State Ex Rel. Patterson v. Pure Vac Dairy Products Corp.

170 So. 2d 274, 251 Miss. 457, 1964 Miss. LEXIS 364
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 18, 1964
Docket43228
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 170 So. 2d 274 (State Ex Rel. Patterson v. Pure Vac Dairy Products Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Patterson v. Pure Vac Dairy Products Corp., 170 So. 2d 274, 251 Miss. 457, 1964 Miss. LEXIS 364 (Mich. 1964).

Opinion

*462 Lee, C. J.

The State of Mississippi ex rel Joe T. Patterson, Attorney General, acting for and on behalf of Si Corley, Commissioner of Agriculture and Commerce of the State of Mississippi, filed a bill of complaint against Pure Yac Dairy Products Corporation, organized and existing under the laws of Tennessee, but doing business in Mississippi.

The allegations of the will set out the origin and continuance of this controversy as follows: Commencing in 1960 it was charged that the defendant, with a license to operate as a manufacturer and distributor of perishable milk products, began to ignore some of the statutory provisions relating to this matter. However, in 1961, after an alleged violation of Section 4560-108(c) Mississippi Code Annotated (Supp. 1962), the defendant agreed, under the provision of Section 4560-118(b) of said Code, to pay the costs and desist from any threatened violation. But the defendant, from January 1963, has continued to violate said provisions by selling such products in certain counties of the State at less than the established price therefor. In July 1963, the defendant filed with the Commissioner a revised schedule, listing prices of ice cream, ten percent butter fat, at $.85 per gallon, and ice milk at $.65 per gallon, to which would be added a small freight charge. Since those prices were below the prevailing prices in the affected areas, the Commission notified the defendant to comply with Section 4560-108 (b) Mississippi Code Annotated (Supp. 1962), by furnishing the proof therein required. *463 The defendant refused to do so. It also refused to comply with the provisions of Section 4560-113 of the above stated Code, in failing to report the quantity of such perishable milk products, and notified the Commissioner, on August 8, 1963, that no such reports would thereafter be forthcoming. The defendant, in addition, refused to pay the fees and assessments prescribed, in violation of Section 4560-111 of the above stated Code.

The prayer of the bill was for the issuance of a writ, enjoining the defendant against violations of Sections 4560-111, 4560-113, 4560-108 (c), Mississippi Code Annotated (Supp. 1962), and against refusal to comply with Section 4560-108(b) thereof by furnishing proof that its prices were not below costs, to be verified by the Commissioner.

The answer of the defendant substantially admitted the statement of facts, set out in the bill of complaint, but denied the effect and conclusions, allegedly made by the pleader in reaching the results as charged. It maintained that the sales, which it has made, were made and consummated in Memphis, Tennessee, and denied that such sales were in violation of the Milk Products Sales Act of Mississippi. It also denied that it has threatened to continue the alleged violations, and denied that its sales were subject to the Act. It pled that sales, since January 3, 1963, were contracts f.o.b. its docks in Memphis, Tennessee; that title was passed to the purchaser at that time; and that possession of the defendant became that of agent or bailee for the purchaser. It amended its answer to the effect that, if mistaken in the sufficiency of the foregoing defense, then, alternatively, the sales were in interstate commerce, regulated only by the Congress of the United States; and, if the Milk Products Sales Act is applied, it interferes with and constitutes a burden upon interstate commerce and is in violation of Article 1, section 8, Constitution of the United States.

*464 The evidence showed that Pure Vac Dairy Products Corporation is a Tennessee corporation, with its only plant located in Memphis, Tennessee. It has no plants in Mississippi. Prior to 1963, its mode of operation in the sale of ice cream, ice milk and novelty items, in Mississippi, was through route salesmen, transporting the products in trucks and calling on retail stores, taking orders, and selling the products from the trucks. These salesmen would also look over the stocks in the stores and make recommendations as to quantities of various items to he purchased. In other words, this mode of doing business was a pure peddling operation.

In 1963, the corporation discontinued that kind of operation, and adopted, what it denominates as its f.o.b. dock, Memphis, Tennessee, prices. Under that practice, its prices were listed at $.80 per gallon for ice cream and $.60 per gallon for ice milk, with special charges added for delivery. In a 50 mile radius, this charge was $.02 per gallon; in 150 miles, $.03; and in 300 miles, $.04. (The total cost to the purchaser was approximately $.20 a gallon less than the established prices in Mississippi.) Orders could he made by mail or by telephone, even collect. It was claimed that the orders were accepted in Memphis, Tennessee, the specific order filled and loaded separately in refrigerated trucks, owned or rented by the corporation, and driven by employees of the corporation from its dock to the dock of the customer’s store, where the goods were unloaded by the customer. But the corporation was neither a common nor contract carrier. It had no permit from either the Public Service Commission of Mississippi or the Interstate Commerce Commission. The ordered products were under the control of the corporation from its docks to the customer’s dock. The driver took his orders from his manager, the Secretary-Treasurer of the corporation, who could stop his truck on the route, if it could be located, and divert it wherever such officer desired. *465 The corporation was acting in a dual capacity, both as manufacturer and as hauler, but it said that title passed at the dock at Memphis and the products were delivered from Pure Vac, the manufacturer, to Pure Yac, as hauler. It appeared that Pure Yac was to bear the loss for damage in transit, but it must have done so as distributor because it replaced the goods, and did not pay for the damage in money. The defense said that it was an economic advantage to make the deliveries at particular times and haul only merchandise which had been previously ordered. The Commissioner has, in no way, tried to change the corporation’s method of doing business.

The learned chancellor, after a hearing, in a written opinion, declined to issue the injunction, and dismissed the bill. Prom the decree entered, the Commissioner appealed.

On appeal, the same questions again arise, that is, whether the sales were fully consummated in Memphis, Tennessee, and whether the application of The Milk Products Act constitutes a burden on interstate commerce.

By Mississippi Laws 1960, chapter 155, section 4560-141, et seq., Mississippi Code Annotated (Supp. 1962), the Legislature invoked the police powers of the state in the creation of the Mississippi Milk Commission.

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Bluebook (online)
170 So. 2d 274, 251 Miss. 457, 1964 Miss. LEXIS 364, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-patterson-v-pure-vac-dairy-products-corp-miss-1964.