Hilo Coast Processing Company, and California and Hawaiian Sugar Co., Third Party v. The United States

816 F.2d 629, 1987 U.S. App. LEXIS 221
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedApril 14, 1987
DocketAppeal 86-681
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 816 F.2d 629 (Hilo Coast Processing Company, and California and Hawaiian Sugar Co., Third Party v. The United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hilo Coast Processing Company, and California and Hawaiian Sugar Co., Third Party v. The United States, 816 F.2d 629, 1987 U.S. App. LEXIS 221 (3d Cir. 1987).

Opinions

JACK R. MILLER, Senior Circuit Judge.

This appeal is from the Claims Court’s judgment filed September 20, 1985, ordering dismissal of plaintiffs’ complaint following the granting of defendant’s motion for summary judgment and the denial of plaintiffs’ like motion. We reverse and remand.

BACKGROUND

Claims Court’s Published Opinion (Jan. 8, 1985)

The first and only published report of this case is at 7 Cl.Ct. 175 (issued January 8, 1985), familiarity with which will be assumed because of the length of the opinion. Subsequent Claims Court orders and opinions are summarized and discussed in turn.

On January 8, 1985, on cross-motions for summary judgment, the Claims Court held that refusal by the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) to amend a regulation (providing for price support payments to growers of sugar cane) was arbitrary and capricious in view of its finding that different treatment was accorded similarly situated sugar cane growers. Intervening amendments to the regulation were found to have left plaintiffs singled out for special and seemingly unfair treatment. If any rational basis existed for allowing the economically irrelevant event of transferring raw sugar to refineries to trigger program coverage in the ease of Louisiana-based integrated processor-refiners (IPRs), but not in appellants’ case, the Claims Court declared that the Secretary of Agriculture’s rationale did not supply it.

Accordingly, the case was remanded to the Secretary to review and supplement the record as he saw fit to determine whether, unlike the IPRs, appellants (collectively “C & H”) could have pledged raw sugar under the 1977 loan program without disruption of C & H’s refining operations. If so, C & H had price supports available to it under the loan program and could not complain that it was excluded from participating in the payment program. (The IPRs were allowed to participate in the payment program because they effectively were unable to pledge sugar under the loan program.) The court instructed the Secretary to state [631]*631the reasons why plaintiffs should be treated differently from the IPRs.

Secretary’s Memorandum of Determination (April 12, 1985)

On April 12, 1986, the Secretary filed with the Claims Court a “MEMORANDUM OF DETERMINATION” in response to the court’s order. The rationale supplied by the Secretary is summarized below:

On November 8, 1977, after normal rule making procedures had been suspended, a loan program that replaced the earlier payment program was implemented. In accordance with legislative intent, the payment and loan program regulations were written so that, between the two programs, processors would have the opportunity to obtain price support for the entire 1977 crop. The definition of “marketing” under the payment program, which triggered eligibility for payments, did not include internal transfers of sugar from a processor to a refiner if the transfer occurred within an integrated processing and refining operation like C & H’s. Instead, payments to such entities were made when the refiner sold sugar to third parties. After the loan program was implemented in late 1977, several IPRs approached USDA officials and argued that the IPRs were at an unfair competitive disadvantage (under the payment program) with other non-integrated Louisiana processors that were eligible for payments for sugar sold to refineries before November 8, 1977. In response, the officials orally advised the IPRs that their internal transfers of raw sugar would be considered “marketing,” and would thus be eligible for payments.

Earlier, an internal USDA memo had recognized that the loan program’s rapid implementation had left sugar committed for sale but not sold by November 8, 1977 without any form of price support. (Because sugar had to be pledged to the government to secure a loan, sugar under commitment but not yet sold was not available for use under the loan program.) The memo suggested that payment program regulations should be amended to make sugar committed but not sold by November 8,1977 eligible for payments. This suggestion was adopted in late December when the regulations covering non-integrated processors were amended to “cover” the “gap” in sugar price supports. Although the memo and amendment did not address vertically-integrated processors, USDA’s advice to the IPRs was based on the conclusion that the commitment of sugar to their refineries was analogous to sugar committed but not sold by non-integrated processors. After this advice was given, the price support programs for the 1977 crop were audited by the USDA Inspector General, who recommended that USDA seek to recover from the IPRs substantially all of the payments made to them under the payment program. According to the Inspector General, these payments were unauthorized and inconsistent with regulations.

USDA sought concurrence of the General Accounting Office (GAO) in amending the 1977 payment program regulations to retroactively authorize the payments made to the IPRs. Without the retroactive amendments, it was said that USDA would be compelled to seek return of price support payments from the IPRs.

The basis of USDA’s position was that the IPRs had reasonably relied on advice of USDA officials, and to renege on that advice, after the payment program had ended in late 1977, would have effectively denied price support to the IPRs for a portion of the 1977 crop. This, it was argued, would be inconsistent with Congressional intent.

The Comptroller General concurred—provided the Secretary determined that, absent such retroactive amendments, there would be an effective denial of price support for a portion of the 1977 crop. So finding, USDA retroactively amended the payment program regulations on July 22, 1980, to conform them with the oral advice given by USDA officials to the IPRs in late 1977. However, under the terms of the amendment, C & H was still excluded from participating.

When the amendment was published, C & H petitioned USDA to amend the 1977 payment program regulations again to cov[632]*632er the Hawaiian sugar industry under the definition of “marketing” so that, much like the IPRs, the contractual marketing arrangement between Hawaiian processors and C & H would be considered a marketing. This would have effectively accelerated the marketing of Hawaiian sugar so that the portion of the Hawaiian sugar crop committed to C & H’s refineries (and thus not available for use in the loan program) but not yet sold on November 8, 1977 would have been covered by the payment program. USDA rejected the petition.

According to the Secretary, the issue was whether there was an effective denial of price support to the Hawaiian sugar industry for that portion of the 1977 crop which was not eligible for the payment program under existing regulations. The Secretary found that C & H could have participated in the loan program, although C & H would have been required to divert raw sugar from its refinery operations and/or import foreign raw sugar for such operations in order to participate. The same was true of the IPRs, but the Secretary concluded that this, alone, did not make the IPRs and C & H “similarly situated” for purposes of the 1977 payment program.

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Related

Golightly v. Yeutter
780 F. Supp. 672 (D. Arizona, 1991)
Krzeminski v. United States
13 Cl. Ct. 430 (Court of Claims, 1987)

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816 F.2d 629, 1987 U.S. App. LEXIS 221, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hilo-coast-processing-company-and-california-and-hawaiian-sugar-co-third-ca3-1987.