We granted leave to appeal here, to review a unanimous confirmation by the Appellate Division of a determination of the State Commissioner of Agriculture and Markets. The cоmmissioner had denied the application of petitioner for an extension of its milk dealer’s license issued pursuant to section 257 of the Agriculture and Markets Law. The extension would have рermitted petitioner to operate a milk receiving plant at Greenwich, New York, in addition to petitioner’s other similar plants already licensed and operating at Eagle Bridge, Salem and Norfolk, in this State. Eagle Bridge is in Rensselaer County and Salem and Greenwich are in Washington County, Rensselaer County being adjacent to Washington County on the south, and both these counties being on the easterly edge of New York State, bordering on Massachusetts and Vermont. Petitioner’s Norfolk establishment is in St. Lawrence County in another part of New York State, and serves a different area and a different group of milk producers. The present Eagle Bridge and Salem depots, however, are quite close together and the proposed Greenwich plant, for which а license has been refused, is ten miles from Salem and twelve miles from Eagle Bridge. Petitioner’s main contentions on the appeal are: first,
*213
that the commissioner’s order is violative of the Commerce Clause of the United States Constitution (art. I, § 8, cl. 3); and second, that the order is not supported by the commissioner’s findings made after the hearings conducted by him, or by the evidence. The two concurring opinions in the Appellate Division both said that the commissioner had acted on adequate proof and appropriate findings. Neither opinion discussed the constitutionаl point and it was not raised in the petition for review under article 78 of the Civil Practice Act. However, it was argued in petitioner’s brief in the Appellate Division, and so is available to aрpellant in this court (see
Jongebloed
v.
Erie R. R. Co.,
Petitioner’s business is wholly interstate in character. It purchases, at its several locations, milk delivered there by farmer-producers, weighs, tests and cools it (if not alrеady cooled), then ships it, the same day, without any processing, to the Boston, Massachusetts, marketing area. Petitioner’s procedures at the proposed Greenwich plant would be exactly the same. It appeared — and the commissioner found — that the new Greenwich plant would to some extent serve the convenience of petitioner and its suppliers. Thе Eagle Bridge and Salem depots have experienced some difficulty in the past in handling, before the 9:00 a.m. daily deadline for shipment out, the large quantities of milk brought there during the flush season. If the Grеenwich facilities were added, petitioner would divert thither, and away from Salem and Eagle Bridge, some 300 cans of milk now arriving daily at Salem and Eagle Bridge, and would allow, but not require, any individual dairy farmer to use the depot nearest his farm. In addition, petitioner hoped, when and if it should go into operation at Greenwich, to take on some twenty to thirty new producers at the new place. Several other milk dealers have plants near Greenwich and some of them have facilities for handling more milk than they are now getting. The commissioner found all these things as facts, аnd found also that some Troy, New York, retail milk distributors now obtain milk in the area where applicant purchases and that “ the supply of milk for the Troy market during the last short season of October thrоugh January was inadequate.” It was the commissioner’s “ conclusion ” that the opening of another milk plant by petitioner and the taking on by it of producers now delivering to other *214 dealers, would tend to reduce the volume at those other dealers’ plants, thus tending to increase milk handling costs there, that there would be a tendency to deprive Troy and other local markets of thеir milk supply in flush seasons, that all producers now had outlets for their milk, that the licensing of the new Greenwich establishment would tend to destructive competition in an already adequately served mаrket, and would not be in the public interest.
Petitioner’s whole business, present and proposed, is interstate commerce
(United States
v.
Rock Royal Co-op,, Inc., 307
U. S. 533;
Milk Control Board
v.
Eisenberg Farm Products,
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Petitioner argues, further, that the commissioner’s order here under attack,’ conflicts with Federal milk order No. 4 issued pursuant to the Agricultural Marketing Agreement Act of 1937 (U. S. Code, tit. 7, § 671
et seq.)
which order regulates the handling, price, etc., of milk sold in interstate commerce in the Boston area and which Federal order is valid as to this petitioner and its business (see
Hood & Sons
v.
United States,
Petitioner’s final attack on the commissioner’s determination assails it as unreasonable and unsupported by any evidence. The Agriculture and Markets Law (§ 258-e) forbids the issuance of such a license ‘1 unless the commissioner is satisfied * * *
that the issuance of the license will not tend to a destructive competition in a market already adequately served, and that the issuance of the license is in the public interest.” The commissioner, as hereinabove noted, found, in petitioner’s proposal, a tendenсy to destructive competition in an adequately served market, and that the public interest would not be served thereby. There was a basis for those findings, and we could not oppose any contrary views of ours, if we had any, to that of the State officer commissioned to make such decisions.
The order should be affirmed, with costs.
Lotjghrau, Ch. J., Lewis, Couway, Thacher, Dye and Fuld, JJ., concur.
Order affirmed.
