United States v. P. C. Kuyper & Co.

17 C.C.P.A. 139, 1929 CCPA LEXIS 33
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedJune 13, 1929
DocketNo. 3166
StatusPublished

This text of 17 C.C.P.A. 139 (United States v. P. C. Kuyper & 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. P. C. Kuyper & Co., 17 C.C.P.A. 139, 1929 CCPA LEXIS 33 (ccpa 1929).

Opinion

Garrett, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

The merchandise concerning which the litigation involved in this case arose consists of knitting machines manufactured in Germany and imported by appellee. Sixteen entries are involved, three of them being importations made in 1925 and the remainder in 1927. They were assessed for duty under paragraph 372 of the Tariff Act of 1922 at 40 per centum ad valorem.

It is stipulated by attorneys for appellant and appellee that the application for review of the appraisement No. 77020-A shall be considered as representative of the applications for review in all of the other 15 cases. The court will, therefore, confine its consideration practically to this number and the decision as to it will be the decision as to the others.

Entry and appraisement were made upon the basis of foreign value, under paragraph 1 of section 402 (a). This is agreed to have been the legally correct valuation basis for the articles in question, and the issue presented is primarily one of fact as to whether the correct foreign value was arrived at under the law. In the case of this particular importation under consideration (77020-A), the invoice price seems to have been $3,516.40 plus a 1% per centum German consumption or sales tax, making a total of $3,569, which appel-lee insists is the proper value upon which duty should be assessed. The importer, however, “in order to meet advances by the appraiser in foreign market value in similar .cases then pending on appeal for reappraisement,” added to the invoice price above given the sum of $573, thus making a total of $4,142 fixed by the appraiser as the dutiable or foreign market value. This addition was made under duress, under section 489, and the importer appealed under section 501 from the appraisement by the local appraiser to a reappraisement by an associate justice of the Customs Court. Mr. Chief Justice Fischer, before whom the testimony was taken, rendered a decision finding the dutiable value of the merchandise to be the invoice [141]*141values, and upon application for review of this decision before the first division of the Customs Court, Mr. Justice Brown, speaking for the court, affirmed the decision of Mr. Chief Justice Fischer.

The Government has appealed to this court and assigns numerous allegations of error.

The contention of the Government’s counsel in the case is that the effect of the decision of the United States Customs Court is to grant the importer two discounts of 15 per centum each, thus approximating 30 per centum discount from the manufacturer’s list prices in the home (German) market, whereas he was entitled (if to any discount at all) to only one 15 per centum. Appellee contests this contention, insisting that only one 15 per centum was allowed, and so the issue of fact is made up and presented.

We do not understand counsel for the Government seriously to insist that the importer was not entitled to have credited on the total dutiable value at least one discount of 15 per centum. This seems from the record to be clearly a proper allowance in arriving at the correct dutiable value in these cases, and the court so holds.

The real question presented is whether in some way a double discount has improperly been allowed.

Appellant contends that (1) the invoice values, as supplied to the importer by the manufacturer, were the manufacturer’s list prices less 15 per centum at the time of the exportation; (2) the foreign value is no less than the manufacturer’s list price, less 15 per centum, and hence the trial court erred in allowing 15 per centum to be deducted from the entered value, as the entered value had previously been arrived at by a deduction of 15 per centum from the manufacturer’s list price.

In other words, we understand counsel for the Government to contend that in this case (77020-A) there was deducted in the invoice sent to the importer 15 per centum of the actual list price, which gave the price of $3,516.40 insisted upon by appellee as being the true dutiable value plus the l}í per centum German consumption tax. The importer, on the other hand, insists that this 15 per centum had not been so deducted and that he was entitled to its deduction, in fixing the total value upon which he should be required to pay duty, and that, therefore, the $573 added to be entered under duress should be remitted.

Appellant insists that the importer has offered no proof that this 15 per centum was not deducted at the time of the making out of the invoice, which was the basis of the entry, by the manufacturer, as it (the Government) claims, and that the Government has proven the contrary by the admission of the manufacturer “on at least two separate occasions,” to wit: (a) An admission to the.special‘agent in Germany, and (6) in an alleged deposition»of the manufacturer, Hilscher, purporting to have been taken in New York on April 28, [142]*1421926. The latter instrument is challenged by appellee as not being properly a part of the record and will be referred to later.

Appellant quotes from the testimony of Max Nydegger, witness for appellee, when he was asked by appellee’s counsel where he obtained the figures used in making the duress addition so as to bring the amount up to what the examiner claimed was the home market (German) value, his reply being, “These figures are based on the report we have from the manufacturer, the way he would calculate a similar machine for home-market sale.” The argument is then made that when the shippers supplied the importer with the “home-market price,” they supplied the price at which the merchandise was sold in Germany, “which price necessarily included any deductions or adjustments.” This is purely argumentative, and the statement of the witness is construed by counsel for appellee to uphold his contention with quite as much plausibility in argument as marks that of counsel for the Government. We do not think this reply of the witness is such proof of a fact as to call for or justify a reversal by this court of the findings of fact by the Customs Court.

We have examined with care the report of the special agent of the Government, made from Berlin, Germany, to the Secretary of the Treasury, under date of January 25, 1926, which includes the agent’s preliminary cable sent January 23 in response to instructions wired him on January 12. Without attempting to review it, because in our opinion it is unnecessary, let it suffice to say that we find nothing therein stated as a fact which would justify this court holding that in these transactions it has been shown that the 15 per centum deductions were made from the list prices upon the invoices sent by the manufacturers to the importer.

The Customs Court is clothed by law with authority to adopt and promulgate its own rules of procedure. Acting under this authority, it has, as a part of its system of procedure, in rule 26, the following:

At the hearing of appeals to reappraisement affidavits and reports of special agents abroad and other United States officials discharging their duties in investigating market conditions shall be considered and accorded such credence and probative value as, in the opinion of the justice, the circumstances may justify, even though such reports may contain statements in the nature of hearsay or secondary evidence.

This rule was adopted by the Customs Court in accordance with that part of section 501 of the Tariff Act of 1922 which reads:

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Bluebook (online)
17 C.C.P.A. 139, 1929 CCPA LEXIS 33, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-p-c-kuyper-co-ccpa-1929.