Sanchez v. Grain Growers Assn.

126 Cal. App. 3d 665, 179 Cal. Rptr. 459, 1981 Cal. App. LEXIS 2455
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 2, 1981
DocketCiv. 19679
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 126 Cal. App. 3d 665 (Sanchez v. Grain Growers Assn.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sanchez v. Grain Growers Assn., 126 Cal. App. 3d 665, 179 Cal. Rptr. 459, 1981 Cal. App. LEXIS 2455 (Cal. Ct. App. 1981).

Opinion

Opinion

PHILLIPS, J. *

Plaintiffs sued defendant, a nonprofit agricultural cooperative association, for money due, declaratory relief and an accounting. Plaintiffs are expelled members of the association. 1 The court entered judgment for plaintiffs, and defendant appeals.

The primary purpose of defendant agricultural association, as outlined in article I of its bylaws, was the processing, utilization and marketing of grain and grain sorghum crops produced by member-growers. 2 Operating on a nonprofit basis, the association returned any net proceeds realized to its members.

Such cooperative associations find statutory authorization in Food and Agricultural Code section 54001 et seq. 3 in order to, “(a) [promote ... the intelligent and orderly marketing of agricultural products through cooperation; (b) [eliminate speculation and waste; (c) [m]ake the distribution of agricultural products between producer and consumer as direct as can be efficiently done; [and] (d) [stabilize the marketing of agricultural products.” (§ 54031.)

Section 54111 of the code requires such associations to adopt a set of bylaws. If the association desires, the bylaws may prescribe an amount each member is required to contribute to meet the financial requirements for carrying on the business of the association. (§ 54119.) In the present situation, defendant provided for its financial needs by withholding a stipulated dollar amount for each ton of products marketed. *669 This money, known as “retains,” was credited to one of two accounts (either the “Capital Revolving Fund” or the “Operating Revolving Fund” 4 ) in the members’ names (known as “Revolving Fund Credits”).

Any retains determined by defendant’s board of directors to be in excess of the association’s financial needs were returned to the members according to the following bylaw provisions: “At the conclusion of each crop year, it shall be the duty of the Board of Directors to determine what moneys then in each of said Revolving Funds, including those retained for the Revolving Funds during such crop year, are then not needed, and will not be needed for the use of the Association. ... [¶] The amounts so determined not to be needed for the use of the Association will then be used for payment of the indebtedness evidenced or represented by the oldest (unpaid) Revolving Fund Credits, and not later than the annual meeting next succeeding the close of the season, the oldest indebtedness or Revolving Fund Credits shall, to the extent of the moneys available, be paid. ... [¶] No payment of Revolving Fund Credits shall be made which would cause the book value of the assets of the Association, after payment, to be less than the indebtedness and liability of the Association, including indebtedness in respect of any Revolving Funds, or would cause the fair market value of the assets of the Association, after payment, to be less than the indebtedness of the Association, excluding indebtedness in respect of the Revolving Funds.”

An association member may be expelled from the organization under rules established in defendant’s bylaw, article III, section 1(d). These rules provide that even an expelled member retains a right to payment of money due. The bylaw states: “Any member may, for failure to comply with the Marketing Agreement, By-Laws or the rules or regulations of the Association, or because of the quality or nature of the products of such member, or for any cause or reason whatsoever, which the Board in its unlimited discretion shall deem sufficient, be expelled from the Association by resolution adopted by two-thirds vote of all the members of the Board, either with or without notice or hearing, as the Board shall deem best. ... [A]ll rights of the expelled member shall cease, except the right to be paid any sums that may be or become owing from the Association, which payment shall be due and made at the same time or times, that payment would have been due and the membership continued.” (Italics added.)

*670 Section 54122, allows association bylaws to provide for a method of valuing a member’s interest upon termination of their membership. Section 54122 provides: “The bylaws may prescribe the manner of determining the value of a member’s interest and provision for its purchase by the association upon the death or withdrawal of a member or upon the expulsion of a member or forfeiture of his membership, or at the option of the association, the purchase at a price fixed by conclusive appraisal by the board of directors; and the conditions and terms for the repurchase by the association from its stockholders of their stock upon their disqualification as stockholders. In case of the expulsion of a member, and where the bylaws do not provide any procedure or penalty, the board of directors shall equitably and conclusively appraise his property interest in the association and shall fix the amount of his property interest in money, which shall be paid to him within one year after such expulsion.” (Italics added.)

Pursuant to the authorization of section 54122, defendant instituted bylaw article III, section 2 which provides that a membership in the association has no intrinsic value. A member’s only financial interest stems from his revolving fund credits. Payment of these credits is conducted in the same manner for both past and present members, subject to the board of director’s determination that there are surplus retains for distribution. This bylaw reads: “In the event of termination of membership, regardless of how terminated, the Association shall not become or be, liable for the payment of any amount whatsoever because of the value of the property interest in the Association of the member whose membership is terminated. Each member is received into membership upon the express agreement on the part of such member, and upon the condition that the value of the property interest of such member in the Association, prior to dissolution of the Association whether by expulsion or otherwise, such member shall not be entitled to be paid anything as or for the value of the property interest of such member. [¶] The foregoing provisions are not for the purpose of penalizing any person whose membership shall become forfeited or otherwise terminated, but rather because no membership will have any intrinsic value. It is intended that the Association shall conduct its business with moneys withheld for or invested in the Revolving Funds or other fund or funds, and said withheld or invested moneys shall be repayable in accordance with the provision hereof, regardless of the termination of membership.” (Italics added.)

Plaintiffs’ memberships were terminated in 1968 for failure to sign a marketing agreement. The following year plaintiffs sued to recover “re *671 tains” allegedly wrongfully withheld by defendant. They asserted, in part, that the bylaws did not provide any procedure whereby an expelled member would receive his property interest in the association.

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Bluebook (online)
126 Cal. App. 3d 665, 179 Cal. Rptr. 459, 1981 Cal. App. LEXIS 2455, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sanchez-v-grain-growers-assn-calctapp-1981.