North Dakota-Montana Wheat Growers Ass'n v. United States

94 Ct. Cl. 665, 1941 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 27, 1941 WL 4515
CourtUnited States Court of Claims
DecidedNovember 3, 1941
DocketNo. 43783
StatusPublished

This text of 94 Ct. Cl. 665 (North Dakota-Montana Wheat Growers Ass'n v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Court of Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
North Dakota-Montana Wheat Growers Ass'n v. United States, 94 Ct. Cl. 665, 1941 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 27, 1941 WL 4515 (cc 1941).

Opinion

LittletoN, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

In the petition filed in this case pursuant to the Joint Eesolution of Congress of June 26,1936, set forth in finding 1, plaintiff seeks to have this court find and report to Congress that by reason of the actions of the Federal Farm Board between July 15, 1929, and July 1, 1930, and the alleged representations and promises of the chairman of the Board about January 17, 1930, it suffered loss and damage in the total amount of $3,000,000, and that it is legally, equitably, and morally entitled to reimbursement for this loss by the United States with interest at 6 per centum per annum from July 1, 1930. In the alternative, plaintiff claims that for the reasons mentioned it should be reimbursed by the United States for a loss of at least $1,064,852.21 with interest.

Plaintiff contends that the Federal Farm Board, organized under the act of June 15, 1929, sought the grain cooperatives, and in particular the plaintiff, to withhold grain from the market, thereby cooperating with and becoming a part of the Federal Farm Board’s stabilization program; that markets were falling badly, a stock-market crash having occurred in the fall of 1929, and financial matters generally in the country were in chaos and confusion; that plaintiff’s president, George Duis, during the last three months of 1929 and in January 1930, conferred with Mr. Legge, the chairman of the Federal Farm Board, acquainting him with the large amount of grain which plaintiff was withholding from the market, in storage, and refraining from selling for its members, thereby incurring great expense to the plaintiff in [679]*679the process; that plaintiff’s president was assured by Mr. Legge that the plaintiff association would be taken care of; that the Federal Farm Board would meet the losses of the cooperatives; that the Board would take care of all plaintiff’s operating charges and all the advances made by plaintiff to the farmer members who delivered their grain to plaintiff, and that plaintiff would not lose any money on the Federal Farm Board program; that the Farm Board would pay back to plaintiff what had been advanced to the farmers and. everything for storage and handling charges, and that the. plaintiff would be placed in just as good a position as before.

The evidence submitted fails to establish that the Farm Board caused, or was responsible for, any loss which plaintiff may have sustained, and the far greater weight of evidence of record shows that Chairman Legge of the Farm Board did not at any time make the alleged statements or representations to plaintiff’s president. A careful study of all the evidence submitted, hearsay as well as competent evidence, shows that the most Chairman Legge ever said to plaintiff’s president, or any representative of plaintiff, was, in substance, that the Farm Board would do what it could to aid the grain cooperatives in a program designed to have a stabilizing effect on the market price for wheat. The alleged statements and representations of the chairman of the Farm Board to plaintiff’s president are claimed to have been specifically made shortly after the middle of January 1980. A recitation of some of the evidentiary facts disclosed by the record will suffice to show that plaintiff’s claim as to the alleged representations and promises of Chairman Legge is not sustained by any convincing proof.

On July 29,1929, the Farm Board invited representatives of cooperatives to a conference in Chicago to consider the creation of a national marketing agency to serve all such cooperatives in all wheat-growing areas in the United States. This conference lasted for some time and resulted in the incorporation in October 1929, under the laws of Delaware, of the Farmers National Grain Corporation with principal office in Chicago. All the stock of this corporation was owned and held by cooperative organizations, and plaintiff association was one of its stockholders. The corporation [680]*680acted as the agent oí its stockholders in their business dealings with the Farm Board, and also as a central selling agency of the cooperatives. The Farmers National Grain Corporation was not an agent of the Federal Farm Board, nor were any of the stockholders, including plaintiff, at any time an agent, or agents, of the Farm Board.

August 15, 1929, the plaintiff through its president, Mr. Duis, appeared before the Farm Board to urge the granting of loans to cooperatives by the Board supplemental to 75 percent of the market value which plaintiff could then procure on warehouse receipts from the Federal Intermediate Credit Banks in order to enable plaintiff to advance 85 percent of the existing market value of its wheat to its members instead of 10 percent as theretofore. Such loans by the Board were authorized by section-7 (a) (5) of the Agricultural Marketing Act. Thereafter, the Farm Board authorized supplemental loans, in addition to primary loans, to plaintiff and to other cooperatives on the basis of 10 cents a bushel for wheat, provided the total amount loaned, including the primary loans, did not exceed one dollar a bushel.

The financial panic which occurred late in October 1929 affected particularly the market for stocks and bonds, and for grains. September 12, 1929, plaintiff made a formal written application to the Farm Board for a supplemental loan of $500,000 to be used in making supplemental advances of 10 cents a bushel to its members. In connection with that application, plaintiff, through its president, informed the Board, among other things, that “There is a recognized congestion in the terminal markets in our territory which is manifestly depressing prices below normal values and will retard a reasonable price advance so long as it continues. This makes it extremely desirable to keep back as much wheat as possible.”

September 24', 1929, plaintiff telegraphed the chairman of the Farm Board urging the Board immediately to establish a stabilization corporation under the emergency authority conferred by section 9 of the Agricultural Marketing Act in an effort to prevent a further decline in wheat prices; This telegram in part was as follows:

[681]*681Markets at terminals are dead. Prices are continually falling. Wheat is away below cost of production and farm problem is growing more acute on account of falling prices. This condition can be remedied only by Farm Board. Immediate establishment of a stabilization corporation with power to purchase some wheat will solve the difficulty. The effect of such corporation would be instantaneous, if they bought just a little wheat. Prices would improve not less than twenty cents per bushel. A sure profit would be made by stabilization corporation.

The Farm Board and Chairman Legge were opposed to the establishment of a grain stabilization corporation at that time. Plaintiff’s president was firmly and strongly of the opinion that the Farm Board should inaugurate a definite program and use so much of its authorized fund of $500,-000,000 as might be necessary to hold wheat off the market through the cooperatives and a grain stabilization corporation for such length of time as might be necessary to maintain and improve prices and that the Farm Board should assume the cost of such a program, but this view was not the view of the Farm Board and its chairman.

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Bluebook (online)
94 Ct. Cl. 665, 1941 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 27, 1941 WL 4515, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/north-dakota-montana-wheat-growers-assn-v-united-states-cc-1941.