Sears, Roebuck & Co. v. United States

30 C.C.P.A. 10, 1942 CCPA LEXIS 106
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedApril 27, 1942
DocketNo. 4369
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 30 C.C.P.A. 10 (Sears, Roebuck & Co. v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Customs and Patent Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sears, Roebuck & Co. v. United States, 30 C.C.P.A. 10, 1942 CCPA LEXIS 106 (ccpa 1942).

Opinion

JacKSON, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

This is an appeal, in a reappraisement case involving thirteen importations, from an interlocutory judgment of the Third Division of the United States Customs Court, sitting in appellate term, reversing the judgment of the trial court and remanding the case for reconsideration on the record “giving no weight to the evidence contained in Éxhibit 1.”

Such an appeal we have held to be proper procedure.. United States v. Elliott, Green & Co. et al., 28 C. C. P. A. (Customs) 177, 181, C. A. D. 141.

The involved merchandise consists of ungalvanized standard plow steel wire ropes in various sizes exported from Germany at different times from November, 1935, to August, 1937. The shipments were entered at the ports of New Orleans, Memphis, Boston, and Philadelphia.

Reappraisements 118692-A and 119113-A, consolidated for trial, concern importations at the ports of Memphis and New Orleans respectively. Those are test cases in which the appraiser of merchandise returned export values higher than the' invoice prices at which the merchandise was entered. The remaining eleven reappraise-ments are duress entries which cite one or both of the test cases.

The merchandise was entered and appraised on the basis of export value as defined in section 402 (d) of the Tariff Act of 1930. There is no dispute as to the correctness of that basis of appraisement, the controversy being as to the proper amount of the statutory value of the merchandise.

The values of the goods as invoiced and entered were expressed in United States dollars per hundred feet which appellant claims' represent the dutiable export values in the principal markets of Germany. [12]*12The merchandise was appraised in reichsmarks per hundred kilos, less 10 per centum discount, less nondutiable charges, plus reels.

During the course of the trial, which was held in the city-of New York, counsel for plaintiffs (appellants here) offered in evidence the invoices and entry papers in reappTaisement appeal 118692-A of Montgomery Ward & Co. They were received in evidence, over objection by Government counsel, and marked Collective Exhibit 1. That exhibit discloses that Montgomery Ward & Co. imported from a manufacturer in Germany, other than the manufacturer of the involved ropes, “Black Plow Steel Wire Ropes” which were invoiced and entered in American dollars per hundred feet. The ropes of the Montgomery Ward shipments are apparently of the same size as those of the involved merchandise.

There was received in evidence on behalf of the Government, a report of a Treasury attaché in Germany, dated June 26,' 1935, which enclosed a price list of the “German Wire Rope Export Association, Essen.” That list purports to contain the “Minimum Export Prices for Wire Ropes (Base Price List),” based upon the different wire diameters and different breaking strength of ropes made of iron and of crucible steel. The prices are in reichsmarks per hundred kilos. It was upon this price list that the merchandise here and that in the Montgomery Ward case were appraised.

A witness for the plaintiffs, who was a buyer for Sears, Roebuck & Co., with 20 years’ experience in importing wire rope, testified that the involved merchandise is made of standard plow steel in accordance with standards required by the United States Government; that all wire rope made of plow steel under federal specifications must necessarily be the same; that the specifications include the construction of the rope, its quality and its breaking strength; that there is a higher grade than plow steel, known as improved plow steel which has a higher breaking strength and is more expensive; that black plow steel wire rope is the same as standard plow steel rope; that during his 20 years’ experience in purchasing wire rope he had never bought wire rope from Germany nor sold wire rope in the United States on a weight basis but always by length, and that the prices quoted to his principal had always been on the basis of length and not weight.

An affidavit of a director of the manufacturer of the goods herein contains the following statement:

That the above Company has no agreement of any kind limiting the sales to the United States, to Sears, Roebuck and Co., but that they can sell at the same prices to anyone who desires to buy; that the wire ropes manufactured according to the German specifications are sold at prices per 100 kilos while,the ropes to the United States are sold at prices per 100 feet, that the wire ropes manufactured [13]*13under the German specifications are sold for the German market at prices controlled by a Cartel, that such prices vary considerably and are subject to a complicated rebate system and that, therefore, uniform prices do not exist, that as herein before stated, a comparison of the export prices for goods shipped to the United States and the prices for ropes sold in Germany cannot be made because of the methods of selling in Germany and particularly because of the differences between the ropes manufactured according to the German Standards and those manufactured according to the American Standards, those for the United States being manufactured according to entirely different conditions and manufacturing processes.

The case was submitted to the trial court April 25, 1939, and in a decision dated December 21, 1939, the trial court, after haying set out in quite some detail the evidence before it, stated as follows:

In a reappraisement appeal the burden rests upon the plaintiff to prove, first, that the appraiser was wrong, and second, that the values contended for by him are correct. Counsel for the plaintiff in his brief filed herein contends that the appraiser’s action was erroneous for the reason that the values arrived at by the appraiser were in reichsmarks per 100 kilos whereas the sales to the plaintiff and other importers were made in American currency per 100 feet.
In my opinion the record does not sustain this contention. The notations upon the entry papers combined with the evidence of actual payments, would seem to establish that the purchase of the imported merchandise was made in reichsmarks. Moreover, it would appear that the exporter of the merchandise herein in common with all the other German manufacturers who exported steel wire rope to the United States was a member of the German Steel Wire Rope Export Association which fixed the minimum prices of steel wire rope exported from Germany in reichsmarks per 100 kilos.
In my opinion the appraiser was justified in accepting these minimum prices as the basis of his appraisements, and there is no evidence in the record that the steel wire rope was not offered at such minimum prices to all purchasers in the usual wholesale quantities in the ordinary course of trade for export to the United States.
Upon the entire record, I find that the plaintiff has not sustained the burden either of proving that the action of the appraiser was erroneous or that the values contended by him constitute the correct export values of the merchandise herein.
I therefore find that the export value is the proper basis for determining dutiable value, and that there is no foreign value for said merchandise. Hence, I find such export values to be the values found by the appraiser. Judgment will be rendered accordingly.

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Related

H. C. Redemann, Inc. v. United States
43 Cust. Ct. 397 (U.S. Customs Court, 1959)

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Bluebook (online)
30 C.C.P.A. 10, 1942 CCPA LEXIS 106, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sears-roebuck-co-v-united-states-ccpa-1942.