Mayo v. Lakeland Highlands Canning Co.

309 U.S. 310, 60 S. Ct. 517, 84 L. Ed. 774, 1940 U.S. LEXIS 1173
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedFebruary 26, 1940
Docket270
StatusPublished
Cited by216 cases

This text of 309 U.S. 310 (Mayo v. Lakeland Highlands Canning Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mayo v. Lakeland Highlands Canning Co., 309 U.S. 310, 60 S. Ct. 517, 84 L. Ed. 774, 1940 U.S. LEXIS 1173 (1940).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Roberts

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The appellees, corporations of Florida and other States, and individuals, engaged in, the canning of citrus fruits in that State, filed their bill in the District Court for Southern Florida against Nathan Mayo, as Commissioner of Agriculture of Florida, praying injunctions, temporary and final, to restrain him from cancelling their licenses *312 as citrus fruit dealers, from enforcing against them a regulation made pursuant to a state statute, and from interfering with the conduct of their business by reason of their failure to comply with the statute.

On presentation of the bill and motion for temporary relief, the court issued a restraining order and convened' a court of three judges. The Florida Citrus Commission was permitted to intervene as a defendant. After hearing on affidavits, filed by appellees and appellant Mayo, and, on evidence offered by the appellees, the court granted a temporary injunction pending final hearing, 1 The Commissioner and the intervenor have appealed.

The bill alleges the importance of the grapefruit canning industry in the State, and asserts that,the appellees,' in the conduct of their business, packed over sixty. per cent, of the total grapefruit and grapefruit juice canned in the State in seasons prior to that of 1938-1939. It recites the adoption by the; legislature of the Growers’ Cost Guarantee Act (Chap. 16862 of the Acts of 1935) which, after declaring that 'the production and distribution of citrus fruit is a paramount industry of the State, upon which the prosperity of the State largely depends, and assigning reasons for the protection of the industry and the maintenance of prices commensurate with the cost of production, of citrus fruit, authorizes the Commissioner of Agriculture, in his discretion, with the consent and advice of the Governor, to declare the existence of an emergency in the industry; and provides that, if he does so, then, — upon petition of owners or controllers of fifty per cent, or more of the producing acreage of citrus fruit, and, upon procurement .by the Florida Citrus Commission from producers, shippers, or handlers, not subject to the provisions of the act, of binding agreements to conform thereto and abide- by its terms, — the Commission shall *313 determine and record annually the average reasonable cost, per standard packed box, of producing citrus fruit. The statute provides that, thereupon, every contract with a grower for the purchase of fruit is to be held to require the purchaser to pay the grower a price per box equal to such ascertained and recorded cost; and continues: “Any contract, plan, scheme or device whereby it( shall be attempted to preclude the grower from recovering such cost of production shall to that extent be held to be unlawful and against the public policy of this State, but in all other respects and particulars contracts of sale . . . shall be valid and binding and the terms thereof shall measure the rights of the respective parties.!’ By its terms the act is to apply to any one or more of the varieties of citrus fruit.

The complaint further refers to the Bond and License Act (Chap. 16860, Laws of Florida, 1935, as amended by Chap. 17777, Acts of 1937), which requires every dealer (which term includes processors of citrus fruit) to take a license and provides that if the Commissioner determines that any dealer has violated the provisions of any applicable act he may suspend or revoke the license of the offender. Operation as a dealer without license is made a misdemeanor.

The bill alleges that the packing season for canning citrus products in Florida begins about November 1st of each year and continues until June or July of the following year; that preparations for canning include the ordering of cans, .labels, contracting for purchase of fruit, .securing labor, planning of factory operations, and obtaining orders for the product.

It is alleged that, under the Growers’ Cost Guarantee Act, the appellant Mayo, as Commissioner of Agriculture, with the consent and advice of the Governor, declared an emergency in the citrus industry on January 13, 1939, and that the Citrus Commission passed a resolution Jan *314 uary 16, 1939, reciting that more than fifty per eent. of the owners or controllers of producing acreage of grape-' fruit in the State have requested the Commission to determine the cost of production of grapefruit, fixing the cost per standard packed box at thirty-two cents for the season 1938-1939, and decreeing that every contract with a grower shall be held to require that the purchaser shall, in any event, pay the grower the amount so fixed as the cost of production.

The bill states that the expected pack of grapefruit for the season 1938-39 was large, but that, due to the regulation, the output of the canned product has been less, by two million cases, than that of the previous season; that, since January 19, 1939, each of appellees has been offered quantities of grapefruit by Florida growers, at prices ranging from twelve cents per box for fruit to be processed into juice, to twenty-five cents per box for fruit to be canned into sections or hearts, and that, but for the regulation in question, each could, and would, have purchased such fruit, canned the same, and sold the canned product at a large profit; that, as a result of the regulation, much of the fruit remains unsold and is spoiling.

The bill further asserts that many growers own their own canning plants and may, therefore, process their fruit without being subject to the burden of the Cost Guarantee Law; and that many growers, with like immunity) process their fruit through cooperative organizations to which the Commissioner does not apply the cost price provisions of the law and regulations.

According to the bill a large proportion of the Florida canned fruit is sold in interstate and foreign commerce and much, of it competes with that produced in other States which brings lower prices, and, consequently, the appellees cannot pay thirty-two cents per box and sell in competition with fruit elsewhere processed.

*315 It is further averred that one of the appellees had made binding contracts of purchase prior to.issue of the regulation, the obligation of which has been impaired thereby.

After alleging that each appellee has a large investment; that the payment of thirty-two cents per box would render it impossible for them to sell their processed grapefruit except at a loss; that the enforcement of the. regulation will cause them large losses and irreparable damage; that if they do not comply with the regulation the Commissioner will revoke their licenses, '.and that, if he should do so, they will be compelled to suspend business or subject themselves to risk of fine and imprisonment under the Bond and License Act, the bill charges that the. Growers’ Cost Guarantee Law, as administered and as applied to them, is unconstitutional and void as illegally attempting to regulate interstate commerce, as violating the equal protection clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, because discriminating between cooperatives and the complainants, as taking their property without due process of law, and as impairing the obligation of contracts.

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Bluebook (online)
309 U.S. 310, 60 S. Ct. 517, 84 L. Ed. 774, 1940 U.S. LEXIS 1173, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mayo-v-lakeland-highlands-canning-co-scotus-1940.