Northwest Steel Rolling Mills, Inc. v. Kendall

210 F.2d 283
CourtEmergency Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 3, 1954
Docket635
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 210 F.2d 283 (Northwest Steel Rolling Mills, Inc. v. Kendall) 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
Northwest Steel Rolling Mills, Inc. v. Kendall, 210 F.2d 283 (eca 1954).

Opinion

210 F.2d 283

NORTHWEST STEEL ROLLING MILLS, Inc. et al.
v.
KENDALL.

No. 635.

United States Emergency Court of Appeals.

Heard at Seattle, Washington, November 20, 1953.

Decided February 12, 1954.

Writ of Certiorari Denied May 3, 1954.

See 74 S.Ct. 709.

DeWitt Williams, Seattle, Wash., William Helsell, Seattle, Wash., on the brief, for complainants.

John G. Roberts, Atty., Washington, D. C., Warren E. Burger, Asst. Atty. Gen., Edward H. Hickey, Chief, General Litigation Section, Dept. of Justice, and James A. Durham, Acting Gen. Counsel, Israel Convisser, Asst. Gen. Counsel, Washington, D. C., and Bernard A. Goodkind, Atty., Economic Stabilization Agency, New York City, on the brief, for respondent.

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

McALLISTER, Judge.

Northwest Steel Rolling Mills, Inc., and two of its weighmasters were indicted in the United States District Court for the Western District of Washington, Northern Division, on the charge of unlawfully buying and receiving a truckload of steel scrap, and paying therefor a price in excess of the ceiling price established by the regulations of the Office of Price Stabilization. During the period of the alleged unlawful conduct, the corporate complainant above named was engaged in the business of melting iron and steel scrap and converting it into steel products; and was subject to Ceiling Price Regulation 5 which, in Section 1(b) (1), provided that on and after October 30, 1951, no person should sell, deliver, buy, receive, or prepare iron or steel scrap, or agree or attempt to do so, at prices above those fixed in the regulation.

Pending the trial of the criminal case, complainants filed with the district court, as authorized by law, a petition for leave to file a complaint in the United States Emergency Court of Appeals, attacking the validity of the regulation in question; and, upon leave being granted and the criminal proceedings being stayed in the meanwhile, complainants filed their complaint in this court in which they asserted that, in particular, Section 28(n) of Ceiling Price Regulation 5 was invalid because the standards which it adopted with respect to certain steel scrap were vague and indefinite; that the regulation unlawfully delegated the function of defining unprepared steel scrap to private individuals; and that the regulation was ambiguous in that it purported to apply more than one ceiling price to the same scrap items. Complainants contend that they were unable to ascertain, from the regulation, what unprepared scrap consisted of.

Specifically, complainants were charged with having purchased unprepared steel scrap — that is, steel scrap defined in Grade 34 of Section 3 of the regulation as "Unprepared steel scrap other than material suitable for hydraulic compression," and having paid overceiling prices therefor.

To the complaint, answer was filed by the government and evidence was, by leave of this court, introduced in the form of the presentation of affidavits on behalf of complainants to the Director of Price Stabilization, who was, at the same time, authorized to receive such other evidence as he deemed proper; and the court instructed the director to certify a transcript of such evidence and file the same in this court, together with any statement or opinion the director might choose to make with respect to the foregoing. Such evidence was presented both on behalf of complainants and the government, and appears in the transcript filed by the director, which is now before us, as the record in the case.

Ceiling Price Regulation 5, Collation 1, in part, provides:

"A — Scope of the Regulation.

"Section 1. What this regulation does and prohibitions. (a) This regulation establishes ceiling prices and fees for:

"(1) All sales and deliveries, including export sales and sales for export, by any person of prepared and unprepared scrap." (Emphasis supplied.)

Section 3 of the regulation provided for ceiling prices founded on the basing points of forty-one cities. The basing point prices for steel scrap, of dealer and industrial origin, from which maximum shipping prices were to be computed, for the base grade, No. 1 bundles, Grade 1, were set forth, with the various differences of price per gross ton dependent upon the location of the specified cities.

Differentials which were allowed, above or below the prices theretofore enumerated, for grades of steel scrap other than the base grade, No. 1 bundles, Grade 1, were also set forth in thirty-three different classifications of steel scrap, numbered from 2 to 341. Classifications numbered from 2 to 10, inclusive, were entitled: "Open Hearth and Blast Furnace Grades." Classifications numbered from 11 to 31, inclusive, were entitled: "Electric Furnace and Foundry Grades." Classifications of steel scrap numbered from 32 to 34, inclusive, were entitled: "Unprepared Grades."

The "Unprepared Grades" comprised, within the language of the regulation:

"32. Unprepared steel scrap which when compressed constitutes No. 1 bundles

"33. Unprepared steel scrap which when compressed constitutes No. 2 bundles

"34. Unprepared steel scrap other than material suitable for hydraulic compression"

Since Section 1 of the regulation provides for the establishment of ceiling prices for all sales of "prepared and unprepared scrap," and Section 3 of the regulation provides for differentials with respect to the various grades of steel scrap, in which the last three grades enumerated — from 32 to 34, inclusive — are set forth under the title, "Unprepared Grades," the inference is almost inescapable that all other grades, entitled "Open Hearth and Blast Furnace Grades" and "Electric Furnace and Foundry Grades," are considered "Prepared Grades," in contrast to those denominated, "Unprepared Grades."

We proceed, then, to the consideration of Section 28(n) of Price Regulation 5, which provides:

"`Unprepared scrap.' The term shall have its customary trade meaning and shall not include such demolition projects as automobiles, bridges, rail abandonments, vessels, and locomotives, cranes, freight cars and similar equipment on its own wheels. Prior to demolition such projects are not iron and steel scrap and must be priced under the applicable provisions of the General Ceiling Price Regulation."

Complainants, in attacking the above section of the regulation, submit that "unprepared scrap" has no customary trade meaning; that the regulation is, therefore, void for vagueness and uncertainty; and they allude to the fact that in Section 23 of the regulation, Grades 2 to 31, inclusive — here claimed by the government to constitute the "Prepared Grades" — are identified and described in detail according to their weight, size, and other characteristics.

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210 F.2d 283, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/northwest-steel-rolling-mills-inc-v-kendall-eca-1954.