Lehigh Valley Cooperative Farmers v. Bowles

148 F.2d 828, 1945 U.S. App. LEXIS 4464
CourtEmergency Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 13, 1945
DocketNo. 192
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 148 F.2d 828 (Lehigh Valley Cooperative Farmers v. Bowles) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Emergency Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lehigh Valley Cooperative Farmers v. Bowles, 148 F.2d 828, 1945 U.S. App. LEXIS 4464 (eca 1945).

Opinion

MARIS, Chief Judge.

The complainant is a Pennsylvania agricultural cooperative association organized in 1933. Of its 650 stockholders 408 are local farmers who ship milk to the complainant. When the milk arrives at the complainant’s Allentown plant it is commingled, processed and distributed. Each month the complainant prepares a work sheet showing the total receipts from the sales of the milk. Operating costs, reserves and estimated dividends are deducted. The balance of the receipts is distributed to the patrons in the proportion that each has delivered milk during the month. The work sheet contains no break down as to how much of the payment represents the price of the milk and how much represents the savings effected by the cooperative method of doing business. Although its by-laws provide for distribution of its net income at the end of its fiscal year the complainant has since its inception made full distribution to its patrons each and every month. The monthly payments exceed the applicable maximum prices for milk.1

On February 14, 1944 the Price Administrator issued Supplementary Order No. 84, Payment of Patronage Dividends By Marketing Cooperative Associations.2 Section 1305.215 of that Order provides that marketing cooperatives may pay patronage dividends even though the dividend plus the original payment results in the patron receiving more for the commodity than the applicable ceiling price provided the cooperative meets the conditions laid down by subsection (c). Six of the seven paragraphs of subsection (c) detail various conditions which the cooperative must meet. However, even though the cooperative complies with all these conditions paragraph (5)' of the subsection nevertheless prohibits the payment of patronage dividends except at the end of the cooperative’s fiscal year of at the end of intervals of not less than six months when the books are regularly closed at the end of such intervals. The complainant protested this provision of Supp. Order 84 but its protest was denied. It thereupon filed the present complaint in this court.

The complainant first contends that the Order, insofar as it prohibits the monthly distribution of patronage dividends and restricts such payments to annual or semi[830]*830annual periods violates the Emergency Price 'Control Act because it is disruptive of one of the complainant’s business practices. Its argument in support of this contention is based primarily upon Section 2(h) of the Act,3 which reads:

“The powers granted in this section shall not be used or made to operate to compel changes in the business practices, cost practices or methods or means or aids to distribution, established in any industry, or changes in established rental practices, except where such action is affirmatively found by the Administrator to be necessary to prevent circumvention or evasion of any regulation, order, price schedule, or requirement under this Act.”

As we have stated, it has been the practice of the complainant to make monthly payments of patronage dividends. It is, therefore, quite true that the Order requires a change in one of the complainant’s business practices. However, the prohibition of Section 2(h) does not relate to individual business practices but only to those practices which are established in the industry as a whole. Safeway Stores, Inc. v. Bowles, Em.App.1944, 145 F.2d 836. It is, therefore, not enough for the complainant to show that one of its business practices has been interfered with by the Order. It must also show that the practice which it alleges to have been unlawfully interfered with is industry-wide in extent.

In the effort to meet this burden the complainant asserts that, whatever may be the case as to marketing cooperatives generally, milk marketing cooperatives have customarily made monthly payments of patronage dividends. It urges, therefore, that insofar as the Order prohibits such monthly payments it compels a change in the industry’s business practices in violation of Section 2(h) of the Act. The evidence which the complainant submitted to the Administrator, however, was confined entirely to the fact that its own business practice was to make monthly payments. Moreover the complainant’s president in an affidavit filed in support of the protest made the following admission:

“While it may be the custom and procedure among many cooperatives to pay to the farmers who deliver milk a fixed sum' upon delivery of milk and to distribute the proceeds derived from the sale of milk on a semiannual or annual basis, this has never been the procedure employed by this cooperative.”

In his opinion the Administrator found that the fact thus admitted “is supported and established by a report of the United States Department of Agriculture to the effect that only a relatively small number of milk cooperative marketing associations calculate an actual pool price based on sales returns and expenses, and pay producers this price minus any specified amounts agreed upon in advance for reserves or capital retains. By and large, the greater number of milk cooperative associations either pay their producers a competitive price (equal to that paid by other agencies in the market) and then adjust their profits or losses at the end of an accounting period, or else establish an arbitrary price based on a study of their operations and market conditions, and accumulate whatever profits may result as a surplus or reserve on their balance sheets. These surpluses or reserves must, of course, be disposed of in accordance with the laws under which the associations operate.”

The burden was upon the complainant to refute the facts thus' found, which otherwise must be taken as true. Montgomery Ward & Co. v. Bowles, Em.App., 1943, 138 F.2d 669. The complainant however, as we have said, produced no evidence to show that the practice of paying patronage dividends each month was general with milk marketing cooperatives, but rather admitted the contrary to be true. It, therefore, wholly failed to establish the necessary basis for a holding that the Order in question has compelled a change in a business practice of the complainant’s industry in contravention of Section 2(h) of the Act.

The complainant’s next contention is that the provision of the Order under attack does not serve to effectuate the purposes of the Act. We cannot agree. Section 1(a) of the Act states that one of its purposes is “to eliminate and prevent * * * disruptive practices resulting from abnormal market conditions or scarcities caused by or contributing to the national emergency.”4 The natural and indeed inevitable effect of permitting marketing cooperatives which purchase the products of members to pay them patronage dividends which, when combined with the price paid for their products, exceed [831]*831the maximum price which competing non-cooperative marketing concerns may pay, is to make possible a virtual monopoly by the cooperatives.

It is true that the Order here under attack is not entirely effectual as a device for eliminating such a disruptive practice in the economy.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Bayuk Cigars, Inc. v. Porter
154 F.2d 503 (Emergency Court of Appeals, 1946)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
148 F.2d 828, 1945 U.S. App. LEXIS 4464, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lehigh-valley-cooperative-farmers-v-bowles-eca-1945.