Porter v. Rabinowitz

159 F.2d 512, 1947 U.S. App. LEXIS 2485
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 19, 1947
DocketNo. 11773
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 159 F.2d 512 (Porter v. Rabinowitz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Porter v. Rabinowitz, 159 F.2d 512, 1947 U.S. App. LEXIS 2485 (5th Cir. 1947).

Opinion

LEE, Circuit Judge.

The administrator of the OPA brought this action1 to enjoin violation of Maximum Price Regulation No. 5412 and to recover treble damages in the amount of $10,373.47 for the “bulk sale” of raw muskrat pelts by one A1 Rabinowitz, doing business as Victory Fur Company, at certain prices in violation thereof.3 From a judgment rendered on a motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim upon which relief could be granted, the administrator appeals.

Section 9 of M.P.R. 541,4 as amended, provides maximum prices for “kinds of [514]*514* * * furs * * * listed” therein. For the maximum price of any “assortment or grade” not listed, section 9(a) provides a formula. That price under the formula is “in line with the price enumerated” adjusted downward “in accordance with the general practice in the trade * * * to reflect the customary differentials between the assortment or grade described and the assortment or grade being priced.” Then in the following table "Muskrat, southern” is listed in Column I with “(a) Tops” in Column II and with “$1.77” in Column III.

[515]*515In his amended complaint the administrator alleged that the defendant had sold at certain times, in certain quantities, “bulk lot” muskrat5 pelts so as to overcharge $3,459.49 above the ceiling;6 that “the customary differential in the trade during the base period between ‘bulk lots’ and ‘tops’ was not more than 74%, which, when applied to $1.77 for ‘tops’ as fixed by the Regulation, provides a maximum price of $1.31 for ‘bulk lots’;” that the Regulation is silent as to who should have the authority to determine the custom of the trade, but that it is the duty of the OPA Price Division to gather information and to make such mathematical calculations as may he necessary; that fourteen dealers in compliance with an inquiry filed figures for the base period that showed the average price for bulk lot was 73.88% of the average price filed for tops; that, when this percentage is applied to the figure of $1.77 for tops, specified by the Regulation, a price of $1.31 was determined to be the maximum price for bulk lots; that during at least part of the time involved it was generally recognized that the ceiling price for bulk-lot muskrat fur was $1.23 because the OPA had not permitted the State Conservation Department, one of the largest sellers of raw muskrat furs in “bulk lot” in the State, to sell its bulk-lot muskrats for a price higher than $1.23; that later the OPA redetermined this price to the level of $1.31.

The defendant gave three reasons for his motion to dismiss: (1) M. P. R. 541 does not cover “bulk lot” sales because “assortment or grade” in section 9(a) thereof does not include “bulk lot.” (2) If M. P. R. 541 does cover “bulk lots,” no maximum price was applicable because the plaintiff, by his own pleading, had not the authority to determine the “practice in the trade * * * to reflect the customary differentials,” and defendant could not be expected to make the determination. And (3) that OPA’s determination of $1.23 and subsequently $1.31 as the maximum price for bulk-lot sales of raw muskrat fur by the Louisiana Conservation Department was not sufficient notice to the rest of the industry of a determination of maximum prices, and that defendant had no notice of that determination.

The court below granted defendant’s motion to dismiss on his first and second grounds. The sole question before us is the correctness of this ruling.

M. P. R. 541 does cover bulk-lot sales of southern muskrat fur. Section 2 thereof expressly states: “This regulation applies to all sales * * * of furs,” with certain exceptions here irrelevant. Section 3(f) thereof defines “kind of sale” to include “bulk lot.” Column II of the table following section 9 specifically lists prices for different kinds of furs and includes prices for “bulk lots” of two of the furs 7 listed.

Plaintiff’s contention that M. P. R. 541 does not include “bulk lots” rests upon the meaning of “assortment” in this sentence of section 9: “The maximum price applicable to a sale, purchase or delivery of any other assortment or grade of any kind of raw, dressed or dressed and dyed fur or peltry listed shall be a price in line with the price enumerated for the assortment and grade described in Column II * * * ” “Assortment” may have two meanings: It may mean “a group or class consisting of one soil” or it may mean “a collection containing a variety of sorts or kinds.” 8 Plaintiff argues “assortment” has the first meaning and therefore excludes “bulk lot” from the pricing formula of section 9. Our foregoing analysis of the coverage of section 9 leads us to conclude that “assortment” has the second meaning, hence does not exclude “bulk lot” from the pricing formula set up in section 9.

Under our construction of section 9(a), the second and third reasons [516]*516given by plaintiff for his motion to dismiss are not cogent. In part, section 9(a) reads:

“The maximum price applicable to a sale * * * of any other assortment * * * shall be a price in line with the price enumerated for the assortment and grade described in Column II, making downward adjustments in accordance with the general practice in the trade during the base period of this regulation to reflect the customary differentials between the assortment or grade described and the assortment or grade being priced.”

We believe that “the general practice in the trade * * * to reflect the customary differentials” has reference to a “habitual or customary practice among a * * * trade” known frequently as a “custom” but more correctly known as a “usage.”9 The “usage” must be proven as a fact.10 The burden of proving the “usage” is upon the party who is asserting it.11 The elements necessary for its proof are variously stated.12 One court has said:13

“* * * A local custom [usage] must be well established, reasonable and generally known, of such age, uniformity of observance, certainty, fixedness of character and notoriety that a jury would be justified in saying that it was known to the party sought to be affected by it.”

Since a party engaged in a particular trade will be presumed to know the usages of that trade,14 the plaintiff need not show the defendant had specific knowledge of it.

The judgment appealed from is reversed, and the cause is remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent herewith.

Reversed and remanded.

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Related

Porter v. Rubenstein
161 F.2d 376 (Fifth Circuit, 1947)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
159 F.2d 512, 1947 U.S. App. LEXIS 2485, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/porter-v-rabinowitz-ca5-1947.