Oscar H. Will & Co. v. State

281 N.W. 65, 68 N.D. 433, 1938 N.D. LEXIS 129
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 13, 1938
DocketFile No. 6542.
StatusPublished

This text of 281 N.W. 65 (Oscar H. Will & Co. v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Oscar H. Will & Co. v. State, 281 N.W. 65, 68 N.D. 433, 1938 N.D. LEXIS 129 (N.D. 1938).

Opinion

*435 Morris, J.

The Board of Eailroad Commissioners of the State of North Dakota demanded that the plaintiff apply for a license as a public warehouseman and comply with the rules and regulations pertaining to public warehouses adopted by the Board, and threatened to invoke the penalties of the Grain Warehouse Law in event the plaintiff failed to comply with these demands. The plaintiff, by this action, seeks to enjoin the Board from enforcing or attempting to enforce the Grain Warehouse Law, and the rules and regulations of the Board against the plaintiff upon the ground that it does not conduct a business as a public warehouseman. The only witness at the trial was the president of the plaintiff company who testified at length concerning the plaintiff’s business and the methods by which it was conducted. The District Court found that the plaintiff-is not a public warehouseman and is, therefore, not required to obtain a license as such and restrained the defendants as prayed for in the complaint. The defendants appeal from the judgment of the District Court and ask a trial de novo.

The question determinative of this controversy is whether the plaintiff, Oscar H. Will & Company, operates a public warehouse as that term is defined by the statutes of this state. The legislature by chapter 155, N. D. Session Laws 1927, passed “An Act to Eegulate Grain .and Seed Warehouses;” which vested .in. the Board of Eailroad Com *436 missioners power to license and regulate public warehouses and imposed upon the Board certain duties with reference thereto including the duty to require public warehousemen to obtain a license to operate. Sections 3 and Y of this Act describe the duties of the Board and define public warehouses as follows:

“Section 3. The Commission shall exercise general supervision of the public warehouses of this State, including the handling, weighing and storing of grain and seeds, • and the management of public warehouses; it shall investigate all complaints of fraud and injustice, unfair practices and unfair discrimination, and shall make all proper rules and regulations for carrying out and enforcing any law in this State regarding the same.
“Section Y. All buildings, elevators and warehouses, and all grist and flour mills, cereal and feed mills and seed houses, doing a shipping-business in this state, erected and operated, or which may hereafter be erected or operated by any person, association, copartnership or corporation, for the purpose of buying, selling, storing, shipping or handling grain and seeds for profit, are declared public warehouses and the person, association, copartnership or corporation owning or operating-such buildings, elevators, mills or warehouses, which are now, or may be hereafter located or doing business within this State, whether such owners or operators reside within this State or not, are public ware-housemen within the meaning of this section. Provided, that nothing in this act contained shall be construed to require any person or persons operating a flour, cereal or feed mill or seed house doing a manufacturing business only, to receive, store or purchase at said mill or seed house any kind of grain.”

By chapter 13Y, N. D. Session Laws 1929, the legislature amended and re-enacted the two .sections above quoted to read:

“Section 3. The commission shall exercise general supervision of the public warehouses of this state, including the handling, weighing and storing of grain, and the management of public warehouses; it shall investigate all complaints of fraud and injustice, unfair practices and unfair discrimination, and shall make all proper rules and regulations for carrying out and enforcing any law in this State regarding the same.
“Section Y. All buildings, elevators and warehouses, and all grist *437 and flour mills, cereal and feed mills doing a shipping business in this state,'erected and operated, or which may hereafter be erected or operated, by any person, association, co-partnership or corporation, for the purpose of public buying, selling storing and shipping grain for profit, are declared public warehouses and the person, association, co-partnership or corporation owning or operating such buildings, elevators, mills or warehouses which are now or may be hereafter located or doing business within this state, whether such owners or operators reside within this state or not, are public warehousemen within the meaning of this section, provided, that nothing in this act contained shall be construed to require any person or persons operating a flour, cereal or feed mill doing a manufacturing business only to receive, store or purchase at said mill any kind of grain.”

A comparison between the enactments of 1927 and 1929 discloses that the words “seeds” and “seed houses” were omitted in the amendment. Thus, by the amendment, seed houses, as such, were eliminated from the operation of the act. Unless the business which they do is such as to warrant their regulation because the scope of the business extends beyond that ordinarily done by seed houses, the act does not now apply to them.

Another significant change made by the 1929 Act was the insertion of the word public as an adjective modifying the business activities sought to be regulated. The defendants contend that the evidence shows that the plaintiff is a public buyer of grain. That it is a buyer of grain remains undisputed. Whether the plaintiff is a public buyer is one of the chief points in controversy. The word public, as used in the amended statute, is an adjective which modifies and limits the word buying. Among the definitions of “public” found in Black’s Law Diet. (3d ed.) are, “Open to all; common to all or many; general; open to common use.”

It was not the intention of the legislature that all who buy grain for resale must be licensed. It is the public nature of the business which brings about regulation by the state through the Board of Bailroad Commissioners as a protection to producers and shippers. A public buyer of grain, as contemplated by the statute, is one who holds himself out to the public as being willing and ready to purchase grain from .the public generally. The term grain, as defined by § 25, chapter 155, N. *438 D. Session Laws, 1927, “is held to signify and include the following products: wheat, durum, oats, rye, barley, buckwheat, flaxseed, speltz and corn.”

The plaintiff company operates a nursery and seed house. It raises plants, flowers, shrubs, seeds, and some feed for sale. It also buys plants, flowers, and seeds, for resale. Among its purchases in past years have been varied and limited quantities of grain described in the foregoing definition. ' It has, therefore, been a buyer of such grain. The Grain Warehouse Act does not, however, attempt to bring everyone who buys grain within the purview of the act. We must, therefore, examine into the nature and methods of the plaintiff’s business in order to determine whether it has become a public warehouseman. The evidence discloses that the plaintiff secures 90 per cent of the seed corn necessary to its business by entering into contracts with growers. The plaintiff furnishes the seed corn, the grower plants it and cares for it.

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Bluebook (online)
281 N.W. 65, 68 N.D. 433, 1938 N.D. LEXIS 129, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oscar-h-will-co-v-state-nd-1938.