United States v. H. W. Robinson & Co.

25 C.C.P.A. 395, 1938 CCPA LEXIS 18
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedFebruary 28, 1938
DocketNo. 4116
StatusPublished

This text of 25 C.C.P.A. 395 (United States v. H. W. Robinson & Co.) 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. H. W. Robinson & Co., 25 C.C.P.A. 395, 1938 CCPA LEXIS 18 (ccpa 1938).

Opinion

LeNRoot, Judge,

delivered the'opinion of the court:

This appeal involves four reappraisement proceedings, in which the Customs Court, Second Division, affirmed a judgment of the trial court adjudging that:

* * * as to all items involved to which the importer has or has not made voluntary additions on entry (except the items to which the importer has made additions to meet advances made by the appraiser), the entered values are sustained.
As to all items involved to which the importer has added on entry to meet advances made by the appraiser (except the items to which the importer has not made any voluntary additions), the unit invoiced values, less 2 per centum, plus 10 per centum, plus packing and eases, are sustained.

[397]*397Tbe merchandise involved consists of complete, metal-mounted glass perfume bottles, and metal-mounted glass atomizers, imported in 1933 from Czechoslovakia.

Certain items of the imported merchandise were appraised by the local appraiser on the basis of their United States value, and certain other items were appraised on the basis of their cost of production, which appraised value in both cases exceeded the entered value of the respective items.

Before the trial court both parties introduced evidence, that of appellee consisting of testimony and affidavits, and that of the Government consisting of testimony and reports of special Treasury representatives. There was also incorporated into the record herein,, over the objection of appellant, the record in an earlier case relating to similar merchandise imported by appellee, but in which earlier case the Government had appealed to reappraisement. In that case the judgment of the trial court in favor of the importer was affirmed by the appellate division, and no appeal was taken to this court. Said case was United States v. H. W. Robinson & Co., reported in Reap. Dec. 3571, affirmed in Reap. Dec. 3817.

At the close of appellee’s case before the trial court in the instant proceeding, the Government moved to dismiss the importer’s appeals for failure of proof of a foreign or export value for the completed articles, upon the ground that the evidence of values related solely to parts of said articles. This motion was denied and exception was taken. Such denial is assigned as error in this appeal.

Appellee concedes that, if United States value and cost of production form the proper bases of reappraisement, respectively, the appraised values as found by the local appraiser are correct. There is no evidence in the record to the contrary.

Therefore, but two questions are here presented to us for determination:

1. Whether or not there is substantial evidence in the record supporting the findings of the lower tribunals that there was an export value of the involved merchandise at the time of the importation thereof.

2. If there be such substantial evidence, whether or not a certain charge, made by one Klaar, should be regarded as a commission paid said Klaar as a buying commissionaire or agent of appellee, or whether said Klaar should be regarded as a principal and said charge should be added to export value as a profit made by said Klaar upon said transactions.

If it should be found that there is no substantial evidence in the record to support the finding of the Customs Court tribunals of export value, then it will not be necessary to consider the second question.

[398]*398As we view it, there is no material conflict in the evidence in the •case upon the question of export value of the involved merchandise.

Both parties agree that there was no foreign value of the merchandise, and the record establishes that fact.

It appears that the merchandise here involved was actually imported by De Boer & Livingston, Inc., whose place of business is in New York City. We assume that appellee was the broker making the entry.

One M. P. Livingston testified both in the instant, and in the incorporated, cases that he was president of De Boer & Livingston, Inc. With respect to the merchandise here involved, he testified that he bought it personally in Gablonz, Czechoslovakia, during one of his periodical visits to that country. With respect to his method of purchasing the mounted bottles and atomizers, he testified in the instant case as follows:

Q. Now, Mr. Livingston, will you please tell us how you buy the merchandise ■of the kind under consideration, namely, mounted bottles and atomizers, when you go to Europe with the object of buying, and how you did buy the merchandise ■covered by the individual reappraisements now before the court?- — A. The representative of W. Klaar, our commissionaire, takes me around to the various manufacturers of perfume bottles. I make a selection of these bottles.
Q. From samples submitted to you? — A. From samples which I see in the ■various factories. After we have selected a great many of these bottles, the ■representative of Klaar then takes me to a jewelry mounter of these metal goods. 'We select from an assortment which he also has there — we select our styles we are ■interested in-; and Klaar then has these bottles shipped to the metal mounter, who in turn puts the trimmings on the bottles.
Q. Being the bottles that you selected with Klaar’s representative, and the -mountings which you selected with Klaar’s representative; is that right? — A. That is correct. Then the bottle is finished by the jewelry mounter and is returned to Klaar complete.
■Q. Then -what? — A. Then I purchase the complete bottle from Klaar.

The trial court in its decision summarized the further testimony of .said witness as follows:

The witness testified he paid Klaar “the cost of the completed article” “Plus the ■usual packing charges”, and “He gets the usual 10% commissionaire’s fee.” He further testified he places his order with Klaar, pays him the price shown on the invoice, plus an addition for packing, and in addition thereto 10 per centum over and above; that when he purchases a perfume atomizer he purchases also the atomizer base in a similar manner to that already stated “through the representative of Klaar”; that Klaar then purchases the atomizer mounting, “and assembles -the atomizer” by putting “the top part on the glass base, for which he makes no charge”; that all these goods were'purchased through Klaar, with whom he agrees on the price, an¡i wboip-he pays. The witness-named several firms in the United States who -purchase competitive and similar merchandise to that at bar; and was emphatic that Klaar is not a manufacturer, but a commissionaire and exporter.

[399]*399In tbe record we find two affidavits of Hans Illaar, the representative of tbe firm of W. Klaar, the material portions of which affidavits read as follows:

I herewith affirm in lieu of an oath that the prices of the bottles No. 642, 644, 650, 657, and 658 delivered to the firm of De Boer & Livingstone, Inc., New York, are as follows:
Bottles Nos_ 1> lO CO O ID co TTt CO 03 ^ to
Number of the Metal Mounting_ CO 05 CO 1-t O Th O 'CH ^ o Ox
70.

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25 C.C.P.A. 395, 1938 CCPA LEXIS 18, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-h-w-robinson-co-ccpa-1938.