Weisel & Co. v. Bowles

156 F.2d 1007, 1945 U.S. App. LEXIS 4458
CourtEmergency Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 21, 1945
DocketNo. 256
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 156 F.2d 1007 (Weisel & Co. v. Bowles) 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
Weisel & Co. v. Bowles, 156 F.2d 1007, 1945 U.S. App. LEXIS 4458 (eca 1945).

Opinion

LINDLEY, Judge.

Complainant, a producer and manufacturer of sausage, protested Maximum Price Regulation No. 389, Sections 2(c) and 12(c) (2), issued May 5, 1943 and Amendments No. 7 and No. 11, issued August 7, 1943 and February 25, 1944 respectively. (8 F.R. 5903) It asserted arbitrary and capricious discrimination in (1) that it was not permitted to sell sausage f.o.b. point of origin in other than carload lots, whereas sellers of kosher sausage, beef sausage and special pork sausage of type 1 might do so; (2) that though distributors might ship by truck at the point of origin price and add thereto the transportation charges, they might not do so by railroad in less than carload lots; (3) that they might ship by express to purveyors of meals on a similar basis but might not do so to retailers, and (4) that a seller was forbidden to ship by express, treating the-point of origin as local delivery and adding to the zone price 25(5 and 50^ as provided in Section 12(c) (2) of MPR-389. It further contended that the regulation, with its amendments, operated to compel changes in business practices and' means and aids to distribution long established in the industry in violation of subdivision (h) of Section 2 of the Emergency Price Control Act as amended, 50 U.S.C.A.Appendix § 902(h). It sought amendment to pemit it, at its option, to sell either at the zone price fixed in the zone in which the seller is located and to require the buyer to pay all transportation charges or to sell at the zone price in the zone in which the buyer is located, the seller paying the transportation charges.

[1009]*1009The Administrator denied the protest, approving the recommendation of a Board of Review to that effect. Thereupon complainant came to this court, presenting substantially the same contentions as it had before the Administrator and praying that the provisions of the regulation as amended creating the situation and producing the results complained of be set aside.

By the regulation the Administrator established price ceilings, fixing the base price per hundred weight for each specific product. Section 14 set up eleven geographical zones; Section 12(b) fixed the zone differential by which the base price might be increased when delivery is made in any one of the several zones. Section 12(c) provided for certain additions to base prices, including local delivery charges to the buyer’s store door. Thus, the base prices, plus the provided additions, became the controlling ceiling prices.

The eleven zones follow the pattern of those created by the Administrator for the meat industry generally. Complainant is located in Milwaukee in Zone 4-A and sells about one-third of its product in that area. It relies upon the fact that two thirds of its sales are made to customers beyond its immediate community and contends that for many years it has been the practice of complainant and two other producers to ship all their products on an f.o.b. basis, thereby collecting from the purchaser the cost of transportation. Complainant asserts that by prohibiting continuation of this practice, the Administrator has brought about unreasonable interference with established business practices, and that such interference is wholly unnecessary for maintenance of price control. In this connection, it is essential to keep in mind that, under the evidence of the Administrator, the practice of complainant and the two other manufacturers of selling wholly on f.o.b. basis, is unique in an industry which has never generally engaged in the practice to any appreciable extent. This fact is not controverted by complainant and is, to our mind, determinative of complainant’s contention.

The regulation was promulgated after the Administrator had set up his course of procedure for the meat industry generally. Inasmuch as sausage is made largely from products of that industry, he found, as in the case of meat generally, that the historical price relationship between the various parts of the country reflected substantially the difference in transportation costs from the place of production to the various zones and that the sausage “industry was well adapted to the plan of fixing specific prices by adding a transportation allowance to the base prices.” His prices, so fixed, reflect differentials substantially equal to the differences in freight rates in carload lots in the several zones. He found further, however, that there was an important difference between meat products in general and sausage in particular, for, while the former frequently travel great distances, the latter is usually sold relatively near the point of production, a greater part of the product “being consumed within less than 200 miles of the point of origin.” In various statements of considerations he set forth at some length the advantage of zone prices and pointed out that by virtue of his provisions retailers could easily ascertain the ceilings of their suppliers; that retail sellers in any particular area, accustomed to supplying approximately the same market, were thereby placed in a position of competitive equality to one another, and that, thus, effective control of retail prices was facilitated. Armour & Company v. Bowles, Em.App., 148 F.2d 529. He elaborated upon his conclusion that authorization of f.o.b. sales in all cases would materially increase sausage costs to the retailers and seriously jeopardize retail ceiling prices. All this indicated a reasonable attempt in our opinion to bring about effective maintenance of price control of the retail level.

Complainant contends that this reasoning is fallacious and that if its prayer to be allowed an option to sell all goods f.o.b. were allowed, its purchasers would still realize a comfortable margin of profit. Tables are submitted showing the respective and various prices in the different zones computed upon an f.o.b. shipping basis in less than carload lots or by express. We think it unnecessary to btirden the record with a repetition of the many figures submitted. It might be well to observe, however, that complainant, in making sales to persons in other zones and charging the ceiling prices in the zones where deliveries are made, faces certain obvious results. Thus, in a shipment to Zone 5, complainant is able to collect a wholesale price of 50¡é per hundred weight over that of its home zone. The additional cost imposed upon it by compelling it to pay transportation charges in less than carload lots to that [1010]*1010zone is 600 per hundred weight, or a decrease in realized proceeds of sale over and above what it would be able to get if it were permitted to sell at its own zone price plus delivery charges, of 100 per hundred weight. In other words, the Administrator, in adding the differentials for cost of delivery, has, in this particular instance, •almost equaled’ the differential imposed upon complainant by compelling it to pay transportation charges to Zone 5. In Zone 6, the salé price over and above that of the home zone is 750 per hundred weight; the additional charge imposed on complainant for less than carload shipments, 880. In Zone 9 the differential in zone prices is $1.50 and the additional cost for less than carload shipments $1.54. In other zones, further removed, the differential increases. It is clear from the figures submitted that the Administrator, in laying out the procedure for determination of retail ceilings, has considered the country as -a whole and laid out his zones in an obviously reasonable manner based upon underlying reasons therefor and that his figures are not far out of line with differentials claimed by complainant to exist.

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Bluebook (online)
156 F.2d 1007, 1945 U.S. App. LEXIS 4458, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weisel-co-v-bowles-eca-1945.