Starrh & Starrh Farms v. Cummings

562 F. Supp. 415
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. California
DecidedApril 25, 1983
DocketNo. CV F 83-129-EDP
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 562 F. Supp. 415 (Starrh & Starrh Farms v. Cummings) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Starrh & Starrh Farms v. Cummings, 562 F. Supp. 415 (E.D. Cal. 1983).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER

PRICE, District Judge.

The plaintiffs are owners and operators of farm land which has current Upland Cotton Farm Acreage base. All of the farms in question are situate in Kern County, and fall under the jurisdiction of the Kern County Agricultural Stabilization and Conservation Service office.

The defendants Cummings, Creetol and Page are members of the Agricultural Stabilization and Conservation Service County Committee for Kern County; Everett Rank is the Administrator of the Agricultural Stabilization and Conservation Service of the United States Department of Agriculture, and the Commodity Credit Corporation is a corporation created by federal statute as an instrumentality to implement certain of the commodity credit services of the United States Department of Agriculture; and John Block is the Secretary of the United States Department of Agriculture.

Plaintiffs’ complaint seeks mandamus relief “compelling the defendants, and each of them, to accept and approve the whole base bids from operators and producers in Kern County who now desire to participate in the whole base bid program up to, but not in excess of, the eligible acreage within Kern County, by adding to the otherwise available acreage an amount equal to forty-five percent (45%) of 19,821.2 acres.”

FACTUAL BACKGROUND

On Wednesday, January 12, 1983, in Volume 46, No. 8, of the Federal Register, the Secretary published the interim rules for the Payment In Kind (hereinafter PIK) program for additional diversion of the 1983 crops of wheat, corn, green sorghum, rice and upland cotton. The need for the program was stated by the Secretary to be:

Acreage reduction and land diversion programs have already been instituted for the 1983 crops of wheat, feed grains, upland cotton and rice under provisions of the Agricultural Act of 1949, as amended. Producers participating in those programs will reduce planted acreage for wheat by at least 20%, and for rice by at least 20%. Even with these programs the supply of these commodities will greatly exceed demand. Record production coupled with a weak worldwide demand for these commodities due to the global recession and severe financial problems of some of our major foreign customers has created undesirable surpluses. Accordingly, the Department has determined that the diversion of additional acreage from the production of such crops is necessary to adjust the total national acreage of such commodities to desirable goals and that producers should be compensated by receipt of like commodities.1

[417]*417Historically, the acreage limitation and other programs of the Department of Agriculture are administered on a county-by-county basis. The Agricultural Stabilization and Conservation Service (hereinafter ASCS) County Committee of each county is the body through which the programs are administered. Extensive regulations have been developed in Title 7 of the Code of Federal Regulations (hereinafter CFR). Title 7, CFR consists of sixteen volumes.

The base unit for the purposes of administering the acreage limitation programs of which, PIK is an extension is the “farm.” 7 CFR § 719.3, entitled “Farm Constitution,” instructs the local committee how to constitute a farm for purposes of administering these acts. Subsection (c) of 7 CFR § 719.-3, provides as follows:

(c) Location of farm for administrative purposes.
(1) If all land in the farm is located in one county, the farm shall be administratively located in such county.
(2) If the land in the farm is located in more than one county, the farm shall be administratively located in either of such counties as the county committees and the farm operator agree. If no agreement can be reached, the farm shall be administratively located in the county (i) where the principal dwelling is situated, or (ii) where the major portion of the farm is located if there is no dwelling.

The J.G. Boswell Company is one of the largest growers, if not the largest, of upland cotton in the United States. Its upland cotton base totals 85,480.5 acres. If the base were attributed counties in which the land is situate, using a history method of division, the base would be divided as follows: Kings County, 49,879.3 acres; Kern County, 19,821.2 acres; Fresno County, 15,780.0 acres (See Exhibit B to plaintiffs’ complaint).

The ASCS Office of Kern County formerly administered crop allotment programs that involved Boswell. In 1968 or 1969, the Boswell executives requested that the administration of the Boswell Ranches as constituted for ASCS purposes be moved to Kings County, and this transfer was made. This transfer was approved in accordance with 7 CFR § 719.3. There was no evidence that any objection was made at the time the transfer was undertaken.

Early this year, the plaintiffs and other interested parties in Kern County alerted the appropriate ASCS officers, both in the State of California and national headquarters, as to the detrimental effect the loss of Boswell’s current acreage would have on the ability of the Kern County farmers to qualify for PIK contracts. After giving the matter some consideration, appropriate officials charged with the administration of the program determined that Boswell’s entire upland cotton base acreage would be allocated to Kings County for the purposes of the PIK program.2

Ultimately, the Secretary decided that only 45% of the upland cotton acreage base in any one county would be eligible for inclusion in PIK program contracts. This meant, in effect, that Kern County upland cotton growers were denied 8,919.45 acres of upland cotton base.

The bidding process which was established was roughly as follows:

The bid for the contract containing the lowest percentage of the particular farm’s available base was accepted first, and the amount of acreage deducted from the total acreage in the county available for PIK contracts. The next lowest bid or bids were accepted until all of the available acreage for contracts in the county was exhausted.

In Kern County, according to the evidence, 130 bids were accepted from qualified farmers eligible for inclusion in the [418]*418PIK program. However, because of the acreage limitations imposed by the Secretary upon the program, only 44 bids were approved for contracts, including one of the farms owned by the plaintiff, Don Loveless, Farm No. 8775. Ninety-six bids were accepted but not approved because the available acreage had been exhausted by the 44 lower bids. Had the Boswell cotton lands situate in Kern County been available for PIK acreage allocation in Kern County, an additional 61 contracts would have been approved from such additional acreage. Coincidentally, it should be noted that among those 61 potential contracts, all of the remaining acreage of the plaintiff Loveless as well as Starrh & Starrh Farms would have been approved for participation in the PIK program. However, the land of the plaintiff Bergman & Isaacs would still not have been eligible for inclusion.

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Related

Westcott v. United States Department of Agriculture
611 F. Supp. 351 (D. Nebraska, 1984)

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Bluebook (online)
562 F. Supp. 415, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/starrh-starrh-farms-v-cummings-caed-1983.