Kosdon v. Frick

148 F. Supp. 218, 1957 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4004
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. California
DecidedJanuary 28, 1957
DocketNo. 1648
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 148 F. Supp. 218 (Kosdon v. Frick) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kosdon v. Frick, 148 F. Supp. 218, 1957 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4004 (S.D. Cal. 1957).

Opinion

JERTBERG, District Judge.

This matter under review comes before the Court for the second time. Under date of October 24,1956 I made an order remanding the proceedings to the Review Committee, Area of Venue VI Kern County, State of California “for further hearing and findings of fact as to crop rotation practices followed on new farms on which cotton had been planted prior to 1953”. Pursuant to said mandate the Review Committee held another hearing, and certified and filed in this Court a transcript of the record upon which the determination complained of was made, tojgether with the findings of fact and conclusions of law.

These proceedings are authorized pursuant to Title 7 U.S.C.A. § 1365, to procure this Court’s review of the determination of the plaintiffs’ 1956 upland cotton acreage allotment made by the defendants. Plaintiffs are farmers in Kern County, California. Defendants, who are also farmers, were appointed by the Secretary of Agriculture to act as members of a review committee established pursuant to Title 7 U.S.C.A. § 1363, for the purpose of hearing appeals from farmers in the counties of Fresno, Tulare, Kern and Kings, of the State of California, who are dissatisfied with acreage allotments awarded them by the respective county Agricultural Stabilization and Conservation Committees. These county committees are composed of farmers who are elected by the farmers of their respective counties. They administer the acreage allotment and marketing quota program of the Department of Agriculture, pursuant to authority delegated to them under the applicable statutes and regulations.

In the order of October 24, 1956, this Court held that:

1. The Agricultural Adjustment Act of 1938 under which a 1956 cotton allotment was apportioned to the plaintiffs is not contrary to the Fifth Amendment of the Constitution, and does not unlawfully delegate powers and authority to the Secretary of Agriculture and his representative ;

2. The Acreage Allotment Regulations for the 1956 crop of Upland Cotton were duly and regularly issued by the Acting Secretary of Agriculture on October 28,1955 and are in accordance with the law;

3. The apportionment of cotton allotment to new farms on a basis different from that used for the apportionment of allotment to old farms is authorized under the law and the regulations of the Secretary of Agriculture;

4. The action of the Agricultural Stabilization and Conservation Committee of Kern County, State of California, and the Review Committee, Area of Venue VI, Kern County, State of California, holding that 77% acres of plaintiffs’ farm were not cropland and could not, [220]*220therefore, be considered in fixing a cotton allotment for plaintiffs’ farm for 1956 was in accordance with the law and the regulations of the Secretary of Agriculture and should be and is sustained.

A brief history leading up to the present review by this Court might be helpful in placing the issue now before the Court in proper focus.

Pursuant to the applicable statutes, 7 U.S.C.A. §§ 1341-1346; in particular 7 U.S.C.A. § 1344(c), the 1956 upland cotton allotment for Kern County was set at 182,300 acres. 20 F.R. 8737, 8739. The county committee set aside 22,801.2 acres of this amount as a county reserve to be used:

“ * * * for (A) establishing allotments for farms on which cotton was not planted (or regarded as planted under Public Law 12, Seventy-nine Congress) during any of the three calendar years immediately preceding the year for which the allotment is made [new farms], on the basis of land, labor, and equipment available for the production of cotton, crop-rotation practices, and the soil and other physical facilities affecting the production of cotton; and (B) making adjustments of the farm acreage allotments established under paragraphs (1) and (2) of this subsection [allotments for ‘old farms’] so as to establish allotments which are fair and reasonable in relation to the factors set forth in this paragraph and abnormal conditions of production on such farms, or in making adjustments in farm acreage allotments to correct inequities and to prevent hardship * * *7 U.S.C.A. § 1344(f) (3).

Acting in accordance with Section 722.717(e) (3) (i) of the regulations (20 F.R. 8247, 8253), the county committee then made an estimate of the cropland on “new cotton farms” (farms on which cotton had not been planted in 1953, 1954 or 1955) and, on the basis of that estimate, determined that 300 acres from the county reserve should be used for establishing acreage allotments for such “new farms”.

The portion of 7 U.S.C.A. § 1344(f) (3) quoted above, and the applicable regulations, Section 722.717(e) (3) (iii) (20 F.R. 8253), provide that the county committee is to establish an acreage allotment for each “new farm” on the basis of “land, labor, and equipment available for the production of cotton, crop-rotation practices, and the soil and other physical facilities affecting the production of cotton”. Section 722.717(g) of the regulations (20 F.R. 8253) indicates that the committee can adopt a “mathematical formula or rule” for apportioning the reserve according to the specified factors.

Applications were granted for a 1956 cotton allotment for sixteen farms which qualified as “new farms” under the acreage allotment regulations for the 1956 crop of upland cotton in Kern County, California. Of the sixteen farms for which grants were made for allotments as new farms, six of them were small farms which received five acres of allotment or less per farm. Six of the sixteen farms received allotments in Kern County in 1956 as new farms on which no cotton had been planted during the years 1953, 1954 and 1955, but on which cotton had been planted in some year or years prior to 1953, four of the sixteen farms which received allotments in Kern County in 1956 as new farms (including the plaintiffs’ farm) were farms on which no cotton had ever been planted. Allotments to new cotton farms on which cotton had been planted prior to 1953 were made on the basis of comparable old cotton farms in the same area, except where the amount of allotment requested was lower than that to which the farm was entitled. Allotments to new cotton farms, on which cotton had never been planted! were made on the basis of 40 %■ of the indicated allotment as determined from [221]*221comparable old cotton farms in the same area, or 40% of the requested allotment, whichever was the lesser.

Plaintiffs make no complaint of the allotments made of five acres or less to the six new small farms above mentioned.

Included in the record certified to this Court by the Review Committee are Exhibits 1 and 2. Exhibit 1 is the history of the six new farms which received allotments in 1956 on which cotton was planted in some year or years prior to 1953. This exhibit reads as follows:

Exhibit 2 shows the determination made by the local committee of allotments for 1956 on the remaining four new farms on which cotton had not been planted prior to 1953. This exhibit is as follows:

If the plaintiffs’ farm had received an acreage allotment for 1956 on the same basis as the six new farms shown on Exhibit 1, it would have received an acreage of 41.3 acres, as shown on Ex-Mbit 2. The plaintiffs’ farm (listed on [222]*222Exhibit 2 as Benjamin Kosdon) received an acreage allotment for 1956 of 19.5 acres.

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148 F. Supp. 218, 1957 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4004, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kosdon-v-frick-casd-1957.