Kinder Canal Co., Inc. v. Johanns

493 F.3d 543, 2007 U.S. App. LEXIS 17249, 2007 WL 2068097
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJuly 20, 2007
Docket06-30238
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 493 F.3d 543 (Kinder Canal Co., Inc. v. Johanns) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kinder Canal Co., Inc. v. Johanns, 493 F.3d 543, 2007 U.S. App. LEXIS 17249, 2007 WL 2068097 (5th Cir. 2007).

Opinion

EDITH H. JONES, Chief Judge:

Appellants Kinder Canal Company, Inc. (“Kinder Canal”) and Mike T. Unkel (“Unkel”) challenge the district court’s determination that they must refund farm-support payments received between 1996 and 2003 under various programs administered by the Department of Agriculture’s Farm Service Agency (“FSA”). Finding that Appellants serially misrepresented program-eligibility data they reported to the FSA on- contracts for farm-support benefits, the District Court upheld the FSA’s demand to return all payments received by Kinder Canal and by Unkel in his individual capacity. We affirm.

I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

The FSA program payments at issue in this case involve Farm Serial Number 1228 (“FSN 1228”), a parcel of agricultural land used for cultivation of wheat, oats, and rice in Allen Parish, Louisiana. FSN 1228 encompassed 1,136.9 total cropland acres and 668.0 acres of combined wheat, *545 oat, and rice base. FSN 1228 was divided into seven numbered tracts: 417, 506, 507, 516, 517, 522, and 1447. The parcel was jointly owned by seven entities, including Kinder Canal, a-Louisiana corporation consisting of nineteen members of the Unkel family. Appellant Unkel is Kinder Canal’s president and a shareholder. Additionally, he holds a twenty-five percent stake in the Unkel Four Joint Venture, a separate farming entity co-owned by Unkel and three of his siblings. Having served as the Chairman of the FSA’s Allen Parish Committee for approximately eighteen years, Unkel is a sophisticated participant in the FSA’s various farm-support programs and is well versed in their technical requirements.

On July 18, 1996, acting in his capacity as Kinder Canal’s president, Unkel signed a Form CCC-478 Production Flexibility Contract (“PFC”), to enroll FSN 1228 in the FSA’s PFC Program. 1 See 7 C.F.R. § 1412.101 (1997) et seq. Beginning in 1996, under the Program farmers received a fixed annual payment in return for reducing their acreage of certain agricultural commodities. The FSA approved the Kinder Canal PFC proposal. Kinder Canal, through Unkel, annually re-enrolled its cropland and received PFC payments from 1996 to 2002. Additionally, from 1998 to 2001, the FSA made payments to Kinder Canal under the Marketing Loan Assistance Program (“MLA Program”), eligibility for which was directly tied to Kinder Canal’s participation in the PFC Program.

In December 1991, several years before Kinder Canal enrolled in the PFC and MLA Programs, Unkel’s aunt Eva, the owner of tract 517 (the “Eva Unkel tract”), died. Appellant Unkel had held power-of-attorney for his aunt since 1983. In 1993, the Eva Unkel tract was sold to two individuals unaffiliated with Unkel or any of the family business entities. Unkel admits that when he first applied for PFC payments in 1996 he was aware that the Eva Unkel tract had been sold and that his power-of-attorney had terminated at his aunt’s death. Nonetheless, on FSN 1228’s first PFC proposal, Unkel falsely recorded Mrs. Eva Unkel as tract 517’s owner and did not notify the FSA of the actual owners. When he re-enrolled Kinder Canal for PFC annual payments from 1997 until 2002, Unkel continued to misrepresent to the FSA the company’s ownership of the Eva Unkel tract.

Another source of inflated PFC payments arose from FSA’s mis-accounting for eligible acreage on certain tracts in FSN 1229 known as the Cole/Morrow tracts. Unkel asserts that he did not notice the FSA’s mistake and accordingly requested PFC payments on the Cole/Morrow tracts’ rice base acreage that was technically no longer eligible during the 1997-2002 program years.

In December 2002, Unkel enrolled FSN 1431, a reconstituted group of tracts, in a third FSA commodity-support program— the Direct and Counter-Cyclical Payments Program (“DCP Program”). 2 See 7 C.F.R. *546 1412.101 (2003) et seq. In making base acreage and yield elections as required by the DCP contract, Unkel informed the FSA of one of the Eva Unkel tract’s new owners, but failed to mention the second owner. And, as he had previously reported on the PFC contracts from 1997-2002, Unkel continued to incorrectly certify that the Cole/Morrow rice base acreage was eligible to receive DCP payments when in fact it was not. Kinder Canal’s first DCP contract was approved on December 18, 2002. FSN 1431 received DCP payments for the 2002 and 2003 program years.

Unkel’s misrepresentations regarding the ownership and crop acreage bases of FSNs 1228 and 1431 were discovered in 2003 by the Department of Agriculture’s Office of Inspector General (“OIG”) during an audit of commodity-support programs in Allen Parish. The audit was part of an effort by the FSA to determine farmers’ eligibility for program participation and whether the current administration of program payments was based on valid acreage and yield determinations. The OIG found that representations made under Unkel’s PFC, MLA, and DCP contracts were inaccurate and that Unkel had knowingly misrepresented the ownership and cropland acreage bases of FSN 1431 and its predecessor parcel, FSN 1228. The OIG additionally found that Unkel admitted to publicly discussing the 1993 sale of the Eva Unkel tract and to knowing that Kinder Canal had not owned or leased the tract since 1993, but that it nonetheless was enrolled for PFC and DCP Program payments based on the Eva Unkel tract’s crop acreage base.

Despite Unkel’s misrepresentation of the Eva Unkel tract’s ownership and the FSA’s deletion of the Cole/Morrow tracts, however, Kinder Canal received no excessive benefit payments, except during 2001. This is because the company’s eligibility for PFC, MLA, and DCP annual payments consistently exceeded the payment limitations imposed by those programs. 3 In 2001, the combined contract misrepresentations on the Cole/Morrow and Eva Unkel tracts garnered Kinder Canal a modest $1,124.30 more than the benefits to which they were lawfully entitled.

Nonetheless, the OIG recommended in its audit report that the FSA’s Louisiana State Committee pursue collection of all PFC and MLA payments Kinder Canal received between 1996 and 2002, as well as the 2002 and 2003 DCP payments. Additionally, the OIG recommended collection of all PFC and MLA payments Unkel received between 1996 and 2002 that derived from his participation in the Unkel Four Joint Venture. 4 The State Committee adopted the OIG’s recommendations. *547 Subsequent review by an FSA National Appeals Division Hearing Officer and the FSA’s National Appeals Division (“NAD”) Director affirmed the OIG’s conclusions regarding Kinder Canal’s and Unkel’s liability.

Appellants turned to federal court for a declaratory judgment that the FSA abused its discretion in making the refund demand. The Secretary filed a cross-motion for summary judgment. The district court arrived at substantially the same conclusion as the NAD Director regarding Appellants’ liability and entered judgment for the return of the commodity-support payments.

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Bluebook (online)
493 F.3d 543, 2007 U.S. App. LEXIS 17249, 2007 WL 2068097, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kinder-canal-co-inc-v-johanns-ca5-2007.