United States v. H. S. Dorf & Co.

30 Cust. Ct. 664, 1953 Cust. Ct. LEXIS 493
CourtUnited States Customs Court
DecidedJune 4, 1953
DocketA. R. D. 28; Entry No. 782079
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 30 Cust. Ct. 664 (United States v. H. S. Dorf & 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. H. S. Dorf & Co., 30 Cust. Ct. 664, 1953 Cust. Ct. LEXIS 493 (cusc 1953).

Opinion

Rao, Judge:

This is an application for review of a decision and judgment of a single judge sitting in reappraisement, wherein it was held that certain white cornaline rods, in chief value of glass, were dutiable at the entered value of $0.60 per kilo. In arriving at that conclusion, the trial court determined that France was the country of exportation of the involved merchandise, and, hence, that the appraised value of U. S. $0.8652 per kilo, net packed, which was based upon a Mexican cost of production, was predicated upon an erroneous theory of law. It was therefore stated that:

The only evidence in this record bearing on a valuation in France for this merchandise is contained in the invoice and entry, the bona fides of which has not been attacked.
On the basis of the record herein, I find the proper value of the glass rods in question to be the entered value. Judgment will issue accordingly.

Appellant’s assignments of error bring up for review, inter alia, each of these salient points upon which the trial court’s decision rests, and it is urged in the brief in support of this appeal that Mexico, not France, was the country of exportation, or, and alternately, that even if it be conceded that the involved merchandise was exported from France, appellee has failed to establish a statutory value therefor in that country, since the invoice price, standing alone, has no eviden-tiary value and cannot bé accepted as- proof of a statutory value.

The record as made before the trial court consists of the oral evidence of Edward Kampa, general manager of Joseph H. Meyer [666]*666Bros., hereinafter called Meyer Bros.; defendant’s exhibit 1, a photo-statfc copy of a letter received by said firm from “Univer” Union des Industries du Yerre pour l’Exportation, hereinafter called Univer, the French shipper of the instant merchandise; and defendant’s collective exhibit 2, a photostatic copy of a report of a customs agent, to which are attached, also in photostatic form, copies of correspondence' and documents obtained from the files of Meyer Bros, and from H. S. Dorf & Co., Inc., hereinafter called Dorf of New York, appellee herein.

The facts as revealed by this record are not in dispute. It appears that during the latter part of April 1946, Meyer Bros, ordered from Univer 5,000 kilos of corualine cane glass to be shipped for its account to Industria de Cristal Plástico, S. A., Coyoacan, D. F., Mexico, hereinafter called Cristal. The order was accepted at a quoted price of $0.60 per kilo, to be filled by Messrs. Guilbert-Martiu, the French manufacturer of such merchandise. Owing to the fact that there were no direct shipping facilities between Paris and Mexico, Meyer Bros, advised the shipper to forward the merchandise to the United States for- transshipment by Meyer Bros, to Mexico, with which instructions Univer complied.

The merchandise, packed in 50 cases numbered 1 to 50, inclusive, 'arrived at the port of New York on August 3, 1946, for transshipment to Mexico.

Meyer Bros, forwarded to Dorf of New York the bill of lading and commercial invoice covering said shipment and directed that 25 cases (not involved in this appeal) be sent to Cristal by fast freight, the remaining 25 cases, numbered 26-50, inclusive, to be shipped via water to Vera Cruz, Mexico, for ultimate delivery to Cristal.

Upon receipt of the rail shipment, Cristal began to process the material and, finding that the glass was unsatisfactory for its intended purpose, to wit, the manufacture of glass beads, asked Meyer Bros, not to send the remaining 25 cases. The latter was unable to comply with this request for the reason that the merchandise was then on its way to Mexico, having been laden on the S. S. Medina, which sailed from New York on September 27, 1946.

On October 7, 1946, Meyer Bros, advised Dorf of New York to cable Vera Cruz for the return of the 25 cases on board the Medina. On October 10, 1946, in compliance with that order, Dorf of New York cabled its Mexican affiliate, Dorf Mexico Co., to hold the shipment, which was described as being then “on the way to Vera Cruz,” for return on the next available steamer. Thereafter, but precisely when is not of record, the Vera Cruz branch of Dorf Mexico Co. made application at the customhouse in Vera Cruz for the “devolution” or return of this merchandise, stating that the same was in a bad state, unusable, and shipped to Vera Cruz in error.. The Vera [667]*667Cruz branch of Dorf Mexico Co. was advised to tender the application to the principal office of customs, the Dirección General de Aduanas, at Mexico City, which it did. Eventually permission to return the merchandise was granted.

In the meantime, and because of a shortage in Mexico of material for making glass beads, Cristal decided to accept the 25 cases which it had hitherto rejected. Meyer Bros, so advised Dorf of New York which thereupon directed its Vera Cruz agent to cancel. previous instructions and forward the shipment to Cristal, as originally intended. Because the application to return the merchandise had been filed prior to the receipt of information concerning the change in plans, and because the merchandise had not been declared in Mexico as rods, the Vera Cruz branch of Dorf Mexico Co. felt that it “had no recourse but to re-export it, advising Dorf, New York, of the re-shipment under date of November 20, 1946.” Actually, the 25 cases left Vera Cruz on March 3, 1947, and arrived in New York March 16, 1947, where they were entered on a pro forma invoice prepared by Dorf of New York.

The trial court adopted the theory that the application of Dorf Mexico Co., the subagent of Meyer Bros, by whose actions the latter was hound, to the Mexican. Government for permission to return this shipment to New York, precluded importation of this merchandise into Mexico, and that, therefore, it reverted to its status as a French exportation. Citing as its authority Reap. Circ. 26133, the trial judge stated:

The application to return the shipment to New York was made while the goods were in transit from New York to Mexico, and when the permission was granted, it must he considered that the merchandise was diverted in transit. The continuity of the voyage was as follows: The glass rods were manufactured in France; shipped by boat to New York in transit to Mexico; and reshipped by boat from New York to Mexico. While in transit, the shipment was diverted and transshipped back to New York where it finally arrived and entry' thereof was made. While it appears that the original intention was to export this merchandise from France and import it into Mexico, the fact is that the goods were never imported into Mexico and did not enter into the commerce of that country. Therefore, the shipment must be considered as an exportation from France and not from Mexico. [Italics supplied.]

It is apparent from the italicized portion of the foregoing that the theory of “diversion in transit,” assuming that to be dispositive of' this phase of the case, was predicated upon the factual proposition that the application to return and the granting of permission therefor both were events which occurred, “while the goods were in transit from New York to Mexico.” But the record does not support this construction of the facts. We have .carefully examined the record but do not find a time when any of the following occurred: The arrival in Vera Cruz of the vessel carrying the merchandise from New York [668]

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30 Cust. Ct. 664, 1953 Cust. Ct. LEXIS 493, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-h-s-dorf-co-cusc-1953.