United States v. Avery

30 F.2d 728, 1927 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1804
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. New York
DecidedNovember 22, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 30 F.2d 728 (United States v. Avery) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Avery, 30 F.2d 728, 1927 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1804 (N.D.N.Y. 1927).

Opinion

COOPER, District Judge.

This is another one of the many suits which have been brought by the government to recover from wool dealers gross profits claimed to have been made in the year 1918 in excess of maximum permitted by regulations promulgated by the WTool Division of the War Industries Board for handling the wool during 1918. Decisions upon demurrer or other preliminary matter in several of these cases have been reported, but there is only one case •which deals after a trial with most of many questions which have arisen in these cases. That is U. S. v. McFarland et al. (C. C. A.) 15 F.(2d) 823. Writ of certiorari in this ease, previously granted by the United States Supreme Court (273 U. S. 688, 47 S. Ct. 449, 71 L. Ed. 841), was revoked on October 17, 1927 (275 U. S. 485, 48 S. Ct. 27, 72 L. Ed. 386), with the following statement:

“Per Curiam. The decision of this ease does not require a decision of the questions which are presented in the petition for certiorari because of which the writ was granted, and the certiorari heretofore granted in this ease is therefore revoked upon the authority of Southern Power Co. v. North Carolina Service Co., 263 U. S. 508 [44 S. Ct. 164, 68 L. Ed. 413].”

The McFarland Case in an elaborate opinion reviews at length the conditions which led up to the issuance of the regulations in question and discusses their scope and legal effect. This case will be more fully referred to later herein.

It will bo sufficient for the purposes of this case to set forth only brief extracts from the regulations.

After defining approved dealers as “those dealers authorized by the War Industries Board to handle wool, who are located in the distributing centers and who buy from growers direct, through agents, or from country merchants, and also those dealers authorized by the War Industries Board who are located in wool-growing districts, and who1 buy direct from growers and resell, or consign to the dealers in distributing centers,” and detailing the prior right, desires, and needs of the government in connection with the 1918 wool clip, the regulations provide as to country dealers under the heading of “Compensation of Growers and Dealers” as follows:

“Approved dealers .shall he entitled to a gross profit in no ease to exceed 1% cents per pound on the total seasons’ business, this profit to cover all expenses from grower to loading wool on hoard cars.
“The grower shall receive fair prices for his wool based on the Atlantic Seaboard price as established on July 30, 1917, less the profit to the dealer, as stated above, and less freight to seaboard, moisture, shrinkage and interest.
“In no case shall this be constructed to mean that there shall he more than 1% cents gross profit made from the time the wool leaves growers hands until it arrives at the distributing center.”

Under the head "Government Price” the regulations provide that approved dealers in distributing.centers (central dealers) will be required to open and grade their purchases; that prices will ho fixed by government valuation committee appointed for that purpose, based on seaboard prices on July 30, 1917; and that central dealers will be entitled to a commission or compensation of 4 per cent, of the selling price.

The title “Profiteering Prohibited” is the particular one under which this action is brought, and roads in full as follows:

“As a guard against profiteering, the hooks of all approved dealers in distributing centers shall be at all times open to government inspection, and if it be found that their gross profits, including the aforesaid commission of 4 per cent., are in excess of 5 per cent, on the season’s business then such gross profits shall be disposed of as the gov[730]*730emment decides. The books of the country dealer shall likewise be open for government inspection. It if be found that the gross profits for the season’s business is in excess of iy2 cents per pound, then such excess profits shall be disposed of as the government may decide.”

The record here discloses that the defendant had operated as a wool dealer in Syracuse many years. He bought wools called fleece wools from growers and others dealers in New York state and Northern Pennsylvania. The so-called fleece wools consisted of small lots of wools grown by the farmers, and were within the regulations. In order to obtain these wools the defendant employed purchasing agents in the various country districts to negotiate the purchase of the wool and to collect and store it until a sufficient amount was collected to warrant a shipment to Syracuse.

This method, followed in previous years, the defendant followed in January, March, April, and the early part of May, 1918, and paid his purchasing agents, in addition to the expense of storing and collecting the wool, a commission of 2 cents per pound on all wool purchased by them. Prior to May 21, 1918, the day the regulations were promulgated, the defendant had purchased approximately 141,000 pounds of wool of the 1918 clip, which on that day had a market value of approximately $7,000 more than he actually received for it when it was subsequently sold.

The defendant’s expenses from the purchase of the wool to the time it was loaded on board ears for Syracuse was about 2% cents per pound, these expenses being made up largely of commission to purchasing agents, cost of storage in country districts, insurance, cost of bagging and baling, trucking expenses to warehouses and from warehouses to the cars on which it was loaded for shipment to Syracuse.

The defendant sought to be granted a permit as a central dealer, not as a country dealer. ■ On the 29th of May, 1918, he received a permit to act as a country dealer only, and on the same day signed the agreement to abide by the regulations as such country dealer. The permit reads as follows :

“Washington, D. C., May 24,1918. “War Industries Board, Wool Division.
Permit to Operate.
“Permission is hereby granted to S. E. Avery, Syracuse, N. Y., to operate as an approved wool dealer in country districts, for the 1918 clip in conformity with the regulations of the War Industries Board. Louis Penwell, Chief of Wool Division, War Industries Board.”
The signed agreement reads as follows:
“I, the undersigned, having received from the Wool Division of the War Industries Board a permit to operate as an approved wool dealer 'in country districts, do hereby agree to operate subject to the rules heretofore adopted or to be adopted by said Board for the handling of fleece wools.
“My permit is subject to immediate revocation for failure to comply with said regulations.
“S. E. Avery.” '
But defendant soon realized that this was not the permit as a central dealer that he wanted, and which he asserted he had been led to believe he might obtain. He believed he could not operate as a country dealer successfully or at a profit. Thereupon the fol-' lowing telegraphic correspondence took place between the defendant and the head of the Wool Division:

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United States v. Smith
39 F.2d 851 (First Circuit, 1930)

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Bluebook (online)
30 F.2d 728, 1927 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1804, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-avery-nynd-1927.