Blake-Moffitt & Towne, Inc. v. United States

27 Cust. Ct. 485, 1951 Cust. Ct. LEXIS 1389
CourtUnited States Customs Court
DecidedNovember 27, 1951
DocketNo. 8064; Entry No. 2959-E, etc.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 27 Cust. Ct. 485 (Blake-Moffitt & Towne, Inc. 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
Blake-Moffitt & Towne, Inc. v. United States, 27 Cust. Ct. 485, 1951 Cust. Ct. LEXIS 1389 (cusc 1951).

Opinion

Mollison, Judge:

The appeals listed in schedule “A,” hereto-attached and made a part hereof, are for reappraisement of the value; of certain toilet tissue paper imported from Canada. Two brands or types of tissue are involved, one type, known as “Westminster” brand,, having been invoiced and entered at $4.98 per case, United States-currency, f. o. b. mill at New Westminster, British Columbia (which is near Vancouver, B. C.), and appraised at $6.11 per case, Canadian currency, net, packed, and the other type, known as “Purex” brandy having been invoiced and entered at $6.81 per case, United States currency, f. o. b. mill, and appraised at $8.33% per case, Canadian currency, net, packed. The entries were made on June 30 and July" 8, 1948, respectively.

On the part of the plaintiffs, it is contended that the invoiced and. entered prices represent the export values of such merchandise, as “export value” is defined in section 402 (d) of the Tariff Act of 1930' (19 U. S. C. § 1402 (d)), and that no foreign value, as defined in section 402 (c) of the same act, as amended, existed.1 It is alternatively [486]*486claimed that if at the time of exportation of the two types of merchandise here involved foreign values therefor be found to have existed, then such foreign values were the prices at which the manufacturer of the- paper offered and sold such merchandise to its distributors in Canada, or, in the alternative, the prices at which a distributor of competitive brands offered and sold similar merchandise to all purchasers. It is further contended that the prices at which the distributors of the manufacturer of the paper here involved offered and sold such paper to all purchasers in the principal markets of Canada were not uniform, and consequently such prices do not represent foreign value within the meaning of the statute.

On the part of the defendant, it is contended that the prices at which the distributors of the manufacturer of the paper here involved offered and sold such paper represent the foreign value as defined in the act, as amended. These prices-are represented by the appraised values.

In the circumstances of this case, first inquiry must be made as to the existence or nonexistence of foreign value, as defined in the statute, of paper such as that here involved at the manufacturer’s level. In this connection, it is undisputed that the manufacturer of the paper involved, the Westminster Paper Co., Ltd., of New Westminster, B. C., offered its products for sale both for home consumption and for export only to persons or firms known as “distributors,” in which category were wholesale paper dealers and wholesale grocers. According to the testimony given by Clifford T. Radcliffe, sales manager for the manufacturer, this method of doing business was the “ordinary course of dealing” on the part of all Canadian manufacturers of toilet paper in offering and selling their products for home consumption, and that while there were possible exceptions, the bulk of the business was done on that basis.

As to the practice of his own company, he said, merchandise such as that here involved was offered only to certain distributors because those firms constituting that group took the full production of the mill and there was therefore no need to solicit other business. It appeared that if a further supply became available because of either increased production or the dropping out of one of the group, other distributors might be added, but it clearly appears that even in such a situation his company did not offer to all who might care to buy but made offers only to distributors.

It is contended by the defendant that in these circumstances the merchandise was not “freely offered for sale * * * to all purchasers” within the meaning of those words as used in the statute, and, citing the case of United States v. H. W. Robinson & Co. et al., 19 C. C. P. A. (Customs) 274, T. D. 45436, as directly in point, contends that the existence of foreign value at the manufacturers’ level is thereby negatived for merchandise such as that at bar.

[487]*487The Robinson case, supra, involved the value of certain silk tie squares used in the making of neckties. It appeared that the manufacturers of such tie squares in England, the country of exportation, sold only to wholesale merchants, who, in turn, sold to so-called “retail dealers” who manufactured them into ties. In holding that the proper foreign value was represented by the price at the wholesalers’, rather than the manufacturers’, level, the Court of Customs and Patent Appeals, speaking through the late Judge Bland, said:

We agree with, the contentions of the Government that the sales price of the wholesalers to the tie manufacturers should be accepted as the foreign value. It may be, as is contended by the importer, that it is the “ordinary course of trade” between the manufacturer and the wholesaler to restrict the sales to wholesalers, but this is not the ordinary course of trade to which the statute refers. It must be remembered that the statute provides for “the ordinary course of trade” in which such or similar goods are “freely offered for sale to all purchasers” in the usual wholesale quantities. Since in the sales by the manufacturers the goods were not offered to all purchasers, the sales price should not be accepted as the proper foreign value. In the Richard & Co, case, supra [15 Ct. Cust. Appls. 143, T. D. 42216], this court had before it a question quite similar to the one at bar and said:
* * * Even if it be conceded that the ordinary course of trade may be determined by the usage in a minor fraction thereof, it certainly can not be said that merchandise is being freely offered for sale when it is offered to certain purchasers only, and these purchasers, ones who have “satisfied” the seller that they are wholesalers only. * * * (Italics quoted.)
* * * * * * *
It is argued because sales to wholesalers are all made at the same price that therefore this price thus becomes the wholesale price. But it will be observed that the statute does not thus establish the wholesale price. Section 402 (b) does not provide that the wholesale price shall be the price to wholesalers, but the price in the usual wholesale quantities. The law is not concerned with the persons who buy, but the manner in which they buy (Italics quoted.)

So far as their basic or essential facts are concerned, there is no distinction between the situation which obtained in the case at bar and that which obtained in the Robinson case, supra. In both cases a manufacturer, in accordance with the custom and usage of the trade dealing in his products, offered the said products only to persons or firms who bought and sold at a certain level of such trade, to wit, at the distributor level, and did not offer his products for sale to any others. Judicial notice may be taken of the fact that this is and has been for decades a common practice in many lines of business, and that a very large, if not a major, portion of all marketing of manufactured products is done in that manner.

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Bluebook (online)
27 Cust. Ct. 485, 1951 Cust. Ct. LEXIS 1389, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blake-moffitt-towne-inc-v-united-states-cusc-1951.