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1 Court Questions President's Tariff Action 1 (1958)

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        41, 1885  7

                                                                                                 OCTOBER 1958




                 Court Questions President's Tariff Action


  The escape clause provisions of the Trade Agreements
Act have had a 7-year statutory life free of judicial inter-
pretation or interference.
  This charmed existence came to an abrupt end on
October 6, when the Customs Court in New York de-
clared that the President and the U. S. Tariff Commission
had both acted extra-legally in the conduct of the escape
clause case of 1955 raising rates on bicycle imports.
  The United States, which was the defendant in the
suit, has decided to appeal the decision to the United
States Court of Customs and Patent Appeals which
could, of course, overrule the lower court's decision.
  However and whatever the result of the appeal, the
President, primarily, and the Tariff Commission, sec-
ondly, will be particularly circumspect in the handling
of future escape clause cases. For doubts have been now
raised by a competent court as to basic assumptions in
the law. By declaring void a proclamation of the Presi-
dent, that court has announced to the Congress, the Exec-
utive Branch, the foreign trading fraternity and domestic
producers that the President's discretion under the escape
clause may be more limited than originally intended or
commonly supposed.
  The legality of a number of other escape clause proc-
lamations has thereby been clouded and it is anybody's
guess what will happen to future cases.
  There is also the question whether Congress will want
to amend the law so that, whatever the ultimate court
decision, the legislative intent is clearly enunciated and
the President's discretion either positively limited or
exactly defined.
  The Customs Court's history-making decision invali-
dated the Presidential proclamation in the 1955 bicycle
escape case on two main grounds:
   (1) The Court unanimously found that the Presiden-
tial directive hiking U. S. tariff rates on certain types of
bicycle imports was based on an escape clause investiga-
tion which was improperly conducted by the Tariff Com-
mission because the latter exceeded the statutory deadline
of nine months then called for in conducting the probe.
The investigation, the Court held, consisted of a supple-


mentary study held without abiding by the necessary
procedural requirements which call for due public notice
and public hearing.
   (In the Trade Agreements Extension Act of 1958
which was enacted into law on August 20, Congress nar-
rowed from nine to six months the statutory deadline for
completing escape clause investigations.)
  (2) The Court, in a majority opinion, also decided
that the Presidential proclamation modified. the Tariff
Commission recommendations and thereby failed to com-
ply with what the Court has interpreted as a statutory
limitation in the trade agreements law under which the
President must either totally accept or reject Commission
escape clause recommendations.
  Judges Charles D. Lawrence, Paul P. Rao and Morgan
Ford of the U. S. Customs Court concurred on Point 1
while Judge Rao entered a dissenting opinion on Point 2.
He held that the President's discretionary powers under
the trade agreements statute permitted him to modify
Commission escape recommendations.
  Plaintiffs in the bicycle court case were Schmidt Prit-
chard & Co., and Mangano Cycles Co., importers, who
brought their claim against the U. S. Government as
defendant.

Background of Bicycle Court Case

  The significance of the case was acknowledged by
Judge Lawrence who observed in his opening statement
that the cause of action thereunder presented a problem
of far-reaching importance and that the case naturally
has a direct impact not only upon our domestic economy,
but upon international trade as well, to the extent that
both are affected by the dutiable status of a commodity
which is the subject of extensive importation, manufac-
ture, and trade.
  The Tariff Commission investigation on bicycles and
the subsequent Presidential proclamation, both of which
the Customs Court has now ruled invalid, were based on
an escape clause application initially filed with the Com-
mission on June .14, 1954 by the 'Bicycle Manufacturers
                 (Continued on pa e 2)

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