Reliable Wood Products Co. v. Fleming

160 F.2d 548, 1947 U.S. App. LEXIS 2636
CourtEmergency Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 7, 1947
DocketNo. 379
StatusPublished

This text of 160 F.2d 548 (Reliable Wood Products Co. v. Fleming) 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
Reliable Wood Products Co. v. Fleming, 160 F.2d 548, 1947 U.S. App. LEXIS 2636 (eca 1947).

Opinion

McAllister, judge.

On September 18, 1944, complainant asked the Office of Price Administration to establish a maximum price for its sales of a designated cedar wardrobe, in accordance with the provisions of Maximum Price Regulation 188, issued in July, 1942.1 This Regulation provided for four pricing methods for articles not sold in the base period. For manufacturers like complainant, who were not in business during the base period and who manufactured new articles not comparable to other articles in their line with established ceilings, maximum prices were required to be determined by the Fourth Pricing Method, set forth in Section 1499.158 of the regulation. That section provided for the establishment of maximum prices in line with the maximum prices established by the regulation, upon the specific authorization of the Administrator.

In its application for a maximum price, to be'’based upon prices in line with the maximum prices theretofore established by the regulation, complainant set forth specifications and manufacturing costs of its product and accompanied its application with a photograph of the wardrobe in question. It requested a maximum price of $29.50 for sales to retailers. After the filing of a formal application embodying this request, the Administrator, on January 19, 1945, issued Order No. 3306, in accordance with the regulation, establishing maximum prices for complainant’s wardrobe, of $16.61 for sales to jobbers, and $19.55 for sales to retailers.

[550]*550After the receipt of this order by complainant, it informally requested review of the order establishing the maximum prices, and submitted to the Office of Price Administration a sample wardrobe. Subsequently, the lumber used in this sample began to split, and complainant submitted a second sample. Later, the Office of Price Administration obtained a third sample of the wardrobe from a retailer who had purchased it from complainant.

On April 9, 1945, complainant filed a protest to the order. During the course of the protest proceedings, the Administrator incorporated in the record an affidavit setting forth specifications of the three sample wardrobes above mentioned. Further evidence was submitted by complainant and the Administrator also incorporated additional evidence in the record. The protest was referred to a Board of Review which heard oral argument and on September 11, 1946, made its report to the Administrator recommending that the protest be denied. The Administrator, on September 18, 1946, adopted the report of the Board of Review as his opinion and issued an order denying the protest.

At the present time, complainant is defendant in an enforcement action pending in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania involving sales of the wardrobe at prices above those established by the protested order.

Complainant contends that the order issued by the Administrator establishing maximum prices for its wardrobe is invalid for several reasons: that the order was not accompanied by a statement of considerations ; that the Administrator disregarded the differences in construction, cost of construction, and cost of labor, between the articles used as comparables by him, and the wardrobe of complainant; that he failed and neglected to consider the differences in the market, and competitive areas, in determining proper comparables; that he arbitrarily disregarded the com-parables submitted to him by complainant; and that he erred in using photographs in comparing the wardrobe of the complainant with the wardrobes used by him as comparables in determining a price ceiling for complainant’s wardrobe.

The first problem with which the Administrator was confronted in these proceedings was to ascertain the nature and quality of complainant’s wardrobe. Complainant had submitted a photograph and a written description. Later, before the findings of the Board of Review were filed, there was the further evidence of the three different wardrobes of complainant. It had submitted two — one, after the lumber in the first had split; and a third had been secured by the Office of Price Administration from .a retailer. The first sample was the one which the Administrator concluded was representative of complainant’s product. The fact that the second wardrobe would have warranted a higher price, and the third, a lower price, may lead to the reasonable conclusion that complainant’s wardrobe was manufactured with little adherence to uniform standards of quality. The question for determination involved the judgment of the Administrator as to which wardrobe was the most representative. Complainant alleged that the first represented the original wardrobe; that the third represented one of the very first wardrobes manufactured; and that the second represented substantially most of the wardrobes which it manufactured. However, the first wardrobe was submitted by complainant to the Administrator two years after it had started to manufacture the model in question and, at the time, was alleged to be representative of that model.

Whatever confusion there is in the matter of these different samples submitted by complainant to the Administrator was created by complainant itself, and in the face of its inconsistent allegations and proofs, we are of the opinion that the Administrator’s selection of the first wardrobe, as representative of those sold by complainant, was not unreasonable. Certainly, complainant did not sustain the burden, which rested upon it, of demonstrating that the Administrator was in error in his conclusions on this aspect of the controversy.

In establishing a maximum price for complainant’s product in line with the maximum prices established by the regulation, the Administrator considered the prices charged during the base period of March, 1942, for four cedar-lined wardrobes pro[551]*551duced by other manufacturers. These were compared with complainant’s product and found similar by a qualified expert, whose opinion the Administrator accepted as reliable evidence. The price established for complainant’s product was close to the top of the range of the base period prices charged for the four comparables. These other wardrobes had outside veneer, three of them being of hardwood. Complainant asserts that the four wardrobes in question were not being currently sold at the time the maximum price was established for the complainant. As to two of the four comparable wardrobes, such is the fact. A third had been sold continuously from March, 1942, and was still being sold at the time complainant’s protest was filed. The fourth wardrobe compared was not being sold at the time of the protest proceedings but a similar model without cedar lining was being sold by the manufacturer at a lower maximum price. It appears from the record that the model with the cedar lining was not being produced because of difficulty in obtaining cedar lumber; and that seems to be the most reasonable explanation for the discontinuance of the manufacture of cedar wardrobes by two of the base period manufacturers above mentioned. There is no showing that any of the comparable products were discontinued because of the maximum prices which had been established.

Complaint is made that the evidence relied upon by the Administrator with respect to the wardrobes used as com-parables was insufficient because based upon catalog descriptions and photographs of the products found to be comparable.

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Bluebook (online)
160 F.2d 548, 1947 U.S. App. LEXIS 2636, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reliable-wood-products-co-v-fleming-eca-1947.