American Sumatra Tobacco Corp. v. Tone

15 A.2d 80, 127 Conn. 132, 1940 Conn. LEXIS 243
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJuly 25, 1940
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 15 A.2d 80 (American Sumatra Tobacco Corp. v. Tone) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
American Sumatra Tobacco Corp. v. Tone, 15 A.2d 80, 127 Conn. 132, 1940 Conn. LEXIS 243 (Colo. 1940).

Opinion

Jennings, J.

The plaintiff is a grower and packer of Connecticut valley shade tobacco known as type 61a. On May 9, 1939, the defendant made an assessment upon the plaintiff for the payment of contributions in respect to the wages paid by it to the persons employed by it in the warehouses where the tobacco was packed. The plaintiff appealed. The act under which demand was made (General Statutes, 1939 Supplement, § 1334e) exempts agricultural labor from the operation of the act. The precise question raised by this appeal is whether the wages in question were paid to employees engaged in processing and packing the tobacco “as an incident to ordinary farming operations as distinguished from manufacturing or com *134 mercial operations,” under a regulation promulgated by the administrator pursuant to the act.

The general set-up is described, the pertinent statutes are cited, the- controlling regulation of the administrator is quoted and many of the relevant cases are discussed in the recent case of H. Duys & Co., Inc. v. Tone, 125 Conn. 300, 5 Atl. (2d) 23. That case decided that the regulation is constitutional and the exercise of a valid delegation of legislative power and that a conclusion that it is not within the purview of the act was erroneous (page 312), but that as Duys & Company was not a grower but packed the tobacco grown by others through the labor of its own employees for a commission and expenses, it was not within the exemption. The plaintiff in the case at bar directed its efforts to distinguishing its situation from that case in that it grows its own tobacco and packs it in its own warehouses through the labor of its own employees.

In order to bring out this distinction and its effect, this case was tried at length and a very detailed finding was made. Repeating as little as possible of the description of the general situation in the Duys case, the finding may be summarized as follows: The plaintiff is a Delaware corporation producing shade grown tobacco in Massachusetts, Connecticut, Georgia and Florida. ' This case is concerned only with its operations in Connecticut. . It there grows and packs over a thousand acres of tobacco annually. The number of employees varies with the season and at times reaches two thousand. The production and preparation' for market of Connecticut valley shade grown tobacco is a complicated, intricate and unique process, costing approximately $800 per acre. It includes the preparation of the seed beds, the preparation and fertilization of the soil where the plant will grow, the *135 construction of the shade tent, the transplanting of the plants from the seed bed to the field, the cultivation of the plants and the harvesting of the leaves. After the leaves are harvested they are hung in specially constructed tobacco sheds for curing. It is admitted that all of these operations involve agricultural labor and are exempt under the statute.

After the leaves have been cured in the sheds, they are carried to the warehouses where they are laid in large piles, each containing about two tons of tobacco, where they are bulk sweated. This occurs through chemical changes in the leaves themselves with no mechanical or chemical assistance except for an occasional turning of the pile. The leaves are then moistened sufficiently to permit handling and are sorted for color, texture and soundness. Each grade is then separated into sizes and packed into cases containing about two hundred pounds each. These cases are placed in the mulling room where temperature and relative humidity are controlled for the purpose of drying out the moisture applied during the sorting and sizing process and the tobacco is allowed to ferment slowly. When the mulling is complete the tobacco is baled in a hand press. It remains in the bale for four weeks and is then, for the first time, ready for market. The various steps involved in preparing the tobacco for sale are necessary steps in one continuous operation, which must be entirely completed for the tobacco to be marketable.

Large quantities of hay, oats and corn are grown by the plaintiff for feeding its livestock and for sale to others. It owns and operates four warehouses. Two are located on farms owned and operated by the plaintiff, a third is on a farm owned and formerly operated by the plaintiff and the fourth is in East Hartford, central to several of the plaintiff’s farms. At least half *136 of those employed by the plaintiff in its warehouses also work on its farms in connection with the growing, harvesting and shed-curing of its crops. Ordinarily a farmer who grows less than one hundred acres of shade does not pack his own tobacco but makes arrangements with some owner of a warehouse to complete for him the process of packing and curing. The percentage of the total crop grown by farmers in this class is very small.

The wages of certain clerks and maintenance men were included in the assessment. It was found that these services are essential to the cultivation, packing and. marketing of the tobacco. This finding was assigned as error but was not pursued on the brief and is therefore not discussed.

On these facts the trial court came to the decisive conclusion that the work carried on by the plaintiff in its warehouses in preparing its annual crop of tobacco for market was an incident to ordinary farming operations as distinguished from manufacturing or commercial operations within the meaning of the regulation in question. The defendant claims that the finding should be corrected and that, even as made, it does not support the conclusion.

The attack on the finding is of sufficient importance to merit special consideration. In effect, it aims to show a distinct break and change in the plaintiff’s operations at the point where the tobacco is taken from the sheds to the warehouses. The method used is to seek to have stricken out the findings that there is no market for the tobacco at that time and that the various steps taken by the plaintiff are a part of one continuous operation. Both of these findings are supported by the evidence. While it is true that almost anything can be sold at a price and that in fact tobacco has been sold before being taken to the ware *137 houses for packing, its peculiar nature prevents the possibility of any fair appraisal at that time. The prices paid for Connecticut shade vary from ten cents a pound to $5.25 a pound. The price which it will ultimately bring depends on color, texture, quality, taste and size. None of these, with the possible exception of size, are determinable at this point in its development. It follows that the finding that there is no market for the tobacco at this time is a reasonable one. As for the continuity of the operations, there was abundant proof that stopping them at any point short of completion would result in spoiled and valueless tobacco.

The remaining question is whether the finding supports the conclusion referred to. The general scope and purpose of the Connecticut act and its relation to similar federal legislation is fully discussed in the Buys case.

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Bluebook (online)
15 A.2d 80, 127 Conn. 132, 1940 Conn. LEXIS 243, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-sumatra-tobacco-corp-v-tone-conn-1940.