Ricks v. Louisiana Milk Commission

32 So. 2d 643, 1947 La. App. LEXIS 551
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 21, 1947
DocketNo. 2943.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 32 So. 2d 643 (Ricks v. Louisiana Milk Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ricks v. Louisiana Milk Commission, 32 So. 2d 643, 1947 La. App. LEXIS 551 (La. Ct. App. 1947).

Opinion

On October 11, 1946, the Governor of Louisiana, acting as he was authorized to do, by virtue of the provisions of Act No. 192 of 1946 which had created the Louisiana Milk Commission, appointed as members, Charles M. Rhodes, Thomas J. Jenniskens, J. Wayland Smith, H.L. Guth, and C.R. Wilson. With other appointees, the Commission met on December 18, 1946, for the purpose of organization. At that meeting the members caused warrants to be issued to themselves in order to defray per diem allowances and mileage expenses and these were paid from out of the appropriation made by the Legislature for the Louisiana Milk Commission by the general appropriation Act of 1946, being Act No. 66 *Page 644 of that year. The plaintiffs in this case who are residents, taxpayers and dairy farmers of the Parish of Tangipahoa, claiming that the Commissioners just named did not have the proper qualifications to serve as members on the Commission, instituted this suit seeking an injunction to restrain them from taking part in any further meetings of the commission and also to enjoin the Director of Finance of the State of Louisiana, James S. Reiley, from issuing any warrants or vouchers or other orders for withdrawal of funds from the State Treasury in their favor.

The grounds on which the qualifications of these appointed members are challenged are the following: Charles M. Rhodes, on the ground that he was appointed from the First Congressional District of Louisiana under the provisions of the act, when in fact he was not a resident of that Congressional District and besides was not engaged in the actual production of milk nor was he a distributor as he was engaged in the milk business only to the extent that he was an officer and manager of the Cloverland Dairy Products of New Orleans, a corporation, and therefore he could not serve as an individual on the commission; Thomas J. Jenniskens on the ground that he was not actually engaged in the production of milk and moreover that he had failed to qualify by not taking the necessary oath of office when his commission was issued to him; J. Wayland Smith and H.L. Guth, on the ground that they were not engaged in the actual production of milk as contemplated under the statute creating the commission and C.R. Wilson, on the same ground and in addition that he also was not individually engaged in the milk business at all as he was the manager of the Blue Ribbon Dairy of Alexandria, Louisiana, whose business is owned and controlled by the corporation known as the Louisiana Ice and Utilities Company, Inc.

All the defendants filed exceptions of no right or cause of action which were overruled by the trial judge. The exceptions are not urged either in argument or in brief before this court and therefore do not have to be considered.

The defense to the rule for injunction is based on the ground that all of these appointees were qualified to serve as commissioners under the act, each having the necessary qualifications prescribed under their respective appointments. After trial of the rule for injunction the district judge, in a written opinion, dismissed the same, and refused to grant the injunction. Counsel for the plaintiffs served notice at the time that he would apply for writs to the Supreme Court but later abandoned this procedure and filed a supplemental petition which does not seem to have added more to the issues that had been presented in the pleadings before. The defendants then put the case at issue on the merits and the matter was submitted to the trial judge on the testimony which had been taken on trial of the rule for injunction. The trial judge again wrote a lengthy opinion in which he held that the appointee Rhodes could not serve on the commission in as he had been appointed a commissioner from a Congressional District of which he was not a resident, that the appointee Smith was ineligible because he was not engaged in the actual production of milk as required under the statute and that Wilson who had been appointed as a producer of milk could not serve because he was not engaged in the actual production of milk, his only connection with the production end having been as manager of the Blue Ribbon Dairy which, at the time of his appointment, no longer owned a dairy and had ceased operations as a producer of milk. He refused to recognize his appointment as a distributor of milk in place of Rhodes whose appointment as such he had voided, as he had been urged to do, for two reasons: First, he held that even though he might well have served as a distributor as an official or representative of the Louisiana Ice and Utilities Co., Inc., his relationship to that corporation had not been shown and second, as the Governor had specifically appointed him as a producer, clearly it was not his intention to have him serve as a distributor of milk. He upheld the appointments of Jenniskens and Guth and rendered judgment accordingly. From that judgment plaintiffs have appealed maintaining that all of these appointees are disqualified and have been shown so to be under the testimony adduced in the record. *Page 645

The statute in question is entitled "An act to create the Louisiana Milk Commission and granting to same the power to regulate the buying or receiving of milk or cream on the basis of butterfat contents thereof, regulating testing, sampling and weighing of same, to require licenses for testing milk or cream, to adopt rules and regulations to regulate methods of testing, sampling or weighing of milk or cream and providing penalties for the violation of this Act." The first section of the Act provides for the creation of the Milk Commission which by the terms of that Section is to be composed of the following: "Commissioner of Agriculture and Immigration; the head of the Dairy Department at Louisiana State University and Agricultural and Mechanical College; and nine members to be appointed by the Governor, one from each of the Congressional Districts of the State, seven (7) of these members are to be men engaged in the actual production of milk, and one (1) a distributor of milk, and one member to be appointed at large, who must be engaged in the actual production of milk." With regard to the appointments which are attacked in this proceeding we are interested only in those members who were appointed by the Governor and the direct question at issue is whether seven of these men who were appointed from the Congressional Districts are men engaged in the actual production of milk and whether the one appointed at large is also thus engaged. The other of the nine has to be a distributor of milk.

The appointment of Charles M. Rhodes as a distributor of milk which had been attacked on two grounds, one of which only was sustained by the trial judge, is no longer at issue as it seems to be conceded that his appointment from the First Congressional District cannot stand in view of the fact tht he is a resident of the Second Congressional District. The trial judge held that otherwise he might have served as a distributor of milk even though in his capacity as such he was merely an official of a corporation. It is unnecessary to discuss this phase of his lack of qualifications for, as we have just stated it is conceded by the defendants that he is ineligible on the other ground on which his appointment was vitiated.

[1] With regard to Thomas J. Jenniskens who was appointed as a producer from the Second Congressional District, the testimony shows that this appointee failed to qualify by not taking the oath prescribed for public officials when he received his first commission from the Governor. It is not disputed that he did not take the oath and that he at that time was not qualified to serve.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
32 So. 2d 643, 1947 La. App. LEXIS 551, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ricks-v-louisiana-milk-commission-lactapp-1947.