Pacific Coast Dairy, Inc. v. Department of Agriculture

123 P.2d 442, 19 Cal. 2d 818, 1942 Cal. LEXIS 411
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 12, 1942
DocketS. F. 16694
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 123 P.2d 442 (Pacific Coast Dairy, Inc. v. Department of Agriculture) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pacific Coast Dairy, Inc. v. Department of Agriculture, 123 P.2d 442, 19 Cal. 2d 818, 1942 Cal. LEXIS 411 (Cal. 1942).

Opinion

TRAYNOR, J. —

In 1935 the California legislature passed an act regulating the marketing and distribution of fluid milk and fluid cream. (Cal. Agr. Code, Div. 4, ch. 10, secs. 735-738.) The act declares that it is the policy of the state to promote the intelligent production and orderly marketing of such essential commodities as milk; that an adequate supply of wholesome milk is vital to the public health; that the production, transportation, processing, storage, distribution, and sale of milk and cream therefore constitute an industry affected with a public interest; and that unfair and destructive trade practices in the production, marketing, and distribution of milk and cream have menaced the public health by undermining sanitary regulations, which cannot of themselves guard against serious deterioration in the supply of milk. (Agr. Code, sec. 735.) It sets forth as one of its objectives the elimination of “speculation, waste, improper marketing, unfair and destructive trade practices, and improper accounting for milk purchased from producers. ...” The act as amended (Stats. 1937, ch. 3, 413, 710; Stats. 1941, ch. 1214) empowers the Director of Agriculture to set up defined marketing areas within the state, to prescribe minimum prices for fluid milk and fluid cream to be paid by distributors to producers in accordance with stabilization and marketing plans for such areas (secs. 735.4 (b) (4) (5) and 736.3 (b) (c)), to prescribe minimum wholesale and *820 retail prices of fluid milk and fluid cream within each area (Agr. Code, secs. 736.11, 736.12), to license milk distributors within each area, to revoke or suspend licenses for violation of any stabilization and marketing plan, and to bring actions to enjoin such violations. (Agr.. Code, sec. 737.7.)

The petitioner seeks a writ of mandamus ordering the Director of Agriculture to dismiss proceedings undertaken pursuant to section 737.11 of the Agricultural Code with the object of revoking petitioner’s license. In these proceedings it is alleged that petitioner violated section 736.3 (a) (6) of the code and of the Stabilization and Marketing Plan for the Santa Clara Marketing Area by purchasing, processing, bottling, transporting, and delivering in the Santa Clara Marketing Area fluid milk that it sold to the Federal Government for less than the minimum wholesale prices prescribed for that area. The sale occurred on Moffett Field, territory within the geographic boundaries of the Santa Clara Marketing Area, but subject to the exclusive jurisdiction of the federal government.

Since the demand for fluid milk fluctuates from day to day and cannot be anticipated exactly, the producers must supply enough milk to meet all reasonable needs; then any surplus, or “stand by,” is converted into milk products and sold by the distributors at lower prices, with corresponding lower receipts for the producers. The possibility of a surplus has been a constant threat to the stability of prices paid to the producers, given the reluctance of distributors to pay the full price for milk that becomes in part converted into milk products. A stabilization, plan counteracts this downward pull by establishing minimum prices for fluid milk. At the end of a given period, the distributor settles his accounts with the producer by paying him a “blended price” representing the price for fluid milk bought less the difference between that price and the price for the milk converted into milk products. Even then the producer does not know what the blended price will be until the expiration of the period for settling accounts. The minimum price of fluid milk, however, represents a fixed element in the blended-price that affords him at least some protection against speculation at his expense in the distribution of milk. If the distributor were under no compulsion to pay a minimum price he would seek to shift to the producer the risk of speculation in a fluetuating market by paying him the lowest possible price, not *821 only for fluid milk sold to consumers but for milk converted into milk products, and there would soon be adverse effects on standards of production.

The same adverse effects would result if the minimum price established by a stabilization plan were not uniformly enforced. The act itself anticipates that possibility by specifying that there may be no departures from the minimum price even when the milk is sold to the Federal Government on territory within the exclusive jurisdiction of that government. Section 736.3 (a) provides that any stabilization and marketing plan shall prohibit distributors and retail stores from engaging in such unfair practices as:

“(7) The payment of a lesser price by a distributor to any producer for fluid milk or fluid cream which is distributed to any person, including agencies of the Federal, State or local government, located upon property within the geographical limits of any marketing area for less than the minimum prices established by the director to be paid by distributors to producers for fluid milk or fluid cream for said marketing area.
“(8) The purchasing or receiving of any fluid milk or fluid cream by distributors from producers within a marketing area wherein a stabilization and marketing plan is in effect for less than the minimum prices established in such plan, regardless of whether such milk or cream is subsequently sold or distributed within or without such marketing area, or within or without the jurisdiction of the State of California. ’ ’

The validity of such provisions is clear. (Milk Control Board v. Eisenberg Farm Products, 306 U. S. 346 [59 S. Ct. 528, 83 L. Ed. 752]; Alabama v. King and Boozer, U. S. [62 S. Ct. 43, L. Ed.]; James v. Bramo Contracting Co., 302 U. S. 134 [58 S. Ct. 208, 82 L. Ed. 155, 114 A. L. R. 318].)

In its original form in 1935 the milk control act prescribed minimum prices to the producers only. To prescribe such prices without also prescribing minimum resale prices is ineffectual, however, since the distributors cannot pay the producers the prescribed prices unless they have some guarantee of corresponding returns. Minimum resale prices, moreover, must govern all transactions, particularly those of the producer who is his own distributor and who is otherwise apt to sell to consumers at prices below those at which regular *822 distributors are required to operate. In the light of these considerations, Article 2A was added in 1937 to provide for minimum wholesale and retail prices. Section 736.11 provides that in all marketing areas where a stabilization and marketing plan is in effect the Director of Agriculture shall prescribe minimum wholesale prices at which milk shall be sold by distributors to retail stores, and minimum retail prices at which fluid milk shall be sold by distributors and retail stores to consumers. Section 736.12 provides that in determining minimum prices for any marketing area the director shall make an investigation relative to that area of such factors as the quantities of fluid milk distributed and normally required by consumers, the price to distributors and their handling costs, and the available capacity for processing and distributing. Section 736.13 prohibits sale by distributors at less than the prescribed prices.

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Bluebook (online)
123 P.2d 442, 19 Cal. 2d 818, 1942 Cal. LEXIS 411, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pacific-coast-dairy-inc-v-department-of-agriculture-cal-1942.