Stein v. United States

153 F.2d 737, 1946 U.S. App. LEXIS 3159
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 18, 1946
DocketNo. 10694
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 153 F.2d 737 (Stein v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stein v. United States, 153 F.2d 737, 1946 U.S. App. LEXIS 3159 (9th Cir. 1946).

Opinion

STEPHENS, Circuit Judge.

An amended information (information) containing seventeen counts charged Jacob R. Stein, appellant herein, with the doing of acts in violation of War Production Board (WPB) General Preference Order M-9-a, promulgated pursuant to the Second War Powers Act, Public Law 507, 77th Congress, Chapter 199, 2d Session, 56 Stat. 177, 50 U.S.C.A.Appendix § 633. Counts 4 and 11 were dismissed; the jury found defendant not guilty as to Count 1; he was convicted and sentenced as to the remaining fourteen.

Each comit charged that appellant on a certain date, the dates ranging from December 3, 1942, to March 16, 1943, did wilfully and unlawfully deliver a stated quantity of a wire mill product, namely copper wire, to a purchaser; that said delivery was not made to fill an order bearing appropriate allocation classification and purchaser’s symbol and bearing a preference rating of AA-5 or higher, or bearing any allocation classification, purchaser’s symbol or preference rating whatsoever; that said delivery was not expressly authorized by the Director General for Operations; that appellant thereby wilfully diverted said wire mill product from the war effort of the United States.

Appellant was organizer and sales manager, and was in control, of a company which originally dealt in aluminum and aircraft parts and subsequently handled salvage and other materials.

In September, 1942, appellant purchased certain materials from Lockheed Aircraft Corporation (Lockheed) including a surplus inventory of insulated copper wire. He inventoried the materials and printed a cata-logue of them, and in October, 1942, sent a copy of the catalogue to various firms and government agencies including WPB and the Western Procurement District Office of the Army Air Force (AAF). The engineering division of the Western Procurement District Office advised appellant not to sell certain of the materials until written releases were obtained from that office. Appellant made some telephonic requests for permission to make sales and was verbally given such permission. Thereafter he made numerous sales and de[739]*739liveries of the materials. In 1943 his activities were twice investigated by WPB agents, and in October of that year the information herein was filed. The statements contained in this paragraph will be enlarged upon and related to other circumstances and to effective regulations further on in this opinion.

It is agreed by both appellant and ap-pellee that the purchase orders submitted to appellant by buyers for the sale and delivery of copper wire did not bear any allocation classification, purchaser’s symbol, or preference rating of AA-5 or higher. The original of the orders filled by appellant are before us as a part of the bill of exceptions. We have examined them and have found that none of them bears any of the indications of authorization mentioned. It is also appropriate at this point to say that both parties to this appeal agree that the sales and deliveries charged in the information were made and that at the trial there was no issue as to the acts done.

Appellant contends first that his conviction rests upon the fact that he has been found to have done certain acts which are not crimes. Such contention covers the conviction under eleven counts (2, 3, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 12, 13 and 14), each involving sales made from November 5, 1942, to March 4, 1943, during which period Priorities Regulation No. 10 referred to by § 933.2(c) (2), which required an order to bear “appropriate allocation classification and purchaser’s symbol,” was not effective, having been revoked from the beginning of the period.

Appellant is charged under § 933.2(c) (2) of General Preference Order M-9-a (7 FR 5980, 8825). Prior to November 5, 1942, the section read:

“(c) Deliveries of brass mill products or wire mill products. [‘Wire mill products’ is defined in § 933.2(a) (6) (7 FR 5980, 8825) to mean bare or insulated wire or cable for electrical conduction made from copper or copper base alloy.] Except as expressly authorized or directed by the Director: * * *

“(2) No industrial supplier, mill supplier, plumbing supply house or other person engaged in the business of distributing brass mill or wire mill products to industry or trade, shall deliver or cause to be delivered any brass mill product or wire mill product, unless such delivery is made to fill an order bearing the appropriate allocation classification and purchaser’s symbol (pursuant to Priorities Regulation No. 10) and bearing a preference rating of AA-5 or higher. [For ready understanding we have italicized the part of the section which had been eliminated.]” Priorities Regulation No. 10, § 944.31 (7 FR 4198, 4833, 5640) was revoked November 5, 1942 (7 FR 9028).

The question then is whether appellant’s conduct was condemned by § 933.2(c) (2) even though Priorities Regulation No. 10 with its requirement of appropriate allocation classification and purchaser’s symbol had been revoked. It is appellant’s position that the whole section was impliedly repealed by the revocation of the Priorities Regulation.

The Priorities System was inaugurated by the Office of Production Management and was continued by WPB, which superseded the Office of Production Management. The allocation classification symbol and the purchaser’s symbol used in the Priorities System referred to the amounts of controlled materials to be released. A preference rating referred to the order of deliveries from the standpoint of time. In most instances all three requirements were necessary. In special circumstances an allocation classification and purchaser’s symbol without more was sufficient. They were not invariably accompanied by a preference rating. They had an existence of their own separate and distinct from a preference rating. Therefore, if the requirement for an allocation classification and purchaser’s symbol falls, the requirement for a preference rating remains unaffected. Under § 933.2(c) (2) of General Preference Order M-9-a, then, a delivery remained unlawful, even after the revocation of Priorities Regulation No. 10, unless it was made to fill an order “bearing a preference rating of AA-5 or higher.”

We have seen that the orders filled by appellant did not bear any of the three items originally required by § 933.2(c) (2), and, of course, did not bear the requirement of “a preference rating of AA-5 or higher” as was still required after the revocation of Priorities Regulation No. 10. The court instructed the jury as to § 933.2(c) (2) applicable to the case without noticing the change made by the elimination of the regulation. But this could not possibly have been prejudicial to appellant since there remained the requirement that the order must bear a preference rating of AA-5 or higher and [740]*740the orders did not bear such requirement. The point made is not well taken. (The oversight mentioned was not called to the attention of the court at any time. Nevertheless, we have noticed it.)

Similarly, appellant contends next as to Counts 15, 16 and 17 that his conviction rests upon the fact that he has made sales after March 4, 1943, and after § 933.2(c) (2) was amended.

On March 4, 1943, § 933.2(c) (2) was amended (8 FR 2751) to read:

“(c) Deliveries of brass mill products or wire mill products. Except as expressly authorized or directed by the Director: * * *

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153 F.2d 737, 1946 U.S. App. LEXIS 3159, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stein-v-united-states-ca9-1946.