Arditi v. United States

48 Cust. Ct. 696
CourtUnited States Customs Court
DecidedFebruary 15, 1962
DocketA.R.D. 141; Entry No. 900
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 48 Cust. Ct. 696 (Arditi v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Customs Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Arditi v. United States, 48 Cust. Ct. 696 (cusc 1962).

Opinion

Mollison, Judge:

This is an application for review of the decision and judgment of a judge of this court, sitting in reappraisement. The merchandise involved is Argentine canned corned beef, packed in 12-ounce tins, 48 tins to the case, imported from Peru, in May 1952.

[697]*697The merchandise was entered on the basis of export value, as defined in section 402(d), Tariff Act of 1930, as it existed prior to the amendment thereof by the Customs Simplification Act of 1956, at United States $10.54 per case, net, packed. It was appraised, on the basis of foreign value, as defined in section 402 (c) of the said act, as amended, at 240 Peruvian soles per case, net, packed.

On the trial of the issue below, the then counsel for the plaintiff conceded that the proper basis of value was foreign value, but contended that the correct value was 120 soles per case, net, packed, and this is substantially the position taken by the appellant before this court.

At the trial of the issue in the court below, the appellant herein gave testimony as a witness in his own behalf, and five affidavits offered by the plaintiff were received in evidence. On motion of the defendant, the record in the case of I. Arditi v. United States, the decision in which is reported in 37 Oust. Ct. at page 466, Eeap. Dec. 8610, was received in evidence without objection.

The court below found, after carefully reviewing the record, that the plaintiff had not overcome the presumption of correctness which attaches to the appraised value (28 U.S.C. § 2633) and had failed to prove the claimed value of 120 soles per case. In addition, the court found that the weight of the evidence confirmed the appraised value.

It appears to be undisputed that, at or about the time of exportation of the merchandise at bar, an agreement or convention concerning trade, currency, and cultural relations existed between the Eepublics of Argentina and Peru, as a result of which the sale to buyers in Peru of Argentine canned corned beef was facilitated. It also appears that the seller of the merchandise at bar, a firm named Mercantil del Pacifico, S.A., Lima, acquired and offered for sale in Peru, either for home consumption or for exportation, approximately 12,000 cases of the commodity, of which the present importation, consisting of 6,522 cases, was a part. Further, that other firms in Peru offered such or similar merchandise for sale for home consumption or exportation, but it does not appear that any of the other firms were offering quantities as great as those which Mercantil del Pacifico had available.

As a matter of fact, the evidence offered by the plaintiff below establishes that the Peruvian market could not absorb for home consumption, more than 1,000 cases of such or similar canned corned beef per anmrni. In other words, the evidence establishes that there was a market in Peru for home consumption of canned corned beef such as or similar to that at bar, but it was a comparatively small one.

As supporting the price of 120 soles per case, appellant refers to the affidavits of Gustavo Eguren (plaintiff’s exhibit 1), Jose Olcese (plaintiff’s exhibits 2 and 3), and Edgardo Otten (plaintiff’s exhibit [698]*6984). The affidavit of Jose Dacal Perez (plaintiff’s exhibit 5) was offered to counter or explain statements previously made by Sr. Dacal to agents of the taxing authority upon which the appraisement of the merchandise in issue was obviously based.

These affiants identified themselves as officers of firms engaged, at the time here pertinent, in the sale in Peru of Argentine canned corned beef such as or similar to that here involved. As pointed out by the court below, the affidavits are brief and not very detailed, and do not seem to refer to specific sales actually made in Peru but, in part, to landed costs, and, in part, to a constructed price based upon such costs. The effect of the statements of Dacal and Otten is that the cost to them, as Peruvian importers of such or similar Argentine canned corned beef, was 121.47 soles per case (Dacal), or 119.32 per case (Otten), the difference in costs being relatively insignificant.

It must be borne in mind, however, that the foregoing figures are said to be the costs to Peruvian importers, c.i.f. Callao, that is to say, without the payment of the Peruvian import duty, amounting to approximately 51 soles per case. When the foreign value statute speaks of the “price * * * at which such or similar merchandise is freely offered for sale for home consumption,” it obviously has reference to the price at which the seller offers for sale the right to consume the goods in the foreign market. It is difficult to see how such a right could be transferred without the payment of import taxes in the foreign market, and there is nothing in the record indicating that such taxes could be avoided in Peru. Consequently, the cost of the merchandise available for offer for sale for home consumption in Peru could hardly have been less than 170 soles per case, under Dacal’s and Otten’s own figures.

The affidavit of Eguren, given in 1960, states that he recalls that, in 1951 to 1953, Mercantile del Pacifico sold “for local consumption some lots of 50 cases and upwards of Argentine Corned Beef packed 48 tins of 12 ozs. each to the case, at the price of 171.00 Soles per case, duty paid, and also at the price of 120.00 Soles per case CIF Callao.” Olcese (exhibit 2) says that, during the first half of 1952, Argentine corned beef, packed 48 tins of 12 ounces to the case, was freely offered and sold in the Peruvian market for consumption in Peru “in quantities of 30 cases or more at prices between 122.00 and 125.00 Soles c.i.f. Callao,” and that “during that period the usual wholesale quantities of Argentine Corned Beef were from 30 cases and upwards.”

Here, the price of approximately 120 soles per case is connected with sales for home consumption rather than landed costs, but again the figure is given as c.i.f. Callao, the duty-paid price being 51 soles higher.

Olcese’s second affidavit (exhibit 3) relates that, in April 1952, Mercantile del Pacifico offered him 12,000 cases of Argentine canned corned beef at the equivalent price in soles of United States $12, and, [699]*699later, $10 per case, delivered, duty paid, at bis warehouse, but that he rejected both offers, inasmuch as such a quantity could not be sold for home consumption in Peru “for many years to come.”

It appears that the price at which Dacal offered and sold the commodity was 240 soles per case, in lots of 1 to 10 cases, and it also appears that this was the price adopted by the appraiser as representing the home consumption value.

The finding of value by the appraiser carries with it a presumption of correctness, and the burden rests upon the party who challenges its correctness to prove otherwise. (28 U.S.C. § 2633.) The quantum of proof required to overcome the presumption is that which would establish a prima, facie case in favor of a value other than that returned by the appraiser, that is to say, which would establish every material fact, excepting facts not in dispute, with respect to such other value.

The court below found that the record evidence failed to meet this requirement.

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Related

United States v. Peacock Sales Co.
61 Cust. Ct. 586 (U.S. Customs Court, 1968)

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Bluebook (online)
48 Cust. Ct. 696, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/arditi-v-united-states-cusc-1962.