Galloway v. Hood's Milk, Inc.

154 So. 2d 852, 1963 Fla. App. LEXIS 3341
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedJune 19, 1963
DocketNo. 3274
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 154 So. 2d 852 (Galloway v. Hood's Milk, 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
Galloway v. Hood's Milk, Inc., 154 So. 2d 852, 1963 Fla. App. LEXIS 3341 (Fla. Ct. App. 1963).

Opinions

CARROLL, CPIARLES, Associate Judge.

This is an appeal from a final decree in an equity suit in Pinellas County, in a companion case to appeal Galloway v. Musgrave, Fla.App.1963, 154 So.2d 846.

Flood’s Milk, Inc., as a stakeholder, filed this interpleader suit against appellants B. P. Galloway and John Holton and against the appellee D. L. Musgrave. The court granted interpleader and determined the rights of the defendants respectively in the fund and as to the milk base involved. In a full and informative final decree the able chancellor traced the history and course of the litigation, found the facts and determined the applicable law. The issues and questions involved on the appeal may best be stated by quoting the decree from which the appeal it taken, which is as follows:

“This cause is an action of inter-pleader filed by a milk distributor praying for final determination of a dispute existing between three of its producers as to ownership of a certain fund of money being held by the distributor arising from Plaintiff’s purchase of milk. Issue was joined upon counter-claims, cross-claims and replies thereto of the several defendants and all pleadings taken together made it apparent that the relief prayed for by Plaintiff would result automatically from adjudication of ownership of a certain milk base with Plaintiff, held at divers times by Defendants Mus-grave and Galloway and raised by pleadings of the parties defendant.
[853]*853“Upon final hearing, considering all testimony, exhibits and evidence presented, the following facts were found to be the basis of the dispute before this Court:
“Defendant Musgrave earned an 8.-183% milk base with his dairy herd in the year 1960, subsequently sold the said herd with its milk base to Defendant Galloway and accepted as part of the purchase price a promissory note secured by chattel mortgage encumbering the cattle sold and other security. On May 15, 1961, Defendant Musgrave filed his foreclosure suit upon that mortgage in the Thirteenth Circuit for Hillsborough County, alleging several defaults of Defendant Galloway including failure to pay money due upon the note and mortgage and sale of some of the mortgaged cattle without the mortgagee’s consent. Final Decree of foreclosure on the 133 remaining of the 460 animals sold by him in 1960 to Defendant B. P. Galloway was entered in favor of D. L. Musgrave on November 3, 1961. There was simultaneously litigated in the same Court a foreclosure suit by The First National Bank in St. Petersburg upon another herd of dairy cattle owned by Defendant Galloway and The First National Bank was also granted foreclosure decree on November 3, 1961.
“During the course of that litigation, the Court finding a commingling of the two herds making certain identity not possible, Mr. Musgrave, as assignee of the First National Bank mortgage as well as holder of his own mortgage took possession of all cattle owned by Defendant Galloway pursuant to Interim Order of Court dated August 1, 1961, and founded upon Chapter 699.09, Florida Statutes, 1959. [F.S.A.]. Thereupon Mr. Musgrave commenced selling milk from the two herds to Plaintiff, Hood’s Milk, Inc.
“About September 1, 1961, Defendant Musgrave began acquiring additional cattle and has given as his reasons therefor that milk production of the remnant of his herd security had drastically reduced in volume and that it was essential to produce additional milk during the November-January base earning period in order to avoid cancellation of the milk base. Thus, from September 1961 to the present, Mr. Musgrave sold increasingly greater amounts of milk to Plaintiff. At the November 14, 1961 foreclosure sale Mr. Musgrave bid on and purchased all cattle remaining of those originally sold by him to Mr. Galloway and Certificate of Title thereto issued by the Clerk of the Circuit Court for the Thirteenth Judicial Circuit for Hills-borough County is dated December 5, 1961. Mr. Musgrave continued selling milk from the herd which he purchased at foreclosure sale plus the above-described additional cattle acquired on or after September 1, 1961. Defendant Galloway redeemed the 72 animals subject to The First National Bank mortgage and on November 14, 1961 gave to Defendant Plolten a bill of sale purporting to sell the redeemed animals and a 2.874% milk base with Plaintiff. The animals remained with Defendant Galloway, who sold their milk to Plaintiff and Defendant Hol-ten, who had greater milk production than base, sold his surplus milk to Plaintiff, claiming right to Class I price under the 2.874% base mentioned in the Galloway bill of sale. Thus, from a time shortly after foreclosure sale all three defendants sold milk to the Plaintiff purportedly under the same milk base.
“It is uncontroverted that the mortgage, referring to a dairy herd or “milch cows,” does not specifically describe a milk base and the Final Decree of Foreclosure makes no reference to milk base. Defendant Musgrave’s position is that the milk base is an inseparable, incidental right of ownership of the herd which earned it, sub[854]*854ject to ultimate control only by the Florida Milk Commission. Defendant Galloway argues that it is a severable property right which he retained after foreclosure sale. . Defendant Holten claims under Defendant Galloway and takes only subject to whatever rights Mr. Galloway may have. The milk base referred to is a form of license which apparently greatly exceeds in value the actual market value of the herd which earns the base.
“Defendants Musgrave and Galloway represented by the same counsel who appeared as their attorneys of record in this cause, appeared before the Florida Milk Commission in public hearing on two occasions. As a result of the August 30, 1961 hearing a ruling was adopted by that agency declaring that ‘in this instant case (Musgrave v. Galloway) the initial base shall follow the custodian of this specified herd however that custodianship might be designated by the Court.’ The December 13, 1961 hearing resulted in an order or ruling of the Florida Milk Commission declaring Mr. Musgrave to be owner of the entire milk base as of the date of foreclosure sale.
“Thereupon Defendant Galloway sued in the Second Circuit to enjoin the Florida Milk Commission from carrying out its decision, joining as parties defendant the Administrator and members of the Commission but not D. L. Musgrave. That Court found the Florida Milk Commission to be without authority to make such an award, granted the injunction and declared that ‘the only way for (the dispute between D. L. Musgrave and B. P. Galloway) to be determined is by a proceeding in which the contesting parties, B. P. Galloway, D. L. Mus-grave and Flood’s Milk, Inc, are parties.’ Defendant Musgrave argues that the Florida Milk Commission, by reason of quasi-judicial powers of that agency granted by Chapters 501 and 120, Florida Statutes, 1961, did have the power to enter its December 13, 1961 order and that the same is a Final Order equal in dignity to that of a court of general jurisdiction of this State, that the same has not been appealed and is res judicata as to this-cause; or in the alternative the said order is at the least a valid and binding award resulting from a common law arbitration; and has prayed for this Court to declare the Final Decree-entered January 22, 1962 by the Circuit Court of the Second Judicial Circuit for Leon County to be a void decree as to any effect it may have upon his property rights, not having been made a party to that cause.

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Bluebook (online)
154 So. 2d 852, 1963 Fla. App. LEXIS 3341, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/galloway-v-hoods-milk-inc-fladistctapp-1963.