Vanlandingham v. Clark

163 F.2d 896, 1947 U.S. App. LEXIS 3165
CourtEmergency Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 27, 1947
DocketNo. 354
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 163 F.2d 896 (Vanlandingham v. Clark) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Emergency Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vanlandingham v. Clark, 163 F.2d 896, 1947 U.S. App. LEXIS 3165 (eca 1947).

Opinion

McALLISTER, Judge.

Complainant is a wholesale dealer in lumber, located in Chicago, Illinois. In the past, his customary practice has been to purchase lumber directly from the mills and to assemble and transport it in amounts required by retailers. Prior to Government price control, complainant received a discount from the mills averaging 8% of the sale price of the lumber to him.

Maximum prices were established for various kinds of lumber by the Price Administrator, acting pursuant to the Emergency Price Control Act, 50 U.S.C.A.Appendix, § 901 et seq. Six of the regulations involved in this controversy established maximum prices governing sales of lumber by mills to purchasers without specifying any amount for discounts for wholesalers. Revised Maximum Price Regulation No. 26 —Douglas Fir and other West Coast Lumber;1 Maximum Price Regulation No. 94— Western Pine and Associated Species of Lumber;2 Revised Maximum Price Regulation No. 94 ;3 Maximum Price Regulation No. 290 — Sitka Spruce Lumber;4 Revised Maximum Price Regulation No. 290 ;5 and Maximum Price Regulation No. 402— Western Red Cedar Lumber.6 Two of the regulations, on the other hand, permitted wholesalers of Southern Pine Lumber to charge 6% over mill maximum prices. Revised Maximum Price Regulation No. 19— Southern Pine Lumber;7 and Second Revised Maximum Price Regulation No. 19.8 It was not until after the period here in question, on March 8, 1946, that the Administrator issued Supplementary Order No. 150,9 allowing wholesalers a markup of 5% on all kinds of lumber. During the effective periods of the above regulations, complainant was charged with selling 325 carloads of lumber at a price in excess of the maximum prices established by the Administrator, during the period between August 18, 1943 and August 18, 1944. A judgment was entered against him for the amount of the overcharge in the district [898]*898court and is now pending bn appeal in the United States Circuit Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit. The present controversy arises as a result of a complaint filed in this court attacking the validity of the pertinent price regulations.

Complainant contends :

1. That the regulations in controversy unlawfully deprive lumber wholesalers and commission salesmen as a group of their normal peacetime earnings' during the period from August 18, 1943, to August 18, 1944;

2. That the regulations discriminated unlawfully in favor of mills and wholesale distribution yards and against wholesalers and commission salesmen of lumber;

3. That the regulations discriminated unlawfully in favor of wholesalers and commission salesmen of Southern Pine lumber and against wholesalers and commission salesmen of other species of lumber;

4. That the regulations were unlawfully used and made to operate to compel changes in the business practices and means or aids to distribution established in the lumber industry.

To sustain his claim that the regulations were not generally fair and equitable, in that they deprived lumber wholesalers and commission salesmen, as a group, of their normal peacetime earnings during the period from August 18, 1943 to August 18, 1944, complainant urges that the regulations should have provided an amount for wholesalers and commission salesmen by way of a markup over the maximum selling prices established for the mills. All the regulations (except those for Southern Pine, not involved in this discussion) provided the same ceiling prices for sales of lumber traveling from the producing mill to the purchaser, and not becoming a part of the stock in a lumber distribution yard. For sales by such yards, the ceiling prices were different. But we are not immediately concerned with that phase of the case.

A brief survey of the background of this case may be helpful to an understanding of the issues involved. Before the coming of Government price control, the mills had made use of all possible methods to sell and distribute their products to the public, and for this purpose, availed themselves of the services of wholesalers, commission salesmen, and wholesale distribution lumber yards. In those years, it appears that from 65% to 75% of all softwood lumber was sold through wholesalers. Here it may be observed that although wholesalers and commission men operate in much the same way, a wholesaler, such as complainant is, purchases lumber from the producing mills, taking title and assuming credit risks upon resale, and resells the lumber, usually in carload lots, principally to retail yards and large industrial consumers. Wholesalers do not maintain yards, and usually do not physically handle the lumber. Ordinarily, it is shipped directly from the mill to the wholesaler’s customer pursuant to an order placed with the mill by a wholesaler. Commission salesmen differ from wholesalers in that they do not take title to the lumber. They customarily sell the lumber in the name of the mill and do not assume credit risks.

With the advent of war and the carrying on of the gigantic industrial operations in support of our military effort, changes naturally occurred in the purchase and distribution of lumber. As one instance, the Central Procuring Agency of the United States Government became the largest single purchaser of lumber from the mills. Everyone was trying to secure the commodity in increasing quantities. Retail dealers in lumber and large consumers of lumber took employees into their organization, whose duties were to procure lumber directly from the mills.

Complainant says that by reason of the regulations, the mills bypassed the wholesaler and commission men and enabled the mills to sell directly to the public at the maximum prices, because of the wartime scarcities; and that the regulations further prevented the wholesalers and commission men, under the above circumstances, from rendering services for, and becoming agents of, small retailers and others in finding and procuring lumber for them, inasmuch as they prohibited wholesalers and others from selling at prices above the [899]*899mill ceiling or maximum prices, or receiving compensation for procuring lumber unless they were employees of such companies. Not only is it claimed that the regulations were invalid for not permitting a markup to such wholesalers, but it is further asserted that the Administrator made the matter worse by his subsequent action with regard to the traditional discounts and commissions which had been granted in the past to wholesalers and commission men, before price control. These discounts and commissions were included by the Administrator in the original mill ceiling, or maximum, prices; but it is claimed that as the mills themselves proceeded more and more to sell directly to the public at the maximum prices, and to bypass wholesalers and commission men, the Administrator, in subsequent adjustments of mill ceiling prices, failed to take the traditional discounts and commissions into consideration as an element of cost to the mills and narrowed the mills’ margins of profits accordingly, thereby depriving the wholesalers and commission men of all opportunity of gaining such discounts.

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Bluebook (online)
163 F.2d 896, 1947 U.S. App. LEXIS 3165, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vanlandingham-v-clark-eca-1947.