Georgia Vegetable Co., Inc. v. Joseph A. Relan, D/B/A Relan Produce Farms

731 F.2d 798, 1984 U.S. App. LEXIS 22772
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedMay 7, 1984
Docket83-8284
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 731 F.2d 798 (Georgia Vegetable Co., Inc. v. Joseph A. Relan, D/B/A Relan Produce Farms) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Georgia Vegetable Co., Inc. v. Joseph A. Relan, D/B/A Relan Produce Farms, 731 F.2d 798, 1984 U.S. App. LEXIS 22772 (11th Cir. 1984).

Opinion

TUTTLE, Senior Circuit Judge:

We have here on appeal a judgment in a non-jury trial setting aside a reparation order by the Secretary of Agriculture to the shipper of perishable vegetables under the provision of the Perishable Agricultural Commodities Act, 7 U.S.C. § 499f. This statute, enacted in 1930, provides for the licensing of persons engaged in the business of buying or selling perishable commodities in interstate commerce. It also outlines certain courses of conduct as being unlawful, and then authorizes the issuance of regulations the better to carry the legislation into effect.

Among the provisions in the statute is § 499e providing that liabilities for violations of the Act may be enforced by complaint to the Secretary followed by de novo appeal to the appropriate district court.

The complaint related to three shipments by Joseph A. Reían doing business as Re-ían Produce Farms of Amite, Louisiana, to Georgia Vegetable Company of Tifton, Georgia. For convenience we will designate these shipments as Nos. 1, 2, and 3. The Secretary made findings of fact concerning these three shipments, a part of which included the following:

Shipment 1: On or about June 26, 1980, the parties entered into an agreement whereby respondent (Georgia Vegetable) was to sell for complainant’s account one lot of green peppers. On that date complainant shipped from a Louisiana loading point one truckload of green peppers consisting of 1,102 cartons of large U.S. No. 1 peppers and 200 cartons of medium U.S. No. 2 peppers. The truck contain *800 ing these peppers arrived at respondent’s place of business at an unknown time and date.
The peppers on this truck were received and accepted by respondent, and sold by respondent on or about June 28, 1981, to buyers in Georgia, North Carolina, Kansas City and Houston. Respondent remitted a total of $7526.70 to complainant for 802 cartons of large and 200 cartons of medium peppers sold, leaving 300 cartons of large peppers unaccounted for.
Shipment 2: On June 30, 1980 complainant and respondent entered into an oral contract for the sale by complainant and purchase by respondent of another truckload of peppers at a price of $9.50 per carton delivered to Tifton, Georgia. On that date, complainant loaded and shipped from a loading point in the State of Louisiana one truckload of peppers consisting of 1,064 cartons of large U.S. No. l’s conforming to the contract.
This June 30, 1980 shipment reached the respondent’s place of business in Tif-ton, Georgia at an unknown time and date and was received and accepted by respondent.
Respondent has remitted $5,006 to complainant for this lot of peppers, leaving a balance due of $5,102.
Shipment No. 3: On June 26, 1980 the parties entered into an oral contract for the sale of one truckload of peppers, to be delivered to respondent’s customer Castellini in Cincinnati, Ohio. Under this contract the price is $9.25 per carton for large U.S. No. 1 peppers, and $5.50 per carton for medium U.S. No. 2 peppers, delivered. On that same date, complainant loaded out from its Louisiana loading point 903 cartons of large U.S. No. 1 peppers and 290 cartons of medium U.S. No. 2 peppers into a truck operated by Walker Truck Lines, Mississippi License 2471.
That truck arrived in Cincinnati at an unknown time and date. It was received and accepted by respondent’s customer in Cincinnati, but at that time the customer expressed some doubt about the product by telephone to respondent in Georgia and also to complainant. Complainant asked for a federal inspection, but this was not obtained.
At an unknown time and date, respondent remitted to complainant the amount of $6,132.25, leaving a balance of $3,815.50.

For reasons, differing with respect to each of the three shipments, as discussed below, the Secretary entered a reparations order in favor of Reían for the sum of $14,461.68 with interest.

In its suit to set aside the reparations order, Georgia Vegetable challenged the facts as found by the Secretary and, without making any mention of the regulations issued under § 499e, asserted, in general terms, that the transactions had all been handled in accordance with a custom which had grown up between the parties over a period of some 15 years of dealings. It also alleged that the stated custom between these parties had in fact become a custom of the trade, which should control the relations between the parties.

On his part, Reían seeks to have us hold that a custom of dealing between the parties could not constitute a waiver or estop-pel against his relying upon the regulations and that a custom of the, trade could not prevent him from relying upon the regulations. Because of the specific findings by the Secretary, Relan’s express request in his defensive pleadings in the district court action that the court affirm in full the action of the Secretary, and the failure of Reían to file a cross-appeal complaining of the failure of the Secretary to base his findings on the failure of Georgia Vegetable to comply with other regulations, not specified by the Secretary, we conclude that we do not reach these issues.

In his responsive pleading, appellant Re-ían dealt with each shipment separately and after asserting factual matters with respect to each concluded with the following statement: “By way of further answer the respondent adopts and incorporates the findings and conclusions of the Secretary *801 of Agriculture and prays that they adopted and affirmed by this court.” In addition, under the heading “Argument” in the defensive pleading, he stated again: “The respondent adopts and incorporates the findings and conclusions of the Secretary of Agriculture (as they appear in Exhibits B and C) and prays that the findings of said judicial officer be adopted and affirmed by this court.” Thus, four times in his defensive pleading, appellant made it plain that the decision of the Secretary, and the basis for the decision was adopted by him as his stated position in the district court hearing. be

Now, on appeal, Reían cites a number of regulations as codified generally under 7 C.F.R. 46.2 et seq. 1 The problem facing appellant here is that the Secretary based none of his awards in his reparation order on either of these regulations. Thus, the district court was not put on notice of the fact that they were involved in the case to be tried by it. A careful reading of the entire transcript of the trial makes it clear that at no time was the trial court expressly put on notice of the contentions of the appellant that the failure of Georgia Vegetable Company to comply with either of these regulations entitled Reían to have the Secretary’s order affirmed.

The standard of review before the district court was established by the statute: “Such suit in the district court shall be a trial de novo

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Bluebook (online)
731 F.2d 798, 1984 U.S. App. LEXIS 22772, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/georgia-vegetable-co-inc-v-joseph-a-relan-dba-relan-produce-farms-ca11-1984.