Victor v. United States

18 Cust. Ct. 292, 1947 Cust. Ct. LEXIS 375
CourtUnited States Customs Court
DecidedJanuary 13, 1947
DocketNo. 6753; Entry No. M-2758, etc.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 18 Cust. Ct. 292 (Victor v. United States) 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
Victor v. United States, 18 Cust. Ct. 292, 1947 Cust. Ct. LEXIS 375 (cusc 1947).

Opinion

Cole, Judge:

These appeals for reappraisement concern the export value, section 402 (d) 'of the Tariff Act of 1930 (19 U. S. C. § 1402 (d)) — there being no contention for foreign value by either party— of hard candy and chocolate exported from Havana, Cuba, and entered at Miami, Fla., between May' 1943 and December 1943. Entry was made at the invoice values, i. e., 15 cents per.pound for the hard candj and 16 cents per package of two bars for the chocolate. The hard candy was appraised at 21 cents per pound in all instances, except one where it was appraised at 18 cents per pound. The chocolate was appraised at 26 cents per package in some instances and 28 cents per package in others.

Defendant’s brief correctly defines the issues presented in the case as “(1) Whether the weight of the evidence sustains the entered values or the appraised values. (2) Whether the appeal for reappraisement should be dismissed.”

Question (2) is answered in the negative in the same brief wherein counsel states:

On the other hand, if the Court hold with the plaintiffs, the question of law has been adequately discussed in Agruba Trading Co. v. United States, R. D. 6104, March 15, 1945, and Florea & Co. v. United States, R. D. 5907 and 5908, 11 Cust. Ct. 377, 384; R. D. 6190, July 12, 1945.
The writer deems it fair to advise the Court that after studying the opinions in the cited cases, he is constrained to agree that the motion pending should be denied if it is passed upon.

I accept this admission as sufficient to dispose of the motion, for it should be denied.

The first important and decisive question is addressed to the facts. I proceed therefore to analyze and deposit the evidence in the appropriate scales. This operation results in a clear preponderance of one over the other.

The United States appraiser at Miami testified that his appraisement of all of the merchandise in question was based entirely on a Treasury Department report (collective exhibit 16). Before said [293]*293report was offered, the customs official, who prepared it, gave preliminary testimony, outlining his qualifications and relating his experiences in making the investigation upon which his report is based. He is a certified public accountant and has been in the Government service for approximately 18 years, of which 2 years were spent as an assistant customs agent and 6 years as a customs examiner, his present position being-in the'office of the appraiser at the port of New York. His inquiries in the foreign market regarding the merchandise in question were made pursuant to a special assignment “to conduct a Treasury Department investigation as to market values in Cuba.” To acquire the data embodied in his report, eight visits were had with Enrique Roca, the Cuban shipper of the merchandise under consideration. Enrique Roca “spoke English very well,” and “we had our conversations in English.” At first, he showed only copies of commercial invoices which agreed with the consular invoices. Later, and after further inquiry, he produced a ledger carrying accounts of the importers of the instant merchandise, but showing only dates and total amounts of shipments, without any record • of payments. At ..a subsequent visit, Roca admitted that “the invoices he prepared — that is the consular invoice and the commercial invoice — which he sent to his importers and the copies of the commercial invoices which he showed me were false. He said they were not the correct prices, and he suggested that if I go up to his office again he would tell me the actual prices paid” (R. 149). At a still later visit, Roca “took from his desk very small pieces of paper, scraps of paper I would say, with writing on them, and told me that those were the real records of his business with these importers” (R. 149, 150).

Photostat copies of the “scraps of paper” referred to are embodied in the report (exhibit 16, supra) as exhibits A, B, C, and D to substantiate charges of allegedly fraudulent practice. The report charges that “Consular invoices were fraudulently prepared and fraudulent commercial invoices agreeing with the false consular invoices were furnished importers to corroborate the consular invoices,” all of them “showing the purchase price of hard candies at $0.15 per pound and of chocolate at $0.16 per package of two bars, while the actual purchase price of hard candies was $0.21 per pound and of chocolates $0.26 per package of two bars up to and including consular invoice No. 8690, and $0.28 per package of two bars on consular invoice No. 11633 and thereafter.”

Further allegation is made of a “conspiracy to defraud the customs,” claim being made that the shipper, Enrique Roca, and an agent, J. Antonio Prieto, who negotiated the importations in question, arranged, with understanding from the importers, Mart Haller and Louis Victor, for the alleged false invoicing, as above outlined.

[294]*294As verification of allegedly fraudulent practice, as charged, the report seeks to explain said exhibits A, B, C, and D, as follows: Exhibit A reflects “the true details of shipments No. 2 to 9 (first series)” from Enrique Roca to Mart Haller. Exhibit B is “a photostatic copy of a memorandum prepared by Roca at the time shipments No. 9-15 inclusive were liquidated.” Exhibit C is “a photostatic copy of a liquidation of Victors account covering the first six shipments prepared by Prieto and Roca in Miami.” Exhibit D is “a photostatic copy of Roca’s original calculations.”

The construction sought of these so-called scraps of paper cannot be applied because of the lack of explanatory comment on them. As they appear herein, they are merely a collection of computations. True, the report offers a meaning for some of the figures, but such vague and indefinite copies of mere slips of paper are wholly inadequate in form to receive probative value. The conclusion by the witness as set forth in his report cannot be accepted as supplying that omission.

Stripped of all matter relating to the contention of fraudulent practice, the report contains the following information: Enrique Roca manufactured most of the hard candy included in the shipments in question. Some of the hard candy was made by Jiminez, Fernandez y Cia for the said Roca who “advanced money and materials and paid $0.11% per pound for the candy.” The chocolate was manufactured by different companies for Roca, according to his specifications. Havana is the principal market for such merchandise, and “there is no concession in prices, terms or discounts, because of quantities purchased.” “All orders were verbal” between the shipper and the importers, plaintiffs herein. “Enrique Roca does not have a price fist. He stated that he freely offered the hard candy and chocolate manufactured for him by others to all purchasers in the United States through his selling agent, J. A. Prieto, Miami, at the same prices, namely: Hard candies — $0.21 per pound. Chocolate — $0.26 per package of 2 bars up to September 1943, and $0.28 thereafter.” The cost of pacldng is included in unit prices. The agent, said Prieto, receives a commission of 5 per centum and 1 per centum.

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Related

United States v. Perez
21 Cust. Ct. 272 (U.S. Customs Court, 1948)

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Bluebook (online)
18 Cust. Ct. 292, 1947 Cust. Ct. LEXIS 375, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/victor-v-united-states-cusc-1947.