Nolan v. Morgan

69 F.2d 471, 1934 U.S. App. LEXIS 3578
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedMarch 14, 1934
Docket5039
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 69 F.2d 471 (Nolan v. Morgan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nolan v. Morgan, 69 F.2d 471, 1934 U.S. App. LEXIS 3578 (7th Cir. 1934).

Opinion

ALSCHULER, Circuit Judge.

Appellees sued to enjoin appellant, as United States attorney, from enforcing against them certain regulations of the Secretary of Agriculture promulgated under supposed authority of the McNary-Mapes Amendment 1 of July 8, 1930 (21 USCA § 10), to section 8 of the United States Pood and Drug Act of June 30, 1906. The appeal is from a deeree awarding- appellees a permanent injunction as prayed.

Appellees had been for some years in the business of processing, canning, and marketing dry, ripe peas, which were first soaked in hot water to soften them and to swell them to their original shape and color, and this process being following by further steps. Under the regulations of the Department of Agriculture formerly in force containers of the product designed to move in interstate or foreign commerce were required to be plainly labeled with the words “Prepared Prom Dry Peas.”

After the adoption of the MeNary-Mapes Amendment, the Secretary of Agriculture promulgated regulations for standardizing and labeling canned peas, 2 requiring the cans containing appellees’ product designed *473 for interstate or foreign commerce to bear m conspicuous lettering the legend “Below U. S. Standard. Low Quality But Not Illegal. Soaked Dry Peas.” Appellees were duly notified to so ship no such product unless so labeled. Declining to comply, they were threatened with prosecution and Confiscation of the product undertaken to be so shipped.

There is no contention that dry peas are of themselves to any degree deleterious or unfit for human food, nor that appellees’ process for canning them causes the slightest impairment of the product. It is likewise apparent that such labeling of the container would in a short time practically destroy the industry of canning' dry peas designed for interstate or foreign commerce. This is not only apparent, hut has been practically the result when this label was placed upon the cans. The evidence shows that it is so well recognized in the trade that such a label would destroy trade in the product that the label is generally known in the trade as “crepe label.”

The production and distribution of canned dry or ripe peas is an industry not less lawful or commendable than tho production and distribution of the immature pens, which the regulations prescribe as tho standard for canned peas. The canning of ripe peas is not like the other a seasonal industry. The peas when dry through ripening are gathered, and ■will keep indefinitely in that state before canning; whereas the immature peas must be gathered and processed at once when they reach the suitable stage of maturity, after which delay of even a very few days will overdevelop them and render them unlit for the prescribed standard.

The regulations specify certain tests to be applied to give assurance that the immature peas have not passed beyond the degree of ripeness essential to constitute them “standard canned peas.”

When the peas become hard and dry through the natural process of ripening they cannot, of course, comply with the standard thus fixed for canned peas. Processing restores their fullness and color, and renders them soft and edible. But they are a product essentially different from that of the canned unripe peas which are made the standard. Different processes are necessary. The long soaking in hot water, cooling and reheating of the dry peas would disintegrate and ruin the immature variety. The properties of the two products are very different. In the mature peas there is more of starch and less of sugar than in the immature peas, and the mature have more of nutriment and food value than the immature. There is, of coarse, a difference in the taste, most persons probably preferring the immature peas, although, as was testified, this is a matter of the taste of the individual.

The canned dry peas sell in the market for considerably less than the immature product, which may be accounted for by tho more general preference for the taste and consistency of the immature product, as well as the fact that the dry peas may be kept indefinitely and readily shipped long distances to canneries and may be canned at leisure, while the immature peas must be processed without delay and in canneries conveniently located with ■reference to the place where the peas are grown.

All this indicates that, notwithstanding the same vines produce the immature and the full-ripened peas, for the purposes of canning tho two are products as essentially different as if taken from radically different plants, and were known by different names. As articles of commerce we think they must be regarded as in separate classes, each having its own properties and peculiarities. There are doubtless good, bad, and indifferent grades of dry peas as well as of immature peas; and to say that canned ripe peas are an. inferior grade of canned immature peas is, in our judgment, at once illogical, unreasonable, and unfair.

To bo sure, a customer desiring the immature canned peas should not have the dry peas imposed upon him, and vice versa. The object of such legislation and the regulations thereunder is to guard against deception of the public. Statutes and regulations adopted for that end are salutary and should be supported. The right of Congress to adopt such legislation for regulating interstate and foreign commerce, and to empower the making of suitable and reasonable regulations thereunder, must generally be conceded.

But, in view of what has been said, we cannot regard as “reasonable” the regulation which fixes immature, unripe peas as the standard for canned peas generally, requiring the dry peas product to be labeled in a manner which would convey to the public the impression that it is a degraded and inferior article of food, which in fact it is not.

Appellees’ produet might well be — as the evidence shows it is — a most excellent quality of the canned ripe peas variety and of high food value, and yet, under the regulation, be required to bear the legend “Low Quality.” In our judgment, the very statement of the *474 proposition carries condemnation of the regulation which requires appellees to so brand their product.

We do not think that the statute contemplates, with respect to this product, that either immature peas or the dry peas shall be the generic product whereby the other is to be graded. If canned peas are to be considered the generic product, there should be a subelassification as to the immature and the dry products, each of which, if of good quality, is .a standard food product and neither a subordinate nor an inferior of the other.

The McNary-Mapes Amendment (21 USCA § 10) is not directed toward adulteration of foods, but solely to their misbranding. Its purpose is commendable, but, if unreasonably applied, may work hardship and injustice whoEy beyond its intended and lawful scope. As stated in the amendment itself, the regulations to be made under it should “promote honesty and fair dealing in the interest of the consumer,” and the Secretary of Agriculture is authorized, from time to time, to make modifications therein “as in his judgment, honesty and fair deahng in the interest of the consumer

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

Related

Gardner v. Toilet Goods Assn., Inc.
387 U.S. 167 (Supreme Court, 1967)
Libby, McNeill & Libby v. United States
148 F.2d 71 (Second Circuit, 1945)
A. E. Staley Mfg. Co. v. Secretary of Agriculture
120 F.2d 258 (Seventh Circuit, 1941)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
69 F.2d 471, 1934 U.S. App. LEXIS 3578, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nolan-v-morgan-ca7-1934.