Bowles v. Stapleton

53 F. Supp. 336, 1943 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1895
CourtDistrict Court, D. Colorado
DecidedNovember 13, 1943
DocketCiv. No. 664
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 53 F. Supp. 336 (Bowles v. Stapleton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bowles v. Stapleton, 53 F. Supp. 336, 1943 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1895 (D. Colo. 1943).

Opinion

SYMES, District Judge (from the bench).

This is an action brought by the Acting Administrator of the Office of Price Administration against the Mayor of Denver and other city officers, and dealers in milk in Denver, particularly producers and dairymen, to restrain the enforcement of an ordinance recently passed by the City of Denver, known as Ordinance No. 50, Series of 1943.

The defendants have all filed answers, and by a motion to dismiss have raised the pertinent question of whether a cause of action is stated upon which the relief sought, to wit, an injunction can be granted. It is admitted that the plaintiff, pursuant to the War Emergency Price Control Act of 1941, P.L. 421, 56 Stat. 23, approved January 30, 1942, 50 U.S.C.A.Appendix, § 901 et seq., passed by the Congress pursuant to the war powers vested in the President and Congress, entitled “To Further the National Defense and Security by Checking Speculative and Excessive Price Rises, Price Dislocations, and Inflationary Tendencies, and For Other Purposes,” has fixed ceiling prices for milk in Denver, to, wit, the price to be paid by the ultimate consumer. These regulations have been in force for some time.

It seems that the defendant producers supplying milk for Denver have been very much dissatisfied with the ceiling prices on the ground that they are so low the regulations compel them to produce and sell their milk for consumption in Denver at a loss; that the price has never and especially does not today enable them to pay the increased cost of producing milk occasioned by the increased cost of labor, feed and other necessary expenses.

That within the month these milk dealers —whether they are acting in concert or not I do not attempt to say, because their conduct might lead to other serious consequences — have given notice through the public press and in other ways that they will not after November 1, 1943, furnish milk in the City and County of Denver at the prices so fixed by the Price Administrator. As a result of this notice and this threatened strike on behalf of the milk producers, negotiations of various kinds have been had between the city officials and the milk producers, as well as the local Regional Administrator and the Acting Administrator in Washington.

It evidently is the opinion of the local government officials here administering this law that these allegations in part at least were correct; that the milk producers were selling their milk at a loss due to increase in prices of their supplies, and that they could not be expected to carry on much longer. Mr. Collins, the Regional Administrator, in a letter dated October 6, 1943, to Mr. Bowles, the Senior Deputy Administrator in Washington, said: “We cannot ignore the acute problems of diversion of fluid milk and hay, the steadily mounting cost of all dairy feeding stuffs, the dwindling supplies of fluid milk.”

It is further stated, and not denied, that these dealers have begun to dispose of their cows by slaughter, and are not replacing them with fresh cows, so that the supply of fluid milk is steadily decreasing. Finally, as a last resort, the City of Denver, through its duly constituted assembly or legislative body, the City Council, passed the ordinance referred to, which recites that the Council found that the practical operation of the low ceiling prices hereto-fore fixed by the Office of Price Administration has produced a situation in the City of Denver, local in character and extent, and that the threatened milk strike has created a grave emergency involving the health and lives of children and other persons in the City of Denver. It then passed the ordinance laying an excise tax of two cents per quart upon milk intended for human consumption in the City and County of Denver. By Section 4 it is made the “duty of every seller of milk at retail to collect the said excise tax and to remit the same to the Manager of Revenue of the City and County of Denver; and such Manager is hereby authorized to promulgate rules and regulations in regard to the collection of said tax, the form of records to be kept,” etc. The ordinance (Section 5) says “That, in order to prevent a shortage of milk for human consumption in the City and County of Denver, the moneys to be raised by said excise tax are hereby appropriated for the purpose of paying the same to the producers of the milk being sold in Denver; and the Manager of Revenue is hereby authorized and instructed to pay the same to such producers of the milk, or [338]*338their duly authorized agents, pro rata in proportion to the quantities of milk produced by the various producers and sold for human consumption in Denver.”

It then provides (Section 6) any person whose duty it is to collect the said tax and fails to do so or to comply with the rules and regulations in respect thereto shall be punished by a fine or jail, or both. The Government asks that the enforcement of that ordinance be restrained, and it is contended on behalf of the plaintiff that it is in direct violation of the said Emergency Price Control Act of 1942, and merely a device for getting around the price regulation fixed by the federal government.

That it may have that effect is, of course, quite apparent, because, brushing aside all other views, the net result of this ordinance, if enforced, and this money collected is paid back to the producers of milk, is to increase the price they get for their product and will enable them according to their advertisements and public announcements to continue in business. I think the court can take judicial notice of the fact that at no time have they asked for more than an increase of two cents a quart on the price of their product. If this were a direct conflict between a price regulation of the federal government and a price regulation of the City and County of Denver or the state, there could be no question but what the federal rule would govern, because the Constitution specifically provides (Article 6, cl. 2) the laws made by Congress pursuant to the constitutional powers vested in them are the supreme law of the land and binding upon everybody, both state and federal officers. But this is hardly a price-fixing device by the city. It is an excise tax, and it is not argued seriously that the City of Denver has not the right to lay and enforce such a tax.

In the case of Helena Rubinstein v. Charline’s Cut Rate, Inc., 132 N.J.Eq. 254, 28 A.2d 113, decided September 11, 1942, the Vice-Chancellor laid down the rule, which would govern here if it were adaptable to the facts, where a conflict arises between a state so-called fair trade contract and regulations duly promulgated by the Federal Price Administrator, the regulations must control. A retailer may not be enjoined from selling at lower than minimum retail prices under the said act where his prices have been frozen by the general maximum price regulation. In other words, where there is a conflict between the state prices and the federal government prices, the federal government regulations control, and of that there can be no doubt.

The defendants call attention to what they claim is an exception to the general maximum price regulation of commodities issued April 28, 1942, as amended, and that is the subdivision marked (b) on page 11:77 of the regulations (Exhibit H). That language is as follows: “(b) As to a tax or increase in a tax which becomes effective after March 31, 1942.

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Related

M. H. Gordon & Son, Inc. v. Alcoholic Beverages Control Commission
358 N.E.2d 778 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1976)
Bowles v. Stapleton
142 F.2d 448 (Tenth Circuit, 1944)

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Bluebook (online)
53 F. Supp. 336, 1943 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1895, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bowles-v-stapleton-cod-1943.