State v. Glen & Mohawk Milk Ass'n

114 Misc. 2d 363, 451 N.Y.S.2d 625, 1982 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3483
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJune 10, 1982
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 114 Misc. 2d 363 (State v. Glen & Mohawk Milk Ass'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Glen & Mohawk Milk Ass'n, 114 Misc. 2d 363, 451 N.Y.S.2d 625, 1982 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3483 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1982).

Opinion

opinion of the court

Bernard L. Reagan, J.

In this civil antitrust action there are various motions pending before the court. The main issue to be addressed is the interpretation of the exemption from the Donnelly Act [364]*364(General Business Law, § 340 et seq.) given to co-operative associations of dairymen (General Business Law, § 340, subd 3). All defendants have moved to dismiss the complaint, claiming that it fails to state a cause of action because of this exemption. Two defendants, Oneida-Madison Milk Producers Co-operative Association, Inc., and Queensboro Farm Products, Inc., have requested their dismissal motions be treated as summary judgment motions pursuant to CPLR 3211 (subd [c]), but the court in its discretion declines to do so.

Earlier this year, defendant Northeast Dairy Co-operative Federation, Inc. (NEDCO), a federation of co-operatives, purchased a milk manufacturing plant in Fraser, New York, from Dellwood Foods, Inc. (Dellwood). NEDCO and Dellwood also entered into an agreement whereby NEDCO would provide Dellwood’s milk requirements for a 10-year period. NEDCO is a New York corporation which has approximately 3,500 farmer members and 57 local cooperatives located in New York, Pennsylvania and New Jersey.

By letter dated January 5, 1982, Dellwood informed the approximately 748 farmers it had been purchasing raw milk from that its Fraser plant had been sold to NEDCO and Dellwood would no longer be purchasing their milk. Dellwood further advised these farmers that NEDCO assured a milk market for all of its co-operative members, including those Dellwood farmers who would choose such membership. NEDCO also sent a letter to the Dellwood farmers with similar information dated January 4, 1982.

In order to join NEDCO, the Dellwood farmers were required to pay an initial fee of 20 cents per hundredweight of the milk they sold to Dellwood in 1981, which according to the Attorney-General, is approximately $2,000 for the average farmer, and sign a one-year membership contract. NEDCO would deduct from the minimum price payable to the farmers 11 cents per hundredweight for co-operative costs. NEDCO maintains these charges were not discriminately sought from the Dellwood farmers and the Attorney-General has not claimed that they were.

The gravamen of plaintiff’s complaint is that the membership fee and deduction for co-operative costs were exces[365]*365sive; that, therefore, the Dellwood farmers did not want to sell to NEBCO; and instead, they attempted to sell to other purchasers but were unable to do so because of an agreement among defendants and others which was in violation of section 340 of the General Business Law. The complaint alleges that the defendants agreed to allocate the Dellwood farmers to NEBCO and, with the exception of NEBCO, refused to purchase raw milk from the Dellwood farmers and further agreed to persuade, induce and coerce other milk dealers to refuse to purchase raw milk from the Dellwood farmers. The Attorney-General contends that this agreement was put into effect and alleges that defendant Glen & Mohawk Milk Association, Inc., exerted pressure on the Dolgeville Dairy Co-operative to rescind all but 6 of the 45 contracts it had entered into with former Dellwood farmers.

Defendants, NEBCO and Oneida-Madison Milk Producers Co-operative, Inc. (Oneida-Madison), and only these defendants, are dairymen’s co-operatives. The other corporate defendants are proprietary handlers and are licensed by the State of New York, as are the co-operative defendants. If the conduct complained of falls within the dairymen’s co-operative exemption, then the Donnelly Act simply does not apply and the Attorney-General has not stated a cause of action. On the other hand, if the exemption does not apply, the plaintiff has clearly made out a cause of action against these defendants.

Subdivision 3 of section 340 of the General Business Law reads as follows: “3. The provisions of this article shall not apply to cooperative associations, corporate or otherwise, of farmers, gardeners, or dairymen, including live stock farmers and fruit growers, nor to contracts, agreements or arrangements made by such associations, nor to bona fide labor unions.”

The Attorney-General maintains that not only does this exemption not exonerate the non-co-operative defendants, it is argued that it is of no avail to the co-operative defendants either. Between making this argument and succeeding with it, the plaintiff faces two formidable barriers: Barns v Dairymen’s League Co-op. Assn. (220 App Div 624) and Margrove, Inc. v Upstate Milk Coop. (79 Misc 2d [366]*366309, affd sub nom. Margrove, Inc. v Wegman’s Food Markets, 49 AD2d 669). Both of these cases were decided in the Fourth Department, the department in which this court sits.

In Barns (supra), the Dairymen’s League Co-operative Asociation, Inc., and Borden’s Farm Products Company entered into an agreement whereby Borden’s agreed to buy all its milk from the Dairymen’s League and not to purchase any milk from any producer who had not signed a certain pooling agreement by which the producers would become members of the co-operative. The plaintiff was a farmer who refused to sign the agreement and, therefore, the defendant co-operative refused to accept his milk. The court concluded that the agreement between the defendants was not illegal. The opinion did note that the defendants had not been involved in any “black-listing or boycotting” (Barns v Dairymen’s League Co-op. Assn., supra, p 643). The validity of the Dairymen’s exemption was recognized as to the defendant co-operative, although it was indicated that in any event no illegal restraint of trade had been shown. As to Borden’s, a non-co-operative, it was stated that the exemption would not apply but notwithstanding this, no illegal activity was present anyway.

In Margrove, Inc. v Upstate Milk Coop. (79 Misc 2d 309, supra), the plaintiff alleged that Upstate Milk Cooperative, Inc., a co-operative, and Wegman’s Food Markets, Inc., a non-co-operative, had entered into an agreement for the purpose of allocating markets and pricing milk and claimed that there was coercion involved. Margrove not only broadened the scope of the activities to which the exemption applied, if Barns (supra) had, in fact, left doubt thereto, it, in addition, then applied the exemption to the non-co-operative since it had entered into a contract with a co-operative.

The court concluded that “The Legislature has not empowered the courts to determine what acts of a co-operative association violate the act and what do not. It has provided that a co-operative association of dairymen may not be prosecuted nor liable for damages under the Donnelly Act” and “There is no language in the act that permits the courts to say that some of the contracts, agreements or [367]*367arrangements of a co-operative association are exempt from the act and others are not” (Margrove, Inc. v Upstate Milk Coop., supra, p 311).

As to Wegman’s Food Markets, Inc., the court reasoned: “the defendant Wegman’s Food Markets, Inc. is not a cooperative association and it is not exempt from the provisions of the Donnelly Act.

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Related

People v. Towndrow
187 A.D.2d 194 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1993)
State of New York v. Glen & Mohawk Milk Ass'n
93 A.D.2d 975 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1983)
People v. Elmhurst Milk & Cream Co.
116 Misc. 2d 140 (New York Supreme Court, 1982)

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Bluebook (online)
114 Misc. 2d 363, 451 N.Y.S.2d 625, 1982 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3483, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-glen-mohawk-milk-assn-nysupct-1982.