Kingan & Co. v. Bowles

144 F.2d 253, 1944 U.S. App. LEXIS 4262
CourtEmergency Court of Appeals
DecidedAugust 3, 1944
DocketNo. 124
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 144 F.2d 253 (Kingan & Co. v. Bowles) 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
Kingan & Co. v. Bowles, 144 F.2d 253, 1944 U.S. App. LEXIS 4262 (eca 1944).

Opinion

MAGRUDER, Judge.

On December 26, 1942, Kingan & Co. filed with the Office of Price Administration ten applications for adjustment under Supplementary Order No. 9 and Procedural Regulation No. 6, requesting an adjustment of maximum prices established by Revised Maximum Price Regulation No. 169 applicable to beef carcasses or bone-in beef sold to the United States Army. The applications were similar to those involved in Armour & Co. v. Brown, Em.App.1943, 137 F.2d 233.

Supplementary Order No. 9, applicable generally to maximum price regulations theretofore issued or to be issued thereafter, reads, so far as now material, as follows (7 F.R. 5444) :

“Any person who has entered into or proposes to enter into a contract with the United States or any agency thereof, * * * who believes that a maximum price established by any price regulation of the Office of Price Administration impedes or threatens to impede production of a commodity * * * which is essential to the war program and which is or will be the subject of such contract * * *, may file an application for adjustment of such maximum price in accordance with Procedural Regulation No. 6. Upon the filing of an application for adjustment and pending the issuance of an order granting or denying such application, contracts * * * may be entered into, or offered to be entered into, and deliveries may be made, at the price requested in, such application. If, however, the order issued denies the application in whole or in part, the contract price shall be revised downward to the maximum price ordered, and if any payment has been made at the requested price, the applicant may be required to refund the excess.”

Procedural Regulation No. 6 (7 F.R. 5087) prescribes the form of application to be made under Supplementary Order No. 9 and calls for precise details of cost data, and also balance sheets and income statements for the preceding five years.

Kingan’s applications . for adjustment were accompanied by exhibits purporting to show that the existing ceiling prices would result in losses to the applicant ranging from 65$ to $2.43 per cwt. of dressed beef sold to the Army under the various contracts. The applicant sought specific increases, amounting in all to $3,-717.53, in maximum prices for carcass beef under contracts which it had undertaken with the United States Army.

The applications, together with similar applications by other persons, were denied on March 22, 1943, by Order No. 26 under Revised Maximum Price Regulation No. 169. On May 21, 1943, Kingan filed its protest against Order No. 26. This protest was denied by order of the Administrator issued June 23, 1943.

[254]*254Subsequently, by order issued September 11, 1943, the Administrator vacated the order denying Kingan’s protest. This was done in deference to our opinion in Armour & Co. v. Brown, Em.App.1943, 137 F.2d 233, 240, where a similar issue had been involved.

The Administrator then undertook a reconsideration of Kingan’s protest, directed more specifically to the issue of fact as we had defined it in the Armour case. In that case we said:

“Supplementary Order No. 9 was designed to obviate delays in Government procurement of commodities essential to the war program. It was an invitation to sellers as to whom the established maximum prices were ‘unreasonably low” to apply for adjustment upwards of the maximum prices of commodities to be sold to the Government, with permission to contract with the Government at such higher requested prices, subject to appropriate refund if the application for adjustment were subsequently denied by the Administrator. So far as government contracts are concerned, Supplementary Order No. 9 seems to make provision for relief of sellers who may have lost the right to challenge the validity of the regulation itself, or who may not be entitled to relief under the general adjustment provisions of the regulation, but whose continuing output is needed by the Government and is not likely to be forthcoming at prices which do not meet the costs of production.”

Therefore the issue raised under the particular adjustment provision was whether the maximum prices established by the regulation impeded or threatened to impede the applicant’s production of the commodities in question, and if so, what measure of relief was appropriate.

On November 13, 1943, the Administrator issued an intermediate opinion, referring to certain economic data of which he took official notice and to certain standard books on accounting in the meat packing industry, and setting forth at some length his theory as to the nature of the proof required to make out a case for relief under Supplementary Order No. 9.

The Administrator pointed to the fact that Kingan, like other big packers, is engaged in an integrated multi-product business and that it derives from the slaughter of cattle not only dressed carcasses but also the raw materials which it uses for the processing of many profitable byproducts. Manufacturing operations in the meat packing industry do not consist of assembling raw materials for the purpose of obtaining one finished product, but rather of separating or breaking down raw materials (cattle, etc.) into many parts, one of which (dressed carcass) is the major product, and the other parts of which are further processed into numerous byproducts. The Administrator quoted accounting authorities to the effect that while the cost of all joint products taken together may be computed, the cost of individual products cannot be accurately ascertained. He did not challenge the accuracy of the figures contained in Kingan’s applications for adjustment indicating apparent losses on the sales of carcass beef under the existing ceilings. These losses were arrived at by an accounting procedure widely used in the industry whereby a cost is ascribed to the single product, carcass beef; the details of this accounting procedure need not concern us now. The Administrator claimed, however, that the apparent losses on carcass beef so arrived at are in the nature of “bookkeeping losses” and do not necessarily indicate that the established ceilings on carcass beef would make it unprofitable for the packer to continue the slaughter of cattle yielding carcass beef of the grades affected. Summarizing his position, the Administrator stated:

“If he continues the slaughter of those animals he necessarily continues production of the carcasses, because unlike other multiproduct manufacturers, he cannot stop production of that one commodity without also ceasing production of all other commodities derived from the cattle, and seriously interfering with production of many other items which are combined products of the slaughter of various meat animals. The question is, then, not whether the maximum prices of bone-in beef will induce or impede continued slaughtering, but whether those prices and the prices of the many related commodities will, in the aggregate, induce or impede such slaughtering. That issue can be resolved only by comparison of the current over-all profit position of the particular seller with his profit position during a representative peace-time base period.”

The Administrator incorporated in the record a graph covering the years from 1937-1943, inclusive, for the Chicago market, purporting to show that since 1937 at [255]

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Related

United States v. John J. Felin & Co.
334 U.S. 624 (Supreme Court, 1948)

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Bluebook (online)
144 F.2d 253, 1944 U.S. App. LEXIS 4262, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kingan-co-v-bowles-eca-1944.