Ohio Fresh Eggs v. Wise, 07ap-780 (5-20-2008)

2008 Ohio 2423
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 20, 2008
DocketNo. 07AP-780.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 2008 Ohio 2423 (Ohio Fresh Eggs v. Wise, 07ap-780 (5-20-2008)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ohio Fresh Eggs v. Wise, 07ap-780 (5-20-2008), 2008 Ohio 2423 (Ohio Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

OPINION
{¶ 1} Appellants, the Ohio Department of Agriculture ("ODA"), Fred L. Dailey, the Director of the ODA ("Director"), and Howard F. Wise, the Assistant Director of the ODA, *Page 2 appeal from an order of the Environmental Review Appeals Commission ("ERAC") vacating the Director's order that revoked the permits to install and permits to operate of appellee, Ohio Fresh Eggs, LLC ("Ohio Fresh Eggs"). For the following reasons, we affirm.

{¶ 2} Ohio Fresh Eggs owns and operates multiple commercial egg production facilities in Ohio. One facility, located in Croton, Ohio, consists of four layer sites, four pullet sites, and a hatchery.1 The other facilities, collectively referred to as the northern facilities, consist of two layer sites and one pullet site.

{¶ 3} Ohio Fresh Eggs purchased these facilities from Buckeye Egg Farm ("BEF"). While BEF owned and operated the facilities, it habitually violated environmental statutes and regulations. When BEF failed to ameliorate its environmental problems, the Director proposed the revocation of BEF's permits. After a hearing, the Director revoked the permits and ordered BEF to close its facilities no later than June 1, 2004. Subsequent appeals of the Director's order were unsuccessful.

{¶ 4} Faced with the forced closure of the facilities, BEF decided to sell its assets. A number of potential buyers contacted the ODA and inquired about the application process for acquiring permits to install and to operate the BEF facilities. In June 2002, Jerry Crawford, an attorney representing Austin "Jack" DeCoster, met with the Director to discuss whether DeCoster could get the necessary permits to operate the BEF facilities. Because DeCoster had accrued a poor environmental record in operating his Iowa hog farm, the Director informed Crawford that it was highly unlikely that the ODA would issue DeCoster any permits. *Page 3

{¶ 5} Donald Hershey and Orland Bethel also explored the possibility of purchasing BEF assets; specifically, they entered into negotiations to buy the Croton facility. Hershey owns Hershey Equipment Company, which constructs poultry houses and feed mills. Bethel owns Hillandale Farms, LLC, an egg marketing and distribution business. Hershey and Bethel had previously partnered in the ownership of a Pennsylvania egg farm. Ultimately, however, Hershey and Bethel decided not to purchase the Croton facility.

{¶ 6} Soon after Hershey and Bethel abandoned their plans to purchase the Croton facility, DeCoster approached Hershey with a proposal that he would finance the purchase of the BEF facilities, which Hershey would then operate. Hershey agreed.

{¶ 7} DeCoster intended to use the proceeds from the sale of his Iowa hog farm to purchase BEF, and in order to avoid taxes on those proceeds, he needed the purchase of BEF to qualify as a like-kind exchange under federal income tax laws. For a like-kind exchange to be successful, DeCoster had to qualify as the "owner" of the BEF facilities under federal income tax law. At the same time, DeCoster wanted to avoid becoming the "owner" of the BEF facilities under Ohio law because he knew that the ODA would probably not grant him the necessary permits to operate the facilities.

{¶ 8} To solve this problem, Hershey and Bethel formed Ohio Fresh Eggs to purchase BEF. According to the plan, DeCoster would pay $20 million for an option to purchase Ohio Fresh Eggs. In turn, Ohio Fresh Eggs would purchase BEF's assets with the $20 million from DeCoster. Because DeCoster's status as the optionee would remain confidential, only DeCoster, Hershey, and Bethel would know that DeCoster financed the purchase of BEF. Consequently, Ohio Fresh Eggs could purchase BEF and receive the *Page 4 necessary permits without the ODA discovering, and possibly objecting to, DeCoster's involvement.

{¶ 9} No one disputes that this arrangement, once completed, resulted in DeCoster becoming the "tax owner" of Ohio Fresh Eggs. At issue in this case, however, is whether DeCoster's involvement was such that Ohio law required his disclosure in the permitting applications.

{¶ 10} Pursuant to R.C. 903.02(C)(1), an application for a permit to install must include:

The name and address of the applicant, of all partners if the applicant is a partnership or of all officers and directors if the applicant is a corporation, and of any other person who has a right to control or in fact controls management of the applicant or the selection of officers, directors, or managers of the applicant[.]

An application for a permit to operate must include the same information. R.C. 903.03(C)(1).2 Once the ODA receives a permit application, it conducts a background check of each entity and/or person named in the application if that entity or person has not operated a concentrated animal feeding facility in Ohio for at least two of the five years immediately proceeding the submission of the application. See R.C. 903.05.

{¶ 11} In the course of structuring the financing for the purchase of BEF, Ohio Fresh Egg's attorney, Melanie Lehman, sought guidance from the ODA regarding whether R.C. 903.02(C)(1) and 903.03(C)(1) necessitated the inclusion of DeCoster's name in the permit applications. Lehman explained to the ODA that Hershey and Bethel wanted to sell an option to purchase Ohio Fresh Eggs to a confidential optionee. Lehman *Page 5 also provided the ODA with a brief summary of the option arrangement, which stated in part:

Both [Hershey] and [Bethel] are going to sell options to purchase their interests in Ohio Fresh Eggs, LLC, and the purchaser(s) of those options are only willing to pay for the right to later purchase the applicant if the identity of the Optionee and its member(s) can remain anonymous. If those options are exercised, as to the permitted facilities, it is the understanding of all the parties that new permits would have to be applied for at that time by the Optionee. As part of the option the Optionee and its owner(s) will place certain restrictions on the removal of money from the operations and required re-investments in the plant and improvements. There is a six (year) management agreement with Mr. Hershey's company and neither the Optionee nor its Member(s) can select any officers of the applicant.

{¶ 12} During an August 6, 2003 conference call, Hershey and Lehman discussed the summary with ODA employees, including Kevin Elder, Executive Director of the Livestock Environmental Permitting Program ("LEPP"), and Jennifer Tiell, a staff attorney with the LEPP. Lehman explained that Ohio Fresh Eggs needed to sell an option to raise the capital to purchase BEF and that, as part of the option agreement, Ohio Fresh Eggs would have to agree to allow the optionee to impose certain restrictions on Ohio Fresh Eggs' operations.

{¶ 13} Prior to this conference call, the LEPP staff had discussed the situation and concluded that Ohio law did not require an applicant to name a "purely passive investor," i.e., one "who acted like a bank," in permit applications. (Tr.

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Bluebook (online)
2008 Ohio 2423, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ohio-fresh-eggs-v-wise-07ap-780-5-20-2008-ohioctapp-2008.