Robert B. REICH, Secretary of Labor, United States Department of Labor, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. TILLER HELICOPTER SERVICES, INC. and William J. Tiller, Sr., Defendants-Appellees.
No. 92-7368.
United States Court of Appeals, Fifth Circuit.
Dec. 10, 1993.
Before REAVLEY and GARWOOD, Circuit Judges, and LAKE,* District Judge.
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Southern District of Texas.
The Secretary of Labor appeals the rulings of the district court following a bench trial (1) that certain work of employees of Tiller Helicopter Services, Inc., was exempt agricultural work under the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA), (2) that the Secretary‘s failure to pursue trial by jury precluded the court from awarding liquidated damages, and (3) that Appellees’ violations of the Fair Labor Standards Act were not willful. We AFFIRM.
I. Background
William J. Tiller, Sr., owns and manages several thousand acres of non-contiguous farm and ranch land in south Texas. He also owns and operates Tiller Helicopter Services, Inc. (Tiller Helicopter), a company headquartered on his farm located near Alice, Texas. Tiller Helicopter owns and operates six or seven helicopters that are used to dust lawns, herd cattle, and spray herbicides, insecticides, and fertilizers on crops for Tiller and approximately 200 client farmers. Although most of Tiller Helicopter‘s clients are located in south Texas, some are located as far east as Beaumont, Texas, and as far west as Marfa, Texas.
The trial record shows that a typical day for Tiller Helicopter employees begins at the Tiller farm, where helicopters are loaded onto trailers. Tiller Helicopter employees then fill the fuel and water tanks on the trailers, load unmixed chemicals onto the trailers, and transport the trailers in
On December 21, 1988, the Secretary1 filed suit against Tiller Helicopter and its principal officers, William J. Tiller, Sr., Martha J. Tiller, and William J. Tiller, Jr.,2 under the
After a two-day bench trial the district court found that loading trailers and tanks at Tiller Helicopter headquarters, traveling to and from job sites, and “simple flushing of the tanks on the trailers” upon return to Tiller Helicopter headquarters was exempt from overtime wages under the
The district court‘s rulings as to the scope of the agricultural exemption to the
Although this court has previously addressed the
II. The FLSA‘s Agricultural Exemption
The Secretary argues that the district court erred in holding that loading trailers and tanks at Tiller Helicopter headquarters for spraying operations, traveling to and from work sites, and flushing the tanks on the trailers upon return to Tiller Helicopter headquarters was exempt work within the meaning of the
In 1938 Congress enacted the
(b) The provisions of
section 207 [maximum hours] of this title shall not apply with respect to—. . . . .
(12) any employee employed in agriculture or in connection with the operation or maintenance of ditches, canals, reservoirs, or waterways, not owned or operated for profit, or operated on a sharecrop basis, and which are used exclusively for supply and storing of water for agricultural purposes.
The dispute here is whether the Tiller Helicopter employees were “employed in agriculture” with regard to those activities found to be exempt by the district court.
A. Development of the Agricultural Exemption
The bill specifically and unequivocally excludes certain industries and certain types of business from its scope and effect. It specifically excludes workers in agriculture of all kinds and of all types. There is contained in the measure, perhaps, the most comprehensive definition of agriculture which has been included in any one legislative proposal.
We have placed together in the bill definitions of agricultural work which have been fixed from time to time in other legislative enactments, and in addition to that we have drawn liberally from Mr. Webster‘s definition of agriculture.
81 Cong.Rec. 7648 (1937). As originally introduced the
“Agriculture” includes farming in all its branches and among other things includes the cultivation and tillage of the soil, dairying, the production, cultivation, growing, and harvesting of any agricultural or horticultural commodities ..., the raising of livestock ... and any practices... performed by a farmer or on a farm as an incident to or in conjunction with such farming operations, including preparation for market, delivery to storage or to market, or to carriers for transportation to market.
The Supreme Court first addressed the scope of the agricultural exemption in Farmers Reservoir & Irrigation Co. v. McComb, 337 U.S. 755, 760-763, 69 S.Ct. 1274, 1277-1278, 93 L.Ed. 1672 (1949). The Court stated that the determinative issue in analyzing the scope of the exemption was not whether the work “is necessary to agricultural production ... [but whether it] can itself be termed agriculture.” Id. at 759-760, 69 S.Ct. at 1277. The Court concluded that the exemption recognized two types of agricultural activity: primary and secondary.
Whether a particular type of activity is agricultural depends, in large measure, upon the way in which that activity is organized in a particular society ... The question is whether the activity in the particular case is carried on as part of the agricultural function or is separately organized as an independent productive activity ... As can be readily seen, this definition [of agriculture] has two distinct branches. First, there is the primary meaning. Agriculture includes farming in all its branches. Certain specific practices such as cultivation and tillage of the soil, dairying, etc., are listed as being included in this primary meaning. Second, there is the broader meaning. Agriculture is defined to include things other than farming ... whether or not themselves farming practices, which are performed either by a farmer or on a farm, incidently to or in conjunction with “such” farming operations.
337 U.S. at 760-763, 69 S.Ct. at 1277-1278. For the broader, “secondary” agricultural activity to fall within the scope of the exemption, the Court stated that the activity had to meet two criteria: (1) it had to be performed either by a farmer or on a farm and (2) it had to be incidental to or in
In Farmer‘s Reservoir the Court held that work of employees of a water supply company cooperatively owned by a group of farmers was not exempt as secondary agricultural work even though the work was incidental to agriculture because it was not performed either by farmers or on a farm. 337 U.S. at 767, 69 S.Ct. at 1281. The Court reasoned that the employees’ work was not performed by farmers, although the company that employed them was wholly owned by farmers, because the company had been established as an independent entity to supply water to farmers—an activity that the court characterized as self-contained and separated from the farmers’ farming activities. The Court also reasoned that the employees’ work was not exempt as work performed on a farm because the employees worked only on waterways owned by the company and never worked on the farms to which the company supplied water.5 337 U.S. at 767-768, 69 S.Ct. at 1281.
Six years later in Maneja v. Waialua Agricultural Co., 349 U.S. 254, 75 S.Ct. 719, 99 L.Ed. 1040 (1955), the Court again addressed the scope of the agricultural exemption. The Court held that certain employees of a corporate sugar plantation were exempt from the
While Farmer‘s Reservoir and Waialua established that the agricultural exemption is not available to nonfarmers performing secondary agricultural tasks off the farm, or to farm employees performing secondary agricultural tasks on a farm that are not incidental to the farm‘s own farming operations, neither case addressed the applicability of the exemption to independent contractors who perform primary agricultural tasks on the farms of client farmers and secondary agricultural tasks incidental to their clients’ farming operations off their clients’ farms. Those issues were addressed by this court in Wirtz v. Osceola Farms Co., 372 F.2d 584 (5th Cir.1967). In Osceola Farms we found that the principles established in Farmer‘s Reservoir and Waialua did not preclude us from recognizing the need for independent contractors to perform secondary agricultural tasks off the farms of their client farmers without losing their right to the agricultural exemption. Osceola Farms was an independent contractor that provided farm laborers to harvest sugar cane from the fields of client farmers. We held that Osceola Farms drivers who transported the farm laborers to and from client‘s farms and who transported meals from off-farm locations to the laborers to eat in the fields were exempt because their work was incidental to the primary agricultural task of harvesting performed by the Osceola Farms laborers. Id. at 589.
B. Application of the Agricultural Exemption to Tiller Helicopter‘s Employees
Asserting that secondary agricultural tasks must be performed either by a farmer or on the farm to which they are incidental, the Secretary argues that these tasks performed by Tiller Helicopter employees are not exempt because they are not performed by farmers or on the farms of the client farmers and are not the type of off-farm tasks that can be regarded as performed on a farm because Tiller Helicopter employees spend more than “a small amount of time” performing these off-farm tasks. Appellees respond that the employees are covered by the agricultural exemption because Tiller is a farmer and because the employees in question perform their off-farm tasks either on Tiller‘s farm or on roads en route to the farms of Tiller Helicopter‘s clients.
Based on the principles established in Farmer‘s Reservoir, Waialua, and Osceola Farms we conclude that Tiller Helicopter employees are not employed by a farmer and that the tasks they perform on Tiller‘s farm are not performed “on a farm” for purposes of the agricultural exemption but that the secondary agricultural tasks performed by these employees are nevertheless exempt from the
1. Tiller Helicopter employees are not employed by a farmer and tasks performed on Tiller‘s farm are not performed on a farm for purposes of the agricultural exemption.
2. Secondary agricultural tasks performed by Tiller Helicopter employees are exempt because they are incidental to primary agricultural activities that the employees perform on a farm.
Our conclusion that the affected employees are not employed by a farmer and that much of the work at issue is not performed on a farm does not end our analysis because, as the Supreme Court explained in Farmer‘s Reservoir, “the question here is whether the occupation of the field employees of the ... company can itself be termed agriculture.” 337 U.S. at 760, 69 S.Ct. at 1277. Because the Tiller Helicopter employees’ tasks of applying herbicides, insecticides, and fertilizers to the fields of client farmers fall within the definition of agriculture adopted by Congress in
The legislative history of the
[t]he legislative history makes it plain that ... language was particularly included [in the FLSA] to make certain that independent contractors such as threshers of wheat, who travel around from farm to farm to assist farmers in what is recognized as a purely agricultural task ... should be included within the definition of agricultural employees.
Recognizing that aerial spraying operations are analogous to wheat threshing operations, and that aerial spraying necessarily involves off-farm activities that fall within the agricultural exemption, the Secretary has exempted by regulation pilots and flagmen employed by aerial spraying contractors and decreed that off-farm work performed by such employees will not preclude them from coming within the ambit of the agricultural exemption.
Pilots and flagmen engaged in the aerial dusting and spraying of crops are examples of the types of employees of independent contractors who may be considered employed in practices performed “on a farm.” ... Even though an employee may work on several farms during a workweek, he is regarded as employed “on a farm” for the entire workweek if his work on each farm pertains solely to farming operations on that farm. The fact that a minor and incidental part of the work of such an employee occurs off the farm will not affect this conclusion. Thus, an employee may spend a small amount of time within the workweek in transporting necessary equipment for work to be done on farms.
Because the legislative history, the Secretary‘s own regulations, and this court‘s holding in Osceola Farms all contemplate the need for independent contractors performing primary agricultural activities to travel from farm to farm and to perform incidental off-farm tasks without losing their exempt status, we are not persuaded by the Secretary‘s argument that application of the exemption should turn on either the distances traveled from farm to farm or the amount of time required to complete such off-farm tasks. As we explained in Osceola Farms, application of the exemption to employees of independent contractors turns on whether the activities are incidental to primary agricultural activities performed by the contractor‘s employees on clients’ farms. The Tiller Helicopter
The Secretary does not dispute that the time Tiller Helicopter employees spend traveling from farm to farm and the time they spend loading and flushing tanks and trailers at Tiller Helicopter headquarters are incidental to the primary agricultural activities that they perform on the farms of Tiller Helicopter‘s client farmers. Because the only purpose of these activities is to make spraying operations possible on clients’ farms, we conclude that like the off-farm activities of the drivers in Osceola Farms, the off-farm activities of the Tiller Helicopter employees fall within the scope of the agricultural exemption. Neither the legislative history nor pertinent case law imposes a spatial or temporal restriction on otherwise exempt off-farm activities. (Nor does the Secretary articulate guidelines by which we or district courts are to apply such restrictions.) We therefore agree with the district court that the Secretary‘s position does not realistically honor the congressional desire for an agricultural exemption broad enough to encompass independent contractors performing primary agricultural tasks for client farmers. Tiller, 778 F.Supp. at 1398.
III. Liquidated Damages
The Secretary argues that the district court erred in holding that it could not award liquidated damages because the Secretary failed to request a jury trial. Appellees respond that the district court properly denied the Secretary‘s claim for liquidated damages because the Secretary only sought back wages pursuant to
A. Availability of Liquidated Damages and Prejudgment Interest
The
1. Liquidated Damages
“As used in the FLSA ‘liquidated damages’ is something of a misnomer. It is not a sum certain, determined in advance as a means of liquidating damages that might be incurred in the future. It is an award of special or exemplary damages added to the normal damages.”
Superior Care, 840 F.2d at 1063 n. 3. As originally enacted,
The only exception to
if the employer shows to the satisfaction of the court that the act or omission giving rise to such action was in good faith and that [the employer] had reasonable grounds for believing that his act or omission was not a violation of the Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938, as amended, the court may, in its sound discretion, award no liquidated damages or award any amount thereof not to exceed the amount specified in section 216 of this title.
(emphasis added) A district court may not exercise its discretionary authority to reduce or eliminate a liquidated damage award unless the employer sustains the “substantial burden of persuading the court by proof that his failure to obey the statute was both in good faith and predicated upon ... reasonable grounds.” Mireles, 899 F.2d at 1415, quoting Barcellona v. Tiffany English Pub, Inc., 597 F.2d 464, 468 (5th Cir.1979) (emphasis in original);
2. Prejudgment Interest
In an early case examining the availability of prejudgment interest in
To allow an employee to recover the basic statutory wage and liquidated damages, with interest, would have the effect of giving an employee double compensation for damages arising from delay in the payment of the basic minimum wages ... Congress by enumerating the sums recoverable in an action under Section 16(b) meant to preclude recovery of interest on minimum wages and liquidated damages.
Brooklyn Savings, 324 U.S. at 715-716, 65 S.Ct. at 906. When Brooklyn Savings was decided in 1945 the
Relying on the rationale underlying the Supreme Court‘s holding in Brooklyn Savings, and without considering the effects of subsequent developments in the law, this court has consistently refused to allow prejudgment interest in actions brought under
B. Right to Trial by Jury
In a
C. Claims Stated in the Secretary‘s Complaint
The Secretary‘s six-page complaint asserted jurisdiction under
Our conclusion that the Secretary need not allege jurisdiction under
As originally enacted in 1938, the
In response to such cases, Congress amended
The Conference Report stated that the amendment to
not preclude the Administrator from joining in a single complaint causes of action arising under
section 16(c) andsection 17 . Nor is it intended that if the Administrator brings an action undersection 16(c) he is thereby precluded from bringing an action undersection 17 to restrain violations of the act. Similarly, the bringing of an injunction action undersection 17 will not preclude the Administrator from also bringing in an appropriate case an action undersection 16(c) to collect unpaid minimum wages or overtime compensation owing to employees under the provisions of the law.
Id.
By 1961 Congress had concluded that the 1949 amendments were inadequate to secure full relief for employees.
[u]nder the present provisions of the act, the Secretary of Labor has no authority to require the payment of minimum wages and overtime compensation not paid in
compliance with the law, except where an employee requests that an action be brought by the Secretary of Labor.... This limitation has impeded the Secretary in his efforts to enforce the act.
2 U.S.Code Cong. & Admin.News 1658 (1961). In an effort to make investigations by the Secretary more effective by combining the power to investigate and seek injunctive relief with the power to sue for unpaid wages, Congress amended the
While the 1961 amendments to the
In the introductory paragraph of the complaint the Secretary stated that the action was brought
to enjoin defendants from violating the provisions of
sections 6 ,7 ,11 ,15(a)(2) and15(a)(5) of the Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938 , as amended,29 U.S.C. § 210, et seq. , hereinafter referred to as the Act, and to restrain said defendants from withholding payment of minimum wages and overtime compensation found by the Court to be due employees under the Act and an equal amount as liquidated damages due to the employees who are named in the attached Exhibit “A“.
(ROA 862) (emphasis added) After identifying the parties and reciting the facts that entitled the Secretary to relief, the Secretary stated in paragraph VIII that
[a] judgment enjoining the violations hereinabove alleged and restraining the withholding of minimum wages and overtime compensation found to be due defendants’ employees is specifically authorized by
Section 17 of the Act, 29 U.S.C. § 217 .
(ROA 866) The only mention of
WHEREFORE, cause having been shown, plaintiff prays for judgment permanently enjoining the defendants, their agents, servants, employees and all those persons in active concert or participation with them from violating the provisions of
sections 6 ,7 ,11 of the Act,29 U.S.C. § 206 ,207 ,211 ; restraining the withholding of payment of minimum wages and overtime compensation found by the court to be due employees under the Act together with interest thereon at the rate provided by26 U.S.C. § 6621 from the date such wages became due until the date judgment is entered, and at the rate provided by28 U.S.C. § 1961 thereafter; and for such other and further relief as may be necessary and appropriate,including an additional amount as liquidated damages equal to the back wages found to be due to the employees named in attached Exhibit “A” in accordance with Section 16(c) of the Act [29 U.S.C. § 216(c) ] and costs of this action.
(ROA 866-867) (emphasis added) Nowhere in the complaint did the Secretary claim an entitlement to back pay damages under
The district court denied the Secretary‘s request for liquidated damages and awarded back pay and prejudgment interest. Citing Scott-Rice, 731 F.Supp. 776, the court concluded
that plaintiff‘s failure to pursue trial by jury on this issue upon which it must obtain a verdict forgoes the power of the Court to impose any liquidated damages. It is plaintiff‘s burden to obtain the verdict from the jury when liquidated damages are sought.
Acknowledging that liquidated damages are only available under
Because the Secretary‘s complaint only asked the district court to restrain Appellees from withholding back pay and never asked the court to find Appellees liable for back pay as actual damages, we conclude that the Secretary‘s complaint only stated an equitable claim for back pay as restitutionary injunctive relief pursuant to
If the Secretary wants to recover liquidated damages he must seek back pay as actual damages in the complaint. Were the Secretary allowed to recover liquidated damages following a determination of back wage liability under
The complaint in this action is almost identical to those in other actions where the Secretary has similarly pleaded for injunctive relief under
Since at least 1980 courts have suggested that the Secretary avoid this issue by pleading, alternatively, for back pay damages under
Had the Secretary wanted to be sure he could get liquidated damages, he could have amended his complaint to seek overtime wages under section 16(c). Having elected to pursue overtime wages only under section 17, and gained what he apparently thought was the advantage of avoiding a jury trial on that component of relief, the Secretary has no valid claim for liquidated damages.
Superior Care, 840 F.2d at 1064 (footnote omitted).
Because the Secretary‘s complaint only stated an equitable claim for back wages under
IV. Willfulness
The Secretary argues that the district court erred in holding that Appellees’ violations of the
although there is evidence to support [them], the reviewing court on the entire evidence is left with the definite and firm conviction that a mistake has been committed.
U.S. v. U.S. Gypsum, 333 U.S. 364, 395, 68 S.Ct. 525, 542, 92 L.Ed. 746 (1948).
Applying the McLaughlin standard for determining willfulness, the district court found that the Secretary failed to prove willfulness because the Secretary failed to present records of the previous investigation of Tiller that would allow the district court to determine whether the violations underlying those investigations were sufficiently similar to the violations underlying the present action to warrant finding that Appellees’ present violations were willful. Tiller, 778 F.Supp. at 1400. The district court also found that after an
After reviewing the record as a whole we agree that the Secretary failed to present any records of the 1982 investigation from which the district court could determine that the violations underlying it were substantially similar to the violations underlying this action. Moreover, because the Secretary does not dispute the district court‘s finding that the agricultural exemption defense raised in this action was not raised during the 1982 investigation, we are not persuaded that the district court erred in finding that Appellees’ violations were not willful.
V. Conclusion
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Notes
Mr. TYDINGS. The threshing of wheat and similar crops on the farm would be classed as coming within the agricultural exemption; would it not?
Mr. BLACK. I so understand.
Mr. TYDINGS. What I am thinking of is that quite often the threshing crew is not a part of the farmer‘s organization. There are men who make a business of going around with threshing and baling machines with enough help to come upon a farm and make a contract with the farmer to thresh his wheat. I should like to know if in such a case it is the Senator‘s opinion that the threshing crew would be exempt, or whether they would be under the operation of the hours provision of the bill.
Mr. BLACK. I will say to the Senator that I should not wish to attempt to draw the lines in the shadowy regions that might divide one condition from another.
Mr. TYDINGS. Let me clear up my question. As I understand the bill, its purpose is to exempt agriculture from its provisions, both as to hours and as to wages.
Mr. BLACK. The Senator is correct.
Mr. TYDINGS. I am asking this question because I believe, inadvertently, a loophole has been left which I am sure the proponents of the bill do not mean to leave.
I wanted to bring this matter to the attention of the Senator from Alabama simply because as I understand, farming in all its operations, from the time the grain is put into the ground until it leaves the farm, is to be exempted from the provisions of the measure; but under the bill such a man as I have indicated is not exempt.
Would a thresher be under the provisions of this bill threshing wheat on another man‘s farm? That is the question.
In the case I visualize ... the farmer is not performing the service. The man to whom I refer makes a business of doing nothing but threshing. He owns his own machine, and hauls it from farm to farm, and enters into contracts with farmers to thresh their crops; the point being that while he is dealing with an agricultural commodity, he is not necessarily a farmer, and he is not doing work ordinarily done by a farmer.
Mr. BORAH. He is doing the exact work which the farmer did before he took it up.
Mr. TYDINGS. That is true; but I do not think the bill is drawn in sufficient detail to bring the man to whom I refer under its provisions of exemption.
Mr. BONE. I think the business experience of us all will justify the conclusion that if a man operates a threshing outfit, and goes from one farm to another farm, such a man is an independent contractor. He is not a farmer. That is not an operation incident to farming, because the man is engaging in a cold-blooded business operation, going from one farm to another, precisely as a huckster goes around and sells tinware to farmers.
I realize that in trying to meet that sort of an issue we get into a twilight zone. It is like the suggestion of the Senator from Idaho (Mr. Pope) about the farmer bottling milk. There comes a point where we have to draw a line somewhere; and if a man is running a big threshing outfit, a gigantic combine out West in the State of the Senator from Montana (Mr. Murray), and he hires a large number of men, and they go on a farm with tractors and engage in an operation resulting in threshing thousands of bushels of wheat in a day, it seems to me that sort of an operation, which is in the exclusive control of the contractor, could hardly be called farming; and when he is hiring men and just being an employer, I am wondering how he could be called a farmer, or his operation an incident to a farming operation. He does not own a farm. He has not any connection with it except to take his threshing apparatus there and thresh the wheat and then get off the land.
I know the matter was pretty thoroughly discussed by the Senator from Maryland (Mr. Tydings); but it seems to me that if there is any way of meeting that issue in the bill by a little further clarification, it might be advisable, and might avoid trouble in the future.
81 Cong.Rec. 7653 and 7659 (1937).Mr. McGILL. Mr. President, I offer an amendment, and ask that it be reported from the desk.
Mr. President, the purpose of the amendment is to broaden the definition of “employee” as applied to agriculture. I can readily see how some have construed the language of the bill to mean that one who operates a threshing machine outfit and employs a crew and is employed by a farmer to thresh his wheat might be included under the provisions of the bill. Likewise, those who are engaged in harvesting and delivering to market might be included. It is my understanding, although no definite commitment has been made, that the amendment is not opposed by those in charge of the bill.
Mr. GEORGE. Is it the purpose of the amendment to exempt those who thresh grain?
Mr. McGILL. Those who thresh grain, who harvest grain and deliver it to market.
Mr. GEORGE. Would the amendment also apply to the harvesting of any other crop?
Mr. McGILL. It would apply to any commodity produced on a farm.
Mr. GEORGE. Would it apply to peanut pickers who pick in the fields.
Mr. McGILL. Yes.
Mr. GEORGE. And who move peanuts to market?
Mr. McGILL. Yes; that is my understanding.
Mr. GEORGE. I should like to ask the Senator from Alabama if that is his interpretation of the amendment.
Mr. BLACK. That is my interpretation of the amendment, and it is my belief that the bill as originally drawn covers what is now contained in the language of the amendment; but some Senators who were doubtful about it wished to draw a clarifying amendment.
Mr. BLACK. Unquestionably.
Mr. McGILL. I may say to the Senator from Georgia and other Senators that it is my object to make the language of the amendment broad enough to include all work done on a farm, so long as it is incidental to agricultural purposes.
81 Cong.Rec. 7888 (1937).any employee employed in agriculture or in connection with the operation or maintenance of ditches, canals, reservoirs, or waterways, not owned or operated for profit, or operated on a share-crop basis, and which are used exclusively for supply and storing of water for agricultural purposes.
337 U.S. at 766 n. 15, 69 S.Ct. at 1280 n. 15, citing Bowie v. Gonzalez, 117 F.2d 11 (1st Cir.1941).Although not relevant here, there is the additional requirement that the practices be incidental to “such” farming. Thus processing, on a farm, of commodities produced by other farmers is incidental to or in conjunction with the farming operation of the other farmers and not incidental to or in conjunction with the farming operation of the farmer on whose premises the processing is done. Such processing is, therefore, not within the definition of agriculture.
all the operations necessary to prepare a suitable seedbed, eliminate weed growth, and improve the physical condition of the soil. Thus, grading or leveling of land or removing rock or other matter to prepare the ground for a proper seedbed or building terraces on farmland to check soil erosion are included. The application of water, fertilizer, or limestone to farmland is also included.
