United States v. Gitkin Co.

46 Cust. Ct. 788
CourtUnited States Customs Court
DecidedJune 5, 1961
DocketA.R.D. 132; Entry No. 15207-1/2, etc.
StatusPublished
Cited by38 cases

This text of 46 Cust. Ct. 788 (United States v. Gitkin 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. Gitkin Co., 46 Cust. Ct. 788 (cusc 1961).

Opinion

Rao, Judge:

This is an application for review of the decision and judgment of a single judge sitting in reappraisement (43 Cust. Ct. 508, Reap. Dec. 9524). Tbe merchandise, the subject of this proceeding, consists of bamboo draperies, curtains, blinds, and blind material, exported from Japan during the years 1956 and 1957. Seventy appeals for reappraisement, covering the involved shipments, have been herein consolidated.

It appears from the record, and the individual invoices which are in evidence as plaintiff’s collective exhibit 2, that all of the importations were entered at the invoiced ex-factory prices, which prices included packing, but not certain so-called inland charges, separately listed on the respective invoices as (1) inland freight from maker to shipping port, (2) insurance premium from go-down to on board, (3) storages, and (4) hauling and lighterage, nor a stated buying commission of 5 per centum on the total ex-factory price.

The invoices which are here in issue are those only in the name of Nosawa & Co., Ltd., of Kobe, Japan (hereinafter called Nosawa). Such others as bear the names of other Japanese exporters have been [790]*790expressly excluded, and the respective appeals for reappraisement have been abandoned as to all merchandise from those firms.

Appraisement of the various items covered by these many suits took two general forms. In certain instances, the appraiser’s return was expressed in terms of the invoiced unit values, plus the inland charges, plus 5 per centum, packed. In others, he returned a unit value per 100 square feet, net packed, or per piece, net packed, which was stipulated to “include alleged buying commissions, and inland freight, and other charges in at least the amounts as shown in the invoices in such cases,” but, in any event, exceeded the invoiced unit prices.

Both the entered and appraised values are stated to represent export value, as defined in section 402(d) of the Tariff Act of 1930, as follows:

Expoet Value. — The export value of imported merchandise shall be the market value or the price, at the time of exportation of such merchandise to the United States, at which such or similar merchandise is freely offered for sale to all purchasers in the principal markets of the country from which exported, in the usual wholesale quantities and in the ordinary course of trade, for exportation to the "United States, plus, when not included in such price, the cost of all containers and coverings of whatever nature, and all other costs, charges, and expenses incident to placing the merchandise in condition, packed ready for shipment to the United States.

Tlie parties are in apparent agreement that statutory export value is the proper basis for determining the value of the subject merchandise, and the record substantiates that neither such, nor similar, merchandise was offered for sale for home consumption in Japan.

It may fairly be assumed, from all relevant evidence in this case, that the appraiser’s return of the value of the individual items of bamboo articles covered by these appeals rested upon an implicit finding that Nosawa was the seller thereof. Appellee vigorously disputes tins fact, contending here, as it did before the trial court, that Nosawa was its buying agent who purchased the merchandise in issue for appellee’s account from various Japanese manufacturers, some 17 in number. The names of the alleged actual sellers are set forth on the respective invoices to which their sales relate.

To substantiate its contention that Nosawa was its buying agent, appellee, the Gitkin Co., hereinafter called Gitkin, introduced the testimony of its manager, Harold M. Stuart, whose function it is to arrange for the purchase of imported merchandise, and the mechanics of its entry into this country. Stuart gave evidence of an agreement entered into between appellee and Nosawa, on or about August 15, 1955, in Kobe, Japan, a copy of which is in evidence as plaintiff’s exhibit 1, whereby Gitkin retained Nosawa as its buying agent to make purchases on its behalf, and pursuant to its instructions, [791]*791after submitting samples and price quotations; and to inspect the purchased goods and arrange for its shipment to appellee.

Nosawa was specifically directed to make all purchases on an ex-fáctory basis, and, in invoicing the purchased material, to set forth such prices, and separately itemize all other charges, including an authorized buying commission of 5 per centum of said ex-factory prices. This agreement remained in effect during the entire period covered by the importations in issue.

Stuart, who was in Japan in August 1955, and on two occasions each in 1957 and 1958, testified that Nosawa performed the duties required of it under the agreement. A representative of Nosawa took him to visit some of the factories which produced the type of merchandise Gitkin was buying, introduced him to their owners, acted as interpreter, and helped him to negotiate purchases. “They arrange • the shipping, all of the shipping, and the inspection, market reports, and anything else we needed. In other words, Nosawa is doing the job which I personally would if I lived over there all the time.”

The witness further testified that purchases from the manufacturers are paid for in Japanese yen, by Nosawa, whereas Gitkin remits the amount shown on the invoices by letters of credit opened to Nosawa, and payable in United States dollars. He explained the various items specified on the invoices as follows: The charge for export bales and packing included in the ex-factory price covers the cost of packing the material in a tightly bound round bundle, covering it with paper, and sewing it in Hessian cloth or burlap; the item of inland freight is the transportation charge from the seller’s factory to the port of Kobe; the insurance premium is for insurance from the time the merchandise' is placed in the go-down or warehouse at Kobe until it is put on board the vessel; storage is, as its name implies, warehouse storage charges pending arrival of the vessel; hauling and lighterage are charges for transporting the goods from the warehouse to the exporting vessel, via lighter.

To the best of Stuart’s knowledge and information, the amounts charged for the specified items are actual charges.

In two affidavits, introduced into evidence as plaintiff’s exhibit 15, and plaintiff’s collective exhibit 16, Nosawa’s managing director, Kuichi Hitomi, confirmed that at all times here involved his company acted as buying agent for Gitkin, making purchases as directed by the latter, at ex-factory prices, and adding thereto the inland charges actually incurred and its buying commission on the ex-factory prices, as per its agreement. Hitomi stated that Nosawa has no interest in any of the Japanese factories with which it deals. The affidavits further reveal that Nosawa acts in a similar capacity for several other American importers and purchases bamboo blinds for them, as well as for Gitkin, directly from factories on an ex-factory basis.

[792]*792The record also contains affidavits from some, but not all, of the manufacturers from whom the subject bamboo material was purchased (plaintiff’s collective exhibits 3-14, inclusive). While most of the affiants asserted that it was their respective company’s sales practice to sell ex-factory or ex-appointed warehouse, as desired by the customer, all of them affirmed that, in the case of Gitkin, all sales were on an ex-factory basis.

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Bluebook (online)
46 Cust. Ct. 788, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-gitkin-co-cusc-1961.