Calvert Distilling Co. v. United States

94 Ct. Cl. 517, 1941 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 38, 1941 WL 4569
CourtUnited States Court of Claims
DecidedOctober 6, 1941
DocketNo. 45059
StatusPublished

This text of 94 Ct. Cl. 517 (Calvert Distilling Co. v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Court of Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Calvert Distilling Co. v. United States, 94 Ct. Cl. 517, 1941 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 38, 1941 WL 4569 (cc 1941).

Opinion

Jones, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

The plaintiff, successor by merger to the rights of the Maryland Distillery, Incorporated, brings this action to recover payments amounting to $18,959.05 made to'the Secretary of Agriculture under a marketing agreement for The Distilled Spirits Industry entered into on December 9, 1933.

In 1933 Congress enacted the Agricultural Adjustment Act.

One of the features of the act provided for the establishment of voluntary marketing agreements to be signed by the Secretary of Agriculture and by those engaged in any particular line of industry.

One of those marketing agreements covered the “Distilled Spirits Industry.” The text of that agreement is attached to the petition as “Exhibit A.”

By the terms of the marketing agreement each contracting distiller, including plaintiff, agreed to pay for all cereal grains or products thereof used by him in the manufacture of distilled spirits, a total amount per unit not less than the fair exchange value thereof. The fair exchange value is defined in the Agricultural Adjustment Act, approved May [519]*51912, 1933 (48 Stat. 31, 36), as such price as will give agricultural commodities a purchasing power with respect to ■articles that farmers buy equivalent to the average purchasing power of agricultural commodities in the base period, the base period for cereal grains being August 1909 to July 1914.

It further stipulates that if the price paid by the contracting distillers, plus processing or other tax levied under the act, is less than the fair exchange value of such grain or product, the distiller “shall pay the amount of such difference (hereinafter known as the parity payment) into the 'Treasury of the United States or such other depository as may be designated by regulations of the Secretary” (article IV, section 3, Marketing Agreement). It was under this provision that the fund in question came into being.

Plaintiff alleges that the funds were deposited in a special account in the Treasury of the United States designated as “8055, Collections, Distilled Spirits Industry, Parity Payments, Trust Fund” and that such funds are now being held in the special account in the Treasury of the United States ■and designated “Proceeds Distilled Spirits Industry, Parity Payments.”

It is further alleged that the payments so made cannot now be used for the purpose specified in the marketing agreement because:

(a) The United States had no legal authority to provide for payments and disbursements in the manner provided in the act.

(b) Such payments were to be used for the purposes ■specified in the Marketing Agreement within a reasonable time and not thereafter, and that such reasonable time has ■elapsed.

The plaintiff contends

One: That the parity payment fund is held in a resulting trust, of which plaintiff is the beneficiary.

Two: That the obligation of the Government to return the parity payment to plaintiff is a contract implied in fact, •over which the court has jurisdiction.

Three: That the court has jurisdiction of the case because the claim is one founded upon a law of Congress.

[520]*520Defendant; demurred to tbe plaintiff’s petition on the ground that

One: The court is without necessary jurisdiction to hear and determine the claim alleged in the petition.

Two: The petition does not state facts sufficient in law to constitute a cause of action.

Three: The identical cause of action is now being tried in other Federal courts against officers of the United States. It cites the case of Stitzel Weller Distillery v. Wallace, et al., 30 F. Sup. 1010 (Dist. Ct.) claiming that (1) the complaint in that case shows that it is based on the same factual situation; (2) that the action is a representative one in behalf' of the various distillers who were parties to the marketing-agreement; (3) that the cause of action was dismissed on the ground that the United States is an essential party to. the proceedings, and that such case is now pending on appeal in the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia.

Section 4 of the Marketing Agreement is as follows:

Payments under this section shall be made at such times and in such manner, and shall be computed in accordance with such requirements as may be prescribed by regulations of the Secretary. Such amounts shall be utilized for rental or benefit payments or other disbursements under the Act made with respect to grain.

By the terms of the Marketing Agreement the Secretary of Agriculture was authorized to issue special permits to contracting distillers to manufacture alcohol from commodities other than' cereal grain or products thereof in an amount not less than 10% of the amount of ethyl alcohol required for the manufacture of gin or the rectification of distilled spirits during the period of the operation of such permit.

The distiller agreed, through the agency of' the Code Authority established pursuant to the Code of Fair Competition for the Distilled Spirits Industry, to cooperate with the Administration and the Secretary in carrying out the agreement and it was made the duty of the Code Authority to act as an agency “through which the contracting distillers might make recommendations to effectuate the declared policy of the Act.”

[521]*521All parties to the marketing agreement were given exemptions from prosecution under the anti-trust laws.

The alleged grounds of recovery are so interwoven and. overlapping that they will be treated together.

We cannot see how under the allegations of the plaintiff’s-petition, when read alongside the marketing agreement and the terms of the Code Authority under which the plaintiff and its co-signers were operating, it can have any possible interest in the funds that were thus by voluntary agreement paid' into the hands of the administrative authorities. The payments were unconditional. It* was not necessary that any special fund be established; and far greater sums have been paid out to the same purposes for which these collections were made.

According to the provisions of Section 4 of the Marketing Agreement, it was made the duty of the Secretary of Agriculture to utilize the amounts collected “for rental or benefit payments or other disbursements under the Aet made with respect to grain” [italics ours].

There is nothing in the agreements or in the code under which the distillers were operating that required the Secretary to establish a special fund, trust or otherwise. In fact, it is doubtful whether the Secretary - had any authority under the Agricultural Adjustment Act to establish á trust fund. • ■

The provision in the agreement that such amounts should be utilized for rental or benefit payments or other disbursements under the act with respect to grain gave to the farmers — if to anyone — an interest in the amount of this fund, .and placed upon the Secretary a direct obligation to pay such amount to them.

There were several purposes set out in the Agricultural-Adjustment Act for which available funds could be used.

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Hawkins v. United States
96 U.S. 689 (Supreme Court, 1877)
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297 U.S. 1 (Supreme Court, 1936)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
94 Ct. Cl. 517, 1941 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 38, 1941 WL 4569, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/calvert-distilling-co-v-united-states-cc-1941.