Furze v. Lake Region Packing Association, Inc.

311 So. 2d 183
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedApril 18, 1975
Docket73-181
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 311 So. 2d 183 (Furze v. Lake Region Packing Association, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Furze v. Lake Region Packing Association, Inc., 311 So. 2d 183 (Fla. Ct. App. 1975).

Opinion

311 So.2d 183 (1975)

Flora Flynn FURZE, for Herself and As Guardian Ad Litem for Mary Lewis and Alice Ellingson, Etc., et al., Appellants,
v.
LAKE REGION PACKING ASSOCIATION, INC., et al., Appellees.

No. 73-181.

District Court of Appeal of Florida, Second District.

April 18, 1975.

*184 Robert E. Austin, Jr., Davis, McLin, Burnsed & Austin, and Henry L. Pringle, Leesburg, for appellants.

Christopher C. Ford, Tavares, for appellees.

McNULTY, Chief Judge.

As a tax exempt cooperative, appellee Lake Region markets the citrus produce of its patrons for a charge, remitting the proceeds from fruit sales to the respective growers.

Appellants, who are non-current, former members of the cooperative, brought this class action seeking sums concededly withheld from them by the cooperative in a reserve account. Concluding that the time for repayment was to be determined by the directors' business judgment, the trial court found neither an abuse of discretion nor breach of trust in the directors' refusal presently to repay the accounts. We agree; but we must ultimately remand for further consideration as will more fully hereinafter appear.

At the outset, however, an overview of the problem herein is almost essential to an understanding of our conclusions herein. We comment first on the pertinent cooperative function. While a cooperative form of organization provides advantages unavailable to the independent producer, it requires working capital and sufficient reserves to offset losses due to freezes or other contingencies. To establish such reserves a cooperative might either borrow money from outside sources (debt financing) or retain sums from members and patrons in order to accumulate working capital and reserves over a period of time (equity financing).

In the case before us, since at least 1925 Lake Region has pursued the latter course and has charged its patrons such a fee, in addition to costs, in order to do so.[1] Earnings withheld by the cooperative as contributions to its reserve account were recorded as non-cash "allocations" to member and patron accounts. At the beginning of each fiscal year the board of directors set charges for the various services it was to perform for members and patrons during *185 the coming year. At the end of that fiscal year net margins or net losses were determined by subtracting operating and other costs from the income received from charges. The difference was added to or subtracted from each member or patron's allocated reserve account in an amount proportionate to his transactions with the cooperative during that year. Although no definite schedule was followed, excessive reserves were used to redeem the earliest unrefunded allocations on approximately a ten to twelve year cycle. The directors on these occasions of redemption, pursuant to their duties as set forth in the by-laws, "declared" such excess.

A 1962 amendment to the internal revenue code, however, has caused considerable change in the cooperative's practice. As a consequence thereof, patrons' contributions to reserves since 1963 have designedly totaled less than the cooperative's net margins, and, with equal design, no contributions have been made since 1968. Moreover, no reserve allocations have been redeemed since 1963 and several letters by the president (now chairman of the board) clearly indicated that, until changed, the tax ramifications of the amendment would preclude repayment. (We will more fully discuss the tax problem later.)

In the past, when considering like quandaries, the courts of sister states have generally recognized that absent special circumstances neither current nor former members have a legal right to enforce immediate repayment of equity credits, such as those allocated to appellants.[2] One commentator, however, has analogized the plight of ex-members seeking repayment to that of non-participating, perferred stockholders seeking dividends: while no legal right to payments vests until the board authorizes a refund, an action for abuse of discretion could be brought under appropriate circumstances.[3] Similarly, although reticent to specifically articulate such "appropriate circumstances," several courts have suggested that judicial review of cooperatives' refusal to redeem would be available if the directors' refusal to repay constituted an abuse of discretion or was based upon fraud, illegality or inequity.[4] Florida decisions to date suggest that although repayment rights do not vest until dissolution,[5] applicable by-law provisions may require earlier repayment.[6] It would appear in sum, therefore, that an abuse of the directors' discretion granted under the by-laws may be a predicate for judicial relief in the premises.

We look first, then, to Lake Region's by-laws. Article XIII thereof provides that contributions to reserves, in the nature of "loan capital," shall be separately indicated on the cooperative's books. We have already pointed out that when in any given year the association operates at a net loss, the loss is to be charged to the reserve account and the allocated accounts of patrons reduced accordingly on an equitable basis. It is further provided, however, that when there are profits the directors in their discretion may find the reserves to be "excessive" and, to that extent, the by-laws mandate that they are to apply such excess toward repayment of the oldest unexhausted reserve contributions. Additionally, of course, upon dissolution, reserves must be distributed ratably to patrons after other debts are retired.

Thus, the by-laws establish a hybrid indebtedness referred to as loan capital. Although *186 initially fixed in amount, the obligation may be reduced by financial losses intervening before repayment, or upon dissolution, by higher priority debts. Moreover, as to the oldest reserve contribution, the date and amount of repayment are uncertain since their liquidation depends upon the discretionary determination by the directors of excessiveness of reserves.

Now, it must be pointed out at this point that the appellants do not seek repayment herein of specific allocations; they seek only to force the cooperative to revolve its reserves which, incidentally, may well indeed result in repayment. Since, however, they do not allege that the directors have failed to apply any "excessive" reserves to repayment of past obligations, pinpointing a specific by-law mandate which requires present redemption is an elusive task. While appellants unquestionably have a right ultimately to repayment, the directors' discretionary business judgment necessarily determines not only the setting of charges which inevitably affects the accumulation of reserves to begin with, but also the point at which such reserves become excessive and thus amenable to redemption of those past obligations. Nevertheless, the testimony of Lake Region's incumbent chairman of the board and accountant conceded the existence of such a responsibility to redeem. Although not expressly required by the by-laws, such an obligation would be consistent with the general tenet that current patrons finance the cooperative's current operations. Moreover, we think it implicit in the scheme outlined by the by-laws that the directors may not frustrate the appellants' right to repayment by continually setting charges at a level too low to allow accumulation of "excessive" reserves.

On the other hand, it is obvious that the decision as to when and in what amounts repayments should be made must be made on a year to year basis.

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Related

Mitchellville Cooperative v. Indian Creek Corp.
469 N.W.2d 258 (Court of Appeals of Iowa, 1991)
Lake Region Packing Association v. Furze
327 So. 2d 212 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1976)

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