De Liema v. United States

33 Cust. Ct. 417, 1954 Cust. Ct. LEXIS 896
CourtUnited States Customs Court
DecidedNovember 10, 1954
DocketNo. 58497; petitions 6971-R, etc. (Los Angeles)
StatusPublished

This text of 33 Cust. Ct. 417 (De Liema 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
De Liema v. United States, 33 Cust. Ct. 417, 1954 Cust. Ct. LEXIS 896 (cusc 1954).

Opinion

Mollison, Judge:

These are petitions filed under the provisions of section 489 of the Tariff Act of 1930 for the remission of additional duties accruing by reason of undervaluation on entry of certain earthenware imported from Holland. The cases have been consolidated for trial and disposition.

It appears that the importer and petitioner in this case had been engaged in Holland for a number of years in the business of purchasing earthenware from a manufacturer named "Staalwarenfabriek Elesva” and selling the same to retail stores; that he migrated to the United States in 1950 and became the sole United States agent of the said manufacturer to import earthenware of a somewhat slightly different style from that which he had been selling in Holland, being designed for the American market. All of the merchandise here involved was imported and entered during the period from October 1951 to February 1952.

It further appears that the correct values of the imported earthenware became a matter of discussion between the customhouse brokerage firm employed by the petitioner and the examiner in the appraiser’s office who passed such merchandise; that some time early in 1952 the examiner requested a pricelist in Dutch florins “representing the freely offered price for home consumption in Holland”; that the importer requested the manufacturer to supply a pricelist, and that he was supplied one by the manufacturer, dated April 1952, showing prices stated in an attached affidavit of one who identified himself as the manager of the “Staal-warenfabriek Elesva” to be “equal to those charged for wholesale dealers in Holland.” According to the evidence, thispist was given to the customhouse broker, who transmitted it to the examiner.

The petitioner testifiedTthat he was subsequently asked to furnish a pricelist in dollars, and he stated that he obtained one from the manufacturer and turned it over to the customhouse broker to give to the appraiser. Whether the prices shown in dollars on this latter pricelist were the equivalent of those shown in florins on the first list supplied is not established by the record, but we do not regard this as important, as the merchandise was neither invoiced, entered, nor appraised in dollars. It is, therefore, mentioned only as evidence of the coopera[418]*418tive effort on the part of the petitioner. Both pricelists are in evidence as respondent’s illustrative Exhibit A.

It appears that the values returned by the appraiser were not based upon either of these pricelists, but upon a third pricelist which the appraiser obtained through the .Customs Information Exchange in New York. It further appears that this third pricelist, which is in evidence as respondent’s collective exhibit B, was obtained in the following manner: Petitioner had been importing merchandise such as that here involved through the port of New York. His customhouse broker there requested that the petitioner furnish a pricelist. In response to that request, the petitioner asked the manufacturer to send such a pricelist to the customhouse broker in New York, and the pricelist, respondent’s collective exhibit B, was sent direct from the manufacturer to the New York customhouse broker, who turned it over to the customs officers there. Petitioner stated that he never saw respondent’s collective exhibit B.

Respondent’s collective exhibit B shows prices in Dutch florins, and a comparison between it and the florin prices shown in respondent’s illustrative exhibit A shows that the prices in respondent’s collective exhibit B are considerably higher. The latter exhibit bears the statement “These are the retail prices for the Dutch market.”

The record shows that on or about December 17, 1952, notices, which are before us as petitioner’s collective exhibit 1, were sent to the Los Angeles customhouse broker stating that it was contemplated that the merchandise would be appraised at certain values higher than the entered values, and allowing 30 days from December 17, 1952, to amend the entered values to the contemplated appraised values. Each notice contains this statement:

* * * Unless the entry is amended within THIRTY days from this date it will be assumed that you do not intend to amend and appraisement will be completed. * * *

The president of the customhouse brokerage firm, which acted for the petitioner in making the entries, testified that, despite the reference to “THIRTY days” in the notices, it was then the practice of the appraiser’s office in Los Angeles, inasmuch as the work of that office was behind, to allow much more time than that and not to appraise until subsequent inquiry had been made by the appraiser’s office as to the intention with respect to amendment. Relying on this, his office had used the makeup of amendments of entries as fill-in work, and the amendments of the entries at bar were not made up until the early part of February 1953.

At that time, when his office had prepared the amendments for filing and they first came to his notice, he noted the great discrepancy between the entered and appraised values and called the examiner to ask the basis for the contemplated appraised values. He was then told that the appraisements had already taken place, and he testified that he registered with the examiner and with the appraiser his surprise and protest against what he considered to be an act inconsistent with the general practice of the appraiser’s office. It being too late to file the amendments, however, they were not completed.

While there is no direct contradiction of the foregoing testimony as to pre-appraisement practice, it is the testimony of the examiner in the appraiser’s office who passed the merchandise involved that it was customary for brokers or importers to request additional time in writing, after the expiration of the 30-day grace period, and that no such written request had been received in connection with the appraisements of the merchandise herein.

It is also the examiner’s testimony that there was a lack of cooperation on the part of the petitioner in supplying the pricelists covered by illustrative exhibit A; that he had had to make several requests before they were supplied to him.

[419]*419Calling attention to the fact that as to at least one item, No. 408 on entry-6308, covered by petition 6974^R, the appraised value exceeded the value declared in the entry by more than 100 percent, counsel for the respondent, in the brief filed in its behalf, contends that the petitioner failed to meet the burden of proof required to rebut the statutory presumption of fraud with respect to the entry in that case, and that the petitions with respect to the other entries were not supported by satisfactory evidence, as called for by section 489, supra.

It appears to this court that the burden of a petitioner for the remission of additional duties under section 489, supra, is, in fact and in law, no greater in instances where the undervaluation exceeds 100 percent than it is in eases where the undervaluation is 100 percent or less. While it is true that in the former case there is a statutory presumption that the entry of the merchandise was fraudulent which, at least in a legal sense, does not exist in the latter case, nevertheless, it is the burden of the petitioner in both instances to affirmatively establish that entry was made in good faith. This is the affirmative manner of stating the negative burden expressed by the statute, i.

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33 Cust. Ct. 417, 1954 Cust. Ct. LEXIS 896, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/de-liema-v-united-states-cusc-1954.