Veolay, Inc. v. United States

21 C.C.P.A. 268, 1933 CCPA LEXIS 215
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedNovember 28, 1933
DocketNo. 3605
StatusPublished

This text of 21 C.C.P.A. 268 (Veolay, Inc. v. United States) 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
Veolay, Inc. v. United States, 21 C.C.P.A. 268, 1933 CCPA LEXIS 215 (ccpa 1933).

Opinion

Gb-aham, Presiding Judge,

delivered tbe opinion of the court:

This is an appeal from a judgment of the Third Division of the United States Customs Court, sitting in reappraisement, involving two appraisements under the Tariff Act of 1922. The appellants have made a motion that they be permitted to present, as a preliminary matter, the question of the jurisdiction, warrant and authority of the court below to enter the alleged judgment against them. Upon consideration of said motion, the court has heard counsel on this point, without consideration, at this time, of the merits of the controversy involved between the parties.

The challenge to the authority of the court below to- .enter such alleged judgment rests upon pertain facts shown only of record by the affidavit of Thomas M. Lane, of counsel for appellants, which affidavit was filed in .support of a petition for rehearing filed in the court below, and by the .concessions of counsel, made on oral argument here. Said affidavit was not controverted by counter-affidavits, and must be taken for the purposes of the present proceeding- as showing the facts which are here involved. Thomas & Pierson v. United States, 19 C.C.P.A. (Customs) 277, T.D. 45454; Mech. App. Co. v. Castleman, 215 U.S. 437,

From the record, from this affidavit and from said concessions, it appears that these consolidated cases, when taken to the United States Customs Court for review on reappraisement, were assigned by the then presiding judge, Israel F. Fischer, to a division-consisting [271]*271of Judges George M. Young, Genevieve E. Cline, and Walter H. Evans; that thereafter said cases were heard by said division on October 23 and October 29, 1931, and were submitted for decision to said division at that time, all of said judges being present during the hearing thereof; that thereafter an opinion was written in the matter by Judge Evans, reduced to typewriting, signed by the judge, and also by Presiding Judge Young, in their own handwriting; that accompanying this opinion was a judgment order rendering judgment in favor of appellants, which was not dated, and was signed by, or under the direction of, Presiding Judge Young and Judge Evans, by rubber stamps, bearing their respective names.

It further appears that these two documents were then sent to the office of the clerk of the reappraisement bureau of the United States Customs Court. At that time, decisions of the United States Customs Court were not, as a practice, announced in open court, but decisions and judgments in reappraisement and remission cases were filed in the office of the clerk of the reappraisement bureau of the Customs Court, and decisions and judgments in protest cases were filed in the office of the clerk of the protest bureau of said court. Both of said offices were departments in the office of the clerk of the United States Customs Court, and conducted under his supervision and that of the presiding judge of said court.

As soon as the typewritten opinion and judgment order aforesaid were received by the clerk of the reappraisement bureau, he at once sent both documents to Judge Cline. She retained these documents until after the death of Presiding Judge Young, which occurred on May 27, 1932. Thereafter she returned them, with her dissenting opinion, to the clerk of the reappraisement bureau, where they have since remained. No attempt was made to promulgate the same.

It appears that no judgment book, or minute book, was kept in the office of the clerk of the Customs Court. The only record of the decision or judgment was the original typewritten copy of each, signed by the judges of the court. When these were returned to the clerk of the bureau, he at once placed them in a loose-leaf file, which files were bound in permanent volumes from time to time.

It appears that the practice was that the various originals were retained in the loose-leaf files in the offices of the clerks of the bureaus, and that copies thereof were sent to the clerk of the Customs Court, who thereupon certified to the correctness of the copies and caused the same to be transmitted to the parties in interest, as of the date noted by the clerks in charge of the various bureaus, as the respective dates of the placing of the same in the loose-leaf files in their offices. The judgments were not signed by the clerk of the court, and the only promulgation thereof was by the transmission of the same to the parties in interest by said clerk as aforesaid.

[272]*272The affiant, in his said affidavit, makes reference to the dissenting opinion of Judge Evans, hereinafter referred to, in which a recital of the facts relative to the practice in said court is given.

Judge Young, at the time of his death, was presiding judge of the United States Customs Court by virtue of his appointment by the President of the United States under section 518 of the Tariff Act of 1922. At an early date after his death, Judge McClelland, senior judge of said court as to the date of his commission, as acting presiding judge, assigned Judge William J. Tilson to sit in lieu of Presiding Judge Young, deceased, with Judges Cline and Evans, the remaining judges of Division Three, in the consideration of said appeal.

Thereupon, Judges Cline, Evans, and Tilson, without notice to the appellants or their attorneys, and without hearing further arguments, reconsidered the matters and rendered an alleged decision therein, the said decision being written by Judge Cline, and being concurred in by Judge Tilson. Judge Evans wrote a dissenting opinion in which he expressed his belief that the court was without jurisdiction to render the judgment herein appealed from. This conclusion was based upon the opinion that the decision, formerly signed by himself and by Presiding Judge Young, was a final decision in the matter, and that, if the death of Presiding Judge Young had operated to expunge his concurrence in the majority decision, then the remaining judges being of opposite views, by law the judgment of the court must be considered as affirmed.

This alleged final decision and judgment of Judges Cline and Tilson was rendered on October 21, 1932, and was duly promulgated by the clerk of the United States Customs Court as of that date.

Thereupon the appellants, appearing specially, made a motion for a rehearing, in and by which said motion the appellants stated the facts substantially as heretofore detailed, and contended that the original decision of Presiding Judge Young and Judge Evans, together with the judgment order thereto attached, constituted the decision and judgment order of the said court; that said decision exhausted the judicial functions of said division in the cases, and that the acting presiding judge was without power to assign Judge Tilson to said division for the consideration of said cases; that said reassignment of Judge Tilson to said cases was made after the trial thereof, and that such action was, and is, contrary to section 518 of the Tariff Act of 1922, and other applicable laws; that after trial, submission and decision of said cases, no change could lawfully be made in the judicial personnel of the division which originally had jurisdiction thereof, so long as a majority of such personnel survived; that complete jurisdiction of the subject matter continued to reside in the survivors of said original division, Judges Cline and Evans. [273]

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Bluebook (online)
21 C.C.P.A. 268, 1933 CCPA LEXIS 215, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/veolay-inc-v-united-states-ccpa-1933.