Matter of Mayflower Farms, Inc. v. Baldwin

195 N.E. 532, 267 N.Y. 9, 1935 N.Y. LEXIS 1180
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 16, 1935
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 195 N.E. 532 (Matter of Mayflower Farms, Inc. v. Baldwin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Matter of Mayflower Farms, Inc. v. Baldwin, 195 N.E. 532, 267 N.Y. 9, 1935 N.Y. LEXIS 1180 (N.Y. 1935).

Opinions

*11 Hubbs, J.

Appellant is a domestic corporation engaged in the sale of milk at wholesale to stores in New York city. It was organized in May, 1933. In April, 1934, it made application for a milk dealer’s license. A hearing was held upon the application and it was found that appellant was engaged in selling an unadvertised brand of milk, that is, milk not having a well-advertised trade name. The application was denied for the reason that appellant had violated a price-fixing order by selling milk at the unadvertised price which was one cent per quart below the price fixed by respondent for the sale of milk having a well-advertised trade name. It was decided that as appellant was not engaged in the milk business on April 10, 1933, it was not entitled to avail itself of the one cent unadvertised price differential provided for in section 258-q of the Agriculture and Markets Law (Cons. Laws, ch. 69) which became effective April 1, 1934. Chapter 158, section 317, subdivision c, of the Laws of 1933, was substantially the same as chapter 126, section 2 (258-q), of the Laws of 1934, which reads as follows:

It shall not be unlawful for any .milk dealer who [at the time this act shall take effect is] since April tenth, nineteen hundred thirty-three has been engaged continuously in the business of purchasing and handling milk not having a well advertised trade name in a city of more than one million inhabitants to sell fluid milk in bottles to *12 stores in such city at a price not more than one cent per quart below the price of such milk sold to stores under a well advertised trade name, and such lower price shall also apply on sales from stores to consumers; provided that in no event shall the price of such milk not having a well advertised trade name, be more than one cent per quart below the minimum price fixed [by the board] for such sales to stores in such a city.” .

The words in brackets were eliminated in the revision of the law in 1934 and the words in italics were added. The effect is to leave the date April 10th, 1933, the same in both enactments.

The sole constitutional question urged is that the provision of section 258-q allowing unadvertised dealers to sell milk at a lower price than advertised dealers, provided they were engaged in the business on April 10th, 1933, and preventing unadvertised dealers who became such subsequent to that date from selling at a lower price, is unconstitutional and void in that it violates section 1 of the 14th Amendment of the United States Constitution.

The constitutionality of the emergency legislation embodied in the milk regulation law, chapter 158 of the Laws of 1933, in various phases has been passed upon by the courts. People v. Nebbia (262 N. Y. 259; affd., 291 U. S. 502) passed upon the price fixing provision and held it to be constitutional. In Matter of Eisenberg Farms, Inc., v. Baldwin (265 N. Y. 662) this court decided that the differential clause in favor of co-operative associations which permitted them to pay to producers less than the price fixed by the Commission for milk was constitutional. The case of Borden’s Farm Products Co. v. Baldwin (7 Fed. Supp. 352; reversed and remanded to the court to make findings of fact in 293 U. S. 194, without passing upon the constitutional question) involved the question of the constitutionality of the unadvertised differential provision in its entirety. The statutory court provided for by section 266 of the Judicial Code (28 U. S. *13 C. A. § 380) held it to be constitutional in an opinion by Judge Learned Hand.

The opinions in those cases have stated in great detail the conditions in the milk producing and marketing business in the State at and prior to the date of the enactment in question. They call attention to the fact that the statute was enacted after careful and extended investigations by committees of the Legislature into the milk business as a whole. They point out the chaotic condition existing in the business and the injurious effect produced thereby upon the farmers of the State engaged in milk production, upon the public health and general welfare.

We do not feel called upon to restate the conditions so fully stated in those opinions. We confine our discussion to the single question of whether the Legislature exceeded its power in fixing a specific date, the date when the original statute became effective, April 10, 1933, as the date after which unadvertised dealers not in business at that time were prohibited by the effect of the act from selling milk at a price less than that at which advertised dealers were required to sell.

In New York city there are four large corporations engaged in the milk business. Their brands of milk are highly advertised and well known to all retail dealers and purchasers of milk. They have come to be known as the advertised companies. There were hundreds of small dealers who sold unadvertised brands and they are known as the unadvertised dealers. They purchase their milk from about 50,000 independent farmers. When the Legislature determined upon the policy of regulating and fixing the price at which milk could be sold it was confronted by the fact that the unadvertised dealers could not successfully compete with the advertised dealers, if required to sell their unadvertised milk at the same price at which the advertised dealers sold. Prior to that time the unadvertised dealers had sold milk about one cent per *14 quart less than the price charged by advertised dealers. The market was familiar with that condition and as a result, farmers selling milk to the dealers had become divided into two classes, one selling to the advertised dealers which owned and operated large and extensive plants in favorable localities for collecting and shipping milk, and the other, known as independent farmers, selling to the unadvertised dealers, less favorably equipped, but still, on the whole, having large sums invested in their business. It was believed that the effect of establishing a uniform price at which milk should be sold by all dealers would be to drive the unadvertised dealers out of business and work a practical confiscation of their property. • That would also deprive about 50,000 farmers of a market for their milk and leave them unprotected. At the same time it would consolidate the entire milk business of New York city in the four large advertised companies.

To meet the situation, the Legislature enacted the provision allowing a differential price in favor of the unadvertised dealers and that provision has thus far been held to be constitutional. (Borden’s Farm Products Co. v. Baldwin, supra.)

The effect of the act was to maintain the competitive position of the two classes of dealers in the same condition which existed before the enactment. Before the enactment, any person could go into the milk business at any time and sell his milk at any price at which he chose to sell it.

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Bluebook (online)
195 N.E. 532, 267 N.Y. 9, 1935 N.Y. LEXIS 1180, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matter-of-mayflower-farms-inc-v-baldwin-ny-1935.