Beatrice Foods Co. v. State Milk Commission

139 S.E.2d 922, 205 Va. 763, 1965 Va. LEXIS 132
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJanuary 18, 1965
DocketRecord No. 5856
StatusPublished

This text of 139 S.E.2d 922 (Beatrice Foods Co. v. State Milk Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Beatrice Foods Co. v. State Milk Commission, 139 S.E.2d 922, 205 Va. 763, 1965 Va. LEXIS 132 (Va. 1965).

Opinion

Snead, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

On January 29, 1963, Beatrice Foods Company, trading as Clover Creamery Company, made application with the State Milk Commission for a distributor’s license on the Lynchburg milk market. The [764]*764Commission denied the application by a two to one decision. We granted Beatrice an appeal. Code § 3-369.

Upon receipt of Beatrice’s application, the Commission referred it to the Lynchburg Local Milk Board for a recommendation. The Local Board recommended by a unanimous decision that the application “be denied because sufficient distributors are now in being on the Market and the public interest would be impaired by further dilution of the distributors’ responsibility.”

Later, after due notice, the Commission had a hearing at which time evidence was presented in behalf of the applicant and the objectors. Lynchburg-Westover Dairy and Norfolk Avenue Dairy, the only existing distributors in the Lynchburg market area, opposed the granting of the license. In denying Beatrice’s application for a distributor’s license, the majority opinion, recorded in the Commission’s minutes, stated in part:

“The evidence and testimony of the two local distributors in this market disclosed that the entry into this market of the applicant would result in destructive competition to them. The manager of the Lynchburg Cooperative Milk Producers’ Association, which Association supplies 89 per cent of the milk in this market, testified that it was the consensus of his Group that the granting of the license would adversely affect them.
“Therefore, the Commission is of the opinion that the denial of this license is in the public interest since:
“(1) To grant the same would cause destructive competition to the distributors in the market.
“ (2) To grant the same would disturb the public interest.
“The application, therefore, is refused.
“Commissioner Louthan, dissenting.”

The dominant question presented is whether the evidence shows that the granting of a distributor’s license to Beatrice will tend to “a destructive competition” in the Lynchburg milk market and thus not be in the public interest.

Lynchburg milk market embraces the city of Lynchburg and five magisterial districts in the three surrounding counties. According to the 1960 census, the market area had a population of 92,147. This was an increase of 13,284 or 16.8 per cent over the 1950 census.

G. Roy Weaver, manager of Clover Creamery division of Beatrice Foods Company, testified, among other things, that Beatrice is one of the largest dairy concerns in the United States; that it operates [765]*765satisfactorily in seven of the controlled milk markets in the State and has one processing plant in Roanoke and another at Radford where all of the milk delivered in the seven market areas is processed; that it desires to operate five regular routes on the Lynchburg market; that the milk for these routes would be processed at its Roanoke plant; and that he did not know how much Class I milk would be sold.

Weaver further testified that “Any milk assigned to us, we will see that it is picked up without an additional cost to the producer * * *” and that, in his opinion, “# * * if granted a license, we would help to increase the sales of milk and give the public an additional brand of milk on the market, and also help producers by increasing Class I sales.”

C. L. Fleshman, President and General Manager of Lynchburg-Westover Dairies, Inc., read from a lengthy prepared statement in which he expressed his company’s opposition to Beatrice’s application and the reasons therefor. He introduced an exhibit which he prepared showing, inter alia, that since 1951 there has been a reduction in general and producer distributors in 21 Virginia milk markets of 26 per cent; that the number of independent distributors has decreased by 53 per cent; that chain dairy operations have increased by 475 per cent, and that the processors in these markets have decreased by 59 per cent. He said “This exhibit shows that national chains are destroying the independent distributors * *

Fleshman stated that the Lynchburg market “is very competitive, but at present it is a stable market”; that in 1946 Lynchburg Dairy and Westover Dairy merged their operations to become Lynchburg-Westover Dairy; that another concern, Quality Dairy, was not being profitably operated and Lynchburg-Westover purchased its assets on July 1, 1961, for $837,426.13 by assuming liabilities of $419,011.13 and incurring additional liabilities of $418,415. He said: “We felt that if we could combine the three operations as one, there was a chance that the surviving corporation could be successful.” He further stated that Norfolk Avenue Dairy had about 12 per cent of milk sales and his company had approximately 88 per cent of the Lynchburg market; that in 1962 Lynchburg-Westover’s profit was one-third of a cent per quart whereas the national average was one-half of a cent per quart; that if Beatrice’s license was granted the local economy would be damaged because its milk would not be processed locally, and that “it would be destructive competition to our company.” Fleshman testified to other facts and introduced other exhibits containing statistical data. In the view we take of [766]*766the case, it would prolong this opinion unnecessarily to discuss them.

H. M. Crowder, a certified public accountant who commenced auditing the books of Lynchburg-Westover in 1961, testified that during that year the company’s profit was .06 per cent of sales, in 1962 it was 1.35 per cent, and that the national average of milk delivered is “800 quarts per route per day”. He introduced in evidence exhibits 7 and 8 which he prepared. Exhibit 7 was entitled:

“Lynchburg-Westover Dairies, Incorporated
“Pro-Forma—Profit and Loss Statement
“Showing Decrease In Milk Sales.”

This exhibit was based upon 1962 figures and stated, among other things, that 76.5 per cent ($1,817,156.93) of Lynchburg-Westover’s total sales was for milk in the Lynchburg market and that if there was a 6.64 per cent decrease in Lynchburg-Westover’s milk sales on this market the company would only break even. The exhibit indicated that if Lynchburg-Westover’s milk sales were decreased by five routes (requested by Beatrice) at 400 quarts per day, five routes at 600 quarts per day, or five routes at 800 quarts per day, it would cause Lynchburg-Westover to lose annually $27,560.72, $65,141.75 and $102,651.17 respectively.

Exhibit 8 dealt with the effect that Beatrice’s proposed operations would have on all of Lynchburg-Westover’s operations, both those under the Commission’s jurisdiction and those outside of it. This exhibit stated that if Beatrice had five 400 quart routes Lynchburg-Westover’s profits would be reduced to $1,329.46 per annum; that five 600 quart routes would cause the company a loss of $35,008.54, and that five 800 quart routes would produce a loss of $72,517.96.

T. J. Chaffin, Jr., operator and one of the owners of Norfolk Avenue Dairy, also testified in opposition to the granting of a distributor’s license to Beatrice.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Richmond Food Stores, Inc. v. State Milk Commission
129 S.E.2d 35 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1963)
In re Friendship Dairies, Inc. v. Du Mond
284 A.D. 147 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1954)
Rountree v. State Milk Commission
36 S.E.2d 613 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1946)
Brown v. State Milk Commission
135 S.E.2d 98 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1964)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
139 S.E.2d 922, 205 Va. 763, 1965 Va. LEXIS 132, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beatrice-foods-co-v-state-milk-commission-va-1965.