Kincaid v. United States

96 F. Supp. 468, 119 Ct. Cl. 257, 1951 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 32
CourtUnited States Court of Claims
DecidedApril 3, 1951
DocketNo. 45700
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 96 F. Supp. 468 (Kincaid v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Court of Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kincaid v. United States, 96 F. Supp. 468, 119 Ct. Cl. 257, 1951 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 32 (cc 1951).

Opinion

JoNES, Chief Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

This is a suit by plaintiff for payments alleged to be due for the year 1939 under the Soil Conservation and Price Adjustment Programs.

The defendant denies liability and in a counterclaim asks for a judgment against plaintiff for penalties for alleged marketing of cotton in the years 1941-1943 in excess of the marketing quotas allotted to him for those years.

The law provided a double-barrelled program. It was built around soil conservation under the AAA Act of 1938.1 Its declaration of purpose stated that it was enacted

for the purpose of conserving national resources, preventing the wasteful use of soil fertility, and of preserving, maintaining, and rebuilding the farm and ranch land resources in the national public interest; to accomplish these purposes through the encouragement of soil-building and soil-conserving crops and practices; to assist in the marketing of agricultural commodities for domestic consumption and for export; * * * assisting farmers to obtain * * * parity prices * * * assisting consumers to obtain an adequate and steady supply of such commodities at fair prices.

Farmers who complied with the program were entitled to two kinds of payments. One was for holding soil-depleting crops to an amount not in excess of their allotted acreages, and for preserving and rebuilding the soil on the excess acres through. soil-conserving and soil-building crops and practices. The other type was that of parity payments, which, when funds were available, were made to those farmers who were in compliance.

The programs were handled by and through national and regional officers and state, county, and community committees.

Plaintiff leased approximately 1,450 acres of land in Missouri at a cash rental price of $10 per acre from Lee Wilson and Company. He then proceeded to operate this leased [284]*284acreage through, tenants and share croppers. The usual distinction between a tenant and a share cropper is that ordinarily a tenant furnishes his own equipment and essential livestock, and usually pays the landlord one-fourth of the production and keeps three-fourths. The term of share cropper usually applies to the relationship when the landlord furnishes the tools, equipment, and essential livestock, and the production is divided half and half.

In the regular way plaintiff was notified that his allotment of cotton, which was a soil-depleting crop, would be 557 acres.

Through the county office plaintiff was furnished a worksheet by which he was advised that the parity payments to be made that year would be 1.6 cents per pound. The soil payments were to be two cents per pound. He was also told in writing to be certain to list every person growing cotton on his farm that year, whether renter, cropper, or “person working by the day for a certain acreage of cotton instead of for wages,” and to furnish the approximate acreage of cotton and the share of each tenant; and that the tenant’s signature should be furnished in connection with the worksheet. There were blanks at the bottom of the sheet for the names of the tenants and for their signatures. As completed and reported by the plaintiff, the worksheet named four share croppers who were to operate a total of 51 acres, and plaintiff named himself as the operator of 506 acres.

The two types of payments were to be divided between landlords, tenants and share croppers on the basis of their respective shares of the cotton produced.

Later the county committee ascertained that instead of having only four share croppers, the plaintiff was operating through 23 tenants and share croppers. He was required to secure their signatures and the addition of these 19 names materially reduced the amount of the payments to be made to the plaintiff.

After the signing of the application the county office computed the amount of the two types of payments under the Soil Conservation Program and the Price Adjustment Program as totaling $6,096.43.

The regulations governing the payments provided that all [285]*285or any part of the payments might be withheld (1) if the land was overplanted in a soil-depleting crop or (2) if the applicant adopted any practice which the Secretary determined would tend to defeat any of the provisions of the Price Adjustment Program.

Among the things that the Secretary determined would tend to defeat the program was any side oral or written agreement by which the landlord was to receive more than his share of the payment, or was to be paid directly or indirectly any portion of the payment which was made to the tenant or share cropper.

In the latter part of 1939 some question arose as to the conduct of Lee Wilson and Company, the owner of this and other farms, in connection with the programs of the previous years back to 1933; an investigation was made in reference thereto. In connection with that investigation it developed that Mr. Kincaid had stated that he bought the crops of 17 of his share croppers and that four of the share croppers remained on the farm and harvested their crops, but attention was called to a statement by some other witnesses which indicated that the 17 share croppers did not abandon their crops voluntarily; that the plaintiff forced these 17 share croppers to surrender and leave their crops or pay him an additional $5 per acre cash rent on the land they had planted to cotton, or agree to turn over their part of the Government payments to him.

On the basis of this information the Arkansas State Committee and the Mississippi County Committee determined that plaintiff had violated the provisions of the regulations and recommended that he be denied payment for the year 1939. However, it developed that the plaintiff was not present at the hearing, and the county commitee asked that the case be reheard by the state committee. The request was granted and after the hearing J. B. Daniels, of the state committee, wrote plaintiff and also wrote I. W. Duggan, the Director of the Southern Division of the AAA, recommending that Mr. Kincaid, notwithstanding the violation of the-regulations, be allowed to settle with his tenants and thus-adjust his right to receive the two types of payments. In the course of the correspondence, on January 29, 1941, K. F. [286]*286Croom, who was in charge of the landlord-tenant relationship for the entire Southern Division, wrote to Mr. Daniels advising him that while it had been determined that Mr. Kin-caid had adopted practices which tended to defeat the purposes of the program, nevertheless if the payments that had been exacted from the tenants were refunded, Mr. Kincaid would be allowed to retain his proper portion of the payments ; but that if this could not be done, Mr. Kincaid should be asked to refund to the Government all the payments that had been received by him. Evidently Mr. Croom at the time of writing that letter was under the impression that Mr. Kincaid had already been paid for compliance.

Apparently this method of settlement was agreeable to the state committee and in pursuance of the settlement the plaintiff refunded $5 per acre to the four tenants from whom he had exacted such additional rental payments. These refund checks were issued March 1, and paid March 8, 1941.

On March 10,1941, K. F.

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Bluebook (online)
96 F. Supp. 468, 119 Ct. Cl. 257, 1951 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 32, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kincaid-v-united-states-cc-1951.