Charles T. Wilson Co. v. United States

24 Cust. Ct. 66, 1950 Cust. Ct. LEXIS 1444
CourtUnited States Customs Court
DecidedFebruary 7, 1950
DocketC. D. 1209
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 24 Cust. Ct. 66 (Charles T. Wilson Co. 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
Charles T. Wilson Co. v. United States, 24 Cust. Ct. 66, 1950 Cust. Ct. LEXIS 1444 (cusc 1950).

Opinion

Cole, Judge:

A shipment of onion powder from Mexico was entered through Laredo, Tex., at 4 pesos per kilo, packed, less non-dutiable charges, the purchase price set forth in a contract under which the importation was made. Appraisement was at 4.50 pesos per kilo, packed, less nondutiable charges, which was the price for identical merchandise in a subsequent contract executed between the importer (petitioner) and the Mexican manufacturer of the merchandise in question. Additional duties accrued by reason of the appraiser’s advance over the entered value, and to obtain remission of such duties, petitioner, invoking the provisions of section 489 of the Tariff Act of 1930 (19 U. S. C. §1489), has brought the present case before us.

Both parties introduced oral and documentary proof. In addition to the testimony of the customs broker who made the entry in question, its vice president who purchased the present merchandise, and its traffic manager who directed the movements of the shipment under consideration, the petitioner corporation offered a series of letters covering an exchange of correspondence between Sharretts & Hillis, coimsel for petitioner (hereinafter referred to as “the attorneys”) and the Bureau of Customs, dealing with the determination of the proper dutiable value of the onion powder in question. The Government’s proof consists of oral testimony from the United States appraiser at the port of entry and documents concerning the contractual relations between the petitioner and Mexican manufacturer. The evidence is reviewed in narrative form, without outlining the testimony of each individual as he appeared, or analyzing, singly, the several papers received as exhibits in the case.

On October 2, 1943, petitioner entered into the first contract (petitioner’s exhibit 10) with the Mexican manufacturer of the onion powder under consideration for the purchase of 6 metric tons at a price of 4 pesos per kilo, c. i. f. Laredo, Tex. Although provisions of'the contract required that deliveries be completed by January 1944, they actually did not commence until February 1944. The importer (petitioner) made no objection to the delay, and accordingly accepted the merchandise.

[68]*68A second contract (respondent’s exhibit 8) was executed between the same parties on May 24, 1944, for an additional quantity of 10 metric tons of onion powder at a price of 4.50 pesos per kilo, c. i. f. Laredo, Tex.

The shipment in question — 134 tins, each having a net weight of 24 pounds, 15 ounces — was the last one under the first contract. The merchandise was shipped by the Mexican manufacturer on April 25, 1944. It arrived at the Mexican border, in Nuevo Laredo, between May 2 and May 5, 1944, but was not formally entered for customs purposes until June 22, 1944, about 7 weeks later.

' Edward H. Corrigan, customhouse broker, with 25 years’ experience in Laredo, testified that the long lapse of time between the arrival of the shipment at the Mexican border and its official entry into the United States was due to abnormal conditions prevailing in the port of entry. At that time, during the war period, the port of Laredo was overburdened with traffic. The volume of business was not only four or five times greater than it had been for several years previous, but it was also more than the witness’ business, as well as the customs and railroad organizations, was equipped to handle. The condition, coupled with additional restrictions and censorship that were in effect, caused considerable delay, if not temporary breakdowns, in forwarding merchandise through the port for customs purposes.

' Before making the entry in question, the customhouse broker consulted the United States appraiser at Laredo, seeking advice on the question of value. He obtained none, but was told to assist in developing information on the subject. In entering the onion powder in question, he followed instructions received in a letter dated May 15, 1944 (respondent’s exhibit 14), from petitioner’s traffic manager, who testified that he directed entry to be made at 4 pesos per kilo, net, packed, because “that was the price for purchase contract, shipping documents in Mexico were made out at that price.” Neither the customhouse broker nor the traffic manager had knowledge either of pending negitiations or of execution of the second contract (respondent’s exhibit 8, supra) at the time of their activities leading up to the entry under consideration.

Entry was made, as heretofore stated, on June 22, 1944, and 2 days later, on June 24, the appraiser notified the collector and the importer (petitioner) that appraisement was being withheld pending an investigation in the foreign market. On October 8, 1945, the appraiser advised the customhouse broker that the onion powder* in question would be appraised at “4.50 pesos per kilo, plus packing costs of 3.357 pesos per 15 kilo tin — less freight charges to border and consular invoice fee” (petitioner’s collective exhibit 3).

[69]*69In November 1945, a month after the appraiser expressed his contemplated action, Lloyd Trafford, vice president of the petitioner corporation in New York, visited Laredo where he conferred with the appraiser and the customs broker. He told the appraiser his company seldom had anything to do with merchandise subject to an ad valorem rate of duty, and that his purpose in Laredo was to “show him [the appraiser] just what happened in the purchase of this onion powder.” Petitioner’s representative received no definite information on value, but was assured by the customs official that appraisement would be withheld and was advised to return to New York and “hire an attorney that handles matters of this sort.” “The attorneys” were then consulted and there ensued an exchange of letters between them and the Bureau of Customs. Without detailing each communication, the developments disclosed thereby, so far as they are* pertinent to the issue before us, are summarized.

In a letter under date of December 18, 1945, to the Commissioner of Customs (petitioner’s collective exhibit 3), “the attorneys” disputed the appraiser’s proposed value of 4.50 pesos per kilo, plus packing, less nondutiable charges, and argued that the tins used in packing the onion powder were the usual containers and therefore the appraiser “was in error in suggesting that the price of the tins be added to the packed prices of the merchandise.” In reply thereto, the Bureau of Customs, through the chief of appraisers, under date of January 17, 1946 (petitioner’s collective exhibit 4), conceded the correctness of “the attorneys’ ” contention, and, in stating that the cost of containers should not be added to the unit price, advised that the appraiser at Laredo would appraise “the importations of onion powder which were exported during the period from February 8 to May 23, 1944, inclusive, at Mexican pesos 4.00 per kilo, packed, less nondutiable charges, and at Mexican pesos 4.50 per kilo, packed, less nondutiable charges for shipments exported on and after May 24, 1944.” “The attorneys’” letter of February 27, 1946 (petitioner’s collective exhibit 5), advised the Commissioner of Customs of the importer’s (petitioner’s) acceptance of the appraiser’s suggested amended valuation, and stated that the customs broker would be instructed to amend the entry in question accordingly.

The correspondence, just reviewed, tends to refute the appraiser’s testimony to the effect that he obtained no information from petitioner concerning the value of the present merchandise.

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Related

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39 Cust. Ct. 335 (U.S. Customs Court, 1957)
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Alvarez v. United States
24 Cust. Ct. 303 (U.S. Customs Court, 1950)

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Bluebook (online)
24 Cust. Ct. 66, 1950 Cust. Ct. LEXIS 1444, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/charles-t-wilson-co-v-united-states-cusc-1950.