Currin v. Wallace

19 F. Supp. 211, 1937 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1837
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. North Carolina
DecidedApril 19, 1937
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 19 F. Supp. 211 (Currin v. Wallace) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Currin v. Wallace, 19 F. Supp. 211, 1937 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1837 (E.D.N.C. 1937).

Opinion

MEEKINS, District Judge.

It is well to state the brief history of this cause, particularly important for that it involves the constitutionality of an act of the Congress, and it is as follows:

On Saturday, October 24, 1936, complainants, without notice to respondents, filed a complaint and prayed that respondents be restrained from compulsory inspection of tobacco upon the floors of complainants. Though it was earnestly insisted by counsel for -complainants that they were entitled, as a matter of right in the circumstances, to the relief sought, the prayer for an injunction without notice was refused. Instead, a show cause order was entered returnable1 at Raleigh November 5, 1936. This order gave respondents more than ten days in which to prepare for the hearing or move for an adjournment.

On November 5th respondents appeared at Raleigh pursuant to notice and announced their readiness to proceed after respondent Henry A. Wallace, Secretary of Agriculture, entered a special appearance and moved to dismiss as to him. No motion was made for an adjournment and no intimation that such was desired.

At the close of the testimony and after arguments of counsel were concluded, it was announced from the bench then: “The Act is unconstitutional; discriminating in its provisions and confiscatory in its application.”

Respondents did not appeal from the decision made at Raleigh, November 5, 1936. They elected to answer and have the cause heard on the merits. Upon request of respondents, extensions were granted, from time to time, in which to file answer.

The Special Term was held at Elizabeth City, February 15, 1937, having been ordered, as stated, at the request of respondents. The hearing was reported. At the close of the testimony it was, by consent of the parties, agreed that decision be withheld until the evidence taken could be transcribed by the court reporter. After the transcript had been made and furnished to complainants and respondents, respondents requested further time in which to file additional brief.

The brief of respondents was presented on the 2d day of April, 1937, and this opinion is being entered to-day — 19th day of April, 1937, seventeen days after the brief was presented and considered.

[213]*213The cause was instituted for the purpose .of securing an order restraining the en- ■ forcement of the Tobacco Inspection Act— Public No. 134 — 74th Congress — H.R. 8026 (7 U.S.C.A. §§ 511-511q), and the rules and regulations promulgated thereunder, with regard to federal inspection of tobacco in the warehouses of complainants situated in Oxford, N. C, pending final determination upon the merits.

Findings of Fact.

The bill shows:

1. That complainants are engaged in selling tobacco at auction at the instance of the owner and at a price fixed by the state of North Carolina, for the profit and benefit of themselves, each being intrastate in character and engaged exclusively in an intrastate enterprise — the auction sale of tobacco upon the warehouse floors — and are neither owners nor buyers of the tobacco sold by them upon their floors.

2. That pursuant to and in consequence of the Tobacco Inspection Act, and the rules and regulations promulgated thereunder by the Secretary of Agriculture, all. tobacco sold by complainants at auction for their patrons during the tobacco season of 1936-1937 was required to be inspected by employees and representatives of respondent, the Secretary of Agriculture, before it was sold.

3. That Oxford is one of the three tobacco markets within the state of North Carolina where federal inspection of tobacco prior to its sale on the floor of a tobacco warehouse is required; the other two markets are Goldsboro and Farmville.

4. That there are more than SO tobacco warehouses in North Carolina where millions of pounds of tobacco have been sold and will be sold during the remaining portion of the 1936-1937 tobacco season and that at none of these many markets is federal inspection of tobacco required.

5. That numerous individuals, firms, and corporations within the state of North Carolina, where tobacco markets are maintained, other than at Oxford, Goldsboro, and Farmville, are engaged in precisely the same character of business as complainants, who sell tobacco at auction on their respective warehouse floors for the profit and benefit to themselves where federal inspection is not required.

■ 6. That many of the patrons of complainants favor inspection and many of them are opposed- to it, and that in consequence of the opposition of growers, who are patrons of complainants, to federal inspection, complainants have lost substantial business and therefore substantial sums of money; have suffered and sustained, and will continue to suffer and sustain irreparable loss and damage unless restrained as prayed in the Bill and have no. adequate remedy at law.

At the hearing it developed from the proof through affidavits which are a part of the record and statements of counsel which were either admitted or not denied:

A. That a large quantity of the tobacco thus far sold by complainants during the tobacco season of 1936-1937 was brought by growers from the state of Virginia to the warehouses of complainants and there sold at auction after required federal inspection.

B. That a large quantity of the tobacco brought to the warehouses of complainants and sold at auction after required federal inspection was delivered by growers who are residents and citizens of the state of North Carolina and whose tobacco was seeded, set out, grown, harvested, cured, and placed upon the floors of the warehouses of complainants direct from barn to warehouse, the entire transaction being solely within the state of North Carolina.

C. That the grower retains his title and his control of his tobacco until he accepts payment from the purchaser. If the grower’s tobacco fails to sell for a satisfactory price he may withdraw it from the warehouse floor and take it home, without any expense of sale, and wait for a more favorable market.

The facts in this cause are respectively set forth in the above sections 1 to 6, both inclusive, as shown by the averments in the bill, and in sections A to C, both inclusive, as shown by the proof adduced at the hearing apart from or in addition to the averments in the bill, and I so find.

Conclusions of Law.

1. That the tobacco placed upon the floors of complainants and sold after the required inspection, which was brought to complainants by growers and owners from the state of Virginia, is interstate in character.

2. That the tobacco placed upon the floors of complainants and sold after -the required inspection, which was seeded, set out, grown, harvested, cured, and taken to market wholly within the state of North Carolina, is intrastate in character.

[214]*2143. That' the Tobacco Inspection Act is unconstitutional, in its substance and materially discriminating in its application. Materially discriminating for that the required federal inspection of tobacco on the floors of complainants is not required at any of the other tobacco markets in North Carolina (except at Goldsboro and Farmville) and this material discrimination against complainants is without any valid factual reason and is without affirmative significance in law or equity and cannot be enforced in the circumstances present in this cause.

Opinion.

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Related

Sunshine Mining Co. v. Carver
41 F. Supp. 60 (D. Idaho, 1941)
Currin v. Wallace
306 U.S. 1 (Supreme Court, 1939)

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Bluebook (online)
19 F. Supp. 211, 1937 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1837, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/currin-v-wallace-nced-1937.