The plaintiff, Schwegmann Brothers Giant Super Markets, a commercial partnership engaged in the business of selling, at retail, food and other commodities and conducting three very large establishments in New Orleans and its environs, sought an injunction in the Nineteenth Judicial District Court for the Parish of East Baton
Rouge against the Commissioner of Agriculture & Immigration of this State, Sidney J. McCrory, restraining enforcement of the provisions of Act 193 of the Legislature of 1958, known as the Orderly Milk Marketing Act, and attacking its constitutionality on various grounds. Certain producers and processors of milk and milk products, domiciled in various parts of the State, twenty-one in number,
1
were allowed to intervene and join with the defendant
The said Act — -a supplement and amendment to Part VII of Chapter 4 of Title 40 of the Revised Statutes and designated R.S. 40:940.i to 940.15 — according to its title, is “ * * * to protect and preserve the orderly marketing of milk, milk products and frozen desserts listed or referred to herein * * 3 and contains a preamble declaring the Legislature’s recognition of the development in the State of unfair competition and trade practices in the sale and distribution of those products, its further recognition of the necessity to protect and preserve orderly marketing and to prevent certain unfair trade and marketing practices, and expressing the lawmakers’ intent to prevent the economic destruction of many dairy farmers and others dealing in said products because of discriminatory trade practices engaged in by certain financially strong- business organizations to stifle competition — thus presenting “a situation detrimental to the health, welfare and economy of the people of this State.” Among the practices engaged in by the plaintiff and other large chain stores, and sought to be abolished by provisions of the Act, were a system of rebates or discounts from invoice prices; trade concessions, including the furnishing of display and storage equipment, contributions for free use of refrigeration equipment, advertising paid for by those from whom the dairy products were bought; and trucking of the product from North Louisiana, the entire length of the State (by financially powerful distributors and processors not parties here) and offered for sale at prices cut in half and substantially below the market in the locality from which the product was shipped.
The first section of the Act lists the items covered by its provisions, i. e., the various kinds of milk, milk products and “frozen desserts” (40:940.1); the next section contains a definition of terms, including “Non-processing Retailer” which fits plaintiff’s business, and “Cost” which “shall include the
cost” of the
product
to the
non-processing retailer plus cost of doing business— which latter shall include but not be limited to labor costs, including executive salaries, cost of receiving, cooling, processing, packaging, manufacturing, rent, depreciation, power, supplies, selling costs, delivery costs, storing, maintenance of plant and equipment, advertising, transportation, all types of licenses, taxes, fees, insurance, and all other costs of doing business as determined
The market practices which led to this enactment are disclosed by the record, wherein is revealed a system developed by plaintiff under which it received rebates or discounts from the invoice prices
9
in addition to trade concessions, such as contributions for its free use of refrigeration, display and storage equipment, and advertising furnished and paid for by those from whom it bought dairy products. There was also the practice by large distributors and processors of trucking merchandise great distances from one end of the State to the other, and selling it to big chain stores at prices cut in half below the current market in that locality. In the words of the Trial Judge, “It does not take much imagination to realize the result of such practices
In giving his carefully prepared Reasons the Trial Judge observed: “The evidence in this case, some of which has been referred to briefly herein, convincingly sustains the already well known fact that the all-power combination of volume buying and adequate financial resources has developed demands and requirements which the small producer, processor and retailer cannot meet. Nor is it shown that the effect of such a combination has profited the consumer.” One brief reference was to an ice cream processor of Lake Charles who, said the Trial Judge, “explained that his company had been in business for 44 years and that it had made a profit every year except in the last 5 years his business lost money 3 out of the 5 years, and that one more year with the necessary outlay to meet the discount, rebate, trade concessions and contributions required to hold customers would have put his company out of'business. This manner of testimony was repeated by all the witnesses for the defense. It is further shown that the short period of a few months after August 1, 1958, when Act 193 went into effect, has brought equal and wholesome relief from this disruptive pressure which brought about its enactment. There is no testimony that the discontinuance of these practices * * * has resulted in any material general increase in the retail price to the consumer.” 11
Defendant and intervenors counter with a denial that private individuals fix minimum prices, .contending that Section- .940.4 sets out factors for the Commissioner to take into consideration in determining the minimum prices in each marketing area, and in that way standards are prescribed for carrying out the legislative will; that private individuals at a referendum and upon approval of two-thirds of the milk producers voting, merely approve such minimum prices- — following which the Commissioner shall require payment of such minimum prices, and therefore no arbitrary discretion is vested in him. Relied on are the cases of Currin v. Wallace,
Due to the complexity of our social and industrial activities, the .decisions display an increasing tendency to hold as non-legislative the authority conferred upon commissions and boards to determiné the facts or state of things upon which the law intends to make its action depend. It is now well settled that the Legislature may make the operation or application of a statute contingent upon the existence of certain ponditions, and'may delegate to some executive or administrative board the power to determine the existence of such facts and to carry out the terms of the statute. 15 So long as the regulation or action of-the official or board authorized by statute does not in effect determine what the law shall be, or involve the exercise of primary and independent discretion, but only determines within prescribed limits some fact upon which the law by its own terms operates, such regulation is administrative and not legislative in its nature. 16 The United States Supreme Court has aptly observed that while powers of administration and legislation are quite distinct, “the line which separates exactly their exercise is not easy to define in words. It is best recognized in illustrations. Undoubtedly the legislature must declare the policy of the law and fix the legal principles which are to control in given cases; but an administrative body may be invested with the power to ascertain the facts and conditions to. which the policy and principles apply. If this could not be done, there would be infinite confusion in the laws, and in’ an effort to detail and particulariz ''ey would miss sufficiency both in provision and execution. * * * If -this were not so, the many administrative agencies created by the state and national governments would be denuded of their utility, and government in some of its most important exercises become impossible.” 17
The case of Currin v. Wallace, supra (
The case of United States v. Rock Royal Co-operative, supra (
Plaintiff’s counsel have been diligent in envisaging situations which they consider possible and view with alarm, but we think such fears are unwarranted at this time in the absence of a shred of showing that such happenings, contrary to the intent and purpose of the enactment, might occur. An Act of the Legislature is presumed to be legal until it is shown to be unconstitutional, and the lawmakers would indeed be hard put to draft legislation were it necessary to cover every conceivable contingency or to foresee and prohibit acts of an irresponsible administrator. The purpose and intent of the subject statute is clearly expressed, and the Commissioner of Agriculture, specifically declared to be the instrumentality of the State for the purpose of administering its provisions, is given the duty “to execute the legislative intent herein expressed.” The Supreme Court of the United States, speaking in the Rock Royal case, said: “ * * * It is well settled, therefore, that it is no argument against the constitutionality of an act to say it delegates broad powers to executives to determine the details of any legislative scheme. This necessary authority has never been denied.” We therefore
think that the objections raised by plaintiff
The plaintiff next contends that the Act violates the due process clauses of the State and Federal Constitutions because the power to regulate private business by coercive price fixing is a legislative function, to be invoked under special circumstances and only'when the measure bears a real, substantial and reasonable relation to the public welfare, and is neither arbitrary nor discriminatory — a criterion which the Act fails to meet.
The trial judge, in disposing of this issue, relied in great measure on the case of Louisiana Wholesale Distributors Ass’n v. Rosenzweig,
In that case the defendant Rosenzweig, as a defense to the charge that he had violated the Unfair Sales Act, contended that such a statute is, in fact, a price fixing 'statute and class legislation, precluding him from freely contracting with regard to his property, in violation of 'due process and equal protection guarantees of the Federal and State Constitutions. This Court, observing that the simple question posed (i. e., constitutionality vel non of the Unfair Sales Act) had been answered adversely to the defendant’s contention by the courts of thirty states which had reviewed the similar acts adopted by their respective legislatures, and that tire underlying principle upon which those decisions are based has the support of opinions of the Supreme Court of the United States, quoted at length from “th'e leading case on this subject, Nebbia v. People of State of New York,
Plaintiff’s counsel, realizing that their 'argument on this phase of the case is foreclosed by the above decisions, advance the thesis that principles announced in the Nebbia case are applicable' only where emergency legislation has grown out of a legislative study — because the New York milk control law, adopted in 1933, was the result of study by a joint legislative committee whose activities extended for nearly a year, following which a comprehensive report was submitted; and counsel say that in the absence of such emergency and study there is lacking any basis which the Nebbia case might otherwise furnish for the regulation of milk marketing and distribution under the subject Act. Those statements are without substance, particularly in view of the principle for which the Nebbia case was subsequently cited by the same Court, when it said: “Recently, upon a reexamination of the grounds of state power over prices, that power was phrased by this Court to mean that 'upon proper occasion and by appropriate measures the state may regulate a business in any of its aspects, including the prices to be charged for the products or commodities it sells.’ ” 20 Equally unimpressive is the assertion that the Rosenzweig case is not controlling because we there concluded the Unfair Sales Act was not a price fixing statute, where as the Act under attack is a price fixing statute — and differences between provisions of the two Acts, termed “significant” and “critical,” are enumerated in brief. Suffice to say that the distinctions made are not of controlling importance, and additional discussion would serve no useful purpose.
It is further objected by plaintiff that the Act creates a presumption of guilt (ignoring the presumption of innocence fundamental under our law) in violation of due process guarantees of both Federal and State Constitutions; that a series of new crimes has been created by Sections 940.5 through 940.10, in that the doing of any one of a number of otherwise harmless acts with the intent or the effect of injuring a competitor, destroying competition, creating a monopoly, etc., is a crime, and while the intent or effect are necessary before the act becomes criminal, those elements are supplied by making the commission of the act prima facie evidence of violation of the section — the fatal defect being, the presumption of the wrongful intent or injurious effect which are essential elements of the crime.
Reference to the wording of the various provisions complained of readily shows that counsel’s analysis is not wholly accurate; they declare that none of the groups or individuals (as therein defined) who handle the products covered by the Act, “with the intent or with the effect of unfairly diverting trade from a competitor, or of otherwise injuring a competitor, or of destroying competition, or of creating a monopoly,” shall do a described thing; and
proof of the doing of the thing
“shall be prima facie evidence of a violation of this
In State v. Elkin,
While counsel oppose on numerous other grounds — i. e., that the Act is arbitrary, unreasonable and capricious; is
so vague, general and indefinite in numerous instances as to be impossible of reasonable, fair and practical administration, etc. —we think that enough has been said to show-that those objections are clearly without merit. And the argument that the statute creates undue burdens on interstate commerce and contravenes the commerce clause of the Federal Constitution is fully answered by the United States Supreme Court when, in treating of a Pennsylvania statute creating a milk control board with authority to fix a minimum price to be
For the reasons assigned, the judgment appealed from is affirmed.
Notes
.These are: Blu-Ribon Dairies, Inc., Parish of Rapides; Claiborne Creameries, Inc., Parish of Claiborne; Nick FaKouri, d/b/a Clover Farm Creamery, Parish of St. Landry; Farmers Dairies, Inc., Parish of Lincoln; Walter Bison, d/b/a Fair View Farm Dairy, Parish of Caddo; John S. Green, d/b/a Green Brothers Dairy, Parish of Morehouse; Guth Dairies, Inc., Parish of Calcasieu; Charles Hamel, d/b/a Hamel’s Dairy, Parish of Caddo; Briley Spears, d/b/a Leading Dairy, Parish of Calcasieu; Louisiana Creamei'y, Inc., Parish of East Baton Rouge; Glen O. Dunmire. Jr., d/b/a Lynn’s Dairy Products, Parish of Caddo; J. B. Davis, d/b/a The Milk House, Parish of Franklin; John ■ P. White, d/b/a Pelican Creamery, Parish of Iberia; D. Stafford O’Shee, d/b/a Quality Ice Cream Company, Parish of Rapides; Jesse H. Cutrer, Jr., d/b/a Red Bird Ice Cream Company, Parish of Washington; E. Leroy Miller, d/b/a Sanitax-y Dairy Products Company, Parish of Webster; S. J. Phillips, d/b/a Spring Valley 'Dairy,- Parish of Caddo; William G. Broussard, d/b/a Vermilion Ci’eamery, Pax-ish of Vex'milion; Watson’s Ice Cx’eam Factory, Inc., Parish of Calcasieu; C. A. Stewart, d/b/a C. A. Stewart Dairy, Parish of Washington; and Clyde DeLaughter, d/b/a Bogalusa Dairy Products, Parish of Washington.
. It was stipulated that the evidence offered on the application for a preliminax-y injunction should be considered by the Court as evidence on behalf of all parties on the application for permanent injunction without further trial.
. The title further declares that the Act is one “to prevent disruptive trade practices; specifying the items covered by this act; defining the terms xised therein; authorizing the establishment of minimum px-ices under certain conditions; providing regulations for the sale, transfer or other disposal of the products mentioned and for trade practices . connected therewith; establishing license requirements; vesting in the Commissioner of the Louisiana Department of Agriculture and Immigration certain powers, duties and functions; providing penalties and establishing remedies for the violation of this Act; repealing all laws or parts of laws in conflict herewith.”
. There is a proviso that “in the absence of specific evidence that the cost of doing business as herein defined for a non-processing retailer is less than eight percent, the cost of doing business * * * shall be presumed to be not less than eight per cent of the invoice price and this cost shall be calculated to the nearest half cent per sales unit. * * * ” (940.2)
. The producer is the dairy farmer who obtains the raw milk from the cow and sells it to the processor, handler or distributor; the processor or handler (who may also in some cases be a distributor, or who may sell direct to the consumer) is the one who processes (i. e., cools, pasteurizes, homogenizes, flavors, etc.) the milk and packages it before it is delivered to the seller for sale to the pub- lie; a distributor is one who sells the products for purpose of resale or further processing; and a bulk milk handler is one who furnishes milk in cans, tan'k cars or tank trucks to the processor or handler. (Definition of terms, 940.2)
. The remaining violations enumerated in this subparagraph are: (d) “To make payments of money, credit, gifts or loans to non-processing retailers or their employees or for rental for the storage or display of any of the products” covered by the Act; (e) “To sell any non-processing retailer any new fixture or equipment for less than a mark-up” as specified, and “any used equipment sold to a non-processing retailer by processor, handler, distributor, or bulk milk handler shall be sold” on the basis of price arrived at in a certain way; (f) “To make any loan” or guarantee or underwrite any financial obligation of a nonprocessing retailer; (g) to extend credit to a non-processing retailer to exceed 60 days, and delinquent accounts beyond 90 days subjects the non-processing retailer to revocation of his license; (h) to make or maintain repairs to the equipment of the non-processing retailer at less than usual charges; (i) to make a gift to him of money or merchandise, soda fountain, carbonator, services or material, or to help him conduct his business (except as permitted elsewhere) ; (j) to sell any product listed in the Act at “dock prices at places other than the point of processing,” and if at the point of processing, the dock price shall be augmented by any transportation cost to place of distribution. The final violation is (k) refusal by a handler, processor or distributor to accept milk from a milk producer as a result of the latter’s affiliation with a cooperative association. (940.3)
. “Upon written request of 50 per cent or more of the dairy farmers who regularly supply milk to a milk marketing area, the commissioner shall determine, by official order, after public hearing in which all interested persons shall be given reasonable opportunity to be heard, the appropriate area to be included in the marketing area and minimum prices to be paid for milk by processors or handlers, distributors or bulk milk handlers for milk received. Such minimum prices in any milk marketing area within the state shall be beneficial to the public interest, protect the dairy industry of the state, and insure a sufficient quantity of pure and wholesome milk for inhabitants of this state. In determining the minimum prices, the commissioner shall take into consideration the following factors operative in each marketing area; the quantity of fluid milk produced and disposed of; the cost of dairy feed, farm labor, and other economic conditions affecting the production and sale of milk in the area. The commissioner shall, upon approval by % of the producers voting at a referendum in the marketing area, require payment of such appropriate minimum prices for milk in the respective marketing areas.”
. By further provision of the subsection, “Proof of the advertising, giving, offering to sell or sale of such product with any other commodity or service at a combined price which is less than the ag~ gregate of the price for which such product and the other commodity or service are offered for sale shall be prima facie evidence of a violation of this Section.” (940.9)
. One of the plaintiff-owners in this case testified that plaintiff first deducted 5% of the invoice price of milk and milk products, then added a cost mark-up of 6% of the remainder.
. The publications introduced as exhibits by plaintiff are: Dairy Statistics, U. S. Dept. of Agriculture . (Oct. 1957); Milk-Farm Production, Disposition, and Income, 1956-1957, U. S. Dept. of Agriculture; The Farm Income Situation, U. S. Dept, of Agriculture (Sept. 1958).
. Other testimony to the same effect was (a) By a processor and small distributor in Webster and Olaiborne Parishes, who got caught in a “milk war” between two major concerns in Monroe and Shreveport, with the result that milk in super markets in his locality dropped from 52 cents to 39 cents a half gallon — yet the price where the milk was processed, bottled and put up for wholesale distribution by one of those major concerns was 49 cents a half gallon and it then had to be hauled 100 miles to a dock plus 30 miles from there to the witness’ area; (b) By a man in the milk business for some 30 years in the Alexandria area, who described the same situation when a big distributor, which bottled and processed the milk 130 miles away, started selling to chain stores below cost; (c) By an ice cream manufacturer of Olaiborne Parish who lost accounts because he had to refuse to give discounts and rebates and to furnish free a refrigerated cabinet for storage and display of non-dairy foods such as frozen foods, meats, etc.; and who also lost accounts to a “big chain” which quoted a price of 50 cents per half gallon for ice cream when the list price was 80 cents; (d) By a dairyman in Lake Charles, who at one time had employed 38 people but because of the loss of approximately one-third of the volume of his business due to the tactics being used in the milk industry had found it necessary to reduce his force considerably — his loss of business having been caused in large part because milk imported from Shreveport was selling in Lake Charles for 39$ — the while the same quantity and quality were being sold in Shreveport for 45$; (e) By a retail grocer, who stated that the volume of his business on all items fell off because he was having to buy milk at a higher price than the selling price of his competitors, made possible because they were getting discounts and he was not; and (f) By a disinterested witness, with wide knowledge and experience in the field of marketing and utilization of milk and milk products, who testified concerning the practice of big chains of selling at a loss in a particular area but maintaining the prices in another area to make up the losses. This witness, who, under authority of the U. S. Secretary of Agriculture, had prepared the Federal orders under which milk was being sold in the Shreveport area, stated that the procedure for determining a fair minimum price under the Louisiana statute was identical to that under the Federal Act except for the jurisdiction. With reference to the “loss leader” sales of milk, he aptly observed: “Therefore, I think it could be concluded properly that the Shreveport housewife was subsidizing the Lake Charles housewife to some extent.”
.Section 940.1, after listing the various kinds of milk and milk products covered by the Act, provides: “Also, all frozen desserts as defined in Section 1 of Chapter XXV of the Sanitary Code of the State of Louisiana as revised through February 22, 1957, including any subsequent revisions.” The said Section 1 defines a frozen dessert as “any sound and clean, frozen or partially frozen combination of two or more of the following : Milk or milk products, vegetable fat, animal fat, other food products approved by the Louisiana State Board of Health, eggs or egg products, nutritive sweetening ingredients, artificial sweetening ingredients (use only in diabetic desserts), water, confection (defined in Section 5), nut meats, fruit or fruit juices, citric or other organic food acid or other wholesome flavoring agents and colors together with harmless stabilizer, and shall be deemed to include ice cream, fruit ice cream, nut ice cream, ice milk, frozen malt ice cream, french ice cream, milk sherbert, ices or water ices, mellorine, olarine, sherine, and icicle bars.”
. That paragraph provides “Disruptive Sales Practices” means those practices which are prohibited in R.S. 40:940.3 or such other practices as may be determined by the commissioner to be disruptive of orderly marketing. (R.S. 40:940.-2(14))
. The term “cost”, defined in 940.2(12), is composed of the various factors there listed, “and all other costs of doing business as determined by the commissioner.” •For a more complete quotation see the third paragraph of this opinion.
. For a further statement of these principles, and pertinent authorities, see City of Alexandria v. Alexandria Fire Fighters Ass’n,
. See Annotation, Delegation of Legislative Power,
. Mutual Film Corp. v. Industrial Commission,
. That suit was instituted by the United States for a mandatory injunction requiring the defendant milk cooperatives and milk handlers to comply with Order No. 27 of the Secretary of Agriculture regulating the handling of milk in the New York Metropolitan area, and also, if it should be found that defendants were not subject to that Order, then alleging violation of Official Order No. 126 issued by the Commissioner of Agriculture and Markets of the State of New York. The two orders were in pari materia, one covering milk moving in interstate commerce, and the other covering milk in intrastate commerce. The Commissioner of Agriculture and Markets of the State of New York was permitted to intervene as party plaintiff, and sought an injunction commanding the defendants to comply with his Order No. 126 or, if it did not apply, then to comply with the Order of the U. S. Secretary of Agriculture. The answers challenged the two orders as contrary to the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments to the Constitution, and challenged the Act of Congress as involving improper delegation of legislative power. It appears that in the final analysis the controversy revolved almost entirely around Order No. 27, backed by the Statute under which it was issued, a provision of which authorized the Secretary, if he finds after a hearing that minimum prices with a base period purchasing power are unreasonable, to fix minimum prices so as to reflect the prices of available supplies of feed and other economic conditions; it also provided for use of voluntary agreements as to certain specified commodities, including milk, and for orders instead of agreements when the Secretary of Agriculture had reason to believe that issuance of an order would tend to effectuate the declared policy of the Act, and after notice and an opportunity for hearing; in such Order the Secretary was required to set forth a finding upon the evidence introduced at the hearing, and that the issuance of the Order and the terms and conditions thereof would tend to effectuate the declared policy (Section 1 declares that the disruption of orderly exchange of commodities impairs the purchasing power of farmers, thus destroying the value of agricultural assets to the detriment of the national public interest). Orders may only be issued after hearing upon a marketing agreement which regulates the handling of the commodity, and do not become effective unless approved by a majority of the handlers — but notwithstanding the refusal or failure of handlers to sign a marketing agreement relating to the commodity the Secretary of Agriculture, with approval of the President, may issue an order if he determines that the refusal or failure of the handlers to sign such agreement tends to prevent the effectuation of the declared policy with respect to the eommodity and that the issuance of the order is the only practical means of advancing the interest of the producers. In such a case the order must be approved or favored by two-thirds of the producers in number or volume who have been engaged, during the period, in the production for market of the commodity within the area, or by two-thirds of those engaged in the production of the commodity for sale in the marketing area. A referendum is authorized to determine whether the issuance of the order is approved by the producers.
Among pertinent observations made by the Court in the course of a lengthy examination of the Act, including phases with which we are not here concerned, is one distinguishing the case of A. L. A. Schechter Poultry Corp. v. United States,
. The defendant complained that the Board’s order fixing minimum prices discriminated unfairly against him as a . “cash and carry” dealer in milk since his rivals in the trade who had no store but only a wagon and delivery route were allowed to sell pints of milk as low as lie ..did,, with delivery to the customer’s door as a bonus.
. United States v. Rock Royal Co-operative,
. Milk Control Board of Pennsylvania v. Eisenberg Farm Products,
