B & W Wholesale Co., Inc. v. The United States

436 F.2d 1399, 58 C.C.P.A. 92
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedFebruary 4, 1971
DocketCustoms Appeal 5388
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 436 F.2d 1399 (B & W Wholesale Co., Inc. v. The United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Customs and Patent Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
B & W Wholesale Co., Inc. v. The United States, 436 F.2d 1399, 58 C.C.P.A. 92 (ccpa 1971).

Opinion

RICH, Judge.

This appeal is from a judgment of the Third Division of the Customs Court, Appellate Term, 63 Cust.Ct. 691, A.R.D. 262 (1969), affirming the judgment of a single judge sitting in reappraisement, 58 Cust.Ct. 728, R.D. 11311 (1967). The nature of the goods is unimportant to the issues. They are small hardware store items exported in August 1961.

The question in litigation is value. It is agreed that the proper basis of appraisal is export value as defined by section 402(b) of the Tariff Act of 1930, as amended by the Customs Simplification Act of 1956. 1 In appraising the *1401 merchandise, the appraiser and both courts below disallowed an alleged buying commission of 5% and all. inland charges for freight, storage, insurance, etc., listed on the invoice but excluded by appellant from the value, and added them to the invoiced ex-factory prices. The latter prices are not in dispute as to amount. The questions below were whether appellant has sustained its burden of proving that the 5% buying commission was a bona fide commission rather than a proper part of the export value and whether the inland charges were improperly included by the appraiser in export value. On appeal to this court, the only question is whether the Appellate Term’s decision was supported by substantial evidence. We find it was and affirm.

The merchandise was imported into the United States by appellant, B & W Wholesale Supply Co., of Minneapolis, Minnesota. Its alleged “buying agent” in Japan was M. Matsumoto & Co., Ltd., of Kobe, Japan. The imported merchandise was manufactured by various manufacturers in Osaka, Japan. The imports were invoiced F.O.B. Kobe.

The two questions we have to examine, to see whether the findings below were supported by substantial evidence, are (1) whether appellant sustained its burden of proving that its relation to Matsumoto was that of principal and agent rather than that of buyer and seller and (2) whether appellant sustained its burden of proving that the merchandise was freely sold or offered for sale in accordance with section 402(b) . at the invoiced ex-factory prices.

The “Buying Commission’’

According to an affidavit of its president and principal stockholder, introduced into evidence by appellant,

M. Matsumoto & Co. Ltd. is not a manufacturer but a trading house. We buy and sell goods sometimes for our own account, and sometimes as buying agent.

Because he included the “commission” paid Matsumoto in the export value of these imported goods, the appraiser must have found that in the instant transaction Matsumoto bought the subject merchandise for its own account and resold it to B & W rather than that Matsumoto acted solely as B & W’s buying agent. Since it is uncontroverted that the subject merchandise was not purchased by Matsumoto until after that company had received an order for it from B & W and since the samples of the subject merchandise introduced into evidence both bear the mark of a company associated with B & W (indicating that the goods were already destined for the group of companies associated with B & W when they came into Matsumoto’s hands and were not part of a stock of goods bought and maintained by Matsu-moto for eventual resale as opportunities presented themselves), the appraiser’s determination must have been based on the relationship between Matsumoto and B & W from the time the order was placed until the goods were shipped from Japan.

The relationship between Matsumoto and B & W was brought out, not only by Mr. Matsumoto’s affidavit, but by the testimony at trial of Mr. Robert L. Bernstein, appellant’s treasurer and the employee who placed the order for the instant merchandise. According to Mr. Bernstein, after B & W had placed an order with Matsumoto, Matsumoto would place a corresponding order or orders with factories in Japan, but B & W had no control over which factories Matsu-moto ordered the goods from. Again, although B & W paid Matsumoto bills which included a component for inland freight, B & W did not receive substantiation of the inland freight charges and did not even control the mode by which the goods were shipped. Finally, when questioned whether B & W would “have recourse to the manufacturer,” “If there were a loss or a pilferage between a factory and * * * [B & *1402 W’s] warehouse in Kobe,” Mr. Bernstein replied:

According to my best belief, we don’t take possession of the merchandise until it gets into a warehouse in Kobe. I don’t believe we take possession until it gets on board ship.

As the American Law Institute’s Restatement (Second) of Agency says,

If the existence of ap agency relation is not otherwise clearly shown, as where the issue is .whether a trust or any agency has been created, the fact that it is understood that the person acting is not to be subject to the control of the other as to the manner of performance determines that the relation is not that of agency. [Id. at § 146, p. 61.]

Appellant here stresses the considerable evidence in the record that the relation between Matsumoto and B & W was that of agency. However, it does not attack our longstanding rule that findings of fact in a reappraisement case will not be disturbed if there is “any substantial evidence” in support of those findings. See A. Zerkowitz & Co. v. United States, 435 F.2d 576, 58 CCPA C.A.D. 1005 (Dec. 30, 1970). The kind of argument appellant'has made here is correctly addressed to a single judge sitting in reappraisement and to the Appellate Term reviewing his decision, both of whom are charged with determining whether the importer has proved by a preponderance of the evidence that the findings of the appraiser were incorrect, but is not properly addressed to this court so long as we adhere to our present rule.

Limiting ourselves to the question of whether there is “any substantial evidence” in the record to support the Customs Court’s finding that the alleged buying agency between the shipper and the importer was not bona fide, we find that there is substantial evidence to support a finding of fact that both B & W and Matsumoto understood that Matsumoto was not subject to the control of B & W as to the manner in which Matsu-moto processed and handled the imported merchandise before it left Matsumo-to’s hands. The legal conclusion that an agency relation did not exist between Matsumoto and B & W at that time follows from that finding as a matter of course. Absent a bona fide agency relation, there was no basis for a “commission.” Accordingly, we affirm the judgment below that the 5% “buying commission” was really a part of export value.

Ex-Factory Prices

The appraiser added the following inland charges listed on the invoice to the invoiced ex-factory prices in determining the export value of the merchandise :

Inland Freight ¥ 10,000

Storage 830

Inland Insurance 750

Inspection Charges 5,200

Hauling & Lighterage 8,900

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Bluebook (online)
436 F.2d 1399, 58 C.C.P.A. 92, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/b-w-wholesale-co-inc-v-the-united-states-ccpa-1971.