act of July 24, 1897, certain so-called bone swords were imported and were classified under paragraph 154 of said act, which paragraph reads as follows:

154. Swords, sword-blades, and side arms, thirty-five per centum ad valorem.

They were claimed to be dutiable as manufactures of bone, it being contended that the said paragraph ought to be construed as extending only to weapons of offense and defense. The Board of General Appraisers held them to be swords, commenting on the fact that they were exactly the size and shape of swords and side arms *110used in warfare and that their use as ornaments did not make them any the less swords. T. D. 28229, 13 Treas. Dec. 750.

That case went, on appeal, to the Circuit Court of the Southern District of New York. Morimura Bros. v. United States, 165 Fed. 64. The court there held:

These articles are curios, and are used as ornaments or for purposes of decoration. The evidence shows they are known as “bone swords” to distinguish them from regular swords. I do not think, they are the swords which Congress had in mind when it enacted paragraph 154. .

When the Congress took up for discussion the bill which afterwards became the Tariff Act of August 5, 1909, the Morimura case, supra, was duly brought to the attention of the Ways and Means Committee by the Notes on Tariff Revision, prepared under the direction of the clerk of the committee, Sixtieth Congress, second session, Doc. No. 1503, page 197, in the following language:

Comments and suggestions. — This decision does violence to a cardinal principle of tariff construction, namely, that a specific designation of an article by its individual name governs its classification, to the exclusion of all considerations of use, component materials, similitude, etc. Of course, it is not urged that.a piece of paper, for instance, cut into the shape of a sword should be classified as a sword, but the articles subject of this decision are in truth and fact swords and the circumstances that they are to be used as decorations is of no weight, for that is practically the only use to which swords are put to nowadays outside of military or semimilitary organizations. The case presents an instance of judicial legislation.

Thereupon, the Congress inserted the language, “irrespective of quality or use,” into the paragraph, which has since been retained. (Italics ours.)

Very plainly, the intent of the Congress was to obviate any further judgments such as the one arrived at in the Morimura case. To accomplish this, the Congress, in effect, provided that it mattered not how good or how bad the sword or side arm might be, or how it might be used, if it was a sword or side arm at all, it was embraced within this paragraph.

This being true, it will be at once apparent that it is entirely immaterial how the articles of importation here are used. An article, to be a toy, under the' provision, “all other toys,” in said paragraph 1414, must be such because of its use. Illfelder v. United States, 1 Ct. Cust. Appls. 109, T. D. 31115. If the use is made immaterial by statute, then it follows that swords can not be taken out of the sword paragraph and put into the toy paragraph because of their use.

There is nothing in the case of United States v. China & Japan Trading Co., 71 Fed. 864, which conflicts with this conclusion. In that case it was sought to put certain articles into a classification as “umbrellas,, parasols and sunshades,” which the court found, by inspection, were not, in fact, umbrellas, parasols and sunshades. *111That is quite different from the case at bar, where all the facts appearing of record show that the imported articles are swords.

It should not be understood that this court is here holding that any article which may be denominated a sword or side arm is, perforce, to be so classified. The question as to the real character of an article is always open to investigation, and subject to proof.

The judgment of the United States Customs Court is affirmed.