Gold Dollar Warehouse, Inc. v. Glickman

211 F.3d 93, 2000 WL 376148
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedApril 13, 2000
Docket98-2461, 98-2491
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 211 F.3d 93 (Gold Dollar Warehouse, Inc. v. Glickman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gold Dollar Warehouse, Inc. v. Glickman, 211 F.3d 93, 2000 WL 376148 (4th Cir. 2000).

Opinion

Affirmed in part, reversed in part, and remanded with instructions by published opinion. Judge LUTTIG wrote the opinion, in which Judge MURNAGHAN and Judge DIANA GRIBBON MOTZ joined.

OPINION

LUTTIG, Circuit Judge:

Appellants tobacco warehouses appeal from the district court’s dismissal, for failure to state a claim, of their challenge to appellee United States Department of Agriculture’s (“USDA”) 1 assessment of penalties. The USDA cross-appeals from the district court’s rejection of its argument that the district court lacked subject matter jurisdiction over the dispute because the warehouses had not exhausted their administrative remedies; from the district court’s declaratory judgment that the USDA may not assess penalties for activities that occurred outside a five-year statute of limitations period; and from the district court’s permanent injunction prohibiting the USDA from enforcing penalties that would violate the statute of limitations.

For the reasons that follow, we affirm the district court’s dismissal of one of the warehouses’ claims. We hold, however,. *95 that the warehouses were required to complete their administrative appeal before bringing two of their other claims in federal court, and therefore that the district court lacked subject matter jurisdiction over those claims. Accordingly, we affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand with instructions to dismiss the claims that require exhaustion.

I.

The warehouses participate in the USDA’s tobacco regulatory scheme. Under this scheme, the USDA sets quotas to limit the amount of tobacco individual farmers, or producers, are permitted to sell without losing their price protection from the government. Any excess tobacco over the quota limit that is sold by a producer is subject to a tobacco marketing quota (“TMQ”) penalty of seventy-five percent of the market price of the tobacco. 2 Recognizing that excess tobacco continues to be sold without anyone paying the TMQ penalties, the USDA has promulgated regulations over the years that extend the responsibility for paying the TMQ penalties to agents other than the producers.

There are three primary players in the sale of tobacco — -producers, dealers, and warehouses. Producers can auction their “producer tobacco” to dealers through auction on warehouse floors or through non-auction sales to dealers, and all of their sales are required by the USDA to be recorded on producer “cards,” which indicate the amount of the producer’s quota that has been sold. Once the producer tobacco has been sold by some means to a dealer, it becomes “resale tobacco” and can either be sold from dealer to dealer or through auction on a warehouse floor. Dealers also maintain dealer cards to record their purchases and sales so that the USDA can verify that they have not sold more than they recorded that they purchased. By 1992, the USDA extended liability for unpaid TMQ penalties to “[a] dealer or warehouse operator who permits [a person who owes TMQ penalties] to use such dealer’s or warehouse operator’s identification card to market tobacco.” 7 C.F.R. § 723.311(d)(2).

The plaintiffs in this case are warehouses that were notified on August 4, 1997, by letters from the USDA that they were being assessed for unpaid TMQ penalties from sales of excess tobacco in 1990, 1991, and 1992. In relevant part, the letters from the USDA read as follows:

This determination and resulting assessment arises out of an investigation of fraud and other illegal activity in the flue-cured tobacco program for the 1990-1992 marketing years by tobacco dealers, warehouse operators and others....
This investigation revealed, in a number of cases, a scheme to market excess tobacco. Generally, a tobacco dealer or other person familiar with tobacco auction warehouses and their operation would solicit persons to act as bogus dealers and those bogus dealers would obtain a tobacco dealer registration card and record books.... The “true” dealer would then use the bogus dealer registration number and [book] to make false records and reports of purchases of tobacco from the bogus dealer to the “true” dealer that would then be used to *96 sell excess tobacco of local producers at auction warehouses....
These arrangements in the schemes set forth above effectively amounted to a first marketing of the producer tobacco on the floor of the warehouse, but under the guise of the tobacco being tobacco which belonged to . the dealers [i.e. dealer tobacco].

J.A. 35-37, 49-51 (emphasis added). The warehouses, which are requirfed by the USDA to sell dealers’ resale tobacco, contend that, to the contrary, they went above and beyond to ensure that dealers were legitimate and that they did not in any way collude to sell excess producer tobacco without paying the TMQ penalties.

The warehouses appealed the assessments within the agency, which appeal was stayed pending the result of a civil false claims action. J.A. 42, 56. Following the stay of their appeal, the warehouses filed the present action in the district court for a declaratory judgment that the USDA lacked statutory authority to assess TMQ penalties against them; for a declaratory judgment that the USDA’s assessments of any penalties due before August 4, 1992, were time-barred by the five-year statute of limitations in 28 U.S.C. § 2462; 3 and for injunctions preventing the USDA from enforcing any assessments, or in the alternative, any assessments for penalties due before August 4,1992.

The district court held that no administrative remedy was available to the plaintiffs for their challenge to the regulations and therefore rejected the USDA’s argument that the court lacked subject matter jurisdiction because the warehouses had not exhausted administrative remedies. J.A. 226-31. The court also granted the warehouses’ request for a declaratory judgment that the USDA could not enforce penalties due before August 4, 1992, and permanently enjoined the USDA from collecting those penalties. J.A. 244. However, the court denied the warehouses’ request for a declaratory judgment nullifying the USDA regulations, and granted the USDA’s motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim, because there was no set of facts that would entitle the warehouses to relief on their claim that the USDA regulations exceeded its statutory authority. J.A. 231-38. The warehouses appealed and the USDA cross-appealed.

II.

We address first the question of whether the district court properly exercised subject matter jurisdiction over this dispute. We conclude, for the reasons recited below, that the district court properly exercised subject matter jurisdiction over one of the claims made by the warehouses but improperly exercised jurisdiction over two other of the warehouses’ claims.

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Bluebook (online)
211 F.3d 93, 2000 WL 376148, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gold-dollar-warehouse-inc-v-glickman-ca4-2000.