Virgo Corporation v. Ralph M. Paiewonsky, Governor, Morris F. Decastro, Director of the Budget Andthe Government of the Virgin Islands, Master Time Company, Ltd. v. Percy Dejongh, as Commissioner of the Department of Finance of the Governmentof the Virgin Islands, Virgo Corporation v. Ralph M. Paiewonsky, Governor, Morris F. Decastro, Secretary, Governor'scommittee on the Virgin Islands Watch Industry, Member, Virgin Islandsindustrial Incentive Board, and Director of the Budget, Albert Prendergast,member, Governor'scommittee on the Virgin Islands Watch Industry, Chairman, Virgin Islandsindustrial Incentive Board, and Commissioner of Commerce Percy Dejongh,commissioner of the Department of Finance Ruben Wheatley, Member, Virginislands Industrial Incentiveboard and Director of Tax Division of Department of Finance Mahlen Lindquist,member, Virgin Islands Industrial Incentive Board Adolph Potter, Member,virgin Islands Industrial Incentive Board Joseph Alexander, Member, Virginislands Industrialincentive Board Percy Gardine, Member, Virgin Islands Industrial Incentiveboard the Government of the Virgin Islands, and Atlantic Time Productscorporation

384 F.2d 569
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedNovember 7, 1967
Docket16374
StatusPublished

This text of 384 F.2d 569 (Virgo Corporation v. Ralph M. Paiewonsky, Governor, Morris F. Decastro, Director of the Budget Andthe Government of the Virgin Islands, Master Time Company, Ltd. v. Percy Dejongh, as Commissioner of the Department of Finance of the Governmentof the Virgin Islands, Virgo Corporation v. Ralph M. Paiewonsky, Governor, Morris F. Decastro, Secretary, Governor'scommittee on the Virgin Islands Watch Industry, Member, Virgin Islandsindustrial Incentive Board, and Director of the Budget, Albert Prendergast,member, Governor'scommittee on the Virgin Islands Watch Industry, Chairman, Virgin Islandsindustrial Incentive Board, and Commissioner of Commerce Percy Dejongh,commissioner of the Department of Finance Ruben Wheatley, Member, Virginislands Industrial Incentiveboard and Director of Tax Division of Department of Finance Mahlen Lindquist,member, Virgin Islands Industrial Incentive Board Adolph Potter, Member,virgin Islands Industrial Incentive Board Joseph Alexander, Member, Virginislands Industrialincentive Board Percy Gardine, Member, Virgin Islands Industrial Incentiveboard the Government of the Virgin Islands, and Atlantic Time Productscorporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Virgo Corporation v. Ralph M. Paiewonsky, Governor, Morris F. Decastro, Director of the Budget Andthe Government of the Virgin Islands, Master Time Company, Ltd. v. Percy Dejongh, as Commissioner of the Department of Finance of the Governmentof the Virgin Islands, Virgo Corporation v. Ralph M. Paiewonsky, Governor, Morris F. Decastro, Secretary, Governor'scommittee on the Virgin Islands Watch Industry, Member, Virgin Islandsindustrial Incentive Board, and Director of the Budget, Albert Prendergast,member, Governor'scommittee on the Virgin Islands Watch Industry, Chairman, Virgin Islandsindustrial Incentive Board, and Commissioner of Commerce Percy Dejongh,commissioner of the Department of Finance Ruben Wheatley, Member, Virginislands Industrial Incentiveboard and Director of Tax Division of Department of Finance Mahlen Lindquist,member, Virgin Islands Industrial Incentive Board Adolph Potter, Member,virgin Islands Industrial Incentive Board Joseph Alexander, Member, Virginislands Industrialincentive Board Percy Gardine, Member, Virgin Islands Industrial Incentiveboard the Government of the Virgin Islands, and Atlantic Time Productscorporation, 384 F.2d 569 (3d Cir. 1967).

Opinion

384 F.2d 569

VIRGO CORPORATION
v.
Ralph M. PAIEWONSKY, Governor, Morris F. deCastro, Director
of the Budget andthe Government of the Virgin
Islands, Appellants.
MASTER TIME COMPANY, Ltd.
v.
Percy DeJONGH, as Commissioner of the Department of Finance
of the Governmentof the Virgin Islands, Appellant.
VIRGO CORPORATION
v.
Ralph M. PAIEWONSKY, Governor, Morris F. deCastro,
Secretary, Governor'sCommittee on the Virgin Islands Watch
Industry, Member, Virgin IslandsIndustrial Incentive Board,
and Director of the Budget, Albert Prendergast,Member,
Governor'sCommittee on the Virgin Islands Watch Industry,
Chairman, Virgin IslandsIndustrial Incentive Board, and
Commissioner of Commerce; Percy deJongh,Commissioner of the
Department of Finance; Ruben Wheatley, Member, VirginIslands
Industrial IncentiveBoard and Director of Tax Division of
Department of Finance; Mahlen Lindquist,Member, Virgin
Islands Industrial Incentive Board; Adolph Potter,
Member,Virgin Islands Industrial Incentive Board; Joseph
Alexander, Member, VirginIslands IndustrialIncentive Board;
Percy Gardine, Member, Virgin Islands Industrial
IncentiveBoard; the Government of the Virgin Islands, and
Atlantic Time ProductsCorporation, Appellants.

Nos. 16116, 16133, 16374.

United States Court of Appeals Third Circuit.

Argued Feb. 3, 1967 at Christiansted.
Decided Sept. 29, 1967, Rehearing Denied Nov. 7, 1967.

Francisco Corneiro, Atty. Gen., Bruce MacGibbon, Asst. Atty. Gen., Charlotte Amalie, V.I., for Paiewonsky, de Jongh and others.

William Simon, Washington, D.C. (J. Coleman Bean, Howrey, Simon, Baker & Murchison, Washington, D.C., Russell B. Johnson, Christiansted, St. Croix, V.I. on the brief), for Virgo Corp.

Ronald H. Tonkin, Christiansted, St. Croix, V.I. (Young & Isherwood, Christiansted, St. Croix, V.I., on the brief) for Master Time Co.

Before STALEY, Chief Judge, and MARIS and FREEDMAN, Circuit Judges.

OPINION OF THE COURT

MARIS, Circuit Judge.

These are appeals by the defendants from judgments entered against them in the District Court of the Virgin Islands. The appeals at our docket Nos. 16116, 16133 and 16374 involve the validity of the Watch Production Act of 1965, as originally enacted and as amended, 33 V.I.C. 511-518, which, inter alia, imposed taxes on the production of watches in the Virgin Islands and also involve the validity of the Governor's action in allocating quotas to watch manufacturers under the Act. The appeal at our docket No. 16374 raises, also, the question whether the Governor acted arbitrarily in denying the plaintiff Virgo Corporation tax exemption and subsidy benefits under the Virgin Islands industrial incentive program, 33 V.I.C. 4001 et seq.

Virgo Corporation, a Virgin Islands corporation engaged in the business of manufacturing and selling watches, filed a complaint in the district court, at Civil Docket No. 165-1965, Division of St. Croix, against the Government of the Virgin Islands, its Governor, and certain of its other officers, and Atlantic Time Products Corporation. The complaint set out two separate claims for relief. The first was for a determination that the Governor had acted arbitrarily in making an allocation to Atlantic Time Products Corporation, a newly established watch manufacturer, from the reserve quota of 300,000 units established under the Watch Production Act while denying Virgo an allocation of 45,000 additional watches from the reserve quota to relieve it from severe financial hardship. Virgo sought a judgment declaring that the Governor's allocation of 240,000 units to Atlantic Time was invalid and that Virgo was entitled to the allocation of the additional 45,000 units which it had requested. In the alternative, Virgo asked that the entire watch production program and the taxes imposed by the Watch Production Act of 1965 be declared invalid. Virgo's second claim for relief was for a judgment declaring it entitled to tax exemption and subsidy benefits under the Virgin Islands industrial incentive program, 33 V.I.C. 4001 et seq. The district court, after hearing, filed its opinion holding the Watch Production Act of 1965 to be invalid on the ground that it imposed a new export duty in violation of section 36 of the Organic Act of 1936, 49 Stat. 1816-1817. In respect to count two of the complaint, the court concluded that the case should be remanded to the Virgin Islands Industrial Incentive Board with directions that recommendations which the Board deemed proper should be made to the Governor within 30 days, that the Governor should act thereon within a reasonable time thereafter; and that if no action was taken within the time prescribed, Virgo could seek an order compelling the defendants to grant tax exemption and subsidy benefits to it. 251 F.Supp. 279, 5 V.I. 342. The court entered an order pursuant to its opinion on March 16, 1966 from which the defendant appealed to this court at our docket No. 15894. That appeal was, however, dismissed by this court as premature since the Industrial Incentive Board had not yet acted and a final decision on all the claims for relief had accordingly not yet been rendered.

By the Watch Production Act of August 30, 1965,1 the Legislature sought to discourage through taxation the production of watches2 destined for ultimate shipment to the United States in amounts in excess of one-ninth of the annual consumption of watches in the United States. For the six months period from October 1, 1965 to March 31, 1966, the Governor of the Virgin Islands was authorized by the Act to assign to watch manufacturers in the Virgin Islands production quotas totaling 1,800,000 units. A tax of $2.50 per watch was imposed on all watches produced in the Virgin Islands upon which tax a credit of $2.47 was to be allowed in the case of all watches manufactured within the quota allocated and watches not destined for the United States. The Governor was authorized to allocate 1,500,000 of the total quota of 1,800,000 units to Virgin Islands manufacturers in accordance with a formula set out in the Act. The remaining 300,000 units were to be reserved to relieve severe financial hardship, and to permit allocation to new manufacturers. The Watch Production Act of 1965 was amended by the Act of March 22, 1966.3 Under the Act, as amended, the tax of $2.50 per watch was imposed upon all watches produced in the Virgin Islands in excess of the quotas to be allocated by the Governor for manufacture by Virgin Islands manufacturers, which were to aggregate one-ninth of the total annual consumption of watches within the customs area of the United States. Watches manufactured within these quotas were to be taxed at 3 cents per watch only.

After the passage of the Act of 1966 Virgo brought a second suit in the district court against the Government of the Virgin Islands, its Governor, and the Director of the Budget, at Civil Docket No. 37-1966, Division of St. Croix, for a judgment declaring the amended Act invalid in that it violated section 36 of the Organic Act of 1936 and section 28(d) of the Revised Organic Act of 1954. The district court held that the statute, as amended, continued the export duty in violation of section 36 of the Organic Act of 1936. 254 F.Supp. 405, 5 V.I. 359.

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