Several grape growers object to being compelled by state law to pay money for generic advertising of grapes. The Supreme Court has issued a decision that such a program for growers of nectarines, plums, and peaches did not violate the First Amendment, but a program for mushroom growers did. The only issue in this case is whether the principle distinguishing those two cases makes the grape growers more like the nectarine, plum, and peach growers, or more like the mushroom growers.
Facts.
In 1967, a California statute called the Ketchum Act established- the California Table Grape Commission for “the promotion of the sale of fresh grapes for human consumption by means of advertising, dissemination of information” and oth
The Commission has statutory power to levy assessments “upon all fresh grapes shipped during each marketing season” to pay for generic advertising, marketing, market research and development, and merchandising.
Appellant Delano Farms sells table grapes under a brand name, not generic grapes. It shipped about 1.7 million boxes of its branded table grapes in 1996. On 1.7 million boxes, thirteen cents per box comes to about $221,000.
Appellants Susan Neill Company and Lucas Brothers sell grapes and kiwi fruit under the high end labels “Silver King” and “Grape Royale.” They sell their grapes to “stores that will pay more money for higher quality product, as opposed to large grocery chain stores.” They had to pay the Commission over $35,000 in assessments in 1996.
In the instant consolidated appeal, Delano Farms, Susan Neill, and Lucas Brothers sued for a declaratory judgment that the assessments violated their First Amendment rights, an injunction against collection, and for refunds. The district court issued a preliminary injunction requiring them to pay the bulk of their assessments, subsequently modified as new authority came down from this court and the Supreme Court. The parties eventually stipulated to dismissal of all causes of action except for the constitutional challenge to the assessments for generic advertising, which the district court decided favorably to the Commission. The grape growers now appeal.
Analysis.
We review de novo a district court’s ruling on the constitutionality of a state statute.
The tree fruit (nectarines, plums, and peaches) case, which came down in 1997 while the case at bar was in district court, is Glickman v. Wileman Brothers & Elliott.,
The Supreme Court held that the assessments did not violate the First Amendment rights of the dissenting growers not to be forced to pay for speech in which they preferred not to participate. The reason was that in that particular statutory context, the generic advertising was “part of a broader collective enterprise in which their freedom to act independently is already constrained by the regulatory scheme.”
The mushrooms case that went the other way is United States v. United Foods, Inc.
United Foods distinguished Glickman because in Glickman the generic advertising assessments were “ancillary to a more comprehensive program restricting marketing autonomy,” but in United Foods there was no such “comprehensive program,” just a scheme that consisted mostly of generic promotion of mushrooms.
Constitutional law classes will doubtless enjoy the superficially droll question, “why does the Constitution prohibit the government from compelling mushroom growers, but allow government to compel nectarine, peach and plum growers, to pay for generic advertising?” The Court’s distinction, though, is clear and easy to apply to the case at bar. If the generic advertising assessment is part of a “comprehensive program” that “displacéis] many aspects of independent business ac
Doubtless many cases will arise that are hard to place on one side or the other of the Glickman-United Foods distinction, but this isn’t one of them. Just as in the mushroom case, the scheme does not collectivize the industry, about 90% of the assessment money is spent on generic promotional activities, and there is no antitrust exemption. Delano Farms, Susan Neill, and Lucas Brothers, sell brand name grapes and have an interest in promoting their brands rather than and to some extent at the expense of grapes in general.
The Table Grape Commission argues that grapes are regulated by various California statutes addressing such matters as testing equipment and standards for fruit maturity, container standards, federal regulation of grading standards (e.g., what does “extra fancy” mean?), and quality standards for exported grapes. There is a “marketing order” of the collective sort in one location, though not applicable to the issue in the case at bar. Such consumer protection and information regulations apply to much of the economy, and are far from rising to the level of the collectivization that controlled the result in Glickman. Nor does the Commission attempt to show that mushrooms are not similarly regulated, and, being food products that can poison people if not properly grown, harvested, labeled and sold, they probably are.
We decided two compelled generic advertising cases after Glickman came down but before United Foods was issued: Gallo Cattle Company v. California Milk Advisory Board
We of course intimate no views on economic policy. The distinction between Glickman and United Foods does not turn on evaluation of the merits of competing policy concerns. The grape growers do not operate under the 1937 statute that substituted “collective action” for the “aggregate consequences of independent competitive choices” and expressly exempted them from the antitrust laws, as did the tree fruit, almond, and milk producers in Glickman, Cal-Almond, and Gallo Cattle. Rather, the business practices by the instant growers are governed by a statute similar to the one at issue in United Foods, so they are entitled to First
REVERSED.
Notes
. Cal. Food & Agrie. Code § 65500(f) (1967).
. Cal. Food & Agrie. Code § 65500(g) (1967).
. Cal. Food & Agrie. Code § 65500(e) (1967).
. Cal. Food & Agrie. Code §§ 65600, 65650 (1967).
. See California First Amendment Coalition v. Calderon,
. Glickman v. Wileman Brothers & Elliott,
. Id. at 461,
. Id. at 469, 470-72,
.Id. at 470,
. United States v. United Foods, Inc.,
. Id. at 411,
. Id. at 410-11,
. Id. at 412-13,
. Gallo Cattle Company v. California Milk Advisory Board,
. Cal-Almond Inc. v. U.S. Department of Agriculture,
