Yarnell v. Hillsborough Packing Co.

70 F.2d 435, 92 A.L.R. 1475, 1934 U.S. App. LEXIS 4180
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedApril 14, 1934
Docket7309
StatusPublished
Cited by53 cases

This text of 70 F.2d 435 (Yarnell v. Hillsborough Packing Co.) 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
Yarnell v. Hillsborough Packing Co., 70 F.2d 435, 92 A.L.R. 1475, 1934 U.S. App. LEXIS 4180 (5th Cir. 1934).

Opinion

tj-d-w a -xt rv •, T j BRYAN, Circuit Judge,

. Appellants are here complaining of an lnterl°cutory injunction issued against them at the instant of and appellees, and of the denial of their motion to dismiss the bill of complaint

Appellees are two Florida corporations; one> the Hillsborough Packing Company, being engaged in buying and packing citrus fruit, shipping it out of Florida and selling it at points in other states; and the other, the Lake Fern Groves, in growing citrus fruit on its own grove and shipping it into other states through an agent other than its co-complainant. Appellants, likewise citizens of Florida, constitute what is known as the Florida Control Committee. This eommittee was selected in the manner provided in a marketing agreement entered into and a license issued by the Secretary of Agriculture, under section 8 (2) and (3) of the Agricultural Adjustment Act. 1 The Secretary was *437 also named a party defendant, but declined to appear voluntarily; and upon motion the bill was dismissed as to him. The order appealed from specifically enjoins appellants from in any manner interfering with shipments of citrus fruit by appellees; from re-yoking the license of any licensee who may handle citrus fruit for appellees, or either of them; from imposing on either appellee, or on any grower, shipper, or packer, who may aid it in the handling of citrus fruit, any penalty, fine, or forfeiture; and, m most general terms, from enforcing against appel-lees or either of them any regulation or supposed agreement prescribed or entered into pursuant to any provision of the Agricultural Adjustment Act. It was entered on the case made by the bill and exhibits thereto. Attached to the bill are the following exhiby.g.

mV 7 j.- a . (1) The Marketing Agreement. It ap-v , ., „ • • i-,-__j „ j. plies to citrus fruit grown m and shipped out L ,, . . Ti •_ z ; of the state. It was signed by numerous m- . r. . dividual growers and shippers and many associations and exchanges interested in the citrus industry, and also by the Secretary of Agrieulture, pursuant to section 8 (2) of the act. It provides for the selection by growers and shippers of a control committee, and authorizes that committee to make “prorate” orders and allotments covering shipments out of the State; to “eliminate” from trade channels all fruit not prorated or allotted, or Sold in intrastate commerce; to investigate any suspected violation of the agreement by any shipper and order him to discontinue any violation found to exist, and, “in the event of non-compliance by the shipper with said order,” the committee “shall report such non-compliance to the Secretary.”
In addition, the committee is authorized to make assessments to defray expenses in-eurred in carrying out the agreement and in taking steps necessary to enforce collection, The expenses are to be proportionately levied on the basis of fruit shipped, and any funds remaining in excess of expenditures are to be refunded pro rata at the end of each season,
(2) The License. It was issued by the Secretary pursuant to section 8 (3) of the act. Its provisions are identical with those of the marketing agreement, except that it undertakes to bind all shippers of citrus fruit whether they are parties to the marketing agreement or not.
(3) 0rders Issued iy the Control Corn-mittee. That committee issued several orders in Deeember, 1933) and January, 1934, re-sfaicting shipments in interstate commerce of eer¡;am jate varieties of grapefruit and or-artges and other fruit of certain grades and s;ze. and a]gQ restricting shipments to mar-kek, wker6 ejjrus fruit is sold at auction. In addj(;io:tlj mad8 aa assessment of 1 cent per box defray expenses. From time to ^me ^ ajso issued bulletins and notices to skjppers

Incorporated in the marketing agreement and the license is an elaborate “National . „ „ , .. Stabilization. Flan’ for marketmg citrus n , f , . truit grown not only m Florida but also m ° , , . A. , _. other states and m Fuerto Kieo.

The Hillsborough Packing Company is a party to and signed the marketing agreement. The bill alleges that it became a party thereto through coercion and under duress, in that it was not advised and did not know that the act was invalid, or that the committee would issue such drastic orders, or assume to prevent it from shipping fruit to meet its usual requirements; and because it was induced to believe that its failure to sign up would be of no benefit to it, since the requirements and exactions contained in the agreement would in any event be applied to it.

The Lake Fern Groves did not teome a party to or sign the marketing agreement. The bill alleges that it has left on Ihe trees jn its grove approximately 10,090 boxes of fruit; that the control committee “has forbidden all interstate shipment of certain small sized oranges, and approximately seventy-five (75%) per cent, of said plaintiff’s mid-season oranges on its said grove are of these prohibited small sizes, though all of the said oranges are matured, wholesome, mar *438 ketable, and similar sizes a~d grades of oranges have always been heretofore disposed of by plaintiff's said agent at a profit. That said Plorida Control Committee threatens and will, unless enjoined by this court, continue to threaten said plaintiff and its agent with penalties, prohibitions, injunctions and confiscation of its said fruit if it attempts to have same put in the channels of interstate commerce, and that the entire value of the said seventy-five (75%) per cent. of said czop will be totally lost to said plainti~ unless immediate relief is given said plaintiff by the injunction of this court; that said oranges will drop on the ground, rot and perish, and that said plaintiff's loss will be irreiTiediable unless a temporary restraining order is granted said plaintiff as hereinafter prayed, and followed by injunction both temporary and permanent." The record discloses that appellants, having been served with notice of the application for temporary injunction, on the day before the bill was filed revoked the prorate orders of which com~. plaint is made, but they said nothing about whether it was their intention to reinstate those orders or make others of similar import.

The interlocutory injunction was granted on the broad ground, as stated by the District Judge in an oral opinion which appears in the record, that the sections of the act involved and the means adopted for their enforcement by marketing agreement, license, orders and penalties, were unconstitutional and therefore void. On the question of jurisdiction, appellants argue that the Secretary of Agriculture is an indispensable party, that, because the prorate orders complained of have been revoked, the case is moot, and that in any event appelleni had no right to come into court seeking an injunction without first exhausting their administrative remedy by appiy~ng to the Secretary for relief against the orders of the control committee. We agree at once that the Secretary, not being before the court, could not be enjoined from enforcing his regulations. Gnerich v. Rutter, 265 U. S. 388, 44 S. Ct. 532, 68 L. Ed.

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Bluebook (online)
70 F.2d 435, 92 A.L.R. 1475, 1934 U.S. App. LEXIS 4180, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yarnell-v-hillsborough-packing-co-ca5-1934.