Doty v. United States

24 Cl. Ct. 615, 1991 WL 258954
CourtUnited States Court of Claims
DecidedDecember 4, 1991
DocketNo. 90-491 C
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 24 Cl. Ct. 615 (Doty 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
Doty v. United States, 24 Cl. Ct. 615, 1991 WL 258954 (cc 1991).

Opinion

OPINION AND ORDER

TURNER, Judge.

This case involves a contract for the termination of milk production entered into between plaintiff James Doty1 and the Department of Agriculture (USDA) pursuant to the dairy termination program (DTP).2 See 7 U.S.C. § 1446(d)(3)(A)3; 7 C.F.R. §§ 1430.450—.470. Plaintiff alleges that the government breached the contract when it denied payment of amounts due under the contract and when it demanded a refund of amounts previously paid. Plaintiff also alleges that he was denied due process during administrative appeals con[617]*617ducted pursuant to 7 C.F.R. Part 780.3 He seeks damages in the amount of $116,-606.62 plus interest, which sum represents $10,000 in civil penalties assessed against him by USDA, plus $99,841.96 allegedly due under the contract, plus $6,764.66 in interest and penalties through October 17, 1989.

Defendant contends that a decision of the Deputy Administrator for State and County Operations (DASCO) of the Agricultural Stabilization and Conservation Service (ASCS) finding plaintiff ineligible to receive contract payments and liable for penalties has a rational basis in the administrative record and should be upheld. Defendant also contends that plaintiff was not denied due process and that the agency fully complied with the regulations governing administrative appeals. Defendant sets forth a counterclaim against plaintiff in the amount of $58,382.14 plus interest which represents $10,000 in civil penalties assessed against plaintiff and $48,382.14 as a refund of previous payments made under the DTP contract.

Both parties filed motions for summary judgment pursuant to RUSCC 56.4 Upon review of the administrative record and consideration of the parties’ cross-motions, we conclude that DASCO and other ASCS decision makers abused their procedural discretion in a manner which cannot be deemed harmless with respect to plaintiff and that, consequently, the final decision of ASCS must be vacated and the matter remanded for further proceedings.

I

The following statement of facts is based on the administrative record filed with the court.5 It is intended to explain the context in which this case arose and does not represent independent findings of fact made by the court.

Plaintiff, James Doty, owned and operated a dairy farm in Marshall, Minnesota for many years. For approximately twelve years, including the time of the events giving rise to this law suit, he employed a herdsman, Lowell Siekmann, to manage the daily chores of the farm (R. 49). In February 1986, Doty inquired about the dairy termination program at the Lyon County (Minnesota) Agricultural Stabilization and Conservation Service Office. He was interested in making a bid for a contract and wanted to know whether heifers owned by Siekmann (some of which were commingled with his herd) would have to be included in the contract. Doty contends that a county official of the ASCS initially led him to believe that Siekmann’s heifers could be kept out of the program in the event that Doty entered a DTP contract (R. 40). Doty submitted a bid on March 7, 1986 (R. 127), at which time he understood that all cattle on his farm on or after January 1, 1986 were required to be included in the program.

The Lyon County ASCS accepted Doty’s bid on April 18,1986 resulting in a contract to participate in the dairy termination program requiring disposal of plaintiff’s herd not later than August 31, 1987 (R. 127-127J).6 The contract listed Doty’s dairy herd composition as of March 7, 1986 as 52 cows, 46 heifers and 21 calves. A form entitled “Establishment of Milk Marketing and Dairy Herd Composition” also signed by Doty on March 7, 1986 lists the dairy [618]*618herd composition on January 1, 1986 as 52 cows, 24 heifers and 16 calves, however, below the bottom line of this form, these numbers were revised to read 52 cows, 46 heifers and 21 calves (R. 128). This change was made prior to execution by Doty (R. 98).

The number of Siekmann-owned heifers on Doty’s farm on or after January 1,1986, compared with the number of heifers Siekmann may have kept at other locations, is important to any decision concerning whether Doty violated DTP contract terms. Doty contends that when he went to the county ASCS office to sign the DTP contract form (i.e., to submit his bid), and learned that all of Siekmann’s cattle located on his farm had to be included in the DTP contract, he informed the county ASCS employee, Josh Dirckx, that there were 46 heifers on his farm and that Siekmann owned 20 heifers. Doty contends that he did not specifically tell Dirckx that six of Siekmann’s heifers were located at Siekmann’s home and were not located on Doty’s farm. Doty alleges that Dirckx filled out the numbers on the contract and that originally he listed 26 heifers as belonging to Doty. Doty states that this number should have been 32 but that Dirckx erroneously arrived at the number 26 by subtracting 20 (heifers owned by Siekmann) from 46 (total number of heifers) and that Dirckx increased the number of heifers to 46 when he realized that the Siekmann heifers would have to be included. Doty states that of the 46 heifers on his farm, he owned 32 and Siekmann owned 14. According to Doty, the remaining 6 heifers owned by Siekmann were located at Siekmann’s home when Doty signed the contract and at all times on and after January 1, 1986 (R. 40).

Josh Dirckx, the ASCS employee who prepared the contract, stated that his understanding at the time he signed Doty into the program and made the adjustment tor the 20 heifers on the contract was that all 20 of Siekmann’s heifers were located at Doty’s farm after January 1, 1986 (R. 100). Minutes of the Lyon County ASCS meeting held on April 19, 1989 reflect that “Mr. Doty stated that he made a mistake when he signed the original contract with the addition of Lowell’s 20 heifers, because only 14 should have been included and the other 6 were never on his place with the exception of being on the truck when the other 14 were unloaded” (R. 101). Doty contends that if all 20 of Siekmann’s heifers had been included in his DTP contract then the total number of heifers would have been 52 and not 46 since Doty owned 32 heifers. Doty was not required to itemize how many of the 46 heifers listed on the contract belonged to Doty and how many belonged to Siekmann. An ASCS spot-checker’s report dated June 19, 1986 shows that there were found on Doty’s property 50 cows, 44 heifers and 22 calves. This is close to the 52, 46, 21 count shown on the bid. (Presumably numerical discrepancies result from births, maturation of calves, accidents, etc. and may result from innocent miscounts of moving herds by the owner and the spotchecker.)

Doty certified that all dairy cattle included in his DTP contract had been destroyed by signing a form entitled “Reconciliation of Dairy Cattle Disposal Numbers” on October 30, 1987 (R. 124).7 Meanwhile, Siekmann had left Doty’s employment in December 1986.

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Bluebook (online)
24 Cl. Ct. 615, 1991 WL 258954, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/doty-v-united-states-cc-1991.