United States v. R. Gaertner & Co.

9 Cust. Ct. 609, 1942 Cust. Ct. LEXIS 1365
CourtUnited States Customs Court
DecidedOctober 7, 1942
DocketNo. 5727; Entry No. 835100, etc.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 9 Cust. Ct. 609 (United States v. R. Gaertner & 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. R. Gaertner & Co., 9 Cust. Ct. 609, 1942 Cust. Ct. LEXIS 1365 (cusc 1942).

Opinion

Cline, Judge:

This is an application for review of the decision of the trial judge in R. Gaertner & Co., Inc., et al. v. United States, [610]*610Reap. Dec. 5445, which, relates to the value of ceramic prints or decalcomanias imported from Germany during the years 1936, 1937, 1938, and 1939. Five hundred and fourteen cases were consolidated for trial. With the exception of the entries covered by reappraise-ments 125252-A, 128740-A, and 127383-A, all of the merchandise was entered under duress at prices advanced to equal advances made by the appraiser in test cases pending reappraisement. Reappraisement 127383-A covers but one item which was advanced by the appraiser, the remainder of the items in issue having been entered at advanced prices under duress.

The issue involved hinges upon the question of whether the imported decalcomanias, which are of the type known as “duplex," are similar to decalcomanias used in Germany which are a kind known as “simplex.” The trial judge found that the imported articles were not similar to those sold and used in Germany and appraised them on the basis of export value rather than on the basis of foreign value of the simplex decalcomanias as returned by the appraiser.

The trial judge has carefully summarized the evidence presented at the trials on April 30, 1941, May 1, 1941, and May 21, 1941, and also the evidence in the record in reappraisement 124452-A, etc., (Decal Products Co. et al. v. United States, Reap. Dec. 4748, affirmed in United States v. Decal Products Co. et al., Reap. Dec. 5017), the record in which case was incorporated and made a part of the record in this case. We have carefully examined these records and deem it unnecessary again to review such'evidence.

The cases herein involved were first called for trial on February 27, 1941, at which time counsel for the importers moved to consolidate all of the cases for .trial, but counsel for the Government objected to that procedure, which objection was sustained by the trial judge. There appeared to be four different groups of cases, consisting of merchandise imported by four different importers and counsel for the importers made four separate records, namely reappraisements 125252-A, etc., of R. Gaertner & Co., Inc.; reappraisements 125353-A, etc., of Decal Products Co.; reappraisements 126083-A, etc., of Palm Fechteler & Co., Inc.; and reappraisements 129947-A, etc., of Commercial Decal Products, Inc. The appeals of each separate importer were consolidated with the respective initial suits above enumerated.

Counsel for the importers moved to incorporate in the record in each of the above cases the record in United States v. Decal Products Co. et al., Reap. Dec. 5017, supra, and voluntarily produced for cross-examination two witnesses who testified for the importers in that case; namely, Mr. Alfred Duhrssen and Mr. Albert Pickin, and explained that Mr. James J. Dugan, who testified in behalf of R. Gaertner & Co. in the record sought to be incorporated, had died since [611]*611the testimony was taken in that case. The trial court ordered the record in the cited case incorporated into the record in each of the four cases". Mr. Duhrssen was cross-examined by the Government counsel in connection with the group of cases having initial number 125353-A and Mr. Pickin was cross-examined in connection with the group of cases having initial number 126083-A.

Mr. Duhrssen testified on cross-examination that he purchased the decalcomanias covered by the entries made by Decal Products. Co. from several companies in Europe; that he was not the exclusive purchaser from any of them; that Wunderlich & Co. sell to anybody in the United States; that when he sold his merchandise in the United States he exhibited a design in the form of a small proof which was a finished decalcomania but smaller than the finished sheet eventually delivered; that when he received an order he sent it to Germany; that he had offered decalcomanias to every pottery manufacturer of any consequence in the United States; that there is a difference in use by different potteries in the United States, depending on how fine a product is made, but they all use duplex decalcomanias with English paper; that most decalcomanias are fired at 1,360° to 1,380°, F.; that he sells the same type of decalcomanias to all types of customers; that he is not familiar with all firing points or temperatures but he sells a product which is made to fire at 1,380° and he knows that most of his customers use that temperature; that the same type of decalco-mania usable by a person firing at 1,450° would not be suitable to a person firing at 1,200°; that the firing points make a difference because some colors have more flux than others; that when he buys from Germany the quantity is one factor in the price and the numbers of colors in the decalcomania is another.

On redirect-examination the witness testified that the German sellers place no restriction on him as to the person to whom he sells or the resale price and that there was no contract with the seller by which the sales were restricted to him; that the usual wholesale quantity for export is 2,000 sheets. When asked how that quantity was determined, he said:

It is an economical quantity to print. It is about a half-day’s run on the press. No manufacturer wants to run his press for less than a half-day. That is how they arrive at that quantity.

The witness testified further that if he bought less the price would be higher, and, if he bought more the price would be lower; that about 75 per centum of his orders during the years 1936,1937, 1938, and 1939 were for 2,000 sheets; that he paid the prices shown on the invoices in this case; that the decalcomanias will fade if they are fired at too high a temperature and if they were subjected to a degree of heat necessary to fire a simplex decalcomania they would not be usable.

[612]*612On further cross-examination by counsel for the Government, the witness testified that simplex decalcomanias are fired at a high temperature and that the colors used in the decalcomanias sold in the German market have very little flux in 'them while the colors in those used in the United States have a considerable portion of flux; that there is a difference between the decalcomanias sold in the United States and those sold in Germany in paper and colors; that his customers in the United States would not accept the simplex type of decalcomania.

Mr. Albert Pickin, who was called for cross-examination in re-appraisements 126083-A, etc., of Palm Feciiteler & Co., Inc., testified that the decalcomanias imported by that firm were purchased from two mills in Germany, namely, Ferdinand Foil and Dietz, Beieri & Co.; that tñe mills sent him original sketches and paintings after which he sent the sketches to Germany to be fired and each sketch was made into a proof from which he sold the decalcomanias; that he bought approximately the same amount he sold, and, if a customer wanted a particular style, he bought that style; that he offered decalcomanias to 90 per centum of the potteries in the United States; that the 10 per centum to whom he made no sales did not have good credit; that he gave the customer the proofs, and, if they fired correctly in their ovens, they bought; that the prices are determined on the basis of colors and quantity; that 99%

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Bluebook (online)
9 Cust. Ct. 609, 1942 Cust. Ct. LEXIS 1365, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-r-gaertner-co-cusc-1942.