Marketing Loans for Grains and Wheat

CourtDepartment of Justice Office of Legal Counsel
DecidedJune 3, 1992
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
Marketing Loans for Grains and Wheat, (olc 1992).

Opinion

MARKETING LOANS FOR GRAINS AND WHEAT

T h e fo rm u las in the F ood, A griculture, C onservation, and T rade Act o f 1990, u n d er w hich farm ers repay loans from the D epartm ent o f A griculture, contain a scrivener’s e rro r in the o rg an izatio n o f the subsections, a n d the provisions should be read as if the error, w hich arose in th e p ro cess o f enrollm ent, had n o t been m ade.

U n d er sectio n 1302 o f th e Omnibus B u d g e t R econciliation A ct o f 1990, m arketing loan provi­ sio n s th at p rev io usly h ad been discretionary w ould be m andatory for the 1993 through 1995 cro p y ears, if an agricultural trade agreem ent under the U ruguay R ound N egotiations pursu­ an t to th e G eneral Agreem ent on T ariffs and T rade w ere n ot entered into by June 30, 1992, o r if th is ag reem en t h ad not entered into force for the U nited States by June 30, 1993.

June 3, 1992

M em orandum O p in io n fo r th e G eneral C ou n sel Departm ent o f a g r ic u l t u r e

You have requested our views concerning the proper reading of two pro­ visions o f the Food, Agriculture, Conservation, and Trade Act of 1990. These provisions prescribe formulas governing repayment of marketing loans for feed grains and wheat for the 1991 through 1995 crop years. As explained in more detail below, we concur in your opinion that the provisions should be given the reading that ignores a likely typographical error in the process o f enrollment. We also agree with your reading of a provision of the Omni­ bus Budget Reconciliation Act o f 1990. I.

The Food, Agriculture, Conservation, and Trade Act of 1990 (“ 1990 Act”), Pub. L. No. 101-624, 104 Stat. 3359, established the most recent five-year plan of federal price support and acreage reduction programs for numerous agricultural commodities. The 1990 Act added new sections 105B and 107B to the Agricultural Act of 1949 (“ 1949 Act”), governing the 1991 through 1995 crops o f feed grains and wheat, respectively. See 1990 Act, §§ 301(3), 401(3), 104 Stat. at 3382-3419.' Both sections contain “marketing loan provi­ sions,” which include formulas for repayment of loans made to farmers by the Department of Agriculture (“USDA”). Section 105B(a)(4)(A) provides:

1Sections 105B and 107B are codified at 7 U.S.C. §§ 1444f, 1445b-3a (Supp. U 1990), respectively.

114 The Secretary [of Agriculture] may permit a producer to repay a loan made under this subsection for a crop at a level (except as provided in subparagraph (C)) that is the lesser of —

(i) the loan level determined for the crop; (ii) the higher of — (I) 70 percent of such level; (II) if the loan level for a crop was reduced under paragraph (3), 70 percent of the loan level that would have been in effect but for the reduction under para­ graph (3); or (iii) the prevailing world market price for feed grains (adjusted to United States quality and location), as determined by the Secretary.2 The marketing loan provisions that governed the 1986 through 1990 crops of feed grains provided as follows:

The Secretary may permit a producer to repay a loan made under paragraph (1) or (6) for a crop at a level that is the lesser o f — (i) the loan level determined for such crop; or (ii) the higher of — (I) 70 percent of such level; (II) if the loan level for a crop was reduced under paragraph (3), 70 percent of the loan level that would have been in effect but for the reduction under paragraph (3); or (III) the prevailing world market price for feed grains, as determined by the Secretary.

1949 Act, § 105C(a)(4)(A), as added by Food Security Act of 1985 (“ 1985 Act”), §401, Pub. L. No. 99-198, 99 Stat. 1354, 1396 (codified at 7 U.S.C. § 1444e(a)(4)(A) (1988)).3

2Section 107B(a)(4)(A) is identical except that it refers in (iii) to the prevailing world market price for wheat. For the sake o f brevity, we will discuss section 105B as a proxy for both provisions. 3Again, the provision governing wheat was substantially identical. See 1949 Act, § 107D(a)(5)(A), as added by 1985 Act, § 308, 99 Stat. at 1384 (codified at 7 U.S.C. § 1445b-3(a)(5)(A) (1988)).

115 The relevant textual differences between the loan repayment formulas of the 1985 Act and the 1990 Act are slight. In the 1985 Act, the “world market price” factor is headed by “(III)” and is indented so as to be part of clause (ii). In the 1990 Act, the same factor is headed by “(iii)” and is not indented, appearing to make it a clause parallel with clauses (i) and (ii), rather than part o f (ii). The 1985 Act thus has two clauses with the second clause containing three subclauses, while the 1990 Act has three clauses, the second o f which contains two subclauses. Moreover, the two clauses of the 1985 Act, as well as the three subclauses of clause (ii), are arranged with the connective “or” preceding the ultimate clause and subclause. In the 1990 Act, no “or” appears before clause (ii) or before subclause (II) of clause (ii). Although the textual difference is small, you have informed us that the effect is to make a striking change in the marketing loan repayment formula. USDA estimates that if what appears to be denominated clause (iii) in the 1990 Act is indeed a separate clause, instead of being a third subclause of clause (ii), the federal treasury would lose some $3 billion per year in the form o f reduced loan repayments by producers of feed grains and wheat.

n.

Based upon your detailed understanding of USDA’s marketing loan pro­ grams as implemented by the 1985 and 1990 Acts and your knowledge of the legislative process preceding enactment of the 1990 Act, you have opined that the change in the denomination of the prevailing world market price factor from “(III)” to “(iii)” resulted from an error in the enrollment of the 1990 Act. On this basis, you conclude that USDA should disregard the error and should treat the feed grains and wheat loan repayment formulas of the 1990 Act as having a structure identical to those of the 1985 Act. On the basis of the materials that you have provided us, we concur in your conclu­ sions. We examine first the text o f section 105B(a)(4)(A). It is apparent that this provision contains a grammatical error: if provision (iii) is a separate clause, the word “or” is missing from the end of subclause (ii)(I). This is consistent with the supposed scrivener’s error in transforming what should have been subclause (ii)(III) into clause (iii). Clause (ii)(I) would not have needed a final “or” if it had been only the first of three, rather than two, subclauses in clause (ii). It is also true that if provision (iii) is read to be a subclause of clause (ii), the word “or” is missing from the end of clause (i). The fact that section 105B(a)(4)(A) contains a grammatical error, however read, suggests that we approach the text with more caution than usual. An examination o f the sense of section 105B(a)(4)(A) demonstrates that such additional caution is warranted. As enrolled, the loan repayment for­ mula is seriously flawed as a matter of logic. The output of clause (ii) — the number that results from taking the “higher o f ’ subclauses (ii)(I) and

116 (ii)(II) — will always be less than the output of clause (i).4 The result is that clause (i) will never be the “lesser o f ’ the three clauses and thus will never be the output of the loan repayment formula. Section 105B(a)(4)(A) is es­ sentially saying: choose the lesser of A, B, and C — but B is analytically always less than A, so never choose A. In this scheme, clause (i) — that is, choice A — is superfluous.

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