Weste v. Campbell

21 F.2d 771, 1927 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1467
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedSeptember 26, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 21 F.2d 771 (Weste v. Campbell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Weste v. Campbell, 21 F.2d 771, 1927 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1467 (S.D.N.Y. 1927).

Opinion

HUTCHESON, District Judge.

My impression of the ease is that the Prohibition Acts, the Volstead Act and its amendments (27 USCA) purport to contain reasonably complete provisions as to the regulative and administrative features of them, and that regulations promulgated by the Department under the authority of the law must, of course, conform to the general principle that they can enforce, explain, and apply the law; they can never modify or remake it, and must always be in conformity with it; that it appears from section 9, tit. 2 of the act (27 USCA § 21), that permits were recognized as held under a qualified title, the fundamental basis of which was the good faith, the compliance by the permittee with the provisions of law controlling the disposition, the handling, and use of alcohol.

Under that section provision is made for the revocation of -a permit of any person who is found guilty of either willfully violating any of the prohibition laws, or who has not in good faith conformed to • the provisions of the act; and, that a reasonable construction of that section in accordance with the spirit, intent, and purpose of the act would authorize a revocation without proof of a specific violation of a specific statute or regulation, where the proof established willful connivance with or co-operation in a deliberate attempt to evade, or violate a provision of the law, I have no doubt.

So construed, section 9 ,is comprehensive enough to cover, and at the same time protect, every good-faith and honest permittee, and to have stripped of protection any permittee who operates outside of the bona fides.

That being so, I am of the opinion that a permit once granted cannot be revoked or suspended or nullified either temporarily or permanently without a substantial compliance with the provisions of section 9, and that no regulation can be promulgated which would have such an effect.

Plaintiff asserts that his permit is in effect canceled, in that by this order, which was issued by the Prohibition Administrator under date of April 8, 1927, he was not permitted to withdraw any denatured alcohol until he should submit to the Prohibition Administrator orders for merchandise from persons having a recognized standing in the perfumery industry, and who stood ready-to satisfy the Administrator as to the disposition which they shall make of such merchandise.

Plaintiff contends that this order is arbitrary, and not imposed under the authority or the sanction of law, because it has the effect of annulling his permit without giving him a hearing or following the procedure provided for in section 9.

The defendant replies that the order of the Administrator was not a revocation of his permit, but was an order under the authority of article 112, Regulations Relating to the Manufacture and Distribution of Industrial Alcohol, which regulations are promulgated [772]*772pursuant to title 3 of the National Prohibition Act (27 USCA § 71 et seq.). The particular section on which defendant relies is as follows:

“Where manufacturers qualified to use specially denatured alcohol dispose of their products to such person or in such manner as to render actual confirmation of such sale or disposal by examining officers impossible, said manufacturers will be called upon to show cause why their approved authorization to use specially denatured alcohol should not be amended to conform to quantities and formulas required for the manufactured products whose sale may be confirmed.”

This paragraph has relation to article 111, which contains the following provision:

“In case of an application for a basic permit the determination of the federal Prohibition Administrator, shall be approval or disapproval. In case of approval, the quantity shall be the amount applied for. * * * Permit form 1481 will remain in force until voluntarily surrendered or canceled. * * * In the event of increased or decreased withdrawals, notation of the changed quantity must be made on the permit, which must be returned to the Administrator for this purpose. * * * The manufacturer, on receipt of the permit form 1481 will make application to the Administrator on form 1477 in duplicate for the issuance of one or more withdrawal permits. * * * The Administrator shall promptly approve such application, form 1477, which shall thereupon become permits. The Administrator shall keep a record of all permits form 1477, issued by him, and should a permit form 1481 be canceled, he shall forthwith notify each dealer holding the corresponding permits form 1477, and after such notice no further shipments can be made to the manufacturer to whom the permit was issued.”

It is the contention of defendant that the regulation article 112 relied upon authorizes the calling in and amendment of permit 1477, and that such action is within the basic permit and therefore is not a cancellation of the permit referred to in section 9 of the act, requiring a particular kind of hearing before revocation.

Plaintiff asserts that article 112 does not authorize in terms the amendment of permit 1477, and, if it did, that permit having been issued under a regulation describing it as a permit, the provision of section 9, tit. 2, would apply; and the regulation, if it did authorize such action, would be in violation of it.

Plaintiff further contends, that, if the regulation is valid, it does not apply to this case, since in terms its application is only to actual confirmation of sales or disposals, whereas the record in this case shows conclusively that the sale of the alcohol in question was actually made.

Inside these questions are questions of evidence, defendant seeking to offer additional evidence to that in the record made at the time of the hearing on the order to show cause.

I can dispose of all these interior questions of evidence by one general ruling, sustaining the objection of the plaintiff to these offers, and confining the hearing before me to a review of the record made at the time of the order to show cause. I will therefore give plaintiff a favorable ruling on his objections to the evidence, and the defendant an exception to that ruling, and the case will be disposed of by me on the record taken at the hearing of the order to show cause, and made the basis for an amendment of permit 1477.

Coming to the main questions, I think there is much to be said in support of plaintiff’s view that, since article 112 makes no provision and gives no direction as to what shall be done by the Prohibition Administrator after the hearing to show cause, the action of the Administrator in this case in seeking to impose terms as a condition for further withdrawals was merely personal and arbitrary and without support in regulation or law; for it is fundamental that, where Congress authorizes regulations having the force of law to be made, these regulations must be as clear and explicit as law, and must not leave to be supplied by the personal view of the Administrator important and effective provisions.

This aside, I am also of the opinion that;, in view of the provision of article 111, “when a manufacturer holds permit form 1481, he may make application on form 1477,” and “the Administrator shall promptly approve such application on form 1477, which thereupon becomes a permit,” there is a very grave doubt whether the position of the defendant, that form 1477 is not a permit, and that section 9, tit. 2, of the act does not apply, can be sustained.

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Bluebook (online)
21 F.2d 771, 1927 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1467, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weste-v-campbell-nysd-1927.