Peacock Canning Co. v. Turney

168 F.2d 1019, 1948 U.S. App. LEXIS 2173
CourtEmergency Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 14, 1948
DocketNo. 463
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 168 F.2d 1019 (Peacock Canning Co. v. Turney) 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
Peacock Canning Co. v. Turney, 168 F.2d 1019, 1948 U.S. App. LEXIS 2173 (eca 1948).

Opinion

LINDLEY, Judge.

Complainants are packers of Maine sardines, whose protests, in view of their similarity, were combined before the Administrator. Consequently a joint complaint followed in this court.

Complainants, during the twelve months preceding March 31, 1945, had sold to the Government, at its order, “standard keyless sardines” constituting 55% of their total production during that period. Complainants had found from their experience in 1944 that the maximum prices were such as to yield to them little or no profit. Furthermore, the cost of packing had steadily increased, and, in March, 1945, the number of fish available for processing had so declined and those caught were of such inferior quality as to make it probable that production during the coming season would be greatly curtailed. On March 6, 1945, the War Food Administration requested complainants and other canners to sell sardines to the Commodity Credit Corporation for the twelve months beginning April 1, 1945, in such quantities as should thereafter be ordered by the Government, at O.P.A. ceiling prices in effect on the date of delivery. Complainants agreed to comply, their offers to do so being accepted by the corporation on March 28, 1945. In the meantime, on March 26, the War Food Administration had ordered canners to set aside and reserve for delivery to the Government 80% of all sardines packed during the twelve months beginning April 1. Sardines were greatly in demand from the armed forces; hence the Government’s requisition of 80% of the output of the canners. The maximum ceiling price at that time was $4.32 per case less 1%% cash discount. This price, complainants claim, and there seems to be no dispute, was below canners’ costs.

The canners called the situation to the attention of the War Food Administration and a conference of representatives of O.P. A. and members of the industry was held in [1020]*1020Washington May 16, 1945. About June 1, O.P.A. decided to establish a maximum price of $4.55 per case and a price to the Government of $4.43625, less 1%% cash discount. Apparently the War Food Administration considered the price so low as to be likely to impede production necessary to meet the demands of the armed forces. The Director of Economic Stabilization participated in a preliminary conference. The War Food Administration, in order to assure that production would meet Government requirements, had requested that sales of Maine sardines to the Government be exempted from price control or that the maximum price be increased to not less than $4.75. Eventually, however, O.P.A. adhered to the price it had fixed, but added a price adjustment clause to the regulation as subparagraph (f) of Section 1364.112a of MPR 184, Amendment 6 (10 F.R. 8130, 8132) issued June 29, 1945, as follows: “(f) Amount of adjustment. (1) In the case of applicants more than 80 percent of whose gross dollar sales volume during the current fiscal year consisted of Maine sardines, the adjustment shall be sufficient so that the applicant will realize 25 cents over his ‘average total cost’ for each case of Maine sardines delivered to the War Food Administration, or any procurement agency thereof, between the date the application was filed and March 31, 1946, (2) ‘Average total cost’ shall be computed by: (i) Multiplying the applicant’s total cost of all operations during the current fiscal year * * * by the ratio obtained through dividing his total gross dollar sales volume of the standard keyless can pack during the current fiscal year by his total gross dollar sales volume from all operations and (ii) Dividing the result by the number of cases of the standard keyless can pack he produced during the current fiscal year.”

Under MPR 184, Amendment 6, the price to the Government was $4.43625 less 1%% cash discount, if packed east of the Penobscot river, and $4.72875, less the same discount, if packed west of the river or outside the state of Maine. On July 2, 1945, each of the complainants filed its application for adjustment of the prices at which it was delivering sardines to the Government and each of their contracts was thereafter amended so as to provide that the price to be paid for sardines sold and delivered under such contracts “shall be the maximum ceiling price, as adjusted by the Office of Price Administration” upon application. Thereafter, during the fiscal year, complainant Peacock sold to the Government under its contract 205,138 cases and complainant Seaboard 198,363 cases of canned keyless sardines. The question presented to us therefore is whether the adjusted price, as finally fixed by the Office of Price Administration and the Director of the Division of Liquidation,- is valid and this, in turn, involves the question of whether the Administration’s interpretation of the formula for adjusting the price is justified by the language of the adjustment provision and, in the alternative, whether, if those provisions have been correctly interpreted, the second paragraph of the regulation, thus interpreted, is valid.

The regulation provides that in filing petitions for adjustment, applicant shall file Form A Annual Financial Report upon a blank issued by the O.P.A. supplying data for the current fiscal year. Included in this form' is a profit and loss statement, Item 2(f) of which requires applicant to give effect to “net changes in in-process and finished inventories” in making computation of both “cost of goods and services sold,” and “net profit from operation” for the current fiscal year. Accordingly, in completing their respective Forms A, each complainant gave effect to such changes and, in computing their “total cost of all operations during the current fiscal year,” included in and added to their total cost a decrease in the value of their finished inventory equal to the difference between the value of such inventory on hand at the beginning of that year and the value of such inventory on hand at the end of the year. They likewise carried into this statement the changes in their inventories of raw materials and supplies, but, inasmuch as the value of such inventories had increased rather than decreased, the difference between their opening and closing values was deducted from their total cost. On the other hand, inasmuch as- there had been a decrease in the value of finished inventories, this was added to and includ[1021]*1021ed as a part of complainant’s total cost. This decrease in inventories of the complainants was, in the case of Peacock, $147,223 and, in the case of Seaboard, $137,421.

On September 5 and September 11, the Administrator issued unnumbered Letter Order No. — and Letter Order No. L-15 denying Peacock’s application for adjustment arid, on September 5, an order denying Seaboard’s application, being unnumbered Letter Order No. — and, on November, 25, an order fixing Seaboard’s price at $4.47 per case net. The Administrator found that the prices fixed brought to each complainant a profit of at least 25$ per case over its average total cost. The orders, in effect, approved complainants’ action in giving effect to the changes in the inventories of unfinished or in-process material, in calculating total cost of all operations but disapproved complainants’ action in giving similar effect to changes in finished inventories. Accordingly, in determining complainants’ total cost of all operations, O.P.A. excluded from cost the amounts by which complainants’ inventories of in-process commodities had increased during the current fiscal year, but refused to include the amounts by which complainants’ finished inventories had decreased. Thereupon, after vainly protesting informally, complainants filed with O.P.A.

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Bluebook (online)
168 F.2d 1019, 1948 U.S. App. LEXIS 2173, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peacock-canning-co-v-turney-eca-1948.