SCHEPPS DAIRY, INC., a corporation v. Bob BERGLAND, Secretary, Department of Agriculture
No. 77-1881
United States Court of Appeals, District of Columbia Circuit
November 19, 1979
As amended and Denied of Rehearing February 25, 1980
Argued Oct. 3, 1978.
Where the records have already been furnished, it is abusive and a dissipation of agency and court resources to make and process a second claim. The purpose of the
Appellant claims attorneys’ fees, which are available for parties who have “substantially prevailed” in their suits under the
We accordingly affirm the summary judgment granted by the District Court in favor of the appellee and denying appellant‘s motion for summary judgment and attorneys’ fees. In doing so we also rely upon the Memorandum Order and Opinion of the District Court.
Judgment accordingly.
John H. Vetne, Washington, D. C., a member of the bar of the Supreme Court of Michigan, pro hac vice, by special leave of
Before ROBINSON and WILKEY, Circuit Judges, and HAROLD H. GREENE,* United States District Judge for the District of Columbia.
Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge SPOTTSWOOD W. ROBINSON, III.
Dissenting Opinion filed by Circuit Judge WILKEY.
SPOTTSWOOD W. ROBINSON, III, Circuit Judge:
Schepps Dairy, Inc. (Schepps), a regulated “handler”1 of milk with a processing plant in Dallas, Texas, brought suit in the District Court challenging certain features of the Secretary of Agriculture‘s 1975 decision promulgating a pricing order for the Texas milk-marketing area.2 The District Court sustained the Secretary‘s motion for summary judgment,3 and Schepps tenders three issues for our review.
First, and of foremost importance to the administration of federal milk-pricing orders, is whether Section 8c(5)(A) of the
I. HISTORICAL AND ADMINISTRATIVE BACKGROUND
A. Federal Milk-Marketing Orders
For nearly a half-century, the Secretary of Agriculture has pursued a broad and vital role in the establishment of the prices that many handlers pay many producers of milk. The methodology of federal milk price-fixing has roots extending even deeper in our national economic history. As may readily be expected, a brief sketch of the genesis and evolution of federal milk-marketing orders will serve this appeal by
As everybody knows, raw milk is a highly perishable commodity. Without refrigeration, it is storable for only very brief periods and transportable for only very short distances. In the early 1900‘s, dairy farmers—“producers”8—usually were thus compelled to deal with the one or the very few local milk processors available, who accordingly exercised some degree of monopsony power.9 Moreover, the milk industry was characterized by seasonal overproduction; as the Supreme Court has explained,
[i]n order to meet fluid demand which is relatively constant, sufficiently large herds must be maintained to supply winter needs. The result is oversupply in the more fruitful months. The historical tendency prior to regulation was for milk distributors, ‘handlers,’ to take advantage of this surplus to obtain bargains during glut periods.10
To correct this discrepancy in bargaining power, Congress enacted legislation enabling dairy farmers to form cooperatives to pool their milk and eliminate overproduction.11 These cooperatives established classified pricing schemes based on the use to be made of the milk. They priced milk destined for fluid consumption—class I milk—higher than milk slated for manufacture into dairy products such as cheese—class II milk. Though a small part of the price differential might represent cost differences, the bulk was attributable simply to a desire to exploit the relatively inelastic demand for fluid milk without unduly inhibiting the demand for manufactured milk products.12 To spread the benefits of this pricing strategy among their members, cooperatives would multiply class I prices by the amount of fluid milk sold, and class II prices by the amount of manufactured milk sold, and divide the sum of these products by the total quantity of milk sold to arrive at the “blend price” its members would receive for delivered milk.13
The profitability of this system encouraged dairy farmers to increase their output. It also invited farmers selling a higher percentage of their milk for fluid purposes than the cooperative generally to abandon the pooling arrangement and deal individually, and in this manner to realize more than the blend price. This in turn germinated disputes among cooperatives and handlers who dealt with free-lance farmers, and as a consequence, milk markets became highly unstable during the late 1920‘s.14 During the Great Depression, demand for fluid milk fell, prices declined drastically and the entire cooperative system collapsed, to the farmers’ severe detriment.15
Congress reacted by passing the
The present statutory provisions can be seen as a shoring, with the power of the Federal Government, of the classified pricing scheme initiated by the cooperatives. Not all of the milk industry is federally regulated, however.20 Only if producers and handlers so agree, or if two-thirds of the producers or the producers of two-thirds of the output in the area wish, are federal price controls imposed.21 In each regulated milk-marketing area, class I and II minimum prices are established. No maximum prices are set; producers are free to bargain with handlers for better deals.22
Producers are largely indifferent to whether their milk is used for class I or II purposes, for they receive a blend price. On the other hand, processors must pay at least the minimum class I and II prices. The variance among handlers in the percentages of milk assigned to fluid and manufacturing purposes means that a handler may pay more or less than the producer from whom he is purchasing receives. Any handler who uses more than the average percentage of class I milk must pay the difference over the blend price into a “producers-settlement fund,” from which a handler who uses less than the average percentage of class I milk is compensated.23
Minimum class I prices, however, are not necessarily uniform across the entire area covered by a milk-marketing order. The requirement of uniform prices is statutorily subject to adjustments “which compensate or reward the producer for providing an economic service or benefit to the handler.”24 Milk-producing regions covered by an order are often distant from consuming centers, and chief among the adjustments enumerated in the Act is one for “the locations at which delivery of . . . milk . . . is made to . . . handlers.”25 The location adjustment honors the fact that a handler who receives milk near consuming centers has a more valuable commodity than a handler who takes in milk in an area further out where it is produced cheaply, but who must undertake the burden of transporting the processed product
B. The Texas Marketing Order
In 1973, an association of milk producers proposed that the six then-existing Texas orders be merged. The Secretary solicited comments and additional recommendations from interested parties. Schepps, a handler with a processing plant in Dallas, advocated that the intra-market location adjustment be increased from 1.5 cents per hundredweight (cwt.) of milk per ten miles of transportation to 2.2 cents per cwt. for every ten miles thereof.
In 1975, the Secretary determined that the separate Texas orders should indeed be consolidated.27 He also decided that the base class I minimum price for the Texas area should continue to be set by the same methodology utilized before.28 The base Texas class I price, like base class I prices throughout the Nation, is a function of the current price of manufacturing milk in Minnesota and Wisconsin,29 the most fertile and efficient milk-producing region in the United States. Producers in the northern parts of those states find it profitable to remain unregulated, and the price their manufacturing milk commands is known as the “M-W price.”30 To insure that class I prices are aligned across the country, class I prices in a particular order approximate the sum of the M-W price and the transportation costs from Minnesota-Wisconsin to the area covered by the order.31
In the area to which the Texas order pertains, milk production is most efficient around Dallas. In 1975, the Secretary set the class I price in Dallas at the M-W price plus $2.32 per cwt., the preexisting estimate of transportation costs from Minnesota and Wisconsin.32 This figure was designed to “result in returns to producers sufficient to insure an adequate, but not excessive, supply of pure and wholesome milk for the market.”33
Within the Texas market, location adjustments were based on similar principles. The Secretary adopted a zone system under which the minimum price paid by a handler increases proportionately to the handler‘s distance from the Dallas producing area. Under the present order, handlers located in the Houston zone must pay 36 cents over the Dallas minimum price.34 Under Schepps’ plan, Houston handlers would face minimum prices 53 cents over the Dallas class I minimum price.35 Schepps markets over half of its milk in Houston, so its proposal had the single object of raising its competitors’ costs.36
The Secretary adhered to a transportation rate of 1.5 cents per cwt. per ten miles in establishing the zone rates, over Schepps’ objections that transportation costs are 2.2 cents per cwt. per ten miles. The Secretary, acknowledging that the adjustment may not fully compensate for rising trans-
The Class I price structure under the Texas order is not intended to assure each handler in the market that he will have cost compatibility at any location at which he may choose to distribute milk. Its purpose is to assure handlers, and ultimately consumers, of an adequate milk supply. There has been a reasonable demonstration that the present pattern of milk prices throughout the Texas area has attracted sufficient, but not excessive, raw milk supplies to handlers operating in the various parts of the State. Local considerations do suggest certain price changes at specific locations, and these have been dealt with in this decision. Nevertheless, the supply-demand balance in the market does not warrant a major restructuring of prices that necessarily would result if prices were to reflect a higher transportation rate.38
Schepps’ second proposition received equally unfavorable treatment. On the vote of a majority of milk producers, Section 8c(16)(B) of the Act requires the Secretary to terminate a milk order “at the end of the then current marketing period for [the] commodity.”39 Previous milk-marketing orders had not defined the term “current marketing period,”40 and Schepps, concerned over the consequences of possible sudden deregulation, asked that the term be set at one year.41 The Secretary, however, resolved that the current marketing period should be the first month after announcement of any deregulation vote.42 Noting that milk is produced on a continuous daily basis and hence lacks a seasonal marketing period, the Secretary considered the one-month period appropriate because “milk has been accounted and paid for under the regulatory program on a monthly basis.”43
II. LOCATION ADJUSTMENTS
With the multifaceted regulatory process as the backdrop, we turn to an assessment of Schepps’ challenges to the Secretary‘s order. Section 8c(5)(A) of the Act provides that milk-marketing orders shall
contain one or more of the following terms and conditions, and . . . no others:
(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 classification thereof, is made to such handlers.44
Analogously, Section 8c(5)(B) of the Act mandates price uniformity among producers, subject again to specified adjustments.45
Decisions of the Supreme Court,46 and of this court47 as well, have established
Adoption of Schepps reading of Section 8c(5)(A) would have extremely far-reaching consequences. It would require constant monitoring and modification of all inter-market and intra-market class I minimum prices in order to keep abreast of current transportation costs. For instance, the base class I price in Dallas, which is the sum of the M-W price and a transportation factor calculated at 1.5 cents per cwt. per ten miles, would have had to be increased immediately to account for then-present transportation costs—if Schepps’ estimate was accurate—of 2.2 cents per cwt. per ten miles.50 Indeed, the Secretary‘s carefully crafted zone system, under which handlers’ plants within the same general area are treated identically for purposes of administering the location adjustment, would have to be scrapped in favor of a rate scale attuned more finely to the location of each individual plant, a system the infeasibility of which is hardly open to serious question.51
The language of Section 8c(5)(A) itself runs somewhat counter to Schepps’ contentions. It is that uniform minimum prices are “subject . . . to” certain adjustments,52 and that connotes a permissive, not a mandatory, qualification.53 The text of the congressional committee reports is of the same tenor.54 More importantly, Section 8c(4) authorizes the Secretary to promulgate a marketing order only “if he finds . . . that the issuance of such order and all of the terms and conditions thereof will tend to effectuate the declared policy of [the Act] with respect to [the]
Schepps mounts no attack on the sufficiency of the factual predicate for the Secretary‘s ultimate finding that the proposed increase in the location adjustment would not serve the policies of the Act.63 It argues instead that the Secretary lacked power to make such a judgment, and that location adjustments are mandatory and must reflect transportation costs in toto. We think the straightjacket that Schepps thus would place on the Secretary will not fit; the argument simply cannot withstand the force of the plain meaning of Section 8c(4).64 We agree with the Eighth Circuit that the Secretary may authorize location differentials only to the extent that they are “required to accomplish the broad purposes of the Act,”65 and here, in the Secretary‘s judgment, they could only be disserved were Schepps to prevail.
III. TRADE BARRIERS
Schepps further contends that a location adjustment that fails to take full account of transportation costs constitutes a trade barrier violative of Section 8c(5)(G)‘s injunction that
[n]o marketing agreement or order applicable to milk and its products in any marketing area shall prohibit or in any
manner limit, in the case of the products of milk, the marketing in that area of any milk or product thereof produced in any production area in the United States.66
This provision has been authoritatively construed by the Supreme Court.67 Under review was a provision in milk-marketing orders for the New York-New Jersey area requiring handlers purchasing milk outside the area and then bringing it “into the region for sale as fluid milk to pay to the farmers who suppl[ied] the region a fixed amount as a ‘compensatory payment.”68 The payment was assessed against these outside milk-marketing companies because they were not fully regulated and thus were free to purchase milk below the Secretary‘s minimum prices.69 After canvassing the legislative history of Section 8c(5)(G),70 the Court concluded that the provision was designed to prevent the Secretary from establishing economic barriers that would effectively prohibit outside milk from competing with pool milk,71 or would “tend to limit” the marketing, within the area covered by the order, of milk products manufactured outside the area.72 Finding that the compensatory payment provision imposed “almost insuperable trade restrictions on the entry of nonpool milk into a marketing area,”73 the Court held it invalid under Section 8c(5)(G).
That decision, treating as it did a situation completely foreign to that confronting us here, affords no haven to Schepps in its present position. As the Supreme Court has made clear, Section 8c(5)(G) is addressed primarily to obstacles to the marketing in one area of milk or milk products produced in another area, and we think the section is simply irrelevant in the circumstances of the case before us. Schepps is primarily contesting the Secretary‘s selection of an intra-market location adjustment, not any economic barrier to entry of outside milk or its products.74 That adjustment, we have held, is explicitly authorized by Section 8c(5)(A) and is fully warranted by the conditions prompting the Secretary to make it.75 We accordingly reject Schepps’ contention that the intra-market adjustment soundly bottomed on Section 8c(5)(A) transgresses Section 8c(5)(G)‘s proscription on trade barriers.76
IV. CURRENT MARKETING PERIOD
Under Section 8c(16)(B) of the Act,77 the Secretary must terminate a marketing agreement or order upon finding that action favored by a majority of the regulated dairy farmers, provided they produce more than half of the specific commodity yielded by the area.78 An order of termination is not to become effective immediately upon discovery of the producers’ sentiments, however, but only “at the end of the then current marketing period for such commodity, specified in such marketing agreement or order . . . .”79 To this extent, Section 8c(16)(B) contrasts with Section 8c(16)(A), which instructs the Secretary to abrogate forthwith any order or provision of an order that “does not tend to effectuate the declared policy of this chapter . . . .”80
Prior to the litigation now under review, the Secretary never included a definition of “current marketing period,” for purposes of Section 8c(16)(B) termination, in his milk-marketing orders.81 Schepps, concerned with the possible economic effects of rapid, unanticipated deregulation, requested that the marketing period be defined as “the fiscal year beginning April 1 and ending on March 31,”82 and that termination “not be permitted unless announced at least 90 days prior to the end of the current marketing period.”83 Thus, under Schepps’ proposal, an area could remain regulated for many months after notification of the producers’ desire to deregulate.
On the other hand, a producer-cooperative interested in assuring producer flexibility sought definition of the marketing period as “a calendar month or portion thereof.”84 As we have noted, the Secretary reckoned that since milk is produced and sold on a continuous basis no true “marketing period” could be ascertained.85 He decided nevertheless that fairness to the industry required some advance notice and that a period of one month would accord with long-standing regulatory and accounting practices under federal milk-marketing orders.86 He therefore ruled that termina-
Schepps challenges the Secretary‘s designation of the one-month current marketing period on the ground of inadequate record support. As we have seen, Section 8c(4) ordains that each provision in a milk-marketing order must effectuate the policies of the Act.88 That section also directs that that determination be based on the evidence adduced at a hearing,89 and this instruction has consistently been interpreted to mean that the factual predicate for the order must be grounded in substantial record evidence.90
In our view, Schepps’ position is without merit. Schepps has no real quarrel with the Secretary‘s assessment of standard regulatory practices, nor with the basic fact that milk production and marketing occur on a continuous year-round basis. To require, as Schepps advocates, that an agency‘s long-standing and well known regulatory and accounting procedures be placed in evidence before the agency may take cognizance of them would be to mandate a most sterile formality.91 And for an agency to take notice of the indisputable, commonly known fact that the dairy industry is not characterized by seasonal production or marketing periods is nowise inconsistent with the substantial evidence rule.92
In truth, the Secretary‘s choice of a current marketing period of one month rested on policy considerations. To be sure, he gave predominant weight to protection of the producer-majority‘s statutory freedom of choice, but he did not entirely sacrifice the interests of others in an orderly transition to deregulation. Schepps has vigorously attacked the balance struck by the Secretary, but his action undeniably was the product of reasoned decisionmaking,93 given that the Act‘s principal thrust is to impose regulation for the benefit and only at the will of producers.94
Affirmed.
WILKEY, Circuit Judge, dissenting.
I regret that I am unable to concur in my colleagues’ views herein. In brief, my view is that although the Secretary has considerable discretion in setting the minimum price for the zone, the three adjustments which the statute calls for him to make as to the minimum price are each based on ascertainable factors. Thus the transportation cost adjustment is to be based on the ascertainable transportation cost, and demonstrable deviations from a measure of real cost are impossible.
SPOTTSWOOD W. ROBINSON, III
UNITED STATES CIRCUIT JUDGE
