United States v. Saunders
This text of 113 F. Supp. 386 (United States v. Saunders) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
The plaintiff, the United States of America, brings this action against the defendants, Orville B. Sanders and Clifford Gordon, co-partners doing business as Southwest Metal and Trade Company, to recover damages for the over-ceiling sale or delivery of battery lead scrap. The Government contends that between October 2nd and October 20th, 1951, the defendants violated the Defense Production Act and applicable ceiling price regulations in eight separate instances.1
The defendants admit consummating two sales, one on October 2 and one on October 6, 1951, at prices which turned out to be in excess of the ceiling price, but insist that the remaining six transactions assailed by the Government which took place between October 13 and October 20, 1951, were mere bailments; and, that the defendants did not “sell or deliver” the scrap lead in question for $0.19 per pound within the meaning of said Act and regulations until after the date the ceiling price was raised to $0.19 per pound. The defendants argue that although the six loads in dispute were hauled to and unloaded at Dallas, Texas, at the time when the applicable ceiling was only $0.17 per pound, that neither the defendants nor the purchaser were aware that such was the ceiling price, but both sincerely believed the ceiling to be $0.19 per pound; that when both parties discovered there was some question on the proper ceiling price they orally agreed that no sale would be negotiated until such time as the actual ceiling price could be conclusively determined; that when the purchaser informed the defendants that the purchaser could not lawfully pay $0.19 per pound it was orally agreed that the defendants could leave the scrap lead in temporary storage at the place of business of the purchaser until such time as the parties could agree on a sales price; and, that if subsequently the parties could not agree on a settlement price which would meet the approval of the Office of Price Stabilization the purchaser was to return “similar material” to the defendants.
From the introduced evidence the Court finds the following:
(1) On October 2, 1951, the defendants sold and delivered to the Eagle-Picher Company of Texas, 36,110 pounds of battery lead scrap for $4,286.26; the price received was $527.21 over ceiling.2
(2) On October 6, 1951, the defendants sold and delivered to the Eagle-Picher Company of Texas 37,560 pounds of battery lead scrap for $4,409.54; the price received was $544.62 over ceiling.3
(3) On October 13, 1951, the defendants delivered to the Eagle-Picher Company of Texas 37,830 pounds of battery lead scrap. Subsequently, the defendants were paid $4,-392.06 for this load; the price received was $544.75 above the ceiling price in effect at the time of delivery.4
(4) On October 16, 1951, the defendants delivered to the Eagle-Picher Company of Texas 34,490 pounds of battery lead scrap. Subsequently, the defendants were paid $4,-045.68 for this load; the price received was $496.66 above the ceiling price in effect at the time of delivery.5
[388]*388(5) On October 16, 1951, the defendants delivered to the Eagle-Picher Company of Texas 23,900 pounds of battery lead scrap. Subsequently, the defendants were paid $2,-815.42 for this load; the price received was $346.55 above the ceiling price in effect at the time of delivery.6
(6) On October 18, 1951, the defendants delivered to the Eagle-Picher Company of Texas 39,000 pounds of battery lead scrap. Subsequently, the defendants were paid $4,-426.50 for this load; the price received was $549.90 above the ceiling price in effect at the time of delivery.7
(7) On October 18, 1951, -the defendants delivered to the Eagle-Picher Company of Texas 25,270 pounds of battery lead scrap. Subsequently, the defendants were paid $2,-842.88 for this load; the price received was $353.78 above the ceiling price in effect at the time of delivery.8
(8) On October 20, 1951, the defendants delivered to the Eagle-Picher Company of Texas 31,090 pounds of battery lead scrap. Subsequently, the defendants were paid $3,-575.35 for this load; the price received was $441.48 above the ceiling price in effect at the time of delivery.9
(9) The eight violations in the instant case were neither “willful nor the result of failure to take practicable precautions against the occurrence of the violation”.
Section 405(a) of the Defense Production Act of 1950, as amended, provides:10
“It shall be unlawful, regardless of any obligation heretofore or hereafter entered into, for any person to sell or deliver, or in the regular course of business or trade to buy or receive, any material or service, or otherwise to do or omit to do any act, in violation of this title or of any regulation, order, or requirement issued thereunder, or to offer, solicit, attempt or agree to do any of the foregoing.” (Emphasis supplied.)
The Court is satisfied in regard to the six transactions in controversy that technically no sale for $0.19 per pound took place, as commonly understood under the law of sales, prior to the date the ceiling price for scrap lead was raised to $0.19 per pound. However, regardless of the defendants’ contention that a mere bailment took place, under the admitted facts unquestionably a delivery occurred; a plain reading of the statute indicates that such delivery constituted a violation.
In interpreting similar language used in the Emergency Price Control Act of 1942,11 Judge Huxman in Schreffler v. Bowles said:12
“ * * * The words ‘sell and deliver’ arc not synonymous terms. They have separate and distinct meanings. It must be presumed that Congress used them according to their ordinary and usual accepted meaning and understanding. Otherwise there would have been no need'to include them both in the Act.”
As mentioned in Bowles v. Beucher, another case involving the Emergency Price Control Act of 1942:13
[389]*389“It will.be noted that the Administrator does not merely charge as the violation that the goods were ‘sold’, but also that the goods were ‘delivered’ in Massachusetts. It is fair to assume that the Administrator would not have used the term ‘deliver’ in the regulations promulgated under the act unless he intended to mean something beyond what a sale ordinarily means, that is, a transfer of property or title. * * * It is reasonable to assume, under the circumstances, that the term ‘deliver’ in the regulation has a meaning distinct from ‘sale’ and the term is used in its plain and natural sense — a transfer of possession. If it had no added significance it would be hardly necessary to employ it at all. * * * ”
Although a provision, such as the one involved herein, which makes delivery, without a sale, a violation patently appears harsh, the underlying principle is sound. Otherwise, deliveries could regularly be made with an understanding between the parties that the sales were not to be consummated until such time as the ceiling price was increased.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
113 F. Supp. 386, 1953 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2587, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-saunders-okwd-1953.