Brister & Koester Lumber Corp. v. Turney

176 F.2d 843, 1949 U.S. App. LEXIS 3643
CourtEmergency Court of Appeals
DecidedAugust 25, 1949
DocketNo. 507
StatusPublished

This text of 176 F.2d 843 (Brister & Koester Lumber Corp. v. Turney) 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
Brister & Koester Lumber Corp. v. Turney, 176 F.2d 843, 1949 U.S. App. LEXIS 3643 (eca 1949).

Opinion

LINDLEY, Judge.

Complainant is a wholesaler of Southern pine lumber who sold by “direct mill shipment” to its buyers. Although it purchased and took title to the lumber at the producing mill, it did not take physical possession of the commodity, but had it shipped by the mill directly to complainant’s purchasers. From the mill complainant itself received an invoice; to the prices charged it by the mill for the quántities and grades shown on this invoice, complainant, without verifying the propriety of the prices charged in the original invoice, added its charges and then sent its own invoice for the original invoice prices plus its own mark-up to its purchasers, thus protecting its source of supply from disclosure. It is obvious that, in this type of transaction, complainant, in computing its sales prices relied entirely on the invoice received by it and left it to the mill to see that the shipment actually conformed to the grades and types of lumber specified in its invoices and to the maximum prices established therefor.

During 1943 and 1944, OPA inspectors discovered alleged discrepancies between the types and grades of lumber specified in the invoices sent out by complainant and the types and grades actually received by its purchasers and corresponding overcharges. On the basis of this averment, the Office of Price Administration instituted action against complainant in the District Court, charging complainant with overceiling sales in violation of Revised Maximum Price Regulation 19, issued April 26, 1943 (8 F.R. 5536) and Second Revised Maximum Price Regulation 19, issued January 29, 1944 (9 F.R. 1162) and seeking, under the provisions of the Emergency Price Control Act, 50 U.S.C.A.Appendix, § 925(e), judgment against complainant in the sum of $600,000. Because complainant’s defense to that action rested upon either a favorable interpretation of the applicable regulations or a determination that said regulations were invalid, the latter being a question within this court’s exclusive jurisdiction, 50 U.S.C.A.Appendix, § 924(d), complainant filed a protest, seeking to have Revised Maximum Price Regulation 19 and Second Revised Maximum Price Regulation 19 interpreted as requiring conformance to the rules of the Southern Pine Inspection Bureau relative to complaints of over grading and reinspections or, in the alternative, to have the regulations declared invalid.

In its protest complainant contended that Section 21 of Revised Maximum Price Regulation 19, which reads, in part, “The grades and terms in this Regulation are based on the 1939 standard specifications for Southern pine lumber of the Southern Pine Inspection Bureau * * had the effect of incorporating into the regulation the Southern Pine Inspection Bureau rules with reference to notification to and [845]*845an opportunity for re-inspection by the wholesaler in all cases where buyers complained of overcharges, shortages, or upgrading. Unless this construction should be adopted, complainant argued, the regulations are invalid because: (1) they are discriminatory, arbitrary, and capricious; (2) they violate Section 2(h) of the Price Control Act, 50 U.S.C.A.Appendix, § 902 '(h), in that they compel changes in the business practices of the wholesale lumber industry, although such changes were not necessary to prevent evasion of the Act; (3) they violate the due process clause of the Fifth Amendment by penalizing complainant for a violation of which it had no knowledge; (4) they are repugnant to the Eighth Amendment forbidding excessive fines and cruel and unusual punishments; (5) they violate the Price Control Act, Section 205(e), by penalizing complainant more than three times the amount of the overcharge; and (6) they are so vague, indefinite, and uncertain as to be incapable of understanding and interpretation.

The Director referred the protest to a board of review, which, after hearing, issued a report in which the majority recommended that the protest be denied. One member dissented, holding that the regulations should be interpreted as complainant had urged or be held invalid in violation of Section 2(h) of the Price Control Act. The Director approved the views of the majority and denied the protest. This complaint followed.

Our real issue is whether the complainant can be held to have violated the Pi-ice Control Act by sales in which it arrived at the sale prices by adding to the ceiling price of its vendor, the producing mill, the 6% wholesaler’s mark-up allowed by the regulations, the total prices charged by complainant being in excess of the ceiling prices because the grades and specifications of lumber actually shipped, a matter as to which complainant had no knowledge other than that which it obtained from the mill’s invoice, did not conform to the grades and specifications appearing in the invoice sent out by complainant.

Complainant’s first contention is that the regulations should be interpreted to mean that no wholesaler can be held liable for an overcharge by it unless it is given notice and an opportunity to re-inspect and make corrections, pursuant to the rules of the Southern Pine Inspection Bureau. It asserts that support for this interpretation lies in Section 21 of the challenged regulations, which provides that the “grades and terms” in the regulations are based on the “1939 standard specifications for Southern pine lumber of the SPIB.” According to complainant, this language means that, for the purpose of determining if there has been an over-ceiling sale, the grades and specifications of the lumber sold are to be established, not by the lumber actually shipped, but by the invoice, unless a complaint shall have been filed by the buyer and an opportunity given the seller to re-inspect or re-tally. Complainant also cites a decision of the Comptroller General, Matter of Sullivan Lumber, 23 D.C.G. 703 (1944), in support of this contention.

Respondent denies that the regulations incorporate the Southern Pine Inspection Bureau inspection and shipping rules, maintaining that it was never intended that the liability of a wholesaler for overceiling sales should be contingent upon the buyer’s compliance with the association’s rules. He insists that the interpretation urged by complainant would apply to willful violators as well as to innocent ones, and would, in effect, give to all wholesalers of southern pine lumber a virtual grant of immunity from price controls, for the reason that, in view of the seller’s market prevailing during the war years, buyers were understandably reluctant to make complaints which might result in the loss of their source of supply. U. S. v. Bruno, 329 U.S. 207, at page 211, 67 S.Ct. 211, 91 L.Ed. 193. Finally, respondent distinguishes this case from the Comptroller General’s decision cited by complainant and concludes that the phrase, “grades and terms,” is used in the technical sense, and does not operate to include the Southern Pine Inspection Bureau shipping and inspection rules in the regulations.

[846]*846We think- the interpretation' urged by complainant must be rejected. It has no foundation in the literal wording of the regulations, and should not be adopted because of inferences which would result in the practical exception of a large segment of the Southern pine industry from effective price control and thus result in regulations in derogation of the announced purpose of the Price Control Act rather than in aid thereof.

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Bluebook (online)
176 F.2d 843, 1949 U.S. App. LEXIS 3643, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brister-koester-lumber-corp-v-turney-eca-1949.