Jeka v. Reconstruction Finance Corp

192 F.2d 811, 1951 U.S. App. LEXIS 2794
CourtEmergency Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 14, 1951
Docket550
StatusPublished

This text of 192 F.2d 811 (Jeka v. Reconstruction Finance Corp) 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
Jeka v. Reconstruction Finance Corp, 192 F.2d 811, 1951 U.S. App. LEXIS 2794 (eca 1951).

Opinion

192 F.2d 811

JEKA
v.
RECONSTRUCTION FINANCE CORP.

No. 550.

United States Emergency Court of Appeals Heard at Milwaukee, Wis.,

September 28, 1951.

Decided November 14, 1951.

Paul D. Kain, Milwaukee, Wis., for complainant.

Anthony L. Mondello, Attorney, Washington, D. C., with whom J. Gregory Bruce and George Arthur Fruit, Attorneys, all of the Department of Justice, Washington, D. C., were on the brief, for respondent.

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

McALLISTER, Judge.

Complainant seeks review of an order issued by the Reconstruction Finance Corporation pursuant to regulations invalidating claims for meat subsidies. No question is raised as to the legality or validity of the regulations in question.

The regulations under which the claims for subsidies were invalidated provided that the "Reconstruction Finance Corporation shall declare invalid, in whole or in part, any claim of any applicant who * * * Is certified by the Office of Price Administration or by the Department of Agriculture pursuant to Amendment 4 to Directive 41, to have exceeded his quota for slaughter." Amendment 4 to Directive 41, referred to in the above regulation, directed the Reconstruction Finance Corporation to withhold subsidies upon certification that a claimant had exceeded his quota for slaughter. In this case, such a certificate was executed by the Office of Price Administration to the effect that complainant had exceeded his quota; and complainant's claims for subsidies were subsequently invalidated. Thereupon, complainant filed a protest setting forth that the certification of the Office of Price Administration of over-quota slaughter was without foundation, assigning as reasons therefor:

"(a) That on June 25, 1946, claimant made application to the District Office of the Office of Price Administration, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, for transfer of the quota previously alloted to the Donner Packing Company, * * * which application was made in compliance with regulations then in force governing the issuance of licenses and quotas for class 2 slaughtering houses; that although said application was filed on or about June 25, 1946, the Office of Price Administration never processed said application for reasons unknown to this claimant, although repeated requests were made upon * * * the Office of Price Administration.

"(b) That the matters of the alleged over slaughtering for the month immediately preceding June, 1946, were charged in a complaint instituted by Paul A. Porter then Administrator of the Office of Price Administration against this claimant, which action was filed in the District Court for the Eastern Division of Wisconsin, * * and which action was eventually dismissed on its merits.

"(c) On July 10, 1946, the Office of Price Administration issued its order," removing all restrictions as to the amount that a slaughterer, in complainant's classification, could handle in his plant, and it was, therefore, impossible for complainant to have exceeded any quota that might have been assigned to him; that, therefore, his claims for September and October, 1946, should have been allowed and paid.

On denial of the protest, as above set forth, the complaint now before us was filed. Many interesting questions are raised in the briefs and were argued upon the hearing, but our decision rests upon the question of complainant's compliance with the regulations and a construction of the terms thereof.

Complainant submits that, as a transferee of the Donner slaughterhouse, mentioned in his protest, he became entitled, under the regulation, to the slaughter quotas held previously by his transferor, Donner, although his own license contained no authority for such slaughter; that the certification by the Office of Price Administration of overquota slaughter on his part, was, because of his rights as a transferee of such slaughterhouse, without foundation; and that the denial of protest based upon these grounds by respondent Reconstruction Finance Corporation, was arbitrary, capricious, and not supported by substantial evidence.

The regulation upon which complainant bases his claim that, as a transferee of the Donner slaughterhouse, he was entitled to his transferor's quota, provides that when a slaughterer of the class in which complainant was listed, acquired, "between September 1, 1945 and April 25, 1946, a slaughtering establishment (including the place of business of a Class 2 slaughterer who had livestock custom slaughtered for him) covered by a valid license and quota bases under Control Order 1 (he) need not apply for a license or quota bases for such establishment under this order in the way provided in section 15."1 In such a case, the transferee of the establishment must apply to his District Office, in writing, for issuance of a license and assignment of quota bases as a transferee of an establishment for which a valid license and quota bases were outstanding under Control Order 1 and must give the following information, and submit the following documents:

"(1) The name and address of the applicant.

"(2) The name and address of the Class 2 slaughtering establishment.

"(3) The name and address of the person who held a license under Control Order 1 covering such establishment.

"(4) The date on which the establishment was transferred to the applicant.

"(5) The license of the transferor shall accompany the application unless proof be furnished that it has been lost or destroyed.

"(6) Documents or other proof of the transfer.

"If the District Office finds the conditions of this paragraph are met, it shall issue a new license to the applicant, and assign to him the quota bases established under Control Order 1 for the establishment and cancel the transferor's license and quota bases. If the transferee applies by May 15, 1946, he may continue to operate the establishment until the new license is received. The license and quota bases of the transferor of the establishment shall be treated as the transferee's license and quota bases for all purposes of this order. If such application is not made on or before May 15, 1946, the transferee may not slaughter any livestock after that date until he has made such application and received the license and quota bases applied for."

Complainant, as transferee of Donner, did not apply for the issuance of a license and assignment of quota bases by May 15, 1946. Instead, on June 25, 1946, he filed an application, setting forth certain required data as to the name and address of the person who held the license covering the slaughterhouse in question, as well as certain information regarding complainant's contract of purchase of the premises from a third party; the additional investment made by the company; and a statement that complainant had commenced slaughtering in the slaughterhouse so acquired, utilizing the men and equipment of the Donner Packing Company, while the latter company still remained in the premises and continued to kill cattle for its own purposes.

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192 F.2d 811, 1951 U.S. App. LEXIS 2794, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jeka-v-reconstruction-finance-corp-eca-1951.