United States v. Egry Register Co.

5 Cust. Ct. 562, 1940 Cust. Ct. LEXIS 3261
CourtUnited States Customs Court
DecidedOctober 18, 1940
DocketNo. 5035; Entry No. 23
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 5 Cust. Ct. 562 (United States v. Egry Register Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Customs Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Egry Register Co., 5 Cust. Ct. 562, 1940 Cust. Ct. LEXIS 3261 (cusc 1940).

Opinion

Keeee, Judge:

This is an application filed by the Government for the review of a decision rendered by a single judge in Reap. Dec. 4690, 3 Oust. Ct. 656.

The facts presented before the court below disclose that the Egry Register Co. of Dayton, Ohio, the appellee herein, entered into three contracts with the firm of F. M. Scudds, Ltd., of Toronto, Canada, for the manufacture of three printing presses to be built to such specifications furnished by the appellee as would meet their particular requirements. Each contract provided for the manufacture, sale, and delivery of one rotary offset press at a price of $í 1,666, f. o. b. Dayton, duty and all shipping charges and taxes to be paid by the seller. The contracts were identical in character except that each provided for a different sized cylinder, to wit, 17-inch, 22-inch, and 28-inch.

Work commenced upon the machines on January 11, 1937. Delivery of the first machine was to be made on May 1st, the second on June 1st, and the third on July 1st. A sum of $2,000 was paid upon each contract in advance on the date of the execution of the contracts. Later, the appellee advanced to Scudds, Ltd., as the work progressed, certain sums for wages and materials, to wit, $8,363.77 and a cash loan of $1,000 not connected with the execution of the contracts, or a total of $15,363.77. Scudds, Ltd., became financially involved, and when they failed to deliver the first machine according to contract the appellee company, upon investigation, decided it was to its interest to salvage whatever of the products had been produced. It was established at this time in conversations between the appellee and S. L. Wright, secretary and treasurer of Scudds, Ltd., that $8,500 represented the price of one printing press, f. o. b. factory, and that as it would require about $2,500 additional work thereon to completely finish the 17-inch press, the value thereof, as turned over to the appellee, was $6,000 and further, that, as the miscellaneous parts of the other two machines were not worth any more than their scrap value, $500 would represent such scrap value thereof. The merchandise was therefore invoiced and entered at the values thus placed thereon by S. L. Wright and certain patterns were also included, in the invoice, although no value was given therefor.

When the material came before the appraiser an investigation was ordered and as a result thereof the printing machinery and parts [564]*564were appraised at $18,437.74,. Canadian currency, upon the basis of the cost of production, and the moulders patterns were appraised at an additional sixm'of $355.69, Canadian currency, making a total appraised value of $18,793.43.

At the trial below considerable testimony was adduced upon behalf of the appellee herein establishing the conditions under which the importation was made and the circumstances leading up to the fixing of the invoice and entered prices. It was further disclosed that the pay rolls of Scudds, Ltd., insofar as they applied to the work of the plaintiff, had been “padded” by Scudds, Ltd., although it was impossible to discover the extent thereof. However, one workman, John Darby, signed an affidavit, admitted in evidence, to the effect that he had been paid $209 out of funds supplied by the appellee for work performed upon articles not connected with the Egry Register Co.’s contract.

A cost accountant connected with the firm of Price Waterhouse & Co. testified that he investigated for the appellee the cost of production of the incomplete printing press and parts imported herein, and during his investigation discovered that the pay rolls had disappeared and therefore he was unable to determine exactly the cost of production. From the ledger accounts he was able to determine that the Egry Register Co. had disbursed to Scudds, Ltd., an amount of $15,406.47 which included a loan of $1,000 not connected with the work in progress. In deducting that sum, together with an amount of $42.70 paid for other work not connected with the press contracts, and $315.68, a proportion of wages paid to H. F. and F. M. Scudds considered applicable to work other than the Egry contracts, and $400 in salaries in May and June, also considered not to be disbursements in connection with the Egry contracts, the accountant found that the total advances in connection with the press contracts were $13,947.75. The accountant also reported from his investigation that out of the $6,000 paid by the Egry Register Co. upon the signing of the contracts he had found that $2,382.41 had been used by Scudds, Ltd., for other purposes, and therefore the total disbursements of the appellee in connection with the manufacture of the three printing presses was $11,565.34.

In reference to the disappearance of the pay rolls, the appellee’s representative inquired of Treasury Representative' F. R. Thropp, located in Toronto, Canada, relative to any records seized by said Thropp in connection with his investigation, and specially mentioned the pay rolls. The Treasury representative denied that he had the pay rolls in his possession.' It developed that the Government at the trial had a report signed by said Thropp which had attached thereto as Exhibits N-l, N-2, and N-3, the particular pay rolls of Scudds, Ltd., which he denied were in his possession, and also many other [565]*565bills and records of Scudds, Ltd. In order to have these records before tbe court the appellee moved the report and records attached thereto in evidence as exhibit 11. The Government also moved in evidence two additional reports of the Treasury representative.

Upon consideration of the evidence before him the trial judge found that the entered value represented the fair value of the merchandise and that such value was the foreign or export value thereof. The Government appealed, assigning error substantially as follows:

First, that the court erred in finding that the entered value represented the fair market value of the merchandise for the reason that there is no provision in section 402 of the Tariff Act of 1930 establishing a basis for such value.

Second, that section 402 defines “value” for the purposes of the statute, and the court is directed in section 501 to determine such value from the evidence presented at the trial, and that the trial court, in holding that, because of the nature of the importation, an offer for sale to all purchasers in the ordinary course of trade, in the usual wholesale quantities in the principal markets of the country, was not feasible, the ascertainment of a fair market value was the most equitable method of determining the export value, was contrary to law.

Upon consideration of the evidence and the numerous exhibits ■presented before the court below and upon hearing argument of •counsel, we find that the trial court erred in holding that a fair market value for the merchandise represented the foreign or export value, and, further, that the finding of such value is contrary to the definition thereof iff section 402.

It is clear from the evidence that the Government in denying access to the pay rolls and other records prevented the Egry Register Co. ■from obtaining evidence relative to the cost of production of the merchandise. It is equally clear that the cost of production which formed the basis of the appraiser’s finding of value is erroneous because the labor and material costs used by the appraiser in his finding are not truly representative of the actual costs of the merchandise imported.

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Related

Petition 6125-R of Egry Register Co.
7 Cust. Ct. 304 (U.S. Customs Court, 1941)

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Bluebook (online)
5 Cust. Ct. 562, 1940 Cust. Ct. LEXIS 3261, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-egry-register-co-cusc-1940.