Tanners Hides Inc. Of Texas v. Charles H. Kendall, Assistant Director, Office of Defense Mobilization

219 F.2d 710, 1955 U.S. App. LEXIS 2973
CourtEmergency Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 4, 1955
Docket661
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 219 F.2d 710 (Tanners Hides Inc. Of Texas v. Charles H. Kendall, Assistant Director, Office of Defense Mobilization) 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
Tanners Hides Inc. Of Texas v. Charles H. Kendall, Assistant Director, Office of Defense Mobilization, 219 F.2d 710, 1955 U.S. App. LEXIS 2973 (eca 1955).

Opinion

219 F.2d 710

TANNERS HIDES Inc. OF TEXAS
v.
Charles H. KENDALL, Assistant Director, Office of Defense Mobilization.

No. 661.

United States Emergency Court of Appeals,

Heard at San Antonio, Texas, November 22, 1954.

Filed March 4, 1955.

Herman A. Greenberg, Washington, D. C., for the complainant.

Stephen W. Terry, Jr., Attorney, Department of Justice, Washington, D. C., with whom Warren E. Burger, Asst. Atty. Gen., and Edward H. Hickey, Chief, General Litigation Section, Department of Justice, and James A. Durham, Special Counsel, Office of Defense Mobilization, Washington, D. C., were on the brief for the respondent.

Before MARIS, Chief Judge, and McALLISTER and LINDLEY, Judges.

LINDLEY, Judge.

This complaint, filed pursuant to Section 408(d) of the Defense Production Act of 1950, as amended, 50 U.S.C.A.Appendix, § 2108(d), challenges the validity of Ceiling Price Regulation 2, Revision 1, effective March 19, 1951, 16 F.R. 2492.

Complainant, a corporation organized under the laws of Texas, is a dealer in bovine hides. As such, it buys from producers and resells to tanners, usually in carload lots. In this respect, however, the sales here involved were unique. Thus, during the period of price controls and for some years prior thereto, complainant had one customer, Tex Tan, who regularly purchased in less-than-carload quantities. This company, a manufacturer of leather goods, in order to insure the quality of leather it desired, tanned its own hides, and, in operating its business, was able to use only less-than-carload shipments of hides, i. e., smaller quantities than are desirable or customary in the tanning industry generally.

Between May 15 and October 12, 1951, complainant made six such shipments to Tex Tan, for which it charged the "standard packer selection" prices established by the regulation. On May 2, 1952, the Government filed an enforcement suit, based on the averment that these sales were made for more than the lawful maximum price, in that the prices charged exceeded the general ceiling price established for such commodities. This was denied by complainant, who claimed that it was entitled to charge standard packer selection maximum prices.

Section 2 of C.P.R. 2, Rev. 1, "Cattlehides, Kips and Calfskins," fixed two scales of prices. Thus, Table I fixed the general ceiling prices for ungraded hides while Table II fixed a substantially higher price for hides sorted on the basis of standard packer selection grades. A selected hide, within the meaning of the regulation, is one which has been cured, identified, graded and segregated by the seller, prior to shipment, in accord with accepted standards prevailing in the industry. The first sentence of the headnote to Table II provided, however, that the prices fixed could be charged only for deliveries of selected hides in carload lots, i. e., "36,000 pounds or more", for cattlehides, while note 4 required a 2 cent per pound reduction in price of bullhides shipped in less-than-carload lots.

On November 19, 1952, complainant, having obtained a continuance of the enforcement action, filed a protest against Section 2 of the regulation on the ground that conditioning of the right to demand "selected" prices upon shipment of carload quantities of hides rendered the regulation invalid. This protest was denied on December 4, 1952, on the ground that it had been filed too late.

The District Court having entered judgment for the plaintiff in the enforcement action, complainant, on September 29, 1953, filed an application for a stay and for leave to file a complaint in this court challenging the validity of the regulation. The Application was granted and this complaint followed. On February 9, 1954, we denied without prejudice respondent's motion to dismiss on jurisdictional grounds, which motion is now renewed.

Respondent's chief argument, in this respect, is that the application and the leave granted do not include the objections to the regulation which complainant now seeks to raise. The application incorporated, by reference, the untimely protest which detailed specific objections to the headnote of Table II and Note 4. Although the order granting leave to file does not expressly set forth all these objections, it nevertheless incorporates the necessary jurisdictional findings under the provision of Section 408(d) and we must, we believe, construe the order as a grant of leave to raise objections coextensive with those submitted to respondent in the protest and incorporated by reference in the application. We certainly cannot consider the order in a vacuum, divorced from and without relation to the application upon which it was entered. Under any reasonable interpretation we think that the findings of the enforcement court are in substantial accord with jurisdictional requirements. Limiting the complaint, as we must, to the specific objections raised by complainant in its application for leave to file, the issues growing out of its objections to the first sentence of the headnote of Table II and to Note 4 are properly before us for decision and respondent's motion must be denied.

Complainant attempts, however, to raise objections to certain provisions of Table I. These objections are clearly beyond the scope of the issues preserved by its application to the enforcement court and the order granting leave to file and, therefore, are not properly before us. Accordingly, we do not consider them. Taub v. Bowles, Em.App., 149 F. 2d 817; Fournace v. Bowles, Em.App., 148 F.2d 97.

Before we reach the question of validity of the regulation, we shall consider respondent's contention that there is no evidence before us that the particular shipments of hides in question were of standard packer selections but that, on the contrary, they were heterogeneous lots, the price of which is governed by Table I prices for unselected hides, and that complainant has not sustained its burden to prove that the transactions are within the provisions of the Table II scale for selected hides.

We digress for a moment to bring the question into proper perspective. The factual question now presented grew from a well-masked supposed denial at the pleading stage of the proceeding, to a small voice during the briefing stage and ultimately to a crescendo, at the time of oral argument. For example, ignoring for the moment the pleading aspects, this question, to which respondent's oral argument was principally directed, is mentioned in his brief in only one sentence, which is to the effect that, by paragraph 5 of his answer, respondent had denied that the hides in question were of standard packer selections.

When the unique relationship of the proceeding in this court to that in the enforcement court is considered, we are of the opinion this question was not put in issue by the pleadings. A suit in this court on a Section 408(d) complaint is ancillary to the enforcement proceeding out of which it grows. Massy v. Kendall, Em.App., 209 F.2d 250; Conklin Pen Co. v. Bowles, Em.App., 152 F.2d 764, 766.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
219 F.2d 710, 1955 U.S. App. LEXIS 2973, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tanners-hides-inc-of-texas-v-charles-h-kendall-assistant-director-eca-1955.