Brown v. State Milk Commission

135 S.E.2d 98, 205 Va. 18, 1964 Va. LEXIS 139
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedMarch 9, 1964
DocketRecord No. 5711
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 135 S.E.2d 98 (Brown 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
Brown v. State Milk Commission, 135 S.E.2d 98, 205 Va. 18, 1964 Va. LEXIS 139 (Va. 1964).

Opinion

Eggleston, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Wilmer W. Brown made application to the State Milk Commission, hereinafter referred to as the Commission, for a limited general distributor’s license on the Harrisonburg milk market. In accordance with the usual procedure, the Commission referred the application to the Harrisonburg Milk Board for recommendation. The local board recommended that the application be denied for the reasons that (1) the proposed license operation cannot be justified “by any element of public need, service or benefit;” (2) the local market is adequately served by the present licensed seven distributors; (3) any additional licensees “would tend to weaken and impair the present satisfactory structure of supply and demand,” and “would not be fair to present licensed distributors” in this market area.

At a hearing before the Commission evidence was presented on behalf of and in opposition to the application. Shortly thereafter the Commission advised the applicant that it had approved the recommendation of the local board and denied the application.

In its written opinion and finding of fact the Commission based the denial of the application on the reasons assigned by the local board and the additional reasons that the evidence disclosed that the applicant (a) “is presently not pasteurizing, bottling or processing milk for consumption in the State as is required of a distributor in Regulation No. 7, § 3 A,” of the Commission; (b) “is not qualified by experience and equipment to properly conduct the business as is required by Regulation No. 7, § 4 B;” (c) “does not have the necessary health permits required of a distributor by Regulation No. 7, § 4 L;” (d) “has operated without a license prior to the date of the hearing and though advised at such date to discontinue the same has continued to do so in violation of the rules and regulations of the Commission, Regulation No. 7, § 4 E.”

For these reasons, the Commission said, it was of opinion that the granting of the application “would not be in the public interest.”

[20]*20From the order of the Commission denying the license the applicant has appealed under Code, § 3-369. The substance of his assignments of error is that the evidence does not justify the denial of a license to him on any of the grounds stated by the Commission.

The applicant, Brown, is a producer and distributor of his own milk, for which purpose he leases and operates a farm known as Bowmont Dairy in Rockingham county. At the time of the hearing before the Commission he was milking twenty-five cows and selling about 100 gallons of milk a day.

On July 3, 1962, Brown had obtained the necessary health permits and began distributing his own milk in an area which was not then regulated or controlled by the Commission. Effective on September 15, the Commission revised and enlarged the then existing Harrison-burg-Bridgewater milk market so as to include the area or territory being served by Brown. The Commission then notified him that since the sales area of the local milk market had been redefined he must make application for a license to distribute milk within the new market area. Whereupon Brown applied for the license which is the subject of the present controversy. He testified that he desired only to continue the distribution of milk in the area which was unregulated prior to September 15, 1962. The Attorney General’s brief concedes that thus his application is for a limited general distributor’s license.

Brown does not live at or near the Bowmont farm and leaves the milking operation to a full-time employee. Since he does not own the necessary equipment for pasteurizing his milk it is taken by truck to Riverside Farms at or near Verona in Augusta county, where it is processed by G. E. McAllister who is engaged in processing milk for the Staunton Military Academy and the Augusta Military Academy. After the processing the applicant’s milk is carried to a storage plant at Mt. Jackson where space for storage and icing has been rented. From this storage facility the milk is distributed and sold by Brown to his customers. Ninety per cent of his milk is sold at retail.

Representatives of the Harrisonburg Milk Board appeared in opposition to the granting of a license to Brown “under any conditions.” There was evidence that the seven licensed distributors are adequately serving the Harrisonburg market area.

We agree with the applicant’s contention that the evidence does not justify the denial of the license to him on any of the grounds stated by the Commission.

[21]*21As has been said, the Commission adopted the reasoning of the local board that the local milk market was adequately served by the present licensed seven distributors and that any additional licensees would tend to weaken and impair the present satisfactory structure of supply and demand. In Richmond Food Stores, Inc. v. State Milk Commission, 204 Va. 46, 56, 57, 129 S. E. 2d 35, 42, 43 (decided since the present application was heard by the Commission), we held that, in the absence of evidence that the issuance of a license would tend to “a destructive competition” in the market, the fact that the area was adequately served by a number of other licensed distributors was not a valid basis for the denial of an application. We there said:

“It is clear that the Commission is here holding, in effect, that when there are already two or more existing distributors in the milk market who are rendering adequate service in supplying milk to the public, it is not in the public interest to license another distributor on that market. In so holding, the Commission creates a monopoly for the existing distributors, stifles competition, and abolishes free enterprise in the milk industry. Under the ruling of the Commission no new distributors might ever be licensed on a milk market. The Virginia Milk Act did not contemplate such a result.” 204 Va., at page 56, 129 S. E. 2d, at page 42.

We adhere to that view which is quite applicable to the present case.

The Commission next held as a ground for the denial of a license that the applicant is presently not pasteurizing, bottling or processing milk for consumption as is required of a distributor by Regulation No. 7, § 3 A. That section provides:

uGeneral Distributor Licenses are classified as those issued to persons (including producer-distributors) who pasteurize or bottle milk or process milk into fluid milk for consumption within the State of Virginia. All general distributors shall have facilities adequate to handle milk from assigned producers.” (Emphasis added.)

The Attorney General argues that this regulation requires that a distributor should own the facilities or equipment for pasteurizing, processing or bottling his milk and that since this applicant does not own them he is not properly equipped to comply with this regulation.

We do not agree with this contention. The rule as written does not require that a general distributor shall own such equipment. It is sufficient that he have access to such facilities where the processing may be properly done. There is an entire lack of evidence that the ownership of such facilities by the distributor is necessary or [22]*22in the public interest. The obvious purpose of the regulation is to see that the milk is properly pasteurized or processed for consumption.

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Related

Beatrice Foods Co. v. State Milk Commission
139 S.E.2d 922 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1965)

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135 S.E.2d 98, 205 Va. 18, 1964 Va. LEXIS 139, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-state-milk-commission-va-1964.