Thompson v. Alabama State Milk Control Board

1 So. 2d 381, 241 Ala. 100, 1941 Ala. LEXIS 326
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedMarch 27, 1941
Docket6 Div. 751.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 1 So. 2d 381 (Thompson v. Alabama State Milk Control Board) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thompson v. Alabama State Milk Control Board, 1 So. 2d 381, 241 Ala. 100, 1941 Ala. LEXIS 326 (Ala. 1941).

Opinion

LIVINGSTON, Justice.

The appellant, J. A. Thompson, who does business as J. A. Thompson Dairy, filed his petition in the Circuit Court of Jefferson County, Alabama, seeking a writ of prohibition to prohibit the Alabama State Milk Control Board from conducting a hearing pursuant to a citation or complaint issued by said board directing or commanding appellant to appear before it and show cause why his license as a producer-distributor of milk should not be revoked for alleged violations of certain rules and regulations promulgated by said board and set out in the citation or complaint, arid from otherwise enforcing a certain rule adopted by said board, or, in the alternative, for a writ of mandamus to compel said board to recuse itself in the cause then pending against appellant before said board.

The demurrers of the Alabama State Milk Control Board to appellant’s petition were sustained. He refused to plead further, and his petition was dismissed; hence this appeal.

The present Alabama State Milk Control Board was created by a General Act of the Legislature of 1939, General Acts 1939, page 267. The Act of 1939 specifically repealed an Act of the Legislature of 1935, General Acts 1935, page 204, similar in most matérial aspects to the 1939 Act. The -Act of 1935 was enacted as a so-called “emergency measure,” and was-limited to expire by its own terms on June 30, 1939. The constitutionality of the 1935 Act was passed upon by this court in the case of Franklin v. State, 232 Ala. 637, 169 So. 295, and insofar as there questioned its constitutionality was upheld. Again in the case of Taylor v. State, 237 Ala. 178, 186 So. 463, 465, this court, speaking through Mr. Justice Foster, said of the Milk Control Act of 1935, “We have analyzed the Act here in question carefully to determine whether the nation wide economic depression creating an emergency *102 with which we were dealing to justify that act is the controlling element which justifies the Milk Act here in question. We do not find it to be so dependent, but upon other features of the State’s police power.” We make these observations for historical purposes only. The validity of the legislative Act of 1939 itself is not questioned in the case before us.

The present inquiry concerns the validity of certain rules and regulations promulgated and adopted by the Alabama State Milk Control Board on the 15th day of March, 1940, covering fair trade practices among licensees of the Milk Control Board. Rule No. 1 is .as follows: “-No licensee shall- hereafter, without the written consent of the owner, use, sell, dispose of, buy or traffic in, or have possession of except for delivery to nearest Bottle Exchange, any milk crate or bottle, or wilfully mar, remove or change the name of ownership thereof or erase or change by remarking or otherwise any name or initial of any such owner so stamped, printed, burned into, marked or fastened upon such crate or bottle; provided, in no case shall any licensee retain in his or its possession any bottles or crates owned by another, for a longer period of time than seven (7) days; provided, however', this rule shall be inoperative in any milk shed where there is no bottle exchange or other facility for the exchange of bottles and crates among licensees.”

It is contended by appellant that there is no authorization in the present act for the adoption of Rule No. 1. We may concede that the legislative mandate .for the adoption of this rule must be found, if it exists, within the confines of the act itself.

The facts, policy and application of the act, set forth in section 1, are declared matters of legislative determination. Section 1 reads as follows: “It is hereby declared that milk is a necessary article of food for human consumption; that the production and maintenance of an adequate supply of healthful milk of proper chemical and physical content, free from contamination, is vital to the public health and welfare, and that the production, transportation, processing, storage, distribution and sale of milk, in the State of Alabama, is an industry affecting the public health and interest; that unfair, unjust, destructive and demoralizing trade practices have been and are now being carried on- in the production, marketing, sale, processing and the distribution of milk, which constitute a constant menace to the health and welfare of the inhabitants of this State and tends to undermine sanitary regulations and standards of content and purity, that health regulations alone are insufficient to safeguard the consuming public from future inadequacy of a supply of this necessary commodity; that it is the policy of this State to promote, foster and encourage the intelligent production and orderly marketing of commodities necessary to its citizens, including milk, and to stabilize marketing of such commodities; that fluid milk is a perishable commodity easily contaminated with harmful bacteria, which cannot be stored for any great length of time, and which must be produced and distributed fresh daily, which supply cannot be regulated from day to day, but, due to natural and seasonal conditions fluctuates from day to day; that this surplus of milk, though necessary and unavoidable, unless regulated tends to undermine and destroy the fluid milk industry; that investigation and experience has shown that, due to the nature of milk and the conditions surrounding its production and marketing, that unless the producers, distributors and others engaged in the marketing of milk are guaranteed and insured a reasonable profit on milk, that both the supply and quality of milk are' affected thereby to the detriment of and against the best interest of the citizens of this State whose health and well being are vitally affected thereby; that where no supervision and regulation is provided for the orderly marketing of milk, past experiences has shown that in flush seasons of production, when surplus of milk is great and the price which producers and others are able to obtain for milk is below the cost of production, that oftimes milk strikes invade the market followed by bombings and bloodshed, which oftimes prevents the consuming public from receiving an adequate supply of pure and wholesome milk necessary for its health and well being; that, due to the nature of milk and the conditions surrounding its production and marketing that the natural law of supply and demand has been found inadequate to protect the industry in this, and other states of the United States, and that, in the public interest, it is necessary to provide state supervision and regulations of the fluid milk industry -of this state.”

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Related

Alabama State Milk Control Board v. Graham
33 So. 2d 11 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1947)
Ex Parte Homewood Dairy Products Co.
3 So. 2d 58 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1941)

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Bluebook (online)
1 So. 2d 381, 241 Ala. 100, 1941 Ala. LEXIS 326, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thompson-v-alabama-state-milk-control-board-ala-1941.