Plaintiff brought this action by protest pursuant to the terms of section 514 of the Tariff Act of 1930 (19 U.S.C. § 1514).
Certain machines known as Skardal stock preparators, and parts, were classified by the collector of customs as “Other stock treating parts for paper and pulp machinery,” pursuant to the provisions of paragraph 356 of the Tariff Act of 1930 (19 U.S.C. § 1001, par. 356), as modified by the trade agreement with Sweden, 68 Treas. Dec. 19, T.D. 47785, or the Sixth Protocol of Supplementary Concessions to the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade, 91 Treas. Dec. ISO, T.D. 54108, and duty was imposed thereon at the rate of 20 per centum, 19 per centum, 18 per centum, or 17 per centum ad.valorem, depending upon the date of entry.
The various parts to which the entries relate are described in the stipulation referred to, infra, with English translations, as one set of stators and rotors, Slapas (shoes), Malrings (cylinders), Rotomavs (spiders), Mellanvagg (separator), Axel (shaft), Ring (spacer), Lagerlock (bearing housing cap), Lasbricka (lockwasher), and Lasmutter (locknut).
Plaintiff concedes that the classification of the Slapas, Malrings, and Rotomavs in entry 22483 and the 18 Slapas and 7 Malrings in entry 10859, as well as the 5 Malrings in entry 5694, were properly classified.
As to the Skardal stock preparators and merchandise other than that specified in the above concession, plaintiff contends that the proper classification should be as “machines for making paper or paper pulp” or parts thereof, as provided in paragraph 372 of said act (19 U.S.C. § 1001, par. 372), as modified by the Torquay Protocol to the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade, 86 Treas. Dec. 121, T.D. 52739, and subjected to duty at the rate of 10 per centum ad valorem, or by the sixth protocol, sufra, which provides duty at the rate of 9% per centum, 9 per centum, or 8y2 per centum ad valorem, according to the date of entry.
The pertinent text of the statutes involved is here set forth.
Paragraph 356 of the Tariff Act of 1930:
Planing-machine knives, tannery and leather knives, tobacco knives, paper and pulp mill knives, roll bars, bed plates, and all other stock-treating parts for pulp and paper machinery, * * * meat-slicing cutters, * * * 20 per centum ad valorem.
*67Paragraph 356 of said act, as modified by the trade agreement with Sweden, supra:
Planing-machine knives, tannery and leather knives, tobacco knives, paper and pulp mill knives, roll bars, bed plates, and all other stock treating parts for pulp and paper machinery, * * * meat-slicing cutters, * * *_20% ad val.
Note. — The existing customs classification treatment of articles not more specifically provided for than in paragraph 356 or in the last clause of the first sentence of paragraph 352, Tariff Act of 1930, and described in both such provisions of law, as being more specifically provided for in paragraph 356, in accordance with the decision of the United States Customs Court published as Abstract 23625 ( 63 Treas. Dec. 1417), shall be continued during the effective period of this Agreement.
Paragraph 356 of said act, as modified by the sixth protocol, supra:
Roll bars, bed plates, and all other stock-treating parts for pulp and paper machinery (not including paper or pulp
mill knives)- 19% ad val. 18% ad val. 17% ad val.
Paragraph 372 of the Tariff Act of 1930, as modified by the Torquay Protocol to the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade, supra:
Machines, finished or unfinished, not specially provided for:
Calculating machines * * *
*******
Machines for making paper pulp or paper_10% ad val.
*******
Paragraph 372 of said act, as modified by the sixth protocol, supra:
Machines, finished or unfinished, not specially provided for:
Adding machines * * *
******* Combination candy cutting and wrapping machines; machines for making paper or paper pulp; * * 9% % ad val. 9% ad val. 8%% ad val.
*******
At the trial, the case was submitted for decision upon a written stipulation of fact, the testimony of two qualified witnesses, called by plaintiff, illustrative exhibits 1 and 2 (schematic drawings), and exhibit 3, a book entitled “Modem Pulp and Paper Making,” 3d edition, 1957, by George S. Witham, Sr., revised by John B. Calkin.
It appears from the stipulation that the so-called Skardal stock preparator, which is illustrated in exhibits A, B, and C, attached to the stipulation, “is an integrated mechanical complex lacking only motive power from an outside source in order to perform the function for which it is designed, namely, the refining of paper slurry from virgin stock, waste paper, etc., by means of a grinding or grating-action.”
The stipulation further provides that the machine performs a refining process in three stages, characterized by the fact that drill holes *68in th.e shoes and cylinders are smaller in the second stage than in the first stage and still smaller in the third stage than in the second. Depending upon the stock to be treated and the end result desired, cylinders and shoes with larger or smaller perforations may be substituted, and the working angle between the shoes and cylinders modified by the substitution of spiders of varying dimensions.
Paragraph 7 of the stipulation describes the functions of the machine in the following terms:
* * * The stock enters through the inlet port into the first stage where it is beaten and ground between the rotating shoes and inner surface of the stationary cylinder until it has been sufficiently refined to pass through the perforations in the cylinder (See Exhibit B). It then flows into the second stage where the same process is repeated, the slurry 'becoming further beaten and ground and thus refined. It then passes through the perforations in the second cylinder into the third stage and after further beating and grinding leaves the machine through the perforations in the third cylinder and then the exhaust port. The function performed by the machine is the refinement of the stock fed to the machine, the process involved being that of making the fibres of the paper slurry shorter and finer by beating and grinding.
Plaintiff’s first witness, George L. Nelson, a 'highly trained and experienced mechanical engineer, and who was well informed in the business of pulp and paper manufacture, testified at length with regard to the nature and functioning of machinery employed in the conversion of raw material or stock, such as logs, or waste paper into pulp and paper. His testimony corroborates the recital of facts set forth in the stipulation in greater detail.
Through the witness Nelson, plaintiff’s illustrative exhibit 1, described as a “Typical Kraft Pulp Flow Diagram Screens & Refiner before Washers,” and illustrative exhibit 2, a flow diagram, illustrating the use of the Skardal preparator, “as used in Making of Paper Pulp at Chesapeake Corp., West Point, Va.,” were received in evidence.
Illustrative exhibit 1 is a graphic picture of the testimony of Nelson who, in response to the question on direct examination to “* * * describe the whole process, of which the Skardal plays a part on this particular chart,” stated—
This is called a typical graph [sic] pulp-flow diagram. There are an infinite number of variations, but as shown here wood logs, generally four feet in length, arrive at the pulp mill, and the first part of the process is to go through a barking drum, which resembles a tumbler, to remove the 'bark. These logs are then washed and are then made into chips by a very powerful set of rotating knives. These chips are then conveyed to a digester into which are added chemicals and steam pressure where cooking takes place. This is a batch process, generally, in the digester, and flows from the digester into what is commonly called a blow tank. Prom the blow tank the first separation is made as shown here in this example by the Jonsson Screen. The Jonsson Screen separates the — it’s a coarse separation, separates knots, uncooked chips, slabs, and the like, from the usual run of pulp. Following along, then, the deknotted pulp, the pulp from which the *69knots have been removed — this pulp enters a fine screen where a final separation is made on the basis of size. Then this screened pulp enters, generally, really a three or four-stage washer system, from which the cooking liquors are removed. And then the washed pulp is generally sent to a storage chest from which it later goes to the paper mill for the manufacture of paper. Now, the separation which has been obtained in both the Jonsson Screen, as here noted, and the fine screen can be, as shown in this diagram, sent to a Skardal Preparator where it is reduced in size through the use of power, and again, as shown in this diagram, be returned to the system at the blow tank. Then from the blow tank it goes through the remaining screens that I have already described. It will be refined so that the pieces which have not been reduced enough in the Skardal once again would be sent through.
When asked at what point the material becomes pulp, the witness replied—
Well, the final product in the storage chest. I would consider this is the output of the pulp mill. I would say that the pulp is now in condition for further use when it reaches the storage chest.
The Jonsson screen, identified on illustrative exhibit 1 and referred to in Nelson’s testimony, is not involved in this case but is the subject of decision in a companion case decided concurrently herewith. Bird Machine Company v. United States (protests 61/10981, etc.), 49 Cust. Ct. 81, C.D. 2363.
It was agreed between adversary counsel that plaintiff’s second witness, Sven Fahlgren, also a well-informed and experienced technical advisor, would give substantially the same testimony as was given by Nelson.
As stated earlier in this opinion, it is agreed between the parties that the Skardal stock preparator “* * * is an integrated mechanical complex lacking only motive power from an outside source in order to perform the function for which it is designed, namely, the refining of paper slurry from virgin stock, waste paper, etc., by means of a grinding or grating action.” Furthermore, “* * * the machine consists of a series of three perforated cylinders against each of which the stock is ground or beaten by three perforated shoes. The other parts are the base, housing, inlet and exhaust ports, shaft, spiders to which the shoes are connected, sheave for belt for transmission of power from an outside source, and miscellaneous smaller parts.”
With the material facts of the case not in dispute, the issue before us resolves itself into a question of law — Is the Skardal stock preparator, together with other articles accompanying it in the importation, properly classifiable as “stock treating parts for paper and pulp machinery” or as “machines for making paper or paper pulp” or parts thereof ?
At the opening of the trial, plaintiff stated that the basic question involved herein is whether the Skardal stock preparator briefly described as a machine “* * * for taking material and refining it, that *70is in the sense of making fiber smaller and more usable so that they may be used later on in the process of making paper pulp or in making paper, is a machine” for making paper pulp, as distinguished from paper. Furthermore, plaintiff contended, in substance, that since the Skardal is a machine it cannot be part of machinery, within the purview of paragraph 356.
It is the considered opinion of the court that the word “parts” in the phrase “stock treating parts for paper and pulp machinery” is employed in the tariff sense of the word that a “part” of an article is an integral, constituent, or component part thereof, something necessary to the completion of and without which the completed machinery could not function. United States v. Willoughby Camera Stores,Inc. (1933),21 C.C.P.A. (Customs) 322, T.D. 46851.
The language in paragraph 356, with which we are concerned, is readily susceptible to the meaning that it embraces not only stock treating elements or parts but as well machines which operate together or in sequence in the process of treating stock for pulp and paper machinery.
An examination of the tariff structure leads to the conclusion that Congress used the terms “machines” and “machinery” with different connotations. Paragraph 372 is a striking example. Not only do we find several “machines” specifically enumerated, but the same paragraph also enumerates printing machinery, bookbinding machinery, paper-box machinery, and textile machinery. Paragraph 1643 of the free list provides for certain machines and also for shoe machinery. It would seem to be a matter of common knowledge that shoe machinery, printing machinery, textile machinery, and pulp and paper machinery are of a kind which are large and cumbersome and are composed of a variety of machines and accessories properly integrated to make up what is indicated by the term “machinery.” As was properly stated in plaintiff’s brief—
* * * there is no such thing as one “machine” for making paper pulp or paper in the sense of a single machine designed or sold to perform all the functions necessary for the conversion of virgin or waste stock into paper pulp or paper. * * * The use of many and various separate machines in the pulp-making process, in which the Skardal may or may not play a part, was described by the expert witness for the plaintiff. * * * [referring to the testimony of the witness Nelson] As was brought out in the testimony * * * in the group of machines making paper pulp no particular machine can be more truly said to be a machine for making paper pulp than any other machine.
Further, the brief recites—
* * * Paper pulp is produced by a combination of different machines which are variously arranged and employed. * * *
It is those integrated machines and accessories which are undoubtedly contemplated by the provision for stock treating parts for pulp and paper machinery.
*71As stated by this court in John V. Carr & Son, Inc., and A. W. Fenton Co., Inc. v. United States, 40 Cust. Ct. 292, C.D. 1996, wherein the question in issue was whether mechanisms for automatically feeding sheets of paper into printing presses should be classified as machines or as printing machinery in paragraph 372:
* * * Implicit in the definition of machinery is an aggregate of means and appliances to accomplish an overall purpose, and every device which promotes that purpose is a part of the entire machinery.
The briefs of adversary parties invite consideration of the following four cases in which the provisions of paragraph 356 were involved:
California Fruit Wrapping Mills (Inc.) v. United States (1932), 19 C.C.P.A. (Customs) 381, T.D. 45513.
E. Dillingham (Inc.) v. United States (1930), 58 Treas. Dec. 329, T.D. 44281.
E. Dillingham, Inc. v. United States (1933), 63 Treas. Dec. 1510, Abstract 24027.
American Voith Contact Co., Inc. v. United States (1933), 64 Treas. Dec. 1070, Abstract 25958.
The Galifornia case, supra, concerned the classification of what are known as Fourdrinier-wire screens. It appears from the opinion, in that case, that said screens are endless and travel on rollers and are used to carry the prepared paper stock, in film form, from its receptacle, known as the head box, “* * * to the felt, which in turn passes it between the rollers of the paper machine for several squeezings.”
The court was of the opinion that the words “stock-treating parts” in paragraph 356 of the Tariff Act of 1922, which is in identical terms with said paragraph in the act of 1930, had reference to the treatment of paper and pulp material before it reached the stage of entering upon the wire screens and was related to parts “* * * which perform, or assist in performing, the functions of cutting, grinding, beating, or similar functions.” In conclusion, the court held that the Fourdrinier-wire screens did not perform such functions and, inasmuch as they served to manufacture paper from finished stock, they could not properly be held to be “stock-treating parts for pulp and paper machinery.”
In the course of its opinion, the court stated—
We agree with the lower court that the screens here involved are not ejusdem generis with the articles designated in said paragraph 356. * * *
It is of interest here to recall what the lower court said with reference to the rule of ejusdem generis in the Galifornia case.
A reading of the opinion of. the lower court (59 Treas. Dec. 981, T.D. 44841) discloses that the court there referred to ejusdem generis only after it had found that the function of the Fourdrinier-wire screen pertained to the manufacture or conversion of finished stock *72into either pulpboard or paper and that the elimination of water from the finished stock by the Fourdrinier-wire screen could not “in any sense be considered a further treatment of the [raw] stock itself.” The court thus concluded that the Fourdrinier-wire screen was not a stock treating part. It is clear, therefore, that the trial court did not apply the rule of ejusdem, generis in order to arrive at its determination of the case, and.such references which were made to the rule would seem to be in the nature of dicta.
The first Dillingham, case, supra, involved the classification of certain cast-iron grinders which were used to convert woodstock into woodpulp through a grinding process and were held to be properly classifiable as “stock-treating parts for pulp and paper machinery” in paragraph 356 of the Tariff Act of 1922.
The second Dillingham case, above referred to, related to a machine known as a “K.W.M. Refiner” which the opinion stated was used to “* * * regrind and refine pulp stock which has passed through the ordinary grinders but which is too coarse to pass through the screens for paper making, and that after passing through the refiner the stock is returned to the ‘bull screen’ which is the first stage of the paper-making process.” The claim of plaintiff therein that said machine should be classified within the provision of paragraph 356 of the Tariff Act of 1922 as “all other stock-treating parts for pulp and paper machinery” was sustained, citing both the Dillingham and California cases, supra.
In the American Voith case, supra, the published abstract decision indicates that certain machines equipped with knives which “cut up, tear, and mascerate paper mixed with water, reducing it to pulp,” were classifiable as “stock-treating parts for pulp and paper machinery” in paragraph 356 of the Tariff Act of 1930. The California case was cited and followed.
It is significant that all of the four cases above cited were decided prior to the proclamation of the Torquay protocol, supra, wherein paragraph 372 was modified so as to provide for “machines for making paper pulp or paper.” Knowledge of those decisions and their import must be imputed to the negotiators at the time the trade agreement was drafted and made effective.
The fact that the Skardal stock preparator “is an integrated mechanical complex” consisting of “a series of three perforated cylinders against each of which the stock is ground or beaten by three perforated shoes” clearly brings it within the principle of the second of the Dillingham cases relating to the “K.W.M. Refiner” as “stock-treating parts for pulp and paper machinery.” The mere fact that the Skardal stock preparator may be a machine in itself would seem to be *73of no consequence, in view of tbe broad meaning we have ascribed to the word “parts” in the provision for stock treating parts for pulp and paper machinery in paragraph 356.
Upon the facts of record and for the reasons stated, we find and hold that the Skardal stock preparator was properly classified within the provision for “stock-treating parts for pulp and paper machinery” in said paragraph 356.
The court is of the opinion that the word “parts,” as used in the phrase “stock-treating parts for pulp and paper machinery” in paragraph 356 includes not only the Skardal stock preparator but also the other accessories in controversy, there being no proof to the contrary.
The protest is, therefore, overruled and judgment will issue accordingly.