Bayuk Cigars, Inc. v. Porter

154 F.2d 503, 1946 U.S. App. LEXIS 2082
CourtEmergency Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 20, 1946
DocketNo. 267
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 154 F.2d 503 (Bayuk Cigars, Inc. v. Porter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Emergency Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bayuk Cigars, Inc. v. Porter, 154 F.2d 503, 1946 U.S. App. LEXIS 2082 (eca 1946).

Opinions

McALLISTER, Judge.

This case involves the price regulation establishing maximum prices for tobacco used in the manufacture of cigars.

Maximum Price Regulation No. 494, issued November 13, 1943,1 established maximum prices (in dollars and cents) for domestic cigar filler and binder tobacco of the 1943 crop.

Revised Maximum Price Regulation No. 494, issued December 16, 1944, and amended January 30, 1945,2 established maximum prices for the same types of tobacco of the 1944 crop.

In Revised Maximum Price Regulation No. 494, the maximum price at which green tobacco may be sold by the growers was established by Section 3 thereof.

Section 4 of the Regulation established a formula for computing the maximum prices at which packed tobacco may be sold, by adding to the price of green tobacco, first, the actual packing costs, and, second, a mark-up of 18%.

Growers, therefore, may either sell their tobacco as green tobacco at the lower prices provided in Section 3 of the Regulation, or pack the tobacco themselves (or have it packed), and then sell at the greatly increased price which includes the price of the green tobacco, the packing costs,- and the 18% mark-up.

As a result of the Regulation granting the mark-up of 18%, many of the growers who prior to the Regulation had sold their tobacco as green or unpacked, naturally proceeded to take advantage of the tendered mark-up and sold their tobacco packed, at the higher prices. The packing, in such a case, was usually done by an established packer, or by a cooperative association, which was organized after the Regulation was issued.

Complainant is, and has been for many years in the past, engaged in the business of purchasing and processing tobacco, and manufacturing, selling, and distributing [504]*504cigars. During the course of its existence, it has become the largest single buyer of Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, tobacco, having, in some years, purchased more than 50% of the entire crop for its needs. Formerly, complainant bought green tobacco from the growers, and has itself packed it according to its own methods. Under the Regulation, it is able to buy hardly any green tobacco, inasmuch as nearly all the growers, desirous of securing the additional 18% • mark-up which is allowed for packed tobacco, arrange to have their product packed before selling it to complainant and other purchasers.

We are here particularly concerned with Section 2(a)(9) of Revised Maximum Price Regulation No. 494, as amended, which defines the class of persons who qualify as packers of tobacco and are, therefore, entitled to receive the maximum price established for sales of tobacco by packers.3

Under the foregoing section of the Regulation, as interpreted,4 manufacturers cannot custom pack tobacco for growers and then pay to the grower the maximum price established for sales of tobacco by packers; and when a manufacturer or packer custom packs tobacco for a grower or leases to the grower premises or equipment for packing, he cannot pay to the grower more than the grower ceiling price.

It should here be observed that the above interpretation of the Regulation has been approved, and the Regulation as interpreted, enforced by the District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania, in Bowles v. Bayuk Cigars, D.C., 1945, 59 F.Supp. 745. Complainant in the protest proceedings has assumed that such interpretation was proper, and, accordingly, for the'purpose of this case, we shall do the same.

On February 4, 1945, complainant filed protest directed against the provisions of Section 2(a) (9) of Revised Maximum Price Regulation No. 494, as interpreted by the Office of Price Administration on the ground that: (1) Section 2(a) (9) of the Regulation as interpreted was in contravention of Section' 2(h) of the Emergency Price Control Act of 1942, as amended,5 because it operated so as to compel changes in business practices and means of distribution established in the [505]*505area in question in connection with the marketing of the tobacco crop; (2) that it created classifications which were not based on any sound or established business or economic reasons; (3) that it resulted in discrimination against the tobacco growers in Lancaster County, and against purchasers of the tobacco, including, particularly, complainant; (4) that it operated to prevent the complainant from using its packing facilities and operating its business in accordance with the practice that complainant had followed for many years and which is necessary for the preservation of its business.

The protest was referred to a Board of Review which found against complainant’s contentions and recommended denial of its protest. The Administrator followed the recommendations and entered an order denying protest on the ground that: (1) Complainant failed to show that Section 2(a) (9) of the Regulation as interpreted contravened Section 2(h) of the Act, because the section did not operate to compel changes in business practices; (2) that even though the section would compel changes in business practices, the Administrator had found such Regulation necessary to prevent evasion; (3) that complainant had failed to show that the Regulation discriminated against it. On October 25, 1945, complaint was filed in this court.

In our disposition of the case, it is unnecessary to determine many of the issues submitted, but a review of the contentions advanced thereunder by the parties will serve to illuminate the background and bring into focus the ultimate ground of decision.

In support of its claim that the Regulation as interpreted operates to compel changes in business practices in contravention of Section 2(h) of the Price Control Act, complainant points to the fact that for many years it has been the largest single purchaser of Lancaster County tobacco; that normally, the greatest portion of such tobacco crop was sold by growers as green tobacco; and that since the Regulation permits the growers to have their tobacco packed and then sold as packed tobacco, with the cost of packing tacked on to the price of green tobacco and the addition of a mark-up of 18%, the result is that, with the inducement of this allowance of a net price of 18% more for packed tobacco than for green tobacco, the growers would not and do not follow the normal marketing process of selling the tobacco in green form. Complainant submits that, as a consequence of the Regulation as interpreted, the growers generally were compelled to change their marketing methods and sell their tobacco as packed, rather than as green tobacco, in order to receive the highest price for their crops. The result, it is claimed, was that complainant was able to purchase only a fraction of its requirements of the 1944 tobacco crop

To the foregoing, the Administrator replies that complainant had never, in the past, purchased any tobacco in packed form (which it had previously packed for the growers), and that there was no proof or claim that such a practice had been followed by other members of the industry. It is, therefore, argued that the purchase of tobacco which had been packed by the buyer for the seller is not a practice established in the industry within the scope of Section 2(h) of the Act, citing Safeway Stores, Inc. v. Bowles, Em.App., 1945, 145 F.2d 836; Lehigh Valley Cooperative v.

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Related

Reser v. Fleming
160 F.2d 378 (Emergency Court of Appeals, 1947)

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Bluebook (online)
154 F.2d 503, 1946 U.S. App. LEXIS 2082, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bayuk-cigars-inc-v-porter-eca-1946.