Blackshear Manufacturing Co. v. Talmadge

161 S.E. 256, 173 Ga. 703, 1931 Ga. LEXIS 386
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedNovember 10, 1931
DocketNo. 8453
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 161 S.E. 256 (Blackshear Manufacturing Co. v. Talmadge) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Blackshear Manufacturing Co. v. Talmadge, 161 S.E. 256, 173 Ga. 703, 1931 Ga. LEXIS 386 (Ga. 1931).

Opinion

Gilbert, J.

Blackshear Manufacturing Company filed its petition against Talmadge, Commissioner of Agriculture, seeking injunction to restrain him from “returning” to it and from “cancelling” registrations of forty-four brands of fertilizer and fertilizer materials “filed” by it with the commissioner on December 27, 1930, for the year 1931. Since 1893 the company has engaged in manufacturing and selling fertilizer and fertilizer materials. The capital invested in plant and equipment amounts to more than $300,000, and its annual output of at least 25,000 tons is worth approximately three quarters of a million dollars. It contends that statutes bearing upon the handling and inspection of fertilizer and fertilizer materials do not authorize the commissioner to “return” or “cancel” its registrations, and attacks portions of the statutes as being in violation of designated provisions of the State and Federal constitutions. At interlocutory hearing demurrers filed by the commissioner were sustained, and the petition was dismissed. The exception is to that judgment.

Petitioner alleges that it is the admitted purpose and intention of the commissioner to return and cancel the registrations, unless he be prevented by the courts from so doing. Section 1 of the act approved August 24, 1929 (Ga. Laws 1929, p. 228), which became effective on January 1, 1930, and by its terms is an enlargement of the existing laws regulating the sale, distribution, and inspection of fertilizers, provides that all persons manufacturing, mixing, selling, or offering for sale the commodities mentioned “shall first file annually with the commissioner, upon forms supplied” by him, a registration of each brand manufactured, stating the places at which registrant will do business, the sources from ■ which the various constituent elements of each brand are derived, and pay a fee of five dollars for each brand. Full compliance -with this provision is alleged. The grounds upon which it is alleged the commissioner claims the right to return and cancel the regis[705]*705trations are: (1) That petitioner is liable for a penalty of twenty-five per cent, of the pnrchase-price of the entire output of petitioner during 1930 of two named brands of fertilizer valued at $1700, plus shortage in commercial value, because of the contention of the commissioner that samples of these fertilizers failed to meet requirements of the law. (2) That petitioner sold during 1930, without registering the same, a brand of fertilizer of stated guaranteed analysis under the name “Brantley’s Tobacco Special.” (3) That petitioner did not submit for analysis samples of brands proposed for registration in 1931, which the petition alleges the commissioner contends was required by the Civil Code (1910), § 2068. It is alleged that petitioner did not during 1930 sell any fertilizer under the brand “ Brantley’s Tobacco Special” of the guaranteed analysis stated.

The question is whether the petition set out a cause of action as against the general demurrer. Under the law a manufacturer of fertilizer must register in the department of agriculture the brands of his product, before they can be lawfully sold. The petitioner company alleges that it complied with the law, including the payment of required fees and the signing of an application on a form provided by the Commissioner of Agriculture, and that its brands of fertilizers were registered in accordance with the law. It further alleges that the commissioner admittedly “purposes and intends” to cancel its registrations and to return the same to petitioner. These alleged facts are of course admitted by the commissioner for the purposes of this case, at this stage. Section 11 of the act of 1929 (Ga. Laws 1929, pp. 228-232) is as follows: “If any manufacturer or mixer shall be subject to a penalty under the terms of this law and shall fail or refuse to pay the same upon demand as provided in the preceding section, the Commissioner of Agriculture is authorized to cancel the registration or registrations of such manufacturer or mixer and to forbid the sale by such manufacturer or mixer of any fertilizer or fertilizer materials in this State until such penalty or penalties have been paid, or final judgment has been obtained.” The only penalties which can be lawfully assessed are those provided in section 9 of this act, where it is provided that “these penalties shall be in lieu of all other penalties now provided by law, and shall not be cumulative.”

Did the General Assembly intend, in this section, to authorize [706]*706the Commissioner of Agriculture, arbitrarily and without a hearing, to cancel the registration or registrations of the manufacturer ? We have no difficulty in arriving at the conclusion that if the section is so construed it will be in conflict with the due-process clauses of the State and Federal constitutions. That question, in principle at least, was settled in Southern Cotton Oil Co. v. Raines, 171 Ga. 154 (4 b) (155 S. E. 484). We do not, however, think that it is necessary to so construe the section. It is well settled in this State that where a statute is susceptible of two constructions, one being in conflict with the constitution and the other not, it is bur duty to give it the construction which will be constitutional. The section begins with the language, “If any manufacturer- or mixer shall be subject to a penalty under the terms of this law and shall fail or refuse to pay the same upon demand as provided in the preceding section ” the commissioner is authorized to cancel the registration, etc. Clearly, according to that language, a manufacturer or mixer is subject to a penalty under the terms of law only when such penalty has been established in accordance with the preceding or section 10 of the same act. Section 10 provides: “Whenever any fertilizer or fertilizer material upon analysis by the State Chemist is found subject to a penalty under the provisions of this law, the Commissionér of Agriculture is empowered and it is hereby made mandatory upon him to proceed by attachment or other legal means to collect such penalty from the party or parties subject thereto and to pay the same to the person or persons entitled to receive it. Provided, that such adjustment is not made after sixty days from notice of deficiency from Commissioner of Agriculture.” This merely means that where the State Chemist has made an analysis and found the manufacturer subject to penalty, which incidentally is only a prima facie holding and not final, the Commissioner of Agriculture must serve notice on the manufacturer of the findings of the State Chemist, and sixty days from such notice must elapse before the commissioner can take any further action. If after the sixty days from the notice of deficiency the manufacturer has not paid the amount of the penalty, the commissioner shall then proceed by attachment or other legal means to collect the same.

The necessary legal effect of this procedure, as we have construed it, is that the manufacturer will have the opportunity, after [707]*707service, to come into court and be heard in the judicial proceeding. If after trial according to the law of the land the issue is finally-adjudicated adversely to the manufacturer, the penalty has then been established according to law. In this event the Commissioner of Agriculture, in pursuance of his duty under section 11 of the same act, is authorized to cancel the registration or registrations of such manufacturer or mixer and to forbid the sale by such manufacturer or mixer of any fertilizer or fertilizer materials in terms of section 11.

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Bluebook (online)
161 S.E. 256, 173 Ga. 703, 1931 Ga. LEXIS 386, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blackshear-manufacturing-co-v-talmadge-ga-1931.