Halibut Producers Cooperative v. Porter

157 F.2d 332, 1946 U.S. App. LEXIS 3286
CourtEmergency Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 11, 1946
DocketNo. 290
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 157 F.2d 332 (Halibut Producers Cooperative v. Porter) 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
Halibut Producers Cooperative v. Porter, 157 F.2d 332, 1946 U.S. App. LEXIS 3286 (eca 1946).

Opinion

McAllister, judge.

Complainant filed a protest against the provisions of Maximum Price Regulation 203,1 which relates to the pricing of Vitamin A, claiming that they were invalid on the ground that they were arbitrary, capricious, and contrary to law. The Administrator denied the protest, and the present complaint was thereafter filed.

Complainant is a corporation, organized as a cooperative under the laws of the State of Washington. Its members consist of 276 manager owners, or part owners, of fishing vessels, operating in the Pacific Ocean, out of the Puget Sound area. The principal business of the complainant, conducted under the name of the “Halibut Liver Oil Producers,” consists of handling fish livers taken from fish caught by its members, extracting the oil therefrom, and marketing the natural oils, which are primarily valuable for their Vitamin A con[333]*333tent. The Vitamin A produced by complainant comprises about 25% of all Vitamin A, produced from livers of fish caught by vessel owners in this country. Price Regulation 203 purports to fix the maximum price at which Vitamin A in natural oil can be sold.

Vitamin A is a unique commodity. It is a colorless substance having a chemical structure consisting essentially of a half molecule of beta-carotene. There has as yet been no commercial process developed by which it can be produced synthetically. The most important source of Vitamin A is the oil obtained from the livers of several species of fish and marine animals. The vitamin bearing oil obtained from such livers, serves as a vehicle for the handling and use of the vitamin. Fish liver oils containing Vitamin A are not sold as oils, but as Vitamin A, and such oils are quoted, bought, and sold, at a given price per million units of Vitamin A contained in a certain quantity of such oil, rather than at a certain price per gallon of oil.

The purpose of all methods of production is to extract the vitamin rather than the oil from fish and marine animals. The oil itself can be obtained relatively easily, but each of the various methods in use has as its major purpose insuring as little loss of vitamin potency as possible. The vitamin bearing oil is removed primarily from fish livers, by mechanical, thermal, or chemical action, which breaks down the liver tissue. The oil may be concentrated — in potency of vitamin content — by certain processes. But not all of the vitamin bearing oil goes through the concentrating process. Potency depends upon the kind of livers from which the oil is extracted, as well as upon the method of extraction, and concentration. Much natural Vitamin A oil is available for "end use” in its natural dorm. It appears that only oil in the extremely low potencies, or oil with offensive odor and taste, and poor stability, is required to be concentrated. However, much good quality oil is concentrated to satisfy the requirements of purchasers. Complainant in this case, as has been said, is also engaged in extracting the oil from the livers, but does not have any concentrating facilities. The important point is that, in all oils, the Vitamin A is the same. There is no difference in its quality. The only difference is that the vitamin may be associated with a different quantity or kind of oil.

Before the price control statute, Vitamin A was priced, bought, and sold, according to the millions of units of the vitamin itself, without any regard to the potency of the oil, i. e. the proportion of units of vitamin to quantity of oil.

Price Regulation 203, adopted in August 1942, originally established three different ceiling prices based upon Vitamin A density, or potency of oil in which it was contained. According to its provisions, Vitamin A in oils having a potency of from 6,000 to 60,000 units per gram, had a ceiling price of 14 cents per million units; Vitamin A in oils having a potency of 60,000 to 200,000 units per gram, had a ceiling price of 20 cents per million units; and Vitamin A concentrates of any potency, and Vitamin A in natural oil with a potency in excess of 200,000 units per gram, had a ceiling of 30 cents per million units. Oils of. potencies lower than 6,000 units per gram were excluded from the coverage of the Regulation.

After the Regulation had been in effect for some time, the Administrator found that the new price schedule had the result of encouraging the blending of the natural vitamin oils of different potencies, and the blending of natural vitamin oils with concentrated vitamin oils to create blends of just under 6,000 units per gram, and just at or over 60,000 and 200,000 units per gram. Based upon his finding that natural oils of other potencies, badly needed by pharmaceutical companies and other users were being held and used for blending and mixing, and were accordingly tending to disappear from the market, the Administrator issued Amendment No. 1 to the Regulation (9 F.R. 1036) on January 26, 1944. This amendment removed the exemption from control of vitamin oil of less potency than 6,000 units of Vitamin A per gram, except when used with Vitamin D in blending of oils for animal and poultry feeds, and established a maximum price of 14 cents per million units for any oil with a [334]*334potency of less than 40,000 units of Vitamin A per gram. The maximum price per million units of oils of potencies between 40.000 and 200,000 units of Vitamin A per gram, was fixed at 14 cents plus an additional one cent for each additional 1,000 units per gram. The maximum price of Vitamin A concentrates remained at 30 cents per million units, regardless of potency; and “concentrate” was defined as including any oil with a potency greater than 200,000 units of Vitamin A per gram.

After the above amended provision had been in effect for approximately six months, the Administrator found, in effect, that the result was that a practice had arisen of blending Vitamin A oils priced at 30 cents per million units, and having po-tencies above 200,000 Vitamin A units per gram, with lower priced oils, having poten-cies below 200,000 per gram, to create blends of a potency of 200,000 units or more, all of the oil in such a blend, selling for the maximum price of 30 cents per million units.

In order to end the above practice, the Administrator on July 19, 1944, issued Amendment No. 2 to the Regulation (9 F. R. 8188). In this amendment, it is provided that no blends of concentrates and natural oils shall be sold unless, prior to the sale, a specific maximum price is authorized for such sale by the Office of Price Administration, and that in no event will a maximum price be approved in excess of the amodnt which the components of the blend would be entitled to, if sold separately. Amendment No. 2 further provided that in cases in which it is determined that the blending will lead to circumvention and evasion of the Regulation, a maximum price may be established for. the blend lower than the sum of the maximum prices of the components. In the amendment, the prior graduated scale of maximum prices for oils of potencies between 40,000 and 200.000 units of Vitamin A per gram, and the maximum price of 30 cents per million units for all concentrates were retained.

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Related

S. Roggen & Co. v. Fleming
159 F.2d 707 (Emergency Court of Appeals, 1946)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
157 F.2d 332, 1946 U.S. App. LEXIS 3286, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/halibut-producers-cooperative-v-porter-eca-1946.