Lane v. United States

338 F. Supp. 3d 1324
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Georgia
DecidedSeptember 6, 2018
DocketCV 617-082
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 338 F. Supp. 3d 1324 (Lane v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lane v. United States, 338 F. Supp. 3d 1324 (S.D. Ga. 2018).

Opinion

J. RANDAL HALL, CHIEF JUDGE

Before the Court are Plaintiff and Defendant United States of America's (the "Government") cross motions for summary judgment. (Docs. 9, 15.) Plaintiff, a farmer from southeast Georgia, challenges a decision issued by an Administrative Law Judge ("ALJ") with the United States Department of Agriculture ("USDA"). The ALJ's decision found that Plaintiff made a false claim for crop insurance on his 2009 tobacco crop and that Plaintiff failed to properly report information as required by his crop insurance policy. The ALJ imposed an $11,000 fine and barred Plaintiff from participating in any federal aid program to farmers for five years. Plaintiff seeks judicial review from this Court and argues that the decision was arbitrary and capricious.

I. BACKGROUND

Plaintiff is a farmer in Emanuel County, Georgia. In April 2009 Plaintiff planted *1327tobacco on two plots of land: Unit 101 and Unit 104. On Unit 101 he planted 45 acres of irrigated flue cured tobacco. On Unit 104 he planted 44 acres of non-irrigated flue-cured tobacco. Plaintiff insured both units with the Great American Insurance Company ("Great American").

The centerpiece of Plaintiff's crop insurance policy, or any crop insurance policy for that matter, was the "production guarantee." When a farmer makes a claim, the loss incurred is determined by imputing the production guarantee into a mathematical formula. The production guarantee is, essentially, the number of pounds of harvested tobacco a farmer may insure on any given plot of land, and it is usually measured in pounds per acre. The production guarantee is calculated using either (1) the farmer's previous production history on the specified land or (2) if no production history is available on the specified land, county actuarial tables. Plaintiff had never farmed on Unit 104, thus Great American relied upon the county actuarial tables to calculate his production guarantee. Plaintiff's 2009 production guarantee was 1,580 pounds per acre for Unit 101 and 1,510 pounds per acre for Unit 104. His total guarantee (the production guarantee times the insured acreage) was 71,100 pounds for Unit 101 (45.0 acres X 1,580 lbs.) and 66,440 pounds for Unit 104 (44.0 acres X 1,510 lbs.).

On August 7, 2009, Plaintiff filed a notice of loss on Unit 104 due to drought and wind damage. On August 12, 2009, insurance adjuster Ned Day inspected Plaintiff's insured tobacco. Day estimated that Unit 101 would produce 2,188 pounds of tobacco per acre (i.e., 98,460 lbs. total) and Unit 104 would produce 2,207 pounds of tobacco per acre (i.e., 97,108 lbs. total). Because Day's estimated production per acre exceeded Plaintiff's production guarantees, Day estimated that Plaintiff would have no need to file a claim.

After harvesting the tobacco, Plaintiff reported that: (i) Unit 101 (the irrigated plot) produced 177,099 pounds of tobacco,1 of which 101,657 pounds were sold to Market Center Planters ("MC Planters") for $165, 042; and (ii) that Unit 104 (the non-irrigated plot) produced only 13,394 pounds of tobacco, which was sold to MC Planters for $18,515.85. Thus, according to Plaintiff's reported crop yields, Unit 101 exceeded its production guarantee by 30,557 pounds2 while Unit 104 missed its production guarantee by 53,046 pounds. In December 2009 Plaintiff made a claim on Unit 104 for a loss of $104,429. In January 2010, Plaintiff collected an indemnity payment of $104,429.00 minus credits due to Great American, for a net payment of $72,688.

Around 2009, the Office of Inspector General in North Carolina received information about a major scheme by tobacco producers to defraud the federal crop insurance program. During its investigation, the Government subpoenaed records from Independent Tobacco Services, Inc. ("ITS"). Randy Upton, an investigator with the Risk Management Agency for the Department of Agriculture ("RMA"), sought *1328records of tobacco producers in Georgia who failed to meet their 2009 guarantees by more than 50, 000 pounds. Mr. Upton identified Plaintiff as falling within this category, and, in 2012, began to investigate Plaintiff.

On October 31, 2012, Mr. Upton conducted an interview with Plaintiff at the Farm Service Agency office in Swainsboro, Georgia. During the interview, Mr. Upton inquired into the specifics of Plaintiff's 2009 tobacco crop. Of particular interest to Mr. Upton was Plaintiff's sale of approximately 29,000 pounds of tobacco to ITS in 2009. Plaintiff initially did not recall any sales to ITS, but when informed that Joseph Boyett bought tobacco on behalf of ITS, Plaintiff speculated that it was probably trash tobacco or might have been tobacco left over from previous years ("carryover tobacco").

Based upon this interview and the results of his investigation, Upton hypothesized that Plaintiff did not suffer losses from a drought but instead (1) shifted some of his production from Unit 101 to Unit 104 and (2) sold Unit 104 tobacco to ITS. Upton's hypothesis went as follows:

• Plaintiff exceeded his production guarantee by 30,000 pounds on Unit 101 and missed his production guarantee by 54,000 pounds on Unit 104.
• Plaintiff sold 29,000 pounds to ITS which he claimed was carryover tobacco from 2006.
• Assume that the 30, 000 overproduction in Unit 101 was really production from Unit 104.
• Assume also that the 29, 000 sold to ITS was not carryover tobacco from 2006, but was instead production from Unit 104.
• The sum of 30,000 (the overproduction from Unit 101), 29,000 (the alleged carryover tobacco), and 14,000 (Plaintiff's reported production from Unit 104) is 73,000 pounds.
• 73,000 pounds is only slightly greater than the original 66,400 pound production guarantee for Unit 104.
• Additionally, if Plaintiff had shifted the 30,000 pounds from Unit 104 to Unit 101, then Unit 101 would have produced only 71,000 pounds (101,000 - 30,000 = 71,000) - almost exactly the original production guarantee for Unit 101.

Thus, Upton concluded, after taking into account the adjuster's prediction that both Unit's 101 and 104 would hit their production guarantees, Plaintiff must have shifted production from Unit 104 to Unit 101.

At the conclusion of his investigation, Mr. Upton referred Plaintiff to the United States Attorney's Office. In December 2012, Plaintiff and his attorney met with Assistant United States Attorney Edgar Bueno. Plaintiff explained that the tobacco he sold to ITS in 2009 was carryover tobacco he had grown in 2006 but stored because of unfavorable market conditions. Plaintiff also provided the United States Attorney's Office with evidence supporting the existence of a drought in 2009. The United States Attorney's Office declined to prosecute Plaintiff and referred the case back to the RMA for administrative review.

On April 25, 2014, the RMA recommended that Great American void Plaintiff's policy. The RMA wrote that "[a]n analysis by PRISM weather experts disclosed that drought conditions did not exist in Emanuel County, Georgia in 2009." (CX-22, at 3.) Subsequently, Plaintiff and Great American engaged in federally-mandated arbitration. The arbitration, however, did not focus on Plaintiff's drought claim.

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338 F. Supp. 3d 1324, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lane-v-united-states-gasd-2018.