Gibbs v. Milk Control Board

196 S.E. 791, 185 Ga. 844, 1938 Ga. LEXIS 546
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedMarch 16, 1938
DocketNo. 12132
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 196 S.E. 791 (Gibbs v. Milk Control Board) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gibbs v. Milk Control Board, 196 S.E. 791, 185 Ga. 844, 1938 Ga. LEXIS 546 (Ga. 1938).

Opinions

Hutcheson, Justice.

G. "W. Gibbs, resident of Columbia County, and L. O. Johnson, a resident of Richmond County, brought their petition against the Milk-Control Board of Georgia, alleging substantially as follows: Pursuant to the “milk-control act” approved March 30, 1937 (Ga. L. 1937, pp. 247 et seq.), the board designated Richmond County as a “milk-shed,” and thereafter held an election provided for under the act, for the purpose of determining whether the act should be made applicable in such milk-shed. At the election so held on April 22, 1937 the vote was 24 for adoption and 48 against adoption of the act, and the board so declared the result. Plaintiffs are advised that the board, without any petition therefor, has advertised notice of another election to be held on September 13, 1937. The board is without any authority under the act to call another election after the first; under the act the first election was final and no other election can be had. The board threatens to put the act in force notwithstanding the rejection in the first election, and to control the milk business, including that of plaintiffs and others similarly situated. Plaintiffs are respectively a wholesale milk producer and a producer-distributor as defined in the act, and are both duly licensed milk producers in the milk-shed. Such action by the board will bring great confusion in the milk business and operate greatly to the disadvantage of plaintiffs and others similarly situated, increase the cost of milk [845]*845to consumers without any corresponding advantage to them, and deny to the plaintiffs and other operators the equal protection of the law, as the act exempts producers with six cows or less. The prayers were for injunction restraining holding of the election and enforcement of the act, and for general relief. By amendment plaintiffs allege that they are taxpayers in the milk-shed, and have paid taxes and license fees to carry on their milk business, and are so doing under rules and regulations of force in the county as promulgated by the Board of Health of the City of Augusta and Richmond County. Plaintiffs have arranged their business and its attendant expense in view of the unfavorable election held on April 22, 1937, and said board is now estopped to assert to the contrary and to seek to ignore and set aside its own final declaration of the results of that election. The action of the board has brought and' will bring about great confusion and increased expense in the milk business, will subject citizens and taxpayers including petitioners to irreparable loss and damage and cause a multiplicity of suits. A great part of this confusion and damage has been brought about by the action of a named individual, a member of the board. Such individual is a large producer and distributor in the milk-shed, and since the election of April 22, in order to increase the confusion, he has lowered the prices of milk to the loss and damage of plaintiffs, and is using his position on the board to bring about such confusion, and has persuaded the milk board to try to have another election in the milk-shed, contrary to the interest of plaintiffs. The board now seeks to create a milk-control fund under section 17 of the act, all at the expense of plaintiffs and other milk dealers, and by increased license fees, charges, fines, etc., none of which they have any legal power to impose in the milk-shed, all to the irreparable damage of plaintiffs. Plaintiffs attack the act as unconstitutional and void, in that it is not impartial and complete but arbitrary and unreasonable, and denies to the plaintiffs the equal protection of the law, contrary to art. 7, sec. 2, par. 1, and art. 1, sec. 1, par. 2, of the constitution of the State, and the fourteenth amendment of the constitution of the United States, because said act makes an arbitrary and unreasonable classification of the milk business, operates oppressively against plaintiffs and their property and business by making said act applicable to those who have more than six cows, which petitioners have, and inapplicable to all producers with less than six cows.

[846]*846At interlocutory hearing the plaintiffs introduced an affidavit of W. R. McDonald, manager of the Farmer’s Co-operative Creamery in Augusta, stating that in Atlanta the retail prices fixed by the board have been increased without resulting in any additional benefit; that the operation of the law furnishes no additional protection or safeguard in the way of health regulation, nor does it fix any butterfat standards that would increase the value of the product sold, and that as a result the sale of milk in Atlanta has been greatly curtailed to the hurt and damage of retail distributors, actually making it necessary to dump hundreds of gallons of surplus milk in the sewers; that such curtailment in consumption has caused greater confusion, and has resulted, by reason of the rules promulgated by the board, in actual violation of the statute. An affidavit by J. W. McDonald and G. W. Gibbs pertained to the activities of the individual referred to in the petition in creating a price war, and to the averment that the adoption of the act will give him a monopoly in the milk business in the milk-shed, and to other matters not material to the questions presented for decision. The defendants proved that the election complained of was called upon petition presented to the board and signed by thirty-eight producers, producer-distributors, and distributors.

Section 5 of the milk-control act declares: “Upon its organization, the board shall designate natural marketing areas within the State, each of which shall constitute a milk-shed, and the board may, from time to time thereafter, designate additional milk-sheds or combine two or more milk-sheds in which this act is effective. After the designation of any milk-shed and upon petition to the board therefor, the board shall hold an election within such milk-shed to determine whether or not the provisions of this act shall be made applicable within such milk-shed. Each producer, producer-distributor, and distributor having a municipal or county permit to sell milk within the milk-shed shall be entitled to one vote - only. If in any such election a majority of the votes cast shall be favorable thereto, the provisions of this act shall thereupon apply within such milk-shed, and shall remain in force throughout the remaining life of this act. The board shall advertise each such election and make reasonable rules governing the conducting thereof. The decision of the board as to the results of any such election shall be final, but the provisions of this act shall not apply [847]*847within any part of this State except within any milk-shed wherein a favorable election had been held as provided in this section.” The question is whether, under the language of this section, a second election may be had after a first election against adoption of the act. In Supervisors v. Galgraith, 99 U. S. 214 (25 L. ed. 410), the following portion of a statute of the State of Mississippi, authorizing a named county to subscribe to the stock of a railroad company, was under consideration: "Provided, however, that an election shall be held in the county for and on account of which stock is proposed to be subscribed by the qualified electors thereof, at the regular precincts of said county, twenty days notice of the time of holding such election, and of the amount proposed to be subscribed; . . and if at said election a majority of the qualified electors voting shall be in favor of such subscription, then said board [of police] shall make such subscription; . .

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Bluebook (online)
196 S.E. 791, 185 Ga. 844, 1938 Ga. LEXIS 546, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gibbs-v-milk-control-board-ga-1938.