George v. Tribe Co. v. Kendall, Assistant Director, Office of Defense Mobilization

210 F.2d 658, 1954 U.S. App. LEXIS 2486
CourtEmergency Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 25, 1954
Docket606
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 210 F.2d 658 (George v. Tribe Co. v. Kendall, Assistant Director, Office of Defense Mobilization) 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
George v. Tribe Co. v. Kendall, Assistant Director, Office of Defense Mobilization, 210 F.2d 658, 1954 U.S. App. LEXIS 2486 (eca 1954).

Opinion

210 F.2d 658

GEORGE V. TRIBE CO.
v.
KENDALL, Assistant Director, Office of Defense Mobilization.

No. 606.

United States Emergency Court of Appeals

Heard at Salt Lake City, Utah, November 18, 1953.

Filed February 25, 1954.

Zar E. Hayes, Salt Lake City, Utah, with whom Calvin L. Rampton, Salt Lake City, Utah, was on the brief, for complainant.

Katherine Hardwick Johnson, Washington, D. C., Attorney, with whom Warren E. Burger, Asst. Atty. Gen., Edward H. Hickey, Chief, General Litigation Section, Department of Justice, and James A. Durham, Acting General Counsel, and Israel Convisser, Asst. Gen. Counsel, Economic Stabilization Agency, Washington, D. C., were on the brief, for respondent.

Before MARIS, Chief Judge, and MAGRUDER and McALLISTER, Judges.

MAGRUDER, Judge.

Complainant George V. Tribe Company during the period from 1946 through June, 1952, was a franchised dealer in Lincoln-Mercury automobiles, and engaged in the retail sale of such automobiles in Ogden, Utah. As such, its prices became subject to regulation under the Defense Production Act of 1950, 64 Stat. 798, 50 U.S.C.A.Appendix, § 2061 et seq. On January 26, 1951, the Director of Price Stabilization issued the General Ceiling Price Regulation, 16 F.R. 808, which froze complainant's retail prices at the highest level of its prices which were in effect during the base period December 19, 1950 to January 25, 1951. This regulation was superseded on March 2, 1951, as to the commodity in question, by General Ceiling Price Regulation, Supplementary Regulation 5 — Retail Prices for New and Used Automobiles, 16 F.R. 1769. See Norman-Frank, Inc. v. Arnall, Em.App.1952, 196 F.2d 502, which pointed out that SR 5 was designed temporarily to establish a uniform pattern of ceiling prices for automobiles until a permanent regulation could be prepared with the advice of representatives of the industry. The Statement of Considerations accompanying SR 5 recited that the formula prices established therein "effect no substantial change in the general level of prices for new automobiles established by the General Ceiling Price Regulation." [Italics added.] Of course that obviously did not mean that each and every automobile dealer could assume that his individual maximum prices under SR 5 would remain the same as they had been under the General Ceiling Price Regulation; for the whole point of issuing SR 5 was, as explained in the Statement of Considerations, "to correct the lack of substantial uniformity in the established ceilings" fixed by the freeze technique of the General Price Regulation. In its turn, SR 5 was superseded by Ceiling Price Regulation 83 on October 15, 1951, 16 F.R. 10594.

Pursuant to § 409(c) of the Defense Production Act, a civil suit was brought by the United States in the United States District Court for the District of Utah against George V. Tribe Company to recover damages for overcharges in the sales of new automobiles. This suit resulted in a judgment against the defendant entered June 16, 1952. Thereafter George V. Tribe Company obtained leave of the district court, pursuant to § 408(d) of the act, as amended, to file in this court a complaint challenging the validity of provisions of the regulation upon which such enforcement suit was based. Since the period of alleged violations was from March 2, 1951, to June 27, 1951, this court is now concerned only with the validity of SR 5, which was applicable to complainant's sales during that period.

We need consider and discuss only two objections urged against the validity of SR 5: (1) That the established ceiling prices for new automobiles in SR 5 were fixed in disregard of § 402 (g) of the Defense Production Act, in that such prices failed to permit the addition of certain advertising charges to the manufacturer's suggested retail price, and (2) that SR 5 was fatally ambiguous, vague, and uncertain and unintelligible, in that it failed to make clear whether it was applicable only to transactions in which the consideration was paid exclusively in cash on or before delivery, or whether it also applied to transactions in which part of the consideration was a traded-in car, or in which part of the cash consideration was payable on a credit basis after delivery — with the result that complainant did not and could not know what prices it might lawfully charge for new automobiles except in the relatively infrequent transactions where the entire consideration was payable in cash on or before delivery.

We think that neither of these objections is well-taken.

The basis of the first objection is as follows: A new automobile was defined in § 2 of SR 5 as meaning any automobile, including its standard equipment, for which the manufacturer published a suggested price for sales at retail. Section 3 of the regulation established as the basic ceiling prices for the retail sales of new automobiles the manufacturers' suggested list prices for sales at retail in effect prior to January 26, 1951. The ceiling delivered price for a new automobile was prescribed as the sum of the manufacturer's suggested list price for the automobile and for any extra, special or optional equipment, plus certain charges enumerated in § 3 for transportation, taxes, preparing and conditioning, and for special services requested by the customer. It appears that during the base period prescribed in the General Ceiling Price Regulation, and for many months prior thereto, it had been the practice of the manufacturer of Lincoln and Mercury cars to include as a part of the billed cost to dealers an amount of $50.00 per car for each new Mercury sold by the factory to dealers, and an amount of $65.00 per car for each new Lincoln, which said charges represented cooperative factory and dealer advertising; that the dealers could not obtain such cars from the factory without payment of these advertising charges as part of the cost; that during the period mentioned it had been the policy and practice of complainant, and of Mercury and Lincoln dealers generally in the so-called "Intermountain Area" comprising the States of Utah, Idaho, and parts of Nevada and Montana, to add in said factory-imposed advertising charges as a component of the dealer cost which was passed on to the retail purchaser and paid for by him as a part of the retail price of the car. Hence when complainant's sales were governed by the freeze provisions of the General Ceiling Price Regulation, its maximum prices for retail sales included such advertising charges, because these charges had been reflected in its highest prices prevailing during the base period. But when SR 5 went into effect, the pricing formula prescribed in § 3 of that regulation did not permit complainant to include such advertising charges as an item in the computation of its ceiling delivered prices for sales of new automobiles at retail. The regulation thus ran afoul, so complainant contends, of § 402(g) of the Defense Production Act reading as follows:

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210 F.2d 658, 1954 U.S. App. LEXIS 2486, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/george-v-tribe-co-v-kendall-assistant-director-office-of-defense-eca-1954.