Farmdale Creamery v. Department of Food and Agriculture CA3

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 25, 2022
DocketC093013
StatusUnpublished

This text of Farmdale Creamery v. Department of Food and Agriculture CA3 (Farmdale Creamery v. Department of Food and Agriculture CA3) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Farmdale Creamery v. Department of Food and Agriculture CA3, (Cal. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

Filed 10/25/22 Farmdale Creamery v. Department of Food and Agriculture CA3 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA THIRD APPELLATE DISTRICT (Sacramento) ----

FARMDALE CREAMERY, INC., C093013

Plaintiff and Appellant, (Super. Ct. No. 34202080003332CUWMGDS) v.

DEPARTMENT OF FOOD AND AGRICULTURE,

Defendant and Respondent.

SAVE QIP DAIRY FARMERS,

Intervener and Respondent.

Farmdale Creamery, Inc. (Farmdale) appeals the trial court’s denial of its petition for writ of mandate, in which Farmdale challenged the Department of Food and Agriculture’s (department) directive to pay $363,053.85, 1 comprised of a $4,792.22

1 The department ordered Farmdale to pay $364,367.39. In its petition for writ of mandate, however, Farmdale did not (and, on appeal, does not) challenge $1,313.54 of

1 Dairy Council of California assessment, a $72,609.22 California Milk Producers Advisory Board assessment, and a $285,652.41 Quota Implementation Plan assessment. 2 Farmdale argues it is not responsible for the assessments because it purchased the milk at issue from a milk handler (i.e., a dairy processor) and not from a milk producer (i.e., a dairy farm). The department and trial court, however, found the milk transactions were in substance producer-to-handler transactions and not handler-to-handler transactions. We conclude there is substantial evidence in the record to support the trial court’s factual finding in that regard and the department’s action was not arbitrary, capricious, or lacking in evidentiary support. We thus affirm. LEGAL BACKGROUND I Quota Implementation Plan Assessments Milk is assessable under the Quota Implementation Plan if it is market milk received from a California producer at a California plant. A producer is “any person that produces market milk in the State of California from five or more cows and includes members of cooperative associations.” Market milk “means milk, cream, or skim milk, that is produced in conformity with applicable regulations of the appropriate public regulatory or health authority for disposition as market milk.” To “[r]eceive milk” means “to convey milk physically into a milk plant where it is utilized within the plant, or stored within such milk plant and transferred to another plant for utilization.”

that amount, which was imposed for certain Dairy Council of California assessments that are not at issue in this appeal. 2 The parties and the trial court at times refer to these assessments as fees. We use the term assessment as provided in Food and Agriculture Code section 64301, the Quota Implementation Plan, and the Marketing Order for Research, Education, and Promotion of Milk and Dairy Products in California.

2 If the milk is assessable, the Quota Implementation Plan requires the assessments “be collected from the handlers of market milk.” A handler is “any person who operates one or more plants in California or that engages in the operation of selling, marketing, or distributing in California of Bulk Market Milk he or she has produced or purchased or acquired from a producer.” Bulk market milk is “milk, cream, or skim milk, other than packaged products, from market milk sources.” While the assessments are collected from the handlers of market milk, “[a] handler that pays any such assessments for and on behalf of any producer may deduct such producer assessments from any money which is owed [to] the producer by the handler.” II Dairy Council Of California Assessments During the audit period at issue,3 “[e]ach producer . . . [paid Dairy Council of California assessments] established for each hundredweight of milk produced by him or her in the state and delivered to a handler.” (Former § 64302, subd. (a).) The “first handler that purchase[d], or otherwise acquire[d] possession or control of” the milk had to collect the assessments from the producer and submit the assessments to the department. (Ibid.) Handler was defined as “any person that, as owner, agent, or broker, or otherwise acquire[d] from a producer, producer-handler, or another handler, possession or control of milk, skim milk, or cream, in the form of unprocessed milk, skim milk, or cream, or in any other unprocessed form, for the purpose of processing it, and include[d] any person who secure[d] custom processing services on an ongoing basis.” (Former § 64007.) “[A] handler that s[old] unprocessed milk, of which he or she ha[d]

3 The pertinent Food and Agricultural Code sections pertaining to the Dairy Council of California assessments have been amended at different times. We discuss the versions of the code sections in effect during the audit period. All undesignated section references are to the Food and Agricultural Code.

3 the right to possession or control by contract or otherwise, to another handler, and deliver[ed] this milk in unprocessed form to this other handler or cause[d] this milk to be delivered to this other handler directly from the producer, [wa]s the first handler of th[e] milk.” (Former § 64302, subd. (a).) III California Milk Producers Advisory Board Assessments The department collects California Milk Producers Advisory Board assessments “from the handlers . . . who purchase or otherwise receive or acquire milk or milk fat from producers . . . . Each handler . . . who purchases or receives or otherwise acquires any such milk solids or milk fat for and on behalf of any producer . . . shall deduct such assessments from any monies owed by him or her to any such producer.” Producer is defined as “any person that is engaged within this State in the business of producing, or causing to be produced, for market, milk as defined herein.” Handler is defined as “any person, who, as owner, agent, or broker, purchases or otherwise acquires possession of or control of milk or milk fat from a producer . . . , in the form of unprocessed milk or cream, or in any other unprocessed form, for the purpose of processing it.” FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND Farmdale is a California milk processor, also known as a handler. In mid -2019, the department audited Farmdale’s two processing plants. The department assessed Farmdale $364,367.39 after determining, in part, that “[p]roducer receipts were misreported as Handler receipts during the months of January through April 2019.” The department explained, “[m]ilk from a California producer that is then received and utilized in a California plant must pay California assessments.” Farmdale filed a petition for writ of mandate, challenging the assessment on two grounds. First, Farmdale argued the assessments “were erroneously assessed because they may only be assessed on handlers’ purchases of milk from producers” and, “[g]iven that GH Processing is a handler,” Farmdale “was not required to pay assessments on milk

4 purchased from GH Processing.” Second, Farmdale argued $285,653.41 of the assessment was legally invalid because the department did not adopt the Quota Implementation Plan “in conformity with the underlying statute” and, thus, the Quota Implementation Plan was void. Because this appeal concerns only the first ground of Farmdale’s challenge to the department’s assessment, we recite only the material factual background in regard to that assertion. In the trial court, Farmdale argued it purchased the milk at issue in the audit pursuant to two contracts with GH Processing, in which GH Processing was designated as the seller. Farmdale produced two unsigned contracts identifying Gerben H. Hettinga as the signatory for GH Processing.

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Farmdale Creamery v. Department of Food and Agriculture CA3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/farmdale-creamery-v-department-of-food-and-agriculture-ca3-calctapp-2022.