United States v. Warren M. Jeffcoat

272 F.2d 266, 1959 U.S. App. LEXIS 3049
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedNovember 20, 1959
Docket7955
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 272 F.2d 266 (United States v. Warren M. Jeffcoat) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Warren M. Jeffcoat, 272 F.2d 266, 1959 U.S. App. LEXIS 3049 (4th Cir. 1959).

Opinion

HAYNSWORTH, Circuit Judge.

This is an action by the United States for the recovery of penalties claimed to be due on account of the defendant’s violations of restrictions imposed upon him with respect to the 1956 upland cotton crop year under the Agricultural Adjustment Act of 1938, 1 as amended. After the denial of the plaintiff’s motion for summary judgment and an abortive trial, following which a jury was unable to reach an agreement, the case was retried in the District Court without a jury. The District Court found as a fact that the defendant had destroyed his entire cotton crop, after harvesting only one small bale, and concluded that he was not liable for any penalties, except with respect to the one bale he had harvested. *268 The United States questions the jurisdiction of the Court to inquire into the facts, since the defendant chose not to avail himself of the administrative remedies provided for the resolution of the factual questions.

On December 6, 1955, the defendant was notified that his upland cotton acreage allotment for the crop year 1956 was 17.1 acres. On May 29, 1956, the defendant reported that he had planted two fields of cotton, one of which he estimated to contain 17.1 acres, and the other approximately 38 acres. By actual measurement, after certain deductions, these two fields were found to contain 18.53 acres and 34.47 acres, respectively.

On June 18, 1956, the Agricultural Stabilization and Conservation Committee for his county notified the defendant of its determination that his farm was overplanted in cotton by 35.9 acres. By this notice he was advised that he could dispose of the excess acreage within twenty days, subject to an additional extension if requested, and that, if he did not do so, a penalty would be imposed upon the basis of the normal yield of the excess acreage. It further advised him that no marketing ticket could be issued for any upland cotton produced on the farm until the penalty was paid. He was informed that he must notify the County Committee if he wished to dispose of the excess acreage. By a notice dated August 9, 1956, the defendant was again advised that, if his farm remained overplanted, he would be ineligible for a crop support loan, and that none of his cotton could be sold until the penalty had been paid. This notice further informed him that he could not receive credit for excess acreage disposed of after cotton harvesting had begun.

By a letter dated August 17, 1956, the defendant was requested to furnish information as to his average cotton yield for the past five years. It does not appear that he supplied the requested information. Thereafter, however, on August 23, 1956, a committeeman filed a report containing his estimates of the annual cotton yield per acre on the defendant’s farm for the preceding five years, in which he reported that the defendant did not meet with the Committee to assist in providing information, and that the estimate had been based upon normal yields. This report also contains the estimate, based upon an actual inspection of the defendant’s cotton, that the prospective yield of those fields for 1956 was 375 pounds per acre, as compared with the average of the estimates for the preceding five years of 310 pounds per acre.

On August 28, 1956, a notice was sent to the defendant, which informed him of the Committee’s determination that his excess cotton acreage was 35.9, that the normal yield per acre was 310 pounds, and that, based upon these normal yield figures, a penalty of $1,969.83 had been determined. This notice also informed the defendant that the excess poundage should not be larger than the amount by which the actual production of the entire farm exceeds the normal production of the allotted acres. He was told that if actual production was less than the normal yield determination, he could obtain a downward adjustment of the Committee’s determination, provided he made application to the Committee within sixty days after completion of the harvest. 2

By a letter dated October 17, 1956, the defendant was asked to report the cotton produced on his farm, the cotton marketed, penalties paid, and other data upon Form MQ-98-Cotton, This letter also again informed the defendant that he could obtain a downward adjustment of the determined excess to actual production figures, provided he made application to the Committee within the specified period.

The defendant ignored all of these requests and notices and took no steps to have the excess poundage determined upon the basis of actual production figures.

*269 On March 16, 1957, he was informed that the penalty of $1,969.83, previously determined upon the basis of the normal yield estimates, was due and payable.

Based upon the pleadings and certain admissions, the United States moved for summary judgment in its favor. This motion was denied by an order dated August 7, 1958, in which the opinion was expressed that the penalty determined upon the basis of normal yield figures, should be accorded finality if the defendant failed to avail himself of the administrative remedies to correct the estimates to actual production figures. The Court was of the opinion, however, that the record, as then constituted, indicated that the defendant had disposed of his entire cotton acreage before harvest, and that the penalty, if any, should be based upon actual production figures rather than preharvest estimates.

Thereafter, the case came on for trial before another judge and a jury.

From the transcript of the testimony there taken, it appears that the defendant testified that in late September or early October he had harvested 290 pounds of lint from one acre only and, thereafter, plowed under all of his remaining cotton, that he still had in his possession the one small bale he produced, and that he had disposed of none of his 1956 cotton crop.

An agent of the County Committee testified that he inspected the defendant’s larger field in early October 1956, at which time he observed that at least one-third of that field had been picked. Based upon actual measurement of the field, this would indicate that approximately twelve acres had been picked. He also expressed his estimate of the number of acres which had been picked as 8-10, and, later, as up to 12. Sometime thereafter he returned to make a burr count in the two field's, and found that both had been entirely plowed under, so it was impossible to make the burr count. This witness testified that in 1956 he did not orally inform the defendant how he should proceed to dispose of excess cotton acreage, but testified that the defendant knew how to do it properly, for he had done so in previous years.

There was introduced in evidence defendant’s application to the Production Credit Association for a farm loan. This application was dated January 26, 1957, and discloses the defendant’s representation that, among other crops, he had produced 20 bales of cotton on 20 acres upon which he received a cash return of $4,-000 during the “last season.” When confronted with this application, the defendant testified that he had produced no cotton in 1956, and that he had assumed that the “last season[’s]” heading on the application form referred to the last season of actual production of cotton, or 1955. 3

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
272 F.2d 266, 1959 U.S. App. LEXIS 3049, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-warren-m-jeffcoat-ca4-1959.