Supreme Beef Processors, Inc. v. United States Department of Agriculture

275 F.3d 432, 2001 WL 1556993
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedDecember 17, 2001
Docket00-11008
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 275 F.3d 432 (Supreme Beef Processors, Inc. v. United States Department of Agriculture) 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
Supreme Beef Processors, Inc. v. United States Department of Agriculture, 275 F.3d 432, 2001 WL 1556993 (5th Cir. 2001).

Opinion

PATRICK E. HIGGINBOTHAM, Circuit Judge:

Certain meat inspection regulations promulgated by the Secretary of Agriculture, which deal with the levels of Salmonella in raw meat product, were challenged as beyond the statutory authority granted to the Secretary by the Federal Meat Inspection Act. The district court struck down the regulations. We hold that the regulations fall outside of the statutory grant of rulemaking authority and affirm.

I

The Federal Meat Inspection Act authorizes the Secretary of Agriculture to “prescribe the rules and regulations of sanitation” covering

slaughtering, meat canning, salting, packing, rendering, or similar establishments in which cattle, sheep, swine, goats, horses, mules and other equines are slaughtered and the meat and meat food products thereof are prepared for commerce.... 1

Further, the Secretary is commanded to,

where the sanitary conditions of any such establishment are such that the meat or meat food products are rendered adulterated, ... refuse to allow said meat or meat food products to be labeled, marked, stamped, or tagged as “inspected and passed.” 2

In sum, the FMIA instructs the Secretary to ensure that no adulterated meat products pass USDA inspection, which they must in order to be legally sold to consumers. 3

The FMIA contains several definitions of “adulterated,” including 21 U.S.C. § 601(m)(4), which classifies a meat product as adulterated if “it has been prepared, packed, or held under insanitary conditions whereby it may have become contaminated with filth, or whereby it may have been rendered injurious to health.” 4 Thus, the FMIA gives the Secretary the power to create sanitation regulations and commands him to withhold meat approval where the meat is processed under insanitary conditions. The Secretary has delegated the authority under the FMIA to the Food Safety and Inspection Service.

In 1996, FSIS, after informal notice and comment rulemaking, adopted regulations *435 requiring all meat and poultry establishments to adopt preventative controls to assure product safety. These are known as Pathogen Reduction, Hazard Analysis and Critical Control Point Systems or “HACCP.” 5 HACCP requires, inter alia, that meat and poultry establishments institute a hazard control plan for reducing and controlling harmful bacteria on raw meat and poultry products. In order to enforce HACCP, FSIS performs tests for the presence of Salmonella in a plant’s finished meat products.

The Salmonella performance standards set out a regime under which inspection services will be denied to an establishment if it fails to meet the standard on three consecutive series of tests. 6 The regulations declare that the third failure of the performance standard “constitutes failure to maintain sanitary conditions and failure to maintain an adequate HACCP plan ... for that product, and will cause FSIS to suspend inspection services.” 7 The performance standard, or “passing mark,” is determined based on FSIS’s “calculation of the national prevalence of Salmonella on the indicated raw product.” 8

In June, 1998, plaintiff-appellee Supreme Beef Processors, Inc., a meat processor and grinder, implemented an HACCP pathogen control plan, and on November 2, 1998, FSIS began its evaluation of that plan by testing Supreme’s finished product for Salmonella. After four weeks of testing, FSIS notified Supreme that it would likely fail the Salmonella tests. Pursuant to the final test results, which found 47 percent of the samples taken from Supreme contaminated with Salmo nella, 9 FSIS issued a Noncompliance Report, advising Supreme that it had not met the performance standard. Included in the report was FSIS’s warning to Supreme to take “immediate action to meet the performance standards.” Supreme responded to FSIS’s directive on March 5, 1999, summarizing the measures it had taken to meet the performance standard and requesting that the second round of testing be postponed until mid-April to afford the company sufficient time to evaluate its laboratory data. FSIS agreed to the request and began its second round of tests on April 12,1999.

On June 2, 1999, FSIS again informed Supreme that it would likely fail the Salmonella tests and, on July 20, issued another Noncompliance Report — this time informing Supreme that 20.8 percent of its samples had tested positive for Salmonella. Supreme appealed the Noncompliance Report, citing differences between the results obtained by FSIS and Supreme’s own tests conducted on “companion parallel samples.” Those private tests, Supreme asserted, had produced only a 7.5 percent Salmonella infection level, satisfying the performance standard. FSIS denied the appeal; but based on Supreme’s commitment to install 180 degree water source on all boning and trimming lines, granted the company’s request to postpone the next round of Salmonella testing for 60 days. FSIS later withdrew the extension, however, after learning that Supreme was merely considering installation of the water source.

The third set of tests began on August 27, 1999, and after only five weeks, FSIS advised Supreme that it would again fall short of the ground beef performance stan *436 dard. On October 19, 1999, FSIS issued a Notice of Intended Enforcement Action, which notified Supreme of the agency’s intention to suspend inspection activities. The Notice gave Supreme Beef until October 25, 1999 to demonstrate that its HACCP pathogen controls were adequate or to show that it had achieved regulatory compliance. Although Supreme Beef promised to achieve the 7.5 percent performance standard in 180 days, it faded to provide any specific information explaining how it would accomplish that goal, and FSIS decided to suspend inspection of Supreme’s plant.

On the day FSIS planned to withdraw its inspectors, Supreme brought this suit against FSIS’s parent agency, the USDA, alleging that in creating the Salmonella tests, FSIS had overstepped the authority given to it by the FMIA. Along with its complaint, Supreme moved to temporarily restrain the USDA from withdrawing its inspectors. The district court granted Supreme’s motion and, after a subsequent hearing, also granted Supreme’s motion for a preliminary injunction.

The National Meat Association filed a motion to intervene as a plaintiff in the district court. The district court denied the motion on the grounds that NMA was adequately represented by Supreme in this litigation.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Craten v. Foster Poultry Farms Inc.
305 F. Supp. 3d 1051 (D. Arizona, 2018)
The Parkway Hospital v. Nirav R. Shah
460 F. App'x 21 (Second Circuit, 2012)
Koretoff v. Schaefer
841 F. Supp. 2d 1 (District of Columbia, 2012)
Munsell v. Department of Agriculture
509 F.3d 572 (D.C. Circuit, 2007)
Medical Center Pharmacy v. Gonzales
451 F. Supp. 2d 854 (W.D. Texas, 2006)
Kitty Hawk Aircargo, Inc. v. Chao
418 F.3d 453 (Fifth Circuit, 2005)
Zayler v. United States
442 F.3d 871 (Fifth Circuit, 2004)
Zayler v. Department of Agriculture
391 F.3d 629 (Fifth Circuit, 2004)
Zayler v. United States
279 F. Supp. 2d 805 (E.D. Texas, 2003)
Heaton v. Monogram Crdt Card
Fifth Circuit, 2002
Raspanti v. Caldera
Fifth Circuit, 2002

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
275 F.3d 432, 2001 WL 1556993, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/supreme-beef-processors-inc-v-united-states-department-of-agriculture-ca5-2001.