San Miguel Produce, Inc. v. L.G. Herndon Jr. Farms, Inc.

CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Georgia
DecidedSeptember 11, 2019
Docket6:16-cv-00035
StatusUnknown

This text of San Miguel Produce, Inc. v. L.G. Herndon Jr. Farms, Inc. (San Miguel Produce, Inc. v. L.G. Herndon Jr. Farms, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
San Miguel Produce, Inc. v. L.G. Herndon Jr. Farms, Inc., (S.D. Ga. 2019).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF GEORGIA STATESBORO DIVISION

SAN MIGUEL PRODUCE, INC.,

Plaintiff, CIVIL ACTION NO.: 6:16-cv-35

v.

L.G. HERNDON JR. FARMS, INC.,

Defendant.

O RDER CERTIFICATION OF QUESTIONS FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF GEORGIA TO THE SUPREME COURT OF GEORGIA PURSUANT TO O.C.G.A. § 15-2-9.

TO THE SUPREME COURT OF GEORGIA AND ITS HONORABLE JUSTICES:

The above-captioned matter comes before this Court on Plaintiff and Defendants’ respective Motions for Partial Summary Judgment. (Docs. 61, 66.) After a thorough review of the record, it appears to this Court that resolution of these motions and adjudication of this case involve questions of Georgia law—regarding contract enforceability, licensing requirements, and public policy—that are determinative but unanswered by controlling precedent of the Supreme Court of Georgia or the Georgia Court of Appeals. The Court therefore respectfully CERTIFIES the questions below for resolution by the Supreme Court of Georgia. See O.C.G.A. § 15-2-9; Ga. Sup. Ct. R. 46. For this reason, the Court ADMINISTRATIVELY CLOSES and STAYS this case until such time as the Supreme Court of Georgia renders its answers to the certified questions herein. The Court DIRECTS the Clerk of Court to transmit each party’s Motion for Partial Summary Judgment and all related filings—including briefs, attachments, fact statements, declarations, etc.—to the Supreme Court of Georgia to assist its consideration of the certified questions presented. Ga. Sup. Ct. R. 47. BACKGROUND This case concerns a contract dispute between Plaintiff San Miguel Produce, Inc. (“San

Miguel”), a California corporation that grows, processes, and ships produce, and Defendant L.G. Herndon Jr. Farms, Inc. (“Herndon Farms”), a Georgia corporation that grows and ships produce. (Docs. 1, 30, 31.) In September 2014, these parties entered into a “Grower-Shipper Agreement” (“the GSA”), under which Herndon Farms, “the Grower,” was responsible for growing and delivering produce ordered by San Miguel, “the Shipper,” to ROBO Produce LLC (“ROBO”), the jointly-owned operator of a packing and processing facility in Toombs County, Georgia. (Doc. 66-2, pp. 2–4.) Herndon Farms also agreed to source crops from other growers in the event it could not meet San Miguel’s anticipated volume of orders. (Id.) In turn, San Miguel was obligated to purchase the produce delivered by Herndon Farms, to sell and market all products to regional and national accounts, and to provide sales and marking opportunities for Herndon Farms’ bulk

product sales. (Id.) The produce delivered by Herndon Farms was to be sold at cost to San Miguel, and the parties agreed to equally divide the profits from the sale of products processed and shipped through ROBO. (Id.) Georgia law governs this agreement. (Id. at p. 11.) Concurrent with the GSA, San Miguel and Herndon Farms entered into an Operating Agreement creating ROBO, and San Miguel executed a Co-Packing Agreement with ROBO.1 (Doc. 63, pp. 3–4.) Under the ROBO Operating Agreement, San Miguel and Herndon Farms were co-managers of ROBO and equal members, with each holding a fifty percent interest. (Doc. 66-

1 In total, San Miguel, Herndon Farms, and ROBO entered into five agreements: (1) the GSA between San Miguel and Herndon Farms; (2) the Operating Agreement between San Miguel and Herndon Farms establishing ROBO; (3) the Co-Packing Agreement between San Miguel and ROBO; (4) an equipment- lease agreement between San Miguel and ROBO for the facility’s processing equipment; and (5) a building- lease agreement between Herndon Farms and ROBO to house the facility. (Doc. 63, pp. 3–4.) 3, pp. 2, 5.) Herndon Farms was “the on-site managing member of the operation,” while San Miguel retained the right to make “[a]ll decisions regarding food safety regulations, procedures and product quality.” (Id. at p. 5.) Under the Co-Packing Agreement between ROBO and San Miguel, ROBO was to process and package quantities of produce that San Miguel would direct its

grower to deliver at the Toombs County facility. (Doc. 64-14, p. 1.) San Miguel promised to, inter alia, procure and provide a sufficient supply of produce to meet San Miguel’s own requirements, give oversight and direction on facility operations, and supply all necessary packaging materials. (Id. at p. 2.) The Co-Packing Agreement and the GSA were both to last for a term of five years commencing on November 1, 2014. (Id. at p. 1; doc. 66-3, p. 2.) Herndon Farms and San Miguel’s business arrangement, however, proved unsuccessful, and the relationship terminated in February 2016, less than two years after it began. (Doc. 62, pp. 1–2; doc. 66, pp. 2–3.) Over that period, issues apparently arose with Herndon Farms’ ability to deliver sufficient produce, or source enough from third-party growers, to meet San Miguel’s requirements. (Doc. 1, p. 13; see doc. 62, pp. 11–13 & n.6.) While the parties were able to agree

on some third-party sources, San Miguel eventually began shipping its own produce from California to the ROBO facility despite Herndon Farms’ concerns over high transportation costs. (See Doc. 63, pp. 5–7.) Notably, at no point during the making of the parties’ agreements or during their short-lived business arrangement did San Miguel obtain the Georgia state license required by O.C.G.A § 2-9-2 for dealers in agricultural products.2 (Doc. 63, pp. 2–3; see doc. 79, pp. 6–8.) The instant litigation began on March 25, 2016, when San Miguel filed suit against Herndon Farms. (Doc. 1.) Herndon Farms then filed a separate action against San Miguel on April 5, 2016. See Notice, L.G. Herndon Jr., Farms, Inc. v. San Miguel Produce, Inc., No. 6:16-

2 Both San Miguel and Herndon Farms hold federal licenses to buy and sell produce in interstate commerce. (Doc. 1, p. 1; doc. 30, p. 15.) CV-043 (S.D. Ga. Apr. 12, 2016), ECF No. 1. The two actions were consolidated into this single case on December 6, 2016, (doc. 29), and the consolidated case was reassigned for plenary disposition to the undersigned on September 4, 2018, (doc. 87). Each party brings several causes of action against the other arising out of their failed grower-shipper arrangement. (Docs. 1, 30.)

The matter is now at the summary judgment stage with San Miguel and Herndon Farms each filing a Motion for Partial Summary Judgment. (Docs. 61, 66.) DISCUSSION Though the legal and factual disputes in this case are many, (see docs. 62, 66, 76, 79, 83, 85), much of the case turns on the determinative question of whether the GSA is unenforceable and void under Georgia law. At its core, this case concerns San Miguel’s allegation that Herndon Farms breached the GSA by failing to deliver produce as required under that agreement, (see doc. 1),3 and Herndon Farms’ counter-allegation that San Miguel breached the GSA by failing to remit payment on all produce delivered by Herndon Farms, (see doc. 30).4 In fact, following discovery and summary judgment briefing, Herndon Farms’ only

remaining claims against San Miguel concern two alleged breaches of the GSA—one for failing to pay invoices on produce Herndon Farms delivered and the other for inducing Herndon Farms to grow produce before terminating the GSA. (See Doc. 76, pp. 1–2 & n.1; doc. 30, pp. 17, 20– 22.) Similarly, apart from San Miguel’s federal-law claim for allegedly misweighed produce and its breach of the ROBO Operating Agreement claim, San Miguel’s only remaining claims against

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San Miguel Produce, Inc. v. L.G. Herndon Jr. Farms, Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/san-miguel-produce-inc-v-lg-herndon-jr-farms-inc-gasd-2019.