United States v. Diagonals

22 C.C.P.A. 517
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedJanuary 7, 1935
DocketNo. 3804
StatusPublished

This text of 22 C.C.P.A. 517 (United States v. Diagonals) 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
United States v. Diagonals, 22 C.C.P.A. 517 (ccpa 1935).

Opinions

Lenroot, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

This is an appeal by the United States in a reappraisement proceeding wherein the United States Customs Court (First Division) rendered a judgment reversing the judgment of the trial court and adjudging that the foreign yalue of certain sj!yer.fHig-r-ee was 0.60 lira per gram, plus 2% per centum sales tax, plus packing.

The merchandise involved was imported from Italy by appellee at the port of New York in 1931. It was appraised by the local appraiser at its entered value, viz, 0.70 Italian lira per gram, plus 2% per centum sales tax, plus packing. From such appraisement the collector appealed for reappraisement.

Upon the first hearing the single judge dismissed the appeal upon the ground that the Government had failed to make out a 'prima jade case. Upon motion of the Government a rehearing was granted and the case was again submitted upon the record made at the first hearing. The single judge then rendered judgment adjudging that the foreign value of the merchandise was 0.93 lira per gram, plus 2% per centum sales tax, plus packing.

The importer, appellee here, petitioned for a review of said judgment by the appellate division which, as hereinbefore noted, reversed the judgment of the trial court and entered judgment as aforesaid. From such judgment the United States took this appeal.

The only evidence in the record consists of a report signed by S. Brumer, United States Treasury attaché at Milan, Italy, introduced by the Government, and two affidavits introduced by appellee.

The said report introduced by the Government states that Genoa is the principal market for filigree silver made in Italy and that it is manufactured exclusively in the district surrounding Genoa. The report further states as follows:

An association exists, known as the Federazione delle Artigiane, in Genoa, to which all dealers without exception belong. The association has been in existence over three years, fixes prices which are effective up to and including date of the present investigation. Any infraction to the price rules is punishable by severe fines. All filigree silver is sold by weight in units of grams.

The report further shows that the association price of filigree silver such as is here involved was 0.93 lira per gram, and that at such price said filigree silver was freely offered for sale in Genoa, both for the home market and for export, in the usual wholesale quantities. The report further sets out a number of sales by one firm in Genoa at the uniform price of 0.93 lira per gram for filigree such as is here involved, and the report states that such sales “are representative of the usual wholesale quantities (1) United States and (2) Italy.”

[520]*520The report further states:

* * * In the home market the cities of Florence and Venice are the principal purchasers, where the merchandise is sold without further manufacture and in some cases stones are set therein to form bracelets, necklaces, and broaches.

The report shows eleven sales in Genoa by one firm. In only one of these sales was the address of the purchaser given as Genoa. The other ten sales were to purchasers whose addresses were given as Rome, Venice, Florence, and Santa Fe, in Italy, and Chicago and New York in the United States. There is nothing in the record indicating that there was any restriction upon these purchasers as to resale or use of the filigree silver.

The affidavits introduced by appellee consist "of an affidavit by the exporter of the involved merchandise, one Giovanni Diagonale, a brother of appellee, and an. affidavit by one Bongera Domenico fu Matteo, of Campo Ligure, Italy. (The special agent’s report states that Campo Ligure is “several score kilometers distant” from Genoa.) The affidavit of the exporter states that he is a resident of Torre del Greco in Italy, and that he purchased the silver filigree here involved, from the firm of Bongera & Biombo, of Campo Ligure, at the price of 0.60 lira per gram. '

The material part of the other affidavit is as follows:

I am a member of the firm of Bongera & Piombo, of Campo Ligure; I am personally familiar with the buying and selling transactions of certain silver filigree which occurred between my firm and Mr. Giovanni Diagonale of Torre del Greco. My firm manufactures and sells silver filigree goods, and my firm sells the said filigree in the usual wholesale quantities both in Italy and for export to foreign countries. On October 5th, 1931, my firm sold to Mr. Giovanni Diagonale of Torre del Greco 2,600 grams of silver filigree, of a fineness of 600 per thousand, at lire 0.60 per gram, and that the said price represents the true value of the said merchandise and of similar merchandise sold to others by my firm at that period. And my firm was ready to sell, and willingly would have sold, in the usual wholesale quantities, similar silver filigree at the same price at which it was sold to Mr. Giovanni Diagonale, namely: 60 centimes per gram, as above said. Moreover, my firm sold some silver filigree, of a fineness of 600 per thousand identical to that sold to Mr. Giovanni Diagonale, as above, to Mr. Giovanni Cola, Via San Marco 27, Venice, under date of September 23d, 1931, at the price of 62 centimes per gram; and to Mr. Davide Perugia, Galleria Mazzini, Genoa, under date of November 10th, 1931, at the price of 60 centimes per gram. My firm practices the same price, for the usual wholesale quantities, both for goods sold for local consumption and for goods exported to the United States of America, or to other foreign countries, and it does not practice different prices.

Tbe first question before us is whether the per se va(lue of the silver filigree here involved, should be determined from the market price of such silver filigree in Genoa or its market price in Campo Ligure.

The appellee here has contended throughout this proceeding that the market in Genoa was a controll.ecLmarket by reason of the prices of filigree silver being fixed by an association of dealers, with penalties for infractions of such prices, and that therefore the prices so fixed [521]*521should not be considered in determining the foreign value of the merchandise involved.

The Government, on the other hand, has contended throughout this proceeding that the mere..fixing of prices of filigree silver sold, in Genoa, without any restriction as to resale or disposition of the merchandise by the purchaser, does not constitute a controlled market in the sense that the prices so fixed may not be considered in arriving at foreign value.

This is the principal question before us, and it will be first considered.

It is conceded that a foreign value of the merchandise involved existed at the date of its exportation, and therefore the provisions of section 402 (c) of the Tariff Act of 1930 are applicable; said section reads as follows:

Sec. 402. * * *

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Bluebook (online)
22 C.C.P.A. 517, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-diagonals-ccpa-1935.