KASS v. BRANNAN, Secretary of Agriculture
No. 48, Docket 21966
United States Court of Appeals, Second Circuit
Argued Dec. 5, 1951. Decided April 30, 1952.
196 F.2d 791
Defendant‘s attack upon the contract makes a mountain out of a molehill and a very small one at that. The judgment was right. It is affirmed.
Harry Polikoff and Guggenheimer & Untermyer, all of New York City (Munder, Weissman & Lockwood, Huntington, N. Y., of counsel), for appellant.
J. Stephen Doyle, Jr., and Neil Brooks, Special Assts. to the Atty. Gen., Donald A. Campbell, U. S. Department of Agriculture, Washington, D. C., Frank J. Parker, U. S. Atty., and Morris K. Siegel, Chief Asst. U. S. Atty., Brooklyn, N. Y., for appellee.
Seward A. Miller, New York City (Frank B. Lent, New York City, of counsel), for five organizations appearing as amici curiae.
Before SWAN, Chief Judge, and L. HAND and AUGUSTUS N. HAND, Circuit Judges.
This is an appeal by the plaintiff from a summary judgment dismissing his complaint in an action brought against the Secretary of Agriculture to recover payments, made under protest, pursuant to provisions of Order No. 27, as amended, regulating the handling of milk in the New York milk marketing area. The plaintiff is a small milk dealer in Lindenhurst, Suffolk County, N. Y. As such he is a “handler” of milk as defined in § 927.1(g) of the Order. The payments he seeks to recover were exacted by the market administrator under § 927.9(h) of the Order with respect to cream and plain condensed milk purchased by the plaintiff from a plant in Orrville, Ohio, and resold within the New York area to small establishments for use in manufacturing ice cream. The plaintiff has permission under license from the New York State Health Department and from health authorities of Nassau and Suffolk Counties to import cream and condensed milk from Orrville, Ohio, provided such milk products are used for manufacturing purposes only. He first sought administrative relief, as required by
Before discussing the legal questions presented by the appeal, a brief reference to the history of federal milk regulation in the New York area may be useful. The Agricultural Marketing Agreement Act of 1937,
The Ohio plant from which the plaintiff purchased cream and plain condensed milk for sale in the New York area to ice cream manufacturers was not a pool plant
We think “penalty” is the more aсcurate description. In a very rough way they may tend to compensate New York producers for having lost a sale, because they are an addition to the producer settlement fund and are taken into account in computing the uniform price payable to producers. But they are likewise required even if the plaintiff‘s purchases from the Ohio plant were made at times when no milk was available in the New York market area for processing into cream or condensed milk. § 927.9(h)(1) makes such fact immaterial.
Turning to the statute: Section 8c(5),
Paragraph (A) authorizes the classification of milk in accordance with the form or purpose of its use, and the fixing of minimum prices for each use classification. This is beсause the economic value of milk depends upon the use made of it. To avoid inequities among producers if the price each received depended upon the use each handler makes of his milk, paragraph (B) authorizes provision to be made for the payment to producers of uniform prices for the milk delivered, irrespective of the use to which the milk is put by the particular handler to whom it is delivered. Such uniform prices are subject, however, to specified “adjustments.” To accomplish the purposes of paragraphs (A) and (B), paragraph (C) authorizes the Secretary of Agriculture to set up the necessary machinery.
We think that the payments required by section 927.9(h) of the Order are part of the “minimum price” as that term is used in section 8c(5)(A) of the Act. The price of non-pool cream or condensed milk to a New York handler is in reality composed of two elements: (1) the initial cost, i. e., the amount paid to the seller, and (2) the amount of the penalty required to be paid under the Order. Section 927.9(h)(2)(ii) assumes that the initial cost of the non-pool cream and condensed milk will be the Class IV-A (butter) price under the New York order. If this assumption were true, the minimum prices of pool and non-pool cream and condensed milk would be the same and would satisfy the requirement imposed by section 8c(5)(A) that “Such prices shall be uniform as to all handlers * * *”8 However, there is no substantial evidence in the record of the promulgation hearings which would indicate that the initial cost of non-pool cream and condensed milk would be the New York Class IV-A price. In fact, the only evidence bearing directly on this question supports the conclusion that the initial cost would be more than the New York Class IV-A price. Therefore, the result of the exaction of a penalty computed on the basis of the New York Class IV-A price rather than the actual cost to the handler is a price discrimination between a handler who purchases non-pool milk products and one who purchases pool milk products, although each makes the same use of such products in the New York marketing area. This in our opinion is contrary to the requirement laid down in section 8c(5)(A) that the minimum prices for each use classification shall be uniform as to all handlers.
The same is true of section 927.9(h)(2)(i) of the Order. That section provides for a penalty payment to be computed as any plus amount obtained by subtracting the applicable Cleveland order price from the New York Class-in-which-used price. While the Cleveland class price
Consequently, the challenged provisions of the order under which the penalty payments were exacted are inconsistent with the terms and conditions specified in section 8c(5)(A) and therefore cannot be justified under section 8c(7)(D). As Mr. Justice Clark remarked in construing subsection (7)(D) in Brannan v. Stark, 342 U.S. 451, 439 (1952): “Finally, the provisions cannot be incidental to the enumerated terms and conditions since they are inconsistent therewith.” And because of such inconsistency the court found it unnecessary to determine whether the provisions there under attack were “‘necessary to effectuate the other provisions’ of the Order“. Although Brannan v. Stark is not a precise authority for the case at bar, we think it tends to support our decision.9
Since we rest decision on the ground that the provisions of section 927.9(h) of the order are inconsistent with the terms specified in paragraph (A) of section 8c(5), it is unnecessary to discuss other contentions of the parties.
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
L. HAND, Circuit Judge (dissenting).
Already beforе the order here in suit was passed in 1945, handlers had paid a “uniform price” to producers for fluid milk delivered in a marketing area, that price being computed as it has been under the order in suit. This was by the following formula. Milk was divided by its “uses“—“fluid milk” was one “use” and there were many others, which can be lumped as “products.” Each “use” was given a “classified price,” and the handler became liable for the price of the “use” to which he put his fluid milk: his liability was therefore the product of the number of hundredweights he took, multiplied by the “classified prices” for the “uses” to which he put them. The amounts for which handlers so became liable were added together, and the total was divided by the number of hundredweights of “fluid milk” delivered by the producers. The quotient was the “uniform price,” and was the price at which the “pool” settled with its producers. Since this price was inevitably somewhere between the highest and lowest of the “classification prices,” it followed that the account of any particular handler would never—except theoretically—equal the amount due by him to the producers for the milk which he had taken. If he had turned the milk to lower priced “uses,” his payment would not equal the amount owed by the “pool” to the producers for that milk; if he had turned his milk to higher priced “uses,” his payment would be higher. Nevertheless, it is obvious that the excesses would always exactly cancel the deficiencies, and that there would be enough to pay producers the “uniform price.”
In administration it turned out that this system resulted in shortages of supply in the drier seasons and in variations in the “uni-
What orders, short of prohibition or limitation, the Secretary might adopt to protect the new system of “pool plants” which he had set up, it was сertainly for him to say within the limits of his statutory powers. One method might have been to restore to the producers in a “pool” what they had lost by the “non-pool” competition of each handler; but that was patently impossible to determine, and nobody suggests that it should have been attempted. Another method was to impose upon a “non-pool” handler the same cost that “pool” handlers must pay, thus eliminating any inducement to poach, so to say, upon the local “pool.” The provisions in suit were promulgated to effect this purpose; and I shall assume that they can be defended only on that ground. However, like all rules made to carry out statutory powers, it was not necessary that in application they should go not a jot beyond the exact purposes for which they were intended. There is always a permissible latitude or overlap, which can be justified by the administrative difficulties which may arise in exactly limiting the scope of the measures taken to their need. The Secretary, if he was justified in supposing that the remedy which exactly matched the evil, would prove in execution more cumbersome, dilatory and obstructive than any prejudice which its application would impose upon a handler, was entitled to adopt it, although of course this exercise of his “discretion” is reviewable by us. His decision, and our review of it, do indeed involve a choice betwеen conflicting interests, for which there are, and can be, no general rules. The standard applied is “arbitrary“: i. e. personal; and its ambit is correspondingly narrow, and should be jealously scrutinized; nevertheless it is a delusion to suppose that such latitude is not inevitable in all administration, which without it would degenerate into an impenetrable jungle of verbiage. We ought, I submit, approach the determination of the differential with this in mind.
No one can object to the minuend: i. e. the local “classification price” for the “use” in question—for that is what the “pool” handler has to pay; the doubt arises as to the subtrahend: i. e. the proper credit for the amount which the “non-pool” handler has already рaid. When there is a similar order in the “pool” where he has bought, it is fair to take the “classification price” in that “pool” for that “use.” It is possible that on occasion he may have to pay more, but by hypothesis the price has been fixed as adequate in that market, and it is likely to be the current price. In any event I
There remains the question whether the statute gave the Secretary adequate authority to promulgate the provisions in suit; and
There remains only
I can see so little basis for the assertion that the provisions in suit are unconstitutional that I shall not discuss it. The only possible doubt would be as to the plaintiff‘s condensed milk before the noticе of hearing was amended, and as to that I am in accord with the “Judicial Officer” that it is a case of de minimis. I think that the order should be affirmed.
L. HAND
CIRCUIT JUDGE
Notes
“§ 927.9(h) Payments for milk or milk products other than producer sources.—(1) Payment shall be made by handlers to produсers, through the producer-settlement fund, for milk, cultured or flavored milk drinks, cream, plain condensed milk, or skim milk, which milk and milk product meets each of the following provisions: (i) it was derived from milk received at some plant from dairy farmers (other than the handler operating such plant) who are not producers; (ii) it was received at a plant in, or delivered to a purchaser in the marketing area, or was received at a pool plant outside the marketing area and assigned either to shipments to the marketing area of milk, cultured or flavored milk drinks, cream, plain condensed milk, or skim milk, or to plant loss; and (iii) the milk or milk equivalent of the butterfat is classified as Class I-A, Class II-A, or Class II-B, or the skim milk is classified as Class V-a.
“(2) The amount of payment for the products set forth in (1) of this paragraph shall be as follows:
“(i) If the milk, or the milk equivalent of the butterfat, or the skim milk is classified and paid for under another order issued pursuant to the act, the amount of payment shall be any plus amount obtained by subtracting the value of the milk, the milk equivalent of the butterfat, or the skim milk at the class price or prices under such other order from the value computed in accordance with the classification and pricing set forth herein.
“(ii) If the milk or milk product is derived from milk the handling of which is not regulated by another order issued pursuant to the act, the amount of payment shall be as follows: for milk, or for cultured or flavored milk drinks containing 3.0 pеrcent butterfat or more, the difference between the value of such milk or cultured or flavored milk drinks at the Class I-A price in the 201-210 mile zone and the value computed at the Class IV-A and Class V-B prices; except as provided in (iv) of this subparagraph, for cream, plain condensed milk, or for cultured or flavored milk drinks containing less than 3.0 percent butterfat, the difference between the value of the milk equivalent of such cream, plain condensed milk, or milk drinks at the appropriate class (II-A or II-B) price in the 201-210 mile zone and at the Class IV-A price (milk equivalent in each case to be computed on the basis of milk containing 3.5 percent butterfat); and for skim milk (either as skim milk or in cultured, or flavored milk drinks), the difference between the value computed at the Class V-A price in the 201-210 mile zone and the Class V-B price.
“(iii) In the event that the source of such milk or milk product is not revealed, the amount of payment shall be the full value at the class prices in the 201-210 mile zone.
“(iv) If the market administrator finds that there is an inadequate supply of cream or plain condensed milk in the marketing area and that such products are available from nonpool sources, he may declare an emergency for a period ending not more than three months from the date of such declaration, in which case the payment during the period of such declared emergency shall be the differencе between the value of the milk equivalent of such cream or plain condensed milk at the appropriate class (II-A or II-B) price in the 201-210 mile zone and at the Class II-E price in the 0-250 mile zone from Boston.
“(3) Payment for any milk or milk product pursuant to this paragraph shall be made only once and shall be made by the appropriate handler as set forth in the following provisions: (i) by the handler first receiving the milk or milk product at a pool plant outside the marketing area; (ii) by the handler operating the plant where the milk or milk product is first received in the marketing area if the milk or milk product is not received at a pool plant outside the marketing area; or (iii) by the handler operating the plant from which the milk or milk product was delivered to a purchaser in the marketing area if such milk or milk product is neither received at a pool plant outside the marketing area nor at a plant in the marketing area.
“(4) The amount due pursuant to this paragraph shall be entered on the handler‘s account as a debit immediately after the filing of the report pursuant to Sec. 927.6(a).”
This section with further amendments not here relevant is found at
7 C.F.R. § 927.9(h) .
“(A) Classifying milk in accordance with the form in which or the purpose for which it is used, and fixing, or providing a method for fixing, minimum prices for each such use classification which all handlers shall pay, and the time when payments shall be made, for milk purchased from producers or associations of producers. Such prices shall be uniform as to all handlers, subject only to adjustments for (1) volume, market, and production differentials customarily applied by the handlers subject to such order, (2) the grade or quality of the milk purchased, and (3) the locations at which delivery of such milk, or any use clаssification thereof, is made to such handlers.
“(B) Providing:
“(i) for the payment to all producers and associations of producers delivering milk to the same handler of uniform prices for all milk delivered by them: Provided, That, except in the case of orders covering milk products only, such provision is approved or favored by at least three-fourths of the producers who, during a representative period determined by the Secretary of Agriculture, have been engaged in the production for market of milk covered in such order or by producers who, during such representative period, have produced at least three-fourths of the volume of such milk produced for market during such period; оr
“(ii) for the payment to all producers and associations of producers delivering milk to all handlers of uniform prices for all milk so delivered, irrespective of the uses made of such milk by the individual handler to whom it is delivered; subject, in either case, only to adjustments for (a) volume, market, and production differentials customarily applied by the handlers subject to such order, (b) the grade or quality of the milk delivered, (c) the locations at which delivery of such milk is made, and (d) a further adjustment, equitably to apportion the total value of the milk purchased by any handler, or by all handlers, among producers and associations of producers, on the basis of their marketings of milk during a representative period of time. “(C) In order to accomplish the purposes set forth in paragraphs (A) and (B) of this subsection (5), providing a method for making adjustments in payments, as among handlers (including producers who are also handlers), to the end that the total sums paid by each handler shall equal the value of the milk purchased by him at the prices fixed in accordance with paragraph (A) hereof.”
* The word “production” was deleted and the word “marketings” was substituted by section 2(d) of the Agricultural Marketing Agreement Act of 1937.
“The payments to cooperаtives are inconsistent with § 8c(5)(A), which provides that all handlers shall pay uniform prices for each class of milk, subject to certain adjustments of no concern here. The discriminatory effect of the payments becomes the more evident when they are considered in context with the reduction in the uniform allowance to all handlers on the price of Class II milk. That reduction was simultaneous with the establishment of the system of payments to be made to cooperatives only and to be funded by deductions from prices paid all producers. The result would have been substantially similar if the allowance to proprietary handlers had been reduced while the allowance to cooperatives had been permitted to remain at its previous higher level. Such a lack of uniformity in prices paid by handlers would clearly have contravened § 8c(5)(A).”
