Southern Milling Company v. United States of America

270 F.2d 80
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 25, 1959
Docket17626
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 270 F.2d 80 (Southern Milling Company v. United States of America) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Southern Milling Company v. United States of America, 270 F.2d 80 (5th Cir. 1959).

Opinions

JONES, Circuit Judge.

On April 23, 1954, the United States Department of Agriculture issued its Announcement No. LD-6 offering, on behalf of Commodity Credit Corporation, to sell in car lots nonfat dry milk for use, prior to November 1, 1954, as an ingredient in animal and poultry mixed feeds at 3.5 cents per pound. Paragraph 5 of the Announcement stipulated for a use warranty by the purchaser that milk would not be sold by it except in the form of mixed animal or poultry feed. The purchaser was required by Paragraph 6 of the Announcement to furnish to Commodity Credit Corporation certificates showing the use of the milk purchased for the restricted purposes. In Paragraph 7 of the Announcement was contained a provision that if the milk was not used for the permitted purpose within the specified time the purchase price would be increased to that at which dry milk was being sold for unrestricted uses. Failure to supply certificates would result in a conclusive presumption that the milk was used for other than the restricted use.1 The appellant purchased two cars of milk at the 3.5 cent price. The Commodity Credit Corporation, on August 31, 1954, sent the directors of Commodity Credit Offices an amendment to the Announcement2 which authorized the resale of dry milk by purchasers under Announcement LD-6 on the conditions and subject to the terms of the Amendment.

The appellant learned that purchasers of dry milk for the restricted use might resell for the same restricted use, but appellant did not, so it asserted, see the amendment nor learn of all of its provisions. The appellant negotiated a sale to [83]*83Meddin Packing Company of the two carloads of milk at a price of six cents a pound. The milk was delivered and the price was paid. Commodity Credit Corporation, upon being informed that the appellant had made the sale to Meddin requested the appellant to procure from Meddin certificates as to the use of the two cars of milk. Meddin declined to furnish the certificates. The United States brought suit against the appellant for the difference between the 3.5 cents per pound charged for the two cars of milk and 17 cents per pound, the Commodity Credit Corporation’s dry milk price for unrestricted use. The appellant answered, admitted the purchase, the resale and the inability to furnish use certificates executed by Meddin. It asserted Meddin agreed to use only in mixed animal feeds at the time it bargained to buy the milk from the appellant. It asserted it had never seen a copy of Announcement LD — 6. Appellant, under Rule 14(a), Fed.Rules Civ.Proc. 28 U.S.C.A., brought in Meddin as a third-party defendant, and in its third-party complaint, made reference to its answer and averred that it was entitled to judgment against Meddin if and to the extent that the United States might recover against it. The district court entered a summary judgment for the United States against the appellant. Then, finding that the appellant and Meddin are both residents of Georgia and there was no Federal question as between them, the third-party complaint was dismissed. The appellant has appealed from the judgment of the United States against it and from the dismissal of the third-party complaint.

The only ground specified by the appellant as a basis of error in the entry of the judgment against it in favor of the United States is that the provision obligating purchasers to pay the difference between the 3.5 cent price and the current dry milk price for unrestricted use “is a provision for liquidated damages and is unenforceable as one imposing a penalty.” There is a distinction between liquidated damages on the one hand and a penalty on the other. 25 C.J. S. Damages § 101 c, p. 654 et seq. The provision in the contract here involved is not a penalty. The appellant was given the privilege of purchasing a commodity at a greatly reduced price upon condition that it be used for a restricted purpose and that such use be established by an appropriate certificate, with a provision that if the condition be broken the buyer should pay the unrestricted use price. The provision is a reasonable one and the measure of damages provided is properly related to the stipulated condition. It does not invalidate this provision to refer to it as one for liquidated damages. The Supreme Court has recently sustained the validity of liquidated damage clauses in Government contracts and, in so doing, has said:

“The Government has the right to make contracts and hold and dispose of property, and, for the protection of its property rights, it may resort to the same remedies as a private person. Cotton v. United States, 11 How. 229. Liquidated damages are a well-known remedy, and in fact Congress has utilized this form of recovery in numerous situations. * * * Liquidated-damage provisions, when reasonable, are not to be regarded as penalties.” Rex Trailer Co. v. United States, 350 U.S. 148, 76 S.Ct. 219, 221, 100 L.Ed. 149.

We also conclude that the record does not establish any amendment of the original contract of purchase or release of the restrictions imposed by that contract except as shown in the amendment to the announcement quoted in footnote 2, supra.

The summary judgment in favor of the United States against Southern Milling Company, Inc., was properly entered.

A more difficult question is presented by the appellant’s assertion that its third-party complaint against Meddin Packing Company was erroneously dismissed. The Federal jurisdiction [84]*84of the suit of the United States against Southern Milling Company was based upon a Federal cause of action and under a statute which provided for exclusive jurisdiction in the Federal courts. 15 U.S.C.A. § 714b. A third-party proceeding under Rule 14 must be ancillary to the claim originally asserted although the third-party claim need not be identical with the plaintiff’s claim or rest upon the same theory. American Fidelity & Casualty Co. v. Greyhound Corporation, 5 Cir., 1956, 232 F.2d 89. The third-party claim of Southern Milling Company against Meddin Packing Company was ancillary to the original suit. Where the claim is ancillary the right to assert and maintain the third-party claim is unaffected by the fact that the third-party claimant and the third-party defendant are residents of the same state; and it is unnecessary, where the original suit is based upon a Federal cause of action, that the third-party claim should involve a Federal question. 3 Moore’s Federal Practice 499, Par. 14.26. The district court’s discretion was regularly invoked by the appellant’s motion to file a third-party complaint and was properly exercised. The third-party complaint was properly filed and the court acquired jurisdiction. The court, absent any abuse of its discretionary power, might have declined to permit the filing of the third-party complaint. After jurisdiction of the third-party proceeding was taken a summary judgment was- entered for the plaintiff against the defendant. This was a final judgment on the merits as between the original parties and it was surely contemplated that a judgment would be entered on the merits for one party or the other at the time the filing of the third-party claim was authorized. If there had been no recovery against the appellant-defendant there could have been no liability on the third-party claim.

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270 F.2d 80, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southern-milling-company-v-united-states-of-america-ca5-1959.