Heart of America Grain Inspection Service, Inc. v. Missouri Department of Agriculture

123 F.3d 1098
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedAugust 26, 1997
Docket96-3249, 96-3263
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 123 F.3d 1098 (Heart of America Grain Inspection Service, Inc. v. Missouri Department of Agriculture) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Heart of America Grain Inspection Service, Inc. v. Missouri Department of Agriculture, 123 F.3d 1098 (8th Cir. 1997).

Opinion

BOWMAN, Circuit Judge.

The Missouri Department of Agriculture, ex rel John L. Saunders, Director, Missouri Department of Agriculture (the Department); Stephen Bell; and Tommy D. Hopkins appeal from an order of the District Court 2 granting summary judgment to Heart of America Grain Inspection Service Inc., Thomas J. Clatanoff, Jack L. Covey, Stephen E. Plummer, and Monty M. Uptegrove (collectively, HOA) on HOA’s counterclaim for *1101 declaratory and injunctive relief, and denying summary judgment to the Department on its own claim for declaratory and injunctive relief. HOA cross appeals from a number of decisions adverse to it. We affirm.

I.

In 1992, HOA (some of whose employees were employed by the Department before joining HOA) was performing grain weighing, grading, and inspection services in grain warehouses in the Kansas City area that were licensed under the United States Warehouse Act, 7 U.S.C. §§ 241-73 (1994) (the USWA or the Act). Among other services, HOA provided Class II certified weights. Such weights are a grain industry standard (not a matter of federal or state law) and are obtained by a licensed weigher, using an approved scale, under twenty-five per cent supervision by a disinterested third party. HOA and the Department both offered Class II certification services in 1992, that is, they provided the supervisory, disinterested third party. HOA provided this service under authority of the Association of American Railroads, a trade group, and in October 1992 individuals working for HOA received federal licenses under the USWA (after the Department notified the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) of HOA’s grain certification activities).

In September 1992, the Department sent a letter to the grain industry over the signatures of Hopkins, who was then (and was from November 1981 through June 1994) the Division Director of Grain Inspection and Warehousing for the Department, and Mark Weaver, an assistant state attorney general. The letter related the Department’s position that it had the exclusive right (subject to the rights of grain exchanges and boards of trade) to weigh and supervise the weighing of grain in all warehouses in the state of Missouri. The Department relied for its authority on the Missouri Grain Warehouse Law (the MGWL):

The department shall have the exclusive right to officially weigh or supervise the actual weighing of grain in licensed terminal warehouses subject to the provisions of this chapter, unless the owner or his agent indicates that no official weights are desired and may officially weigh or supervise the actual weighing of grain in public or private warehouses or industries upon application of the owners or operators thereof and their agreement to guarantee the operating costs.

Mo.Rev.Stat. § 411.030.2 (1986). In the Department’s view, or so it now claims, this statute gave the Department the sole right (with the exceptions we have noted above) to certify Class II grain weights. The Department took this position, even as to warehouses licensed under the USWA, notwithstanding two other sections of the MGWL. The first, concerning the scope of the MGWL, stated, “The provisions of the [MGWL] shall apply to all warehouses located within the state of Missouri not licensed under the provisions of the [USWA].” Id. § 411.015 (1986). The other relevant section provided:

This chapter shall not apply in any respect whatsoever to that part of any operation of any public or private warehouse, elevator, or structure in this state operating under a federal warehouse act, except as such warehouseman may make application for any of the services of the Missouri grain warehouse department, nor shall this chapter prohibit, infringe, or apply to any weighing or weighing supervision in or in connection with a federally licensed warehouse performed by any grain exchange or board of trade.

Id. § 411.681 (1986).

In 1993, the Department found it necessary to revise its regulations to reflect its position on the certification of grain weights. Also, during the 1993 Missouri legislative session, sections 411.015 and 411.681 were revised to eliminate the portions of those sections that prohibited state regulation of federally licensed warehouses. 3

On August 2, 1993, HOA filed a complaint in the District Court seeking a declaratory *1102 judgment and injunctive relief against the Department (Count I), and challenging certain actions taken by Hopkins and Bell as tortious interference with HOA’s business relationships (Count II) and as violations of HOA’s rights under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 (1994) (Count III). The Department then filed suit in Missouri state court seeking an injunction against HOA, which responded with a counterclaim in three counts, essentially reproducing its federal claims. The Department’s suit was removed to federal court and consolidated with HOA’s suit.

On July 21, 1994, the Department as a state agency was dismissed from HOA’s suit on Eleventh Amendment grounds. On January 25, 1995, HOA’s claim against Hopkins for declaratory and injunctive relief (Count I) was dismissed because he was no longer an employee of the Department. The District Court also granted summary judgment to Hopkins on HOA’s Count II, tortious interference with business relationships, concluding that Hopkins was entitled to official immunity because sending the September 1992 letter was a discretionary act. In January 1996, the court granted Hopkins summary judgment on HOA’s § 1983 claim (Count III), concluding that he was entitled to qualified immunity. Finally, on July 3,1996, Bell, who was responsible for administering the Department’s grain inspection program when HOA’s claims were made, was granted summary judgment on all three counts: on Count I because he had no policy-making authority at the time the summary judgment was granted, on Count II because of privilege, and on Count III because of qualified immunity. The court granted summary judgment to HOA, however, on Count I of its counterclaim against the Department ex rel Saunders for declaratory and injunctive relief, having determined that the state law at issue was preempted by federal law.

The Department appeals, challenging the standing of the HOA individual plaintiffs to bring suit and the District Court’s decision on preemption. HOA cross appeals, challenging all of the court’s decisions adverse to HOA (except for the Eleventh Amendment dismissal of the Department and the dismissal of Count I as to Hopkins and Bell), and further claiming that the court erred in denying HOA’s motion to compel discovery of certain Department files. We affirm.

II.

The Department argues that the individual HOA plaintiffs are without standing to sue, and that the District Court erred by not dismissing them. According to the Department, the claims of the individual plaintiffs are merely derivative of the corporation’s claims. We reject this argument.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
123 F.3d 1098, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/heart-of-america-grain-inspection-service-inc-v-missouri-department-of-ca8-1997.