Peterson v. Valley Packing Co.

276 P.2d 403, 202 Or. 489, 1954 Ore. LEXIS 268
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 10, 1954
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 276 P.2d 403 (Peterson v. Valley Packing Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Peterson v. Valley Packing Co., 276 P.2d 403, 202 Or. 489, 1954 Ore. LEXIS 268 (Or. 1954).

Opinion

TOOZE, J.

This is an action by E. L. Peterson, director of the Department of Agriculture, State of Oregon, plaintiff, against Valley Packing Co., a corporation, defendant, to recover the sum of $366, as charges for brand inspection of cattle at the Salem, Oregon, packing plant of defendant. The case was tried to the court without a jury’s intervention. Judgment was entered in favor of defendant; plaintiff appeals.

The brand inspection was performed and recovery is sought by plaintiff pursuant to his interpretation of the provisions of ch 193, Oregon Laws 1949. This act is otherwise known as the “Livestock Identification and Theft Prevention Act.”

The facts are undisputed. Defendant operates a meat-packing plant in Salem, Oregon. It purchases livestock and slaughters them at its plant. Between August 23,1949, and May 6,1951, defendant purchased, and there were delivered to its Salem plant, 1464 head of cattle, which plaintiff claims were brand inspected [491]*491by him after their arrival in Salem. It is to recover the charges for such inspection that plaintiff brings this action.

The 1464 cattle involved in this case were shipped from outside the state of Oregon to commission firms at the Portland Union Stock Yards for sale. The Portland Union Stock Yards is a “posted market” under the Federal Packers and Stockyards Act. The commission agents operating at such yards are approved by the United States Department of Agriculture. The cattle were sold by the commission firms, as agents of the out-of-state shipper, to the defendant, and were shipped by rail to defendant’s Salem plant.

All the cattle involved were shipped by common carrier from the out-of-state shipping points to the Portland Union Stock Yards, and were accompanied by the usual way bills and freight bills. All were subject to what is known as “diversion privileges”. This means that the Portland-Salem movement (after purchase by defendant) was on the same shipping bill as the prior movement to the Stock Yards in Portland, at the same freight rate, and not on a new billing which would entail a higher freight rate.

Plaintiff contends that the movement of the cattle in interstate commerce terminated at the Stock Yards in Portland, and that the shipment from the Stock Yards to the Salem packing plant of defendant constituted a new shipment “originating in Oregon”, and by reason thereof, the cattle in question were subject to brand inspection under the provisions of ch 193, Oregon Laws 1949. Defendant contends that the interstate character of the shipment did not terminate until the cattle arrived in Salem. Defendant further contends that should the shipment from Portland to Salem be considered as an intrastate shipment, and not as [492]*492a continuation of the interstate movement from the original out-of-state points, then the provisions of ch 193, Oregon Laws 1949, requiring brand inspection, would be invalid as constituting an unreasonable burden upon interstate commerce in livestock.

This is the second time that we have been called upon to construe the provisions of ch 193, Oregon Laws 1949, as they relate to shipments of cattle by out-of-state shippers to the Stock Yards in Portland, where the cattle are sold and then transported to the plants of the purchasers in Oregon. In Swift & Co. and Armour & Co. v. Peterson, 192 Or 97, 233 P2d 216, Mr. Justice Warner, speaking for the court, thoroughly analyzed and construed this statute. The entire text of the statute is set forth as an appendix to the opinion.

After a most painstaking analysis of all the provisions of ch 193, Oregon Laws 1949, Mr. Justice Warner stated the following conclusion: “* * # the only livestock amendable to brand inspection under the Act of 1949 are those which are a part of shipments originating in the state of Oregon, * * *.” He stated further: “ * * * the legislature had no intention to reach shipments originating outside of the state, well knowing that it had neither jurisdiction nor power to compel the execution of such certificates by persons charged with such shipments”.

But, as noted, plaintiff now contends that the shipment from Portland to Salem constituted a new shipment which originated in the state of Oregon, and that under our original opinion the cattle in question were subject to brand inspection. However, plaintiff overlooks the fact that this precise question was before us in the prior case. Both Swift & Co. and Armour & Co., the plaintiffs in the prior litigation, purchased livestock received at the Portland Hnion Stock Yards from [493]*493out-of-state shippers and then transported their purchases to their own slaughtering plants in Portland, just as the Valley Packing Co. made its purchases at the Stock Yards and then transported the cattle to Salem. As to those cattle so purchased at the Stock Yards by plaintiffs in the prior ease, and by them transported from the Stock Yards to their own packing plants, we said that the shipments did not originate in the state of Oregon, and that the cattle so purchased and transported were not subject to brand inspection. Insofar as the interstate character of the shipment is concerned, it is immaterial that in the prior case the transportation from the Stock Yards to the plants of Swift & Co. and Armour & Co. in Portland involved short distances only, as compared to the 53-mile distance between Portland and Salem in the instant litigation; neither does the means of transportation employed between stockyards and paeldng plants make any difference.

In the prior case the plaintiff in this ease, the defendant there, filed a petition for rehearing in this court, suggesting that our opinion endowed livestock, which have been imported into Oregon, with a continuing immunity from the operation of the brand-inspection law. In denying the petition for rehearing, we stated the question presented by the petition as follows: “Does livestock not become part of the mass of property within this state, as do other subjects of commerce, when the interstate shipment thereof is ended and the animals come into the possession of Oregon owners?”

Replying to the question, Mr. Justice Wabneb wrote (p 138):

“We do not think that the reasons assigned for that query, nor the query itself, are warranted by any language found in the original opinion.
[494]*494“It is not always easy to determine the exact moment when any given shipment in interstate transportation comes to an end or its final place of rest. It is, nevertheless, a matter of common knowledge that all interstate shipments eventually reach a terminal point, that is, a place where their interstate character and incident immunities from state interference and control are immediately and completely lost and where the shipment, by the same token, becomes immediately and completely responsive and liable to any nondiscriminatory local laws appropriately relating to it. Such is true of any livestock coming into this state from without its boundaries by any means of transport. When we use the term ‘final place of rest’, we have no reference to that type of temporary rest or momentary interruption in the continued flow of commerce which sometimes give a commodity a temporary situs sufficient to make it liable to assessment for taxation under local tax laws.” (Italics ours.)

It is manifest that every question now raised by the plaintiff was fully answered in our original opinion.

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Bluebook (online)
276 P.2d 403, 202 Or. 489, 1954 Ore. LEXIS 268, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peterson-v-valley-packing-co-or-1954.