Under the Agricultural Marketing Agreement Act of 1937, the
Secretary of Agriculture, after notice and hearings, made an order
for fixing and equalizing minimum prices to be paid producers for
milk sold to dealers ("handlers") and disposed of by the latter
either in liquid form or as milk products within a "marketing area"
comprising the City of New York and adjacent counties.
Page 307 U. S. 534
Efforts to secure the consent of dealers to a marketing
agreement having failed, the order, before its promulgation, was
submitted by referendum to producers, the vote resulting, as
determined by the Secretary with the approval of the President, in
acceptance of the order by at least two-thirds of those producers
who, during a representative period, had been engaged in production
of milk for the marketing area. The Secretary had found that
two-thirds of the milk comes to this area from other States where
it is produced, or from the New York through other States, and that
the other one-third, produced in New York, becomes "physically and
inextricably intermingled" with this "interstate" milk, and that
all is handled either in the current of interstate commerce or so
as to affect, burden, and obstruct interstate commerce in milk and
its products. The Secretary had determined also that prices
calculated to give milk a purchasing power for producers equivalent
to that enjoyed in the base periods selected by §§ 2 and 8e of the
Act would not be reasonable, in view of prices for feed and "other
economic conditions," and resorted to the authority granted by §
8c(18), to fix prices so as to "reflect" those factors and "insure
a sufficient quantity of pure and wholesome milk and be in the
public interest." The order provides a method for computing
"minimum prices" or values for the milk received by "handlers'
during the computation period, varying according to the class of
use to which the milk is put, the butter-fat content, distance of
transportation, etc. It then provides for fixing the "uniform
price" which producers are actually paid by the proprietary
(non-cooperative) "handlers," and which, in substance, is
determined by multiplying the amount of milk of each class received
by all "handlers' during the period, less certain deductions, by
the respective "minimum price," making certain deductions, and
dividing the total of the remainders by the total amount of the
milk received. For the purpose of equalization, the order requires
"handlers' to pay into a "Producer Settlement Fund" the amount by
which their purchases at the "minimum prices" exceeds the amount of
their purchased milk multiplied by the "uniform price." When the
value of a "handler's" purchased milk at the "minimum prices" is
less than if bought at the "uniform price," the Fund pays him the
difference for distribution to his producers. By the terms of the
order, cooperative associations of producers which are also
"handlers' need not pay the "uniform price," but may settle with
their patrons according to their contracts. The order, by these and
other means, sought to bring
Page 307 U. S. 535
about a fair division among producers of the fluid milk market
and utilization of the rest of the supply in other dairy staples,
and thus to correct evils arising from overproduction of the fluid
milk, price-cutting, etc.
Cf. Nebbia v. N.Y., 291 U.
S. 502. In a suit by the Government to enforce the order
against a proprietary producer of milk and cooperative associations
of producers, in which other cooperative associations intervened on
the side of the plaintiff, the District Court adjudged the order
invalid and dismissed the bill.
Held:
1. Suspension of the order by the Secretary under §8c(16)(A) of
the Act because of the effect of the decree on its administration
and enforcement did not render the proceedings moot, since rights
accrued under the order were preserved, and reports, accountings
and payments under it were sought from the defendants. P.
307 U. S.
555.
2. Contentions that the adoption of the order was influenced by
false representations and coercive tactics practiced by certain
cooperative associations which intervened in this case are
immaterial, as there is no authority in the courts to go behind the
conclusion of the Secretary to inquire into the influences which
caused the producers to favor the resolution. P.
307 U. S.
556.
3. The provision of the Act, § 8(12), authorizing cooperatives
to express their approval or disapproval of such orders for all
their members or patrons is not unreasonable. P.
307 U. S.
559.
4. If the order and Act are otherwise valid, the fact that their
effect would be to give cooperatives a monopoly of the market,
would not violate the Sherman Act or justify a refusal of an
injunction enforcing the order. P.
307 U. S.
560.
5. The objection that the Act does not authorize the provision
of the order exempting cooperatives from payment of "uniform
prices" required to be paid by proprietary "handlers" cannot be
taken by defendants who are themselves cooperatives, but can be
taken by a defendant proprietary. P.
307 U. S.
560.
6. This exemption for cooperatives is authorized by § 8c(F) of
the Act, which provides that
"Nothing . . . shall . . . prevent a cooperative . . . from . .
. making distribution [of net proceeds] . . . in accordance with
the contract between the association and its producers."
P.
307 U. S.
561.
7. The objection that, in authorizing payments to cooperatives
and certain other "handlers" from the Producer Settlement Fund, the
order is without statutory basis cannot be raised by
"handlers,"
Page 307 U. S. 536
whether proprietary or cooperative, since "handlers " have no
financial interest in that fund. P.
307 U. S.
561.
8. Section 8e(5) of the Act, in sanctioning exemptions of
producer cooperative associations from the duty imposed by the
order on other "handlers" of paying a uniform price to producers is
not unconstitutionally discriminative. P.
307 U. S.
562.
This results from the nature of cooperatives, the policy of
Congress in their regard, their relations to their members, and to
price-cutting, as compared with ordinary business corporations.
9. No unconstitutional discrimination is produced by provisions
of the order, sanctioned by the Act, which limit minimum prices to
milk sold in the marketing area or which passes through a plant in
the marketing area, thereby permitting "handlers" to purchase other
milk from the same production area at any price they may please. P.
307 U. S.
565.
If such "unpriced" milk be sold by the "handler" outside of the
market area designated by the order for a price greater than can be
obtained within the area, thus enabling the "handler" to replace
losses on sales within the area and still be in a position to pay
the "uniform price" for milk supplied to the area, this is a
competitive situation which the order did not create, and with
which it does not deal.
10. Special differentials on milk coming from certain counties
located most favorably to the marketing area, allowed by the order
under § 8e(5)(A) of the Act, are not shown to discriminate unduly
between producers. The Secretary's determination of their
propriety, made on substantial evidence, is supported by a strong
presumption. P.
307 U. S.
567.
11. Where milk sold by the dairy farmer locally and milk from
other States are drawn into a general plan for protecting the
interstate commerce in the commodity from the interferences,
burdens, and obstructions arising from excessive surplus and the
social and sanitary evils created by low prices, the power of
Congress extends also to the local sales. P.
307 U. S.
568.
12. The federal commerce power, where it exists, is complete and
perfect. P.
307 U. S.
569.
13. Congress has power over the prices of milk in interstate
commerce of the same nature and extent as the power retained by the
States over their internal commerce in milk.
Nebbia v. New
York, 291 U. S. 502. P.
307 U. S.
569.
Page 307 U. S. 537
14. The provisions of the Act and the order which require a
"handler" whose purchases at the "minimum price" exceed their value
at the "uniform price" to pay the surplus into the Producer
Settlement Fund, instead of paying it to his patrons, do not
deprive him of liberty and property without due process. P.
307 U. S.
571.
This pooling device is ancillary to the price regulation; both
are designed to foster and protect interstate commerce by smoothing
out the difficulties of milk surplus and cut-throat competition
which burdened the marketing. P.
307 U. S.
572.
As Congress would have the right to limit the quantities of milk
in interstate commerce, it may permit its movement on these terms
of pool settlement.
15. The Act declares a definite policy to restore parity prices
for farmers; directs the Secretary to issue orders to that end
whenever he has reason to believe they will tend to effectuate that
policy; limits the terms of such orders specifically, while
allowing flexible auxiliary administrative discretion; confines its
application to specified farm products and the orders to such areas
as are "practicable;" and requires preliminary hearings and
findings, with right to object to the Secretary and appeal to the
courts. In these respects, it sets up sufficient standards, and
does not delegate legislative power in violation of the
Constitution. P.
307 U. S.
574.
Even though procedural safeguards in the Act cannot validate an
unconstitutional delegation, they do protect against arbitrary
abuse of properly delegated authority. P.
307 U. S.
576.
16. Section 8c(18) of the Act, which provides that, whenever he
finds upon hearing and evidence that prices giving milk and milk
products purchasing power equivalent to that of the "base period,"
defined in §§ 2 and 8e, are not reasonable, in view of the price
and available supplies of feeds and other economic conditions which
affect market supply and demand for milk and its products in the
marketing area, the Secretary shall fix such prices as he finds
"will reflect such factors and insure a sufficient quantity of pure
and wholesome milk and be in the public interest," sets up a
standard sufficient to avoid improper delegation of power. P.
307 U. S.
576.
17. The provisions of the Act for submission of proposed orders
for approval of producers of milk, through a referendum, §
8c(9)(B), and the provision authorizing cooperatives to cast the
votes of their producer patrons, are not invalid delegation. P.
307 U. S.
577.
Page 307 U. S. 538
18. Sections 8c(5)(A), 8c(5)(C) and 8c(5) (F), construed
together and with § 8c(1), show that there was no intention to
except cooperatives of the agency type (distinguished from the
"sale" type) from the duty imposed on handlers generally to pay
into the Producer Settlement Fund and share the expenses of
administration. The term "purchased" in § 8c(5)(A) means "acquired
for marketing;" the section cannot be construed as freeing agents,
cooperative or proprietary, from the requirement to account at the
minimum prices for milk handled. P.
307 U. S.
578.
This conclusion accords with the legislative reports and debates
and administrative construction.
19. The provisions of the Act, § 8c(5)(F) permitting a
cooperative to distribute the "net proceeds" of all its sales to
its members in accordance with its contract with them refers to the
results of the cooperative's sales in the marketing area after
complying with the equalization requirements. P.
307 U. S.
579.
20. A provision of the order authorizing any "handler," in
determining its net pool obligation, to subtract "the quantity of
milk received from the
handler's' own farm" does not apply to a
cooperative "handler" which has no farm. P. 307 U. S.
581.
26 F. Supp.
534, reversed.
Appeals under § 2 of the jurisdictional Act of August 24, 1937,
from a decree of the District Court dismissing two suits brought by
the Government to enforce an order of the Secretary of Agriculture,
issued under the Agricultural Marketing Agreement Act of June 3,
1937, regulating the handling of milk in an area comprising the
City of New York and neighboring counties. One of the suits was
against three incorporated "cooperatives," representing milk
producers, in the handling of milk in this area. The defendant
corporation in the other suit was a "proprietary" handler. One of
the appellants is Noyes, Commissioner of Agriculture and Markets of
the City of New York, who intervened and petitioned, among other
things, for enforcement of a regulation under the state law insofar
as the traffic in question might be adjudged
Page 307 U. S. 539
to be intrastate commerce. Inasmuch as the operations of all of
the defendants are found to be of interstate character, the Court
rules that his petition be dismissed. The other three appeals are
by the United States and by two incorporated "cooperatives," which
intervened to combat charges made against them by the defendants
concerning their activities in aid of the adoption and enforcement
of the federal order.
MR. JUSTICE REED delivered the opinion of the Court.
These appeals involve the validity of Order No. 27 of the
Secretary of Agriculture, issued under the Agricultural
Page 307 U. S. 540
Marketing Agreement Act of 1937, [
Footnote 1] regulating the handling of milk in the New
York metropolitan area.
On October 27, 1938, the United States of America filed a
complaint against the Rock Royal Cooperative, Inc., the Central New
York Cooperative Association, Inc., and Schuyler Junction New York
Milk Shed Cooperative, Inc., seeking a mandatory injunction
requiring the defendants and their representatives to comply with
the provisions of the Order. On November 26, 1938, a similar action
was filed in the same court against the Jetter Dairy Company, Inc.
On December 2, these causes were consolidated. The original
proceedings had sought relief not only for violations of the Order
of the Secretary of Agriculture, but also, if the court should find
that the defendants or any of them were not subject to that Order,
for violation of Official Order No. 126 issued by the Commissioner
of Agriculture and Markets of the New York. The two orders are
in pari materia, one covering milk moving in or directly
burdening, obstructing, or affecting interstate commerce, and the
other [
Footnote 2] covering
milk in intrastate commerce. Each defendant is a dealer handling
milk moving in interstate commerce. On December 15, Holton V.
Noyes, as Commissioner of Agriculture and Markets of the New York,
was permitted to intervene as a party plaintiff in the consolidated
action. He sought an injunction commanding the defendants and their
representatives to comply with Order No. 126 or, should it be
determined that their milk was not subject to this Order, to comply
with the Order of the Secretary of Agriculture.
In their answers, the defendants pleaded certain affirmative
defenses, setting up the invalidity of Order No. 27 because of
improper efforts to secure its adoption.
Page 307 U. S. 541
Broadly speaking, these defenses were based upon erroneous
representations alleged to have been made by officials and by
certain private organizations to bring about the approval of the
Order, and upon an alleged conspiracy of the same private
organizations to create a monopoly by means of the Order. The
motion to strike these defenses having been overruled, the
Dairymen's League Cooperative Association, hereinafter called the
League, and the Metropolitan Cooperative Milk Producers Bargaining
Agency, Inc., hereinafter called the Agency, were permitted to
intervene to combat them.
The answers also challenged the two orders and the Act as
contrary to the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments to the Constitution
and the Act as involving improper delegation of legislative power.
The Central New York Cooperative Association denied the power of
the Congress to enact the legislation under the Commerce Clause and
set up as a further defense that it was not subject to either
order.
After a hearing upon the merits, the District Court dismissed
the complaints. The state order was eliminated from consideration
on the understanding, not questioned here, that the milk of all
four defendants is covered by the Federal Order, if valid. It was
further held that Sections 8c(5)(B)(ii) and 8c(5)(F) of the Act
violate the due process clause of the Fifth Amendment, that the
Order is discriminatory, and takes property without compensation,
that approval of the producers was secured by unlawful
misrepresentation and coercion, and that important provisions of
the Order, authorizing payments to cooperative and proprietary
handlers, have no basis in the Act.
United States v. Rock Royal
Cooperative, 26 F. Supp.
534, 544, 545, 548, 550, 553. As the unconstitutionality of
certain sections of an Act of Congress was one ground of the
decision, an appeal was allowed directly to this Court. [
Footnote 3]
Page 307 U. S. 542
The Statute. [
Footnote
4] The controversy revolves almost entirely around Order No.
27. Back of the Order is the statute under which it was issued, the
Agricultural Marketing Agreement Act of 1937, which reenacted and
amended certain provisions of the Agricultural Adjustment Act.
[
Footnote 5]
Page 307 U. S. 543
As its name implies, it was aimed at assisting in the marketing
of agricultural commodities.
By § 1, it is declared that "the disruption of the orderly
exchange of commodities in interstate commerce impairs
Page 307 U. S. 544
the purchasing power of farmers," thus destroying the value of
agricultural assets to the detriment of the national public
interest. This interference is declared to "burden and obstruct the
normal channels of interstate commerce."
Page 307 U. S. 545
By § 2, it is declared to be the policy of Congress, through the
exercise of the powers conferred upon the Secretary of
Agriculture,
"to establish and maintain such orderly marketing conditions for
agricultural commodities in interstate commerce as will establish
prices to farmers at a level that will give agricultural
commodities
Page 307 U. S. 546
a purchasing power with respect to articles that farmers buy,
equivalent to the purchasing power of agricultural commodities in
the base period. . . ."
Under § 2 of the Act, the base period for agricultural
commodities, except tobacco and potatoes, is fixed at the pre-war
period of August, 1909, to July, 1914. Where the purchasing power
during the base period cannot be satisfactorily determined from
available statistics within the Department of Agriculture, the
Secretary is authorized to take as the base period from August,
1919, to July, 1929, or a portion thereof. § 8e. In prescribing
minimum prices for milk, the statute authorizes the Secretary to
fix minimum prices without restriction to the purchasing power
during the base period so as to reflect the prices of available
supplies of feed and other economic conditions, if he finds after a
hearing that minimum prices with a base period purchasing power are
unreasonable. § 8c(18).
Section 8a(6) gives jurisdiction to the district courts of the
United States to enforce and to prevent and restrain any person
from violating any of the orders, regulations or agreements under
its provisions.
Section 8b authorizes the Secretary of Agriculture to enter into
marketing agreements with the producers and others engaged in the
handling of agricultural commodities in or affecting interstate
commerce. These agreements may be for all agricultural commodities
and their products, are entirely voluntary, and may cover the
handling of the commodity by any person engaged in the various
operations of processing or distribution. Agreements are involved
only incidentally in this proceeding.
Section 8c provides for a use of orders, instead of agreements,
in certain situations. These orders apply only to specified
commodities, including milk. [
Footnote 6] They are to be entered only when the Secretary
of Agriculture has reason
Page 307 U. S. 547
to believe that the issuance of an order will tend to effectuate
the declared policy of the Act with respect to any commodity or
product thereof, and after notice and an opportunity for hearing.
It is necessary also for the Secretary of Agriculture to set forth
in such order a finding upon the evidence introduced at the hearing
that the issuance of the Order and of the terms and conditions
thereof will tend to effectuate the declared policy. [
Footnote 7] When, as here, the commodity is
milk, the Act requires [
Footnote
8] that the Order contain one or more of terms specified in §
8c(5), and no others, except certain terms common to all orders and
set out in § 8c(7). These terms, as used in the Order under
examination, will be referred to later. Orders may only be issued
[
Footnote 9] after hearing upon
a marketing agreement which regulates the handling of the commodity
in the same manner as the order. Without special determination of
the Secretary of Agriculture and approval of the President, orders
are not to become effective unless approved by handlers as required
by the Act. [
Footnote
10]
Notwithstanding the refusal or failure of handlers to sign a
marketing agreement relating to such commodity, the Secretary of
Agriculture, with the approval of the President, may issue an order
without the adoption of an agreement if he determines that the
refusal or failure of the handlers to sign a marketing agreement
tends to prevent the effectuation of the declared policy with
respect to the commodity and that the issuance of the order is the
only practical means of advancing the interest of the producers. In
such a case, the order must be approved or favored by two-thirds of
the producers, in number or volume, who have been engaged, during a
representative period, in the production for market of the
Page 307 U. S. 548
commodity within the production area or two-thirds of those
engaged in the production of the commodity for sale in the
marketing area specified in the marketing agreement or order. §
8c(9). Section 8c(19) authorizes a referendum to determine whether
the issuance of the order is approved by the producers. Section
8c(12) provides that the Secretary shall consider the approval or
disapproval by any cooperative association as the approval or
disapproval of the producers who are members, stockholders or
patrons of the cooperative association.
Section 8c(15) provides for administrative review by the
Secretary on petition of a handler objecting to any provision as
not in accordance with law and seeking a modification or exemption
therefrom. By § 8c(15)(B), the district courts have jurisdiction to
review such ruling.
The Problem. -- In accordance with the provisions of
the Act, the Secretary of Agriculture, before promulgating Order
No. 27, conducted public hearings attended by handlers, producers,
and consumers of milk and their representatives throughout the
milkshed. No defendant, however, was represented. These hearings
followed the presentation by the Agency to the Secretary and to the
Commissioner of a proposed marketing agreement and order regulating
the handling of milk in the New York marketing area with a request
for action under the Federal and New York statutes. The hearings
were jointly held by the Federal and state governments. The
cooperation of the two governments was the culmination of a course
of investigation and legislation which had continued over many
years. The problem from the standpoint of New York was fully
considered, and the results set out in the Report of 1933 of the
Joint Legislative Committee to Investigate the Milk Industry. This
investigation was followed by the creation of the Milk Control
Board, with broad powers to regulate the dairy business of the
state. This board had power to fix prices to
Page 307 U. S. 549
be paid to purchasers and to be charged to consumers. [
Footnote 11] A later New York act,
the Rogers-Allen Act, [
Footnote
12] authorized the state commissioner to cooperate with the
Federal authorities acting under the present Marketing Agreement
Act, and to issue orders supplementary to those of the Federal
Government to be carried out under joint administration.
The problems concerned with the maintenance and distribution of
an adequate supply of milk in metropolitan centers are well
understood by producers and handlers. In the milkshed and marketing
area of metropolitan New York, these problems are peculiarly acute.
[
Footnote 13] It is
generally recognized that the chief cause of fluctuating prices and
supplies is the existence of a normal surplus which is necessary to
furnish an adequate amount for peak periods of consumption. This
results in an excess of production during the troughs of demand. As
milk is highly perishable, a fertile field for the growth of
bacteria, and yet an essential item of diet, it is most desirable
to have an adequate production under close sanitary supervision to
meet the constantly varying needs. The sale of milk in metropolitan
New York is ringed around with requirements of the health
departments to assure the purity of the supply. Only farms with
equipment approved by the health authorities of the marketing area
and operated in accordance with their requirements are permitted to
market their milk. More than sixty thousand dairies located in the
states of New York, Connecticut, Massachusetts, Maryland, New
Jersey, Pennsylvania and Vermont hold certificates
Page 307 U. S. 550
of inspection and approval from the Department of Health of the
City of New York. More than five hundred receiving plants,
similarly scattered, have been approved for the receiving and
shipping of grades A and B milk. Since all milk produced cannot
find a ready market as fluid milk in flush periods, the surplus
must move into cream, butter, cheese, milk powder, and other more
or less nonperishable products. Since these manufactures are in
competition with all similar dairy products, the prices for the
milk absorbed into manufacturing processes must necessarily meet
the competition of low-cost production areas far removed from the
metropolitan centers. The market for fluid milk for use as a food
beverage is the most profitable to the producer. Consequently, all
producers strive for the fluid milk market. It is obvious that the
marketing of fluid milk in New York has contacts at least with the
entire national dairy industry. The approval of dairies by the
Department of Health of New York City, as a condition for the sale
of their fluid milk in the metropolitan area, isolates from this
general competition a well recognized segment of the entire
industry. Since these producers are numerous enough to keep up a
volume of fluid milk for New York distribution beyond ordinary
requirements, cut-throat competition even among them would threaten
the quality and, in the end, the quantity of fluid milk deemed
suitable for New York consumption. Students of the problem
generally have apparently recognized a fair division among
producers of the fluid milk market and utilization of the rest of
the available supply in other dairy staples as an appropriate
method of attack for its solution. Order No. 27 was an attempt to
make effective such as arrangement under the authority of the
Agricultural Marketing Agreement Act.
Page 307 U. S. 551
Order No. 27. [
Footnote 14] The Secretary of Agriculture found that
two-thirds of the milk produced for the New York marketing area
actually moves in interstate commerce, and that the remaining
one-third produced within the
Page 307 U. S. 552
New York was "physically and inextricably intermingled" with the
interstate milk; that all was handled either in the current of
interstate commerce or so as to affect, burden, and obstruct such
interstate commerce in
Page 307 U. S. 553
milk and its products. An exception was made as to milk
regulated by the order of the Commissioner of Agriculture and
Markets of the New York. The Secretary further found that prices
calculated in accordance with the Agricultural Marketing Agreement
Act of 1937
Page 307 U. S. 554
to give this milk a purchasing power equivalent to the parities
mentioned in §§ 2 and 8e of that Act were not reasonable in view of
the supplies and prices of feeds and other economic conditions
which affect the supply and demand for milk. He then fixed a
minimum price for milk to be determined from time to time by
formula.
By the Order, the marketing area is defined as the City of New
York and the counties of Nassau, Suffolk, and Westchester. A
producer is any person producing milk delivered to a handler at a
plant approved by a health authority for the receiving of milk for
sale in the marketing area. A handler is a person engaged in the
handling of milk or cream received at an approved plant for similar
sale. "Handler" includes cooperative associations. The
administrative sections of the Order setting up a milk
administrator and defining his duties are not attacked. Nor are
those which classify milk.
Article IV is important since it establishes minimum prices for
milk. There are various differentials based upon use, butter fat
content, and distances between the points of production and
consumption which it is unnecessary to analyze. For the purposes of
this opinion, it is sufficient to say, as an example, that the
minimum price each handler should pay for milk is fixed by a
formula which varies with the butter price range for 92-score
butter at wholesale in the New York market during the 60 days
preceding the 25th day of the preceding month. The handlers are
required to file reports as to their receipts and utilization of
milk of the various classes. It should be understood, however, that
this minimum price is not the amount which the producer receives,
but the price level or so-called "value" from which is calculated
the actual amount in dollars and cents which he is to receive.
By Article VI, a uniform price is computed, and it is this
uniform price which the producer is actually paid by
Page 307 U. S. 555
the proprietary (noncooperative) handlers. The uniform price is
determined by a computation which, in substance, multiplies the
amount of milk (classified according to its use) received by all
handlers, less certain quantities of milk permitted to be deducted,
by the minimum prices fixed by Article IV for the different classes
of milk. From the result, various payments and reservations are
deducted, and the remainder is divided by the total quantity of
milk received. To equalize, handlers pay into the producer
settlement fund. While much over-simplified, the operation will be
made clear by summarizing the provisions of Article VII to require
that handlers shall pay to the producer settlement fund the amount
by which their purchased milk, multiplied by the minimum prices for
the various classes, is greater than their purchased milk
multiplied by the uniform price. When the handlers' purchased milk
multiplied by the minimum prices is less than when it is multiplied
by the uniform price, the producer settlement fund pays them the
difference for distribution to their producers. These provisions
give uniform prices to all producers, with exceptions to be herein
stated, in accordance with the general use of milk for the
preceding period.
Other provisions of the Order upon which an attack is made will
be pointed out in the discussion of the particular objections.
Suspension of Order. It developed at the argument of
the causes in this Court that the Secretary of Agriculture, on
March 18, 1939, [
Footnote
15] had suspended Order No. 27 on account of the effect of the
decree below on its administration and enforcement. § 8c(16)(A).
Since this suspension is authorized by the statute and the Order
preserves accrued rights, we are of the opinion this step does not
make these proceedings moot. Reports
Page 307 U. S. 556
of their receipts and classified sales of milk, accounting of
their pool obligations in the determination of the uniform price
and settlement with their producers on the basis of the Order, as
well as the payment of money, are sought from the defendants. The
controversy over the validity of the Order and the power to enforce
its provisions remains.
Adoption of the Order. Before considering the validity
of the Marketing Act and the provisions of the Order under attack,
we shall examine the contention of the defendants that the Order
was adopted under circumstances which require a court of equity to
refuse to enforce it. After dealers had refused or failed to sign
the proposed marketing agreement, the Secretary conducted a
referendum under § 8c(19) to ascertain whether the issuance of
Order No. 27 was approved by two-thirds of the producers, as
required by § 8c(9). Vigorous campaigns were waged by both
proponents and opponents of the Order. Among the proponents were
the League and the Agency. After the vote, the Secretary, on August
24, 1938, with the approval of the President, determined that the
issuance of the Order was favored by at least two-thirds of the
producers, and declared it effective as of September 1, 1938.
[
Footnote 16]
The defendants base their appeal to the conscience of the
chancellor upon matters connected with the referendum which they
claim amount to fraud in its adoption. The alleged fraud is said to
consist of widespread public misrepresentations to the effect that
all producers would receive the same price for their milk, and a
conspiracy between the League and others to convert the state and
national acts into instruments for the creation of a monopoly in
large handlers in the sale of fluid milk in the marketing area.
Page 307 U. S. 557
The findings supporting the charges of misrepresentation and
conspiracy may be summarized as determining that the intervening
plaintiffs, the League and the Agency, participated actively in
proposing, adopting, and inducing both producers and handlers to
accept the Order. In greater detail, the findings show that the
League was instrumental in the organization of the Agency; that it
has representatives upon the Agency's Board of Directors; that the
Agency has acted as an organization for promoting action under both
federal and state acts; that both League and Agency published
papers which gave vigorous support to the campaign for approval of
the order. At the time of the hearings, the Agency issued an
explanatory booklet stating that an equal purchasing price would be
paid by all dealers for milk of the same use, and that each
producer would share equally the benefits of the fluid milk market.
Both Agency and League announced repeatedly that handlers would be
required to pay a uniform price, and that no handler would receive
a competitive advantage over the others. The Agency expended over
$63,000 between December 1, 1937, and June 1, 1938, and over
$45,000 between the latter date and September 1, 1938, the date the
order went into effect, as it actively supported the Federal-state
order program. Voting on the Order took place August 18, 19, and
20. Of 38,627 votes counted as valid in the referendum, 33,663, or
87.1 percent, were in favor of the issuance of the Order, and
4,964, or 12.9 percent, were opposed. Of the favorable votes, the
League cast 22,287.
Supporting evidence beyond the coordinated activities of the
Agency, the League, and other cooperatives for the charge of
conspiracy to monopolize by securing the adoption of the Order was
found by the District Court in the provisions of the Order.
Competitive advantages to cooperatives in the Order were thought by
it to indicate an improper influence by them in its drafting. These
will
Page 307 U. S. 558
be discussed later from the point of view of their legality
under permissible classification. The court found that the
conspiracy to obtain a monopoly was carried out by coercive tactics
on the part of producers, under the leadership of the League and
the Agency. These tactics consisted of threats to handlers that, if
they did not comply with the Order, the producers would withhold
delivery of milk. These schemes, the lower court determined, were
so successful in securing the drafting, adoption and acceptance of
the Order that a conspiracy to monopolize interstate commerce
contrary to the Sherman Anti-Trust Act was established. It held
that the occurrence of the incidents just detailed compelled
refusal of the injunction. We do not agree.
While considering the manner of the adoption of the Order, the
validity of the Act and the provisions of the Order must be
assumed. The Order was submitted to the producers for approval
after the hearings specified in the statute. The full text of the
Order, with explanatory pamphlets, was mailed each prospective
voter. In the face of this fact, erroneous statements cannot be
permitted to render the submission futile. There is no evidence
that any producer misunderstood. A casual sentence in one of the
pamphlets of the Department of Agriculture and a number of other
statements in publications of the League and Agency were to the
effect that dealers would pay all producers the uniform price for
milk. Such assertions need the qualifications given in the Order
that they are not applicable to milk sold outside the marketing
area, or to milk handled by cooperatives. The variation from the
facts is not immaterial in view of the value or volume of milk
involved. But the Order, Article VII, plainly stated that
cooperatives were not covered by the payment requirements, and it
appeared also that milk sold outside the marketing area was not
Page 307 U. S. 559
within its terms. A study of the official form of the Order
would have cleared up any misconception created by the language.
The Secretary of Agriculture declared that three-fourths of the
producers affected by the Order approved its terms. The litigants
do not deny that three-fourths of the voters voted for the
institution of the Order. There is no authority in the courts to go
behind this conclusion of the Secretary to inquire into the
influences which caused the producers to favor the resolution.
The coercion by the League and the Agency, exercised upon the
handlers after the adoption of the Order to force or induce them to
acquiesce in its operation, is of the same indirect character as
the alleged misrepresentation. It is the partisan coercion of the
producer seeking to compel dealer support of the plan by the threat
of the use of his economic power over his own milk. The coercion
was ineffective upon these defendants. Producers' organizations
urged in their papers and meetings diversion of milk from handlers
to influence them to agree to the Order. Such efforts could not
have had an effect on the prior vote of the producers. It is quite
true that the League, which itself cast two-thirds of the favorable
votes, was in a position to cast more than one-third of the total
qualified vote against the Order. This arises from the provision of
the Act, authorizing cooperatives to express the approval or
disapproval for all of their members or patrons. [
Footnote 17] This is not an unreasonable
provision, as the cooperative is the marketing agency of those for
whom it votes. If the power is in the Congress to put the order in
effect, the manner of the demonstration of further approval is
likewise under its control. These associations of producers of milk
have a vital interest in the establishment of an efficient
marketing system. This adequately
Page 307 U. S. 560
explains their interest in securing the adoption of an order
believed by them to be favorable for this purpose. If ulterior
motives of corporate aggrandizement stimulated their activities,
their efforts were not thereby rendered unlawful. [
Footnote 18] If the Act and Order are
otherwise valid, the fact that their effect would be to give
cooperatives a monopoly of the market would not violate the Sherman
Act, or justify the refusal of the injunction.
Correlation of Order and Act. There is another phase of
the argument against the Order which is not affected by the
validity of the Act or its application in the Order, and therefore
is ready for disposition before the constitutional questions need
be reached. Defendants contend there is no statutory basis for the
sections of the Order exempting cooperatives from the payment of
the uniform price [
Footnote
19] and authorizing payments to them and certain handlers from
the producer settlement fund. [
Footnote 20]
The Government makes the point that none of the defendants, all
handlers, can object to these terms of the Order, because only
producers delivering milk to cooperatives are affected by the
exemption of cooperative handlers from the requirement to pay at
not less than the uniform price, and only producers are affected by
the use of the pooled money for §§ 5 and 6 payments to cooperative
and other handlers. Although three of the defendants cannot
complain of the benefits conferred upon cooperatives, for they are
cooperatives, the defendant Jetter Dairy Company has standing to
raise the issue of want of statutory authority to except
cooperative handlers from the payment of the uniform price. It is a
proprietary corporation, a handler of milk, required by the
Order
Page 307 U. S. 561
to pay uniform prices for the milk it purchases. [
Footnote 21] This requirement to pay
uniform prices arises from the provisions of Article IV that it
shall pay minimum prices. The two are the same except for the
deduction of certain service payments. The cooperatives are
excepted from the payment. The burden of payment is laid directly
upon Jetter, while others are excepted. None of the defendants, on
the other hand, is in a position to raise the issue of lack of
statutory authority for the payments authorized by Article VII, §§
5 and 6. Whether cooperative or not, the defendant corporations
have no financial interest in the producer settlement fund. All
defendants pay into, or draw out of, that fund in accordance with
their utilization of the milk delivered to them by their patrons.
The defendants' profit or loss depends upon the spread each
receives between the class price and sale price. If the deductions
from the fund are small or nothing, the patron receives a higher
uniform price, but the handler is not affected. [
Footnote 22]
We now consider whether the Act authorizes the exception of the
cooperatives from the uniform payment provisions of Article VII, §
1. This authority, if it exists, is in § 8c(5)(F) of the Act. The
earlier paragraphs provide for minimum prices to be paid by
handlers to producers and associations of producers, subject to
usual quality and location differentials not important here. These
would require minimum prices to be paid by cooperatives when, as
here, they were handlers under the definition of the Order,
[
Footnote 23] were it not
for the exception of
Page 307 U. S. 562
these same cooperatives under subsection (F):
"Nothing . . . shall . . . prevent a cooperative . . . from . .
. making distribution thereof [net proceeds] . . . in accordance
with the contract between the association and its producers."
This language specifically permits -- indeed, requires -- the
Order to except cooperatives from the requirement of paying minimum
prices to producers. As the minimum price is paid to the producer
through the payment of the uniform price, after equalization in the
pool, there is authority in the Act to except the cooperative from
the payment of the uniform price.
I. Terms of the Order
Certain provisions of the Order were found by the District Court
to show unconstitutional discrimination against one or more of the
defendants. The discriminations of which complaint is made arise
from the application to the New York problem of § 8c(5) of the Act
relating to milk.
A.
Uniform Price. The Jetter Dairy Company, a
proprietary handler, urges that as milk cooperatives need not pay
producers a uniform price, it is unreasonably discriminatory and
violative of the due process clause of the Fifth Amendment to
require it to pay this uniform price. In § 8c(5)(F), there is a
definition of the type of cooperative permitted to settle with its
members in accordance with the membership contract. The general
characteristics of cooperatives are well understood. The
Capper-Volstead Act defines such cooperatives as associations of
producers, corporate or otherwise, with or without capital stock,
marketing their product for the mutual benefit of the members as
producers with equal voting privileges, restricted dividends on
capital employed and dealings limited to 50 percent nonmember
products. [
Footnote 24]
Different
Page 307 U. S. 563
treatment has been accorded marketing cooperatives by state and
Federal legislation alike. [
Footnote 25] Indeed, the Secretary is charged by this Act
to
"accord such recognition and encouragement to producer-owned and
producer-controlled cooperative associations as will be in harmony
with the policy toward cooperative associations set forth in
existing Acts of Congress, and as will tend to promote efficient
methods of marketing and distribution. [
Footnote 26]"
These agricultural cooperatives are the means by which farmers
and stockmen enter to the processing and distribution of their
crops and livestock. The distinctions between such cooperatives and
business organizations have repeatedly been held to justify
different treatment. [
Footnote
27]
Frost
Page 307 U. S. 564
v. Corporation Commission, [
Footnote 28] in fact recognized the validity of such
classification. The Commission was enjoined from issuing a license
for the operation of a cooperative cotton gin under a proviso
directing it to do so on petition of 100 citizens and taxpayers
without the showing of public necessity required for other ginners.
The applicant was organized for profit, though dividends were
limited and its membership was not confined to producers. The Court
thought the distinctions had no reasonable relation to the subject
of the legislation -- special opportunities for cooperatives. It
was said the Court had "no reason to doubt" that the classification
was valid as applied to true cooperatives. [
Footnote 29]
The producer cooperative seeks to return to its members the
largest possible portion of the dollar necessarily spent by the
consumer for the product with deductions only for modest
distribution costs, without profit to the membership cooperative
and with limited profit to the stock cooperative. It is organized
by producers for their mutual benefit. [
Footnote 30] For that reason, it may be assumed that
it will seek to distribute the largest amounts to its patrons.
Page 307 U. S. 565
The commodity handled by a cooperative corresponds for some
purposes to the capital of a business corporation. Either may cut
sale prices below cost, one as long as its members will deliver,
the other as long as its assets permit. When proprietary
corporations lower sales prices, they naturally seek to lower
purchase prices. Their profit depends on spread. On the other hand,
the cooperative cannot pass the reduction. All the selling price,
less expense, is available for distribution to its patrons. As its
own members bear the burden of price-cutting, it was reasonable to
exempt it from the payment of the fixed price. The cooperative
member measures his return by the market or uniform price the
business handler pays. In commodities with the wide market of
staple dairy products, quotations are readily available. If
distributions do not equal open prices, the cooperators' reactions
would parallel those of stockholders of losing businesses. Neither
the Act nor the Order protects anyone from lawful competition, nor
is it essential that they should do so. [
Footnote 31] We do not find an unreasonable
discrimination in excepting producers' cooperatives from the
requirement to pay a uniform price.
B.
Unpriced Milk. Another discrimination is said to
reside in that part of the Order which limits minimum prices to
milk "sold in the marketing area or which passes through a plant in
the marketing area." Other milk, though from the same production
area, is "unpriced milk," and does not figure in the computation of
the uniform price. Where both priced and unpriced milk are dealt in
by a handler, he must furnish a statement to the producer showing
the percentage of his milk paid for at the uniform price. [
Footnote 32] The defendants handle
only milk which is sold in the marketing area. They assert that an
unreasonable
Page 307 U. S. 566
discrimination results in favor of handlers, such as the League,
which market milk both in and outside the marketing area.
The basis of the complaint is that large dealers and cooperative
handlers with extensive gathering and distributing facilities are
permitted to purchase milk throughout the milkshed at any price
they please, if the milk does not pass through a plant in the
marketing area, and sell it at any price they please, provided the
sale is outside the limited New York marketing area. By reason of
the fact that milk sells for more in New Jersey than in New York, a
greater profit is made by the handler. If he so desires, the
handler can use this profit to replace losses on New York area
sales, and still be in a position to pay the uniform price to
producers on pool milk. This is said to create a discrimination
against the defendants.
It is possible for the handlers with unpriced milk to use their
profits from the profitable extra area trade in the way suggested.
It was equally possible for them to do so before the Order. It is a
competitive situation which the Order did not create, and with
which it does not deal. We are of the view that there is no
discrimination by reason of this situation.
The District Court,
26 F. Supp.
534, found that handlers of unpriced milk
"are permitted to blend prices paid or purported to have been
paid for such milk sold in other markets, with the uniform price
announced by the Administrator for milk sold in the area, thereby
reducing the actual price paid by such handlers, for milk sold in
the Metropolitan Area, in competition with milk sold by the
defendants. . . . If the price, figured by the handler for unpriced
milk, is lower than its actual market value, the handler, by
blending, is thereby permitted to pay producers for all milk at
less than the Order price, and less than the actual value
thereof."
It is erroneous to suppose that, by buying some milk at less
than the minimum, the
Page 307 U. S. 567
"actual price" paid for milk sold in the marketing area is
reduced. The price paid for all milk sold by proprietary handlers
in that area is the uniform price. Unpriced milk from the same
producer may be bought for less. The average paid the producer may
be below the minimum, but for the part sold in the marketing area
or passing through plants there located the minimum is paid. This
is all that justifies the language of the finding that "the
handler, by blending, is thereby permitted to pay producers for all
milk at less than the Order price. . . ."
C.
Nearby Differentials. Provision is made by the Order
for special differentials of 20 cents on milk from certain counties
located most favorably to the marketing area. [
Footnote 33] This is to enable handlers to pay
the producers at these plants. [
Footnote 34] The five-cent difference is absorbed by the
handlers. The Act authorizes such an arrangement. § 8c(5)(A). This
was found discriminatory as between producers by the District
Court, but there was no finding or conclusion of law as to any
discrimination against defendants. The District Court was of the
opinion this was unfair to these defendants, who have no patrons in
these counties. Here, the defendants urge further advantages from
this arrangement to their competitors who have patrons in these
counties because near locations, freight differentials considered,
have lower transportation costs. The differential increases milk
prices to the producers. This payment tends to stimulate
production. Larger production means more benefit from the freight
advantage to competitors. The discrimination seems fanciful and
remote. It would not justify a court in overturning the Secretary's
determination of the propriety of the differentials on evidence
found by the lower court to be substantial. Such an administrative
determination carries a presumption of the existence of a state
Page 307 U. S. 568
of facts justifying the action far too strong to be overturned
by such suggestions as are made here. [
Footnote 35]
II. Constitutionality of the Act
A.
Minimum Prices. The Act authorizes and the Order
undertakes the fixing of minimum prices for the purchase of milk
"in the current of interstate or foreign commerce, or which
directly burdens, obstructs, or affects, interstate or foreign
commerce" in milk. [
Footnote
36] There is no challenge to the fact that the milk of all four
defendants reaches the marketing area through the channels of
interstate commerce. Nor is any question raised as to the power of
the Congress to regulate the distribution in the area of the wholly
intrastate milk. It is recognized that the Federal authority covers
the sales of this milk, as its marketing is inextricably
intermingled with and directly affects the marketing in the area of
the milk which moves across state lines. [
Footnote 37]
The challenge is to the regulation "of the price to be paid upon
the sale by a dairy farmer who delivers his milk to some country
plant." It is urged that the sale, a local transaction, is fully
completed before any interstate commerce begins, and that the
attempt to fix the price or other elements of that incident
violates the Tenth Amendment. But where commodities are bought for
use beyond state lines, the sale is a part of interstate commerce.
[
Footnote 38]
Page 307 U. S. 569
We have likewise held that, where sales for interstate
transportation were commingled with intrastate transactions, the
existence of the local activity did not interfere with the Federal
power to regulate inspection of the whole. [
Footnote 39] Activities conducted within state
lines do not, by this fact alone, escape the sweep of the Commerce
Clause. Interstate commerce may be dependent upon them. [
Footnote 40] Power to establish
quotas for interstate marketing gives power to name quotas for that
which is to be left within the state of production. [
Footnote 41] Where local and foreign milk
alike are drawn into a general plan for protecting the interstate
commerce in the commodity from the interferences, burdens, and
obstructions arising from excessive surplus and the social and
sanitary evils of low values, the power of the Congress extends
also to the local sales.
This power over commerce, when it exists, is complete and
perfect. [
Footnote 42] It
has been exercised to fix a wage scale for a limited period,
[
Footnote 43] railroad
tariffs, [
Footnote 44] and
fees and charges for live-stock exchanges. [
Footnote 45]
The authority of the Federal government over interstate commerce
does not differ in extent or character from that retained by the
states over intrastate commerce.
Page 307 U. S. 570
Since
Munn v. Illinois, this Court has had occasion
repeatedly to give consideration to the action of states in
regulating prices. [
Footnote
46] Recently, upon a reexamination of the grounds of state
power over prices, that power was phrased by this Court to mean
that,
"upon proper occasion and by appropriate measures, the state may
regulate a business in any of its aspects, including the prices to
be charged for the products or commodities it sells. [
Footnote 47]"
The power of a state to fix the price of milk has been
adjudicated by this Court. [
Footnote 48] The people of great cities depend largely
upon an adequate supply of pure fresh milk. So essential is it for
health that the consumer has been willing to forego unrestricted
competition from low cost territory to be assured of the producer's
compliance with sanitary requirements, as enforced by the municipal
health authorities. It belongs to that category of commodities that
for many years has been subjected to the regulatory power of the
state. A thorough exposition of the milk situation in the New York
shed was made in the
Nebbia case. There is nothing to add
to what was there said, save to point out that, since that
decision, we have held that a state cannot prohibit the sale of
imported milk where the extra-state purchase price was below the
prescribed minimum, [
Footnote
49] and that a Pennsylvania regulatory
Page 307 U. S. 571
law, including minimum prices, applied in the absence of Federal
legislation to milk purchased in Pennsylvania for shipment into the
New York marketing area. [
Footnote 50]. In
Hegeman Farms Corp. v. Baldwin,
[
Footnote 51] this Court
sustained again the New York Milk Control Statute against the
complaint that the price limits were arbitrary. A variation in
prices to be charged the consumer between dealers who had and
dealers who had not well advertised trade names was upheld.
[
Footnote 52] The power
enjoyed by the states to regulate the prices for handling and
selling commodities within their internal commerce [
Footnote 53] rests with the Congress in the
commerce between the states.
B.
Equalization Pool. In order to equalize the prices
received by producers, handlers are required to clear their
purchases through the producer settlement fund. Payments into and
withdrawals from this fund depend upon the "value" of the milk
received, which is fixed by the Order at different prices governed
by the use made by the handler of the purchased milk and upon
whether his obligations to producers are greater or less than the
uniform price due the producers under the scheme. The result of the
use of the device of an equalization pool is that each producer,
dealing with a proprietary handler, gets a uniform or weighted
average price for his milk, with differentials for quality,
location, or other usual market variations, irrespective of the
manner of its use. The Act, § 8c(5)(B)(ii) and (C), and the Order,
Articles IV, VI and VII, authorize such an adjustment.
The defendants' objection to the equalization pool here
considered is not to the disbursements from the fund for expenses
of standby or marketing services
Page 307 U. S. 572
authorized by Article VII, §§ 5 and 6, concerning which we hold
the handler has no standing to complain. It is to the alleged
deprivation of liberty and property accomplished by the pooling
requirement in taking away from the defendants their right to
acquire milk from their patrons at the minimum class price,
according to its use, and forcing the handlers to pay their
surplus, over the uniform price, to the equalization pool, instead
of to their patrons. This argument assumes the validity of price
regulation, as such, but denies the constitutionality of the
pooling arrangement because handlers are not at liberty to pay the
producer in accordance with the use of the producer's milk, but
must distribute the surplus to others whose milk was resold less
advantageously. It is urged that to carry this principle of
contribution to its logical conclusion would mean that the wages of
the employed should be shared with the unemployed, the highly paid,
with the underpaid and the receipts of the able, the fortunate and
the diligent, with the incompetent, the unlucky and the drone.
No such exaggerated equalization of wealth and opportunity is
proposed. The pool is only a device reasonably adapted to allow
regulation of the interstate market upon terms which minimize the
results of the restrictions. It is ancillary to the price
regulation, designed, as is the price provision, to foster,
protect, and encourage interstate commerce by smoothing out the
difficulties of the surplus and cut-throat competition which
burdened this marketing. In
Mulford v. Smith, [
Footnote 54] we made it clear that
volume of commodity movement might be controlled or discouraged. As
the Congress would have, clearly, the right to permit only limited
amounts of milk to move in interstate commerce, we are of the
opinion it might permit the movement on terms of pool settlement
here provided.
Page 307 U. S. 573
Common funds for equalizing risks are not unknown, and have not
been considered violative of due process. The pooling principle was
upheld in workmen's compensation, [
Footnote 55] bank deposit insurance, [
Footnote 56] and distribution of benefits
in the Transportation Act. [
Footnote 57]
The defendants rely particularly upon
Thompson v.
Consolidated Gas Utilities Corp., [
Footnote 58] and
Railroad Retirement Board v.
Alton. [
Footnote 59] In
the
Thompson case, the Texas Railroad Commission ordered
proration of gas production in the Panhandle. It was assumed that
proration to prevent waste and protect correlative rights in a pool
was valid, but it was held that the proration order in issue was
for none of these purposes. It was for the "sole purpose . . . to
compel those [with market outlets] . . . to purchase gas from
potential producers" who have no market. This was not deemed to be
reasonably related to the conservation of gas or the protection of
correlative rights. In the
Retirement Board case, the
pooling principle was involved, but was found to be invalid because
the burdens on the roads were not equalized with the benefits.
Entry on service was made at different age levels for different
roads. Employees seventy or older were required to retire. Some
roads had none. Solvent and insolvent roads were liable alike. All
carriers were treated as a single employer. It was these
provisions, deemed unequal, which led to the conclusion that the
manner of pooling of funds denied due process. In this case, the
pooling has differentials to cover the variations of quality and
location.
Page 307 U. S. 574
C.
Delegation. There are three issues of delegation
presented: (1) the delegation of authority to the Secretary of
Agriculture to establish marketing areas; (2) the delegation of
authority to producers to approve a marketing order without an
agreement of handlers, and (3) the delegation of authority to
cooperatives to cast the votes of producer patrons.
From the earliest days, the Congress has been compelled to leave
to the administrative officers of the Government authority to
determine facts which were to put legislation into effect and the
details of regulations which would implement the more general
enactments. It is well settled, therefore, that it is no argument
against the constitutionality of an act to say that it delegates
broad powers to executives to determine the details of any
legislative scheme. This necessary authority has never been denied.
[
Footnote 60] In dealing
with legislation involving questions of economic adjustment, each
enactment must be considered to determine whether it states the
purpose which the Congress seeks to accomplish and the standards by
which that purpose is to be worked out with sufficient exactness to
enable those affected to understand these limits. Within these
tests, the Congress needs specify only so far as is reasonably
practicable. [
Footnote 61]
The present Act, we believe, satisfies these tests.
1.
Delegation to the Secretary of Agriculture. The
purpose of the Act is
"to establish and maintain such orderly marketing conditions for
agricultural commodities in interstate commerce as will establish
prices to
Page 307 U. S. 575
farmers at a level that will give agricultural commodities a
purchasing power with respect to articles that farmers buy,
equivalent to the purchasing power of agricultural commodities in
the base period."
To accomplish this, the Secretary of Agriculture is directed to
issue orders whenever he has reason to believe the issuance of an
order will tend to effectuate the declared policy of the act.
Unlike the language of the National Industrial Recovery Act
condemned in the
Schechter case, page
295 U. S. 538,
the tests here to determine the purpose and the powers dependent
upon that conclusion are defined. In the Recovery Act, the
Declaration of Policy was couched in most general terms. [
Footnote 62] In this Act, it is to
restore parity prices, § 2. Under the Recovery Act, general welfare
might be sought through codes of any industry, formulated to
express standards of fair competition for the businesses covered.
Here, the terms of orders are limited to the specific provisions,
minutely set out in §§ 8c(5) and (7). While considerable
flexibility is provided by § 8c(7)(D),
Page 307 U. S. 576
it gives opportunity only to include provisions auxiliary to
those definitely specified.
The Secretary is not permitted freedom of choice as to the
commodities which he may attempt to aid by an order. The Act, §
8c(2), limits him to milk, fresh fruits except apples, tobacco,
fresh vegetables, soybeans, and naval stores. The Act authorizes a
marketing agreement and order to be issued for such production or
marketing regions or areas as are practicable. A city milkshed
seems homogeneous. This standard of practicality is a limit on the
power to issue orders. It determines when an order may be
promulgated.
It is further to be observed that the Order could not be, and
was not, issued until after the hearing and findings, as required
by § 8c(4). Public hearings were held at Albany, Malone, Syracuse,
Elmira, and New York from May 16 to June 7, 1938, with four days'
recess. Nearly three thousand pages of testimony were introduced,
eighty-eight documentary exhibits and some twenty briefs by
interested parties were filed. On July 23, 1938, the Secretary, in
the Federal Register, notified the public of his findings and the
terms of the Order, and again invited comment. Numerous parties
again filed briefs. A right by statute is given handlers to object
to the Secretary to any provision of an order as not "in accordance
with law," with the privilege of appeal to the courts. § 8c(15)(A)
and (B). Even though procedural safeguards cannot validate an
unconstitutional delegation, they do furnish protection against an
arbitrary use of properly delegated authority. [
Footnote 63]
A further provision of the Act is to be noted, as it was
employed as a standard to determine the minimum price. This is §
8c(18). Acting under this section, the Secretary fixed a
fluctuating minimum price based upon wholesale butter prices in New
York. While it is true that the
Page 307 U. S. 577
determination of price under this section has a less definite
standard than the parity tests of §§ 2 and 8e, we cannot say that
it is beyond the power of the Congress to leave this determination
to a designated administrator, with the standards named. The
Secretary must have first determined the prices in accordance with
§ 2 and § 8e -- that is, the prices that will give the commodity a
purchasing power equivalent to that of the base period, considering
the price and supply of feed and other pertinent economic
conditions affecting the milk market in the area. If he finds the
price so determined unreasonable, it is to be fixed at a level
which will reflect such factors, provide adequate quantities of
wholesome milk and be in the public interest. This price cannot be
determined by mathematical formula, but the standards give ample
indications of the various factors to be considered by the
Secretary.
2.
Delegation to Producers. -- Under § 8c(9)(B) of the
Act, it is provided that any order shall become effective,
notwithstanding the failure of 50 percent the handlers to approve a
similar agreement, if the Secretary of Agriculture, with the
approval of the President, determines, among other things, that the
issuance of the order is approved by two-thirds of the producers
interested, or by interested producers of two-thirds of the volume
produced for the market of the specified production area. By
subsection 19, it is provided that, for the purpose of ascertaining
whether the issuance of such order is approved, "the Secretary may
conduct a referendum among producers." The objection is made that
this is an unlawful delegation to producers of the legislative
power to put an order into effect in a market. In considering this
question, we must assume that the Congress had the power to put
this Order into effect without the approval of anyone. Whether
producer approval by election is
Page 307 U. S. 578
necessary or not, a question we reserve, a requirement of such
approval would not be an invalid delegation. [
Footnote 64]
3.
Authorization of Cooperatives to Cast the Votes of
Producer Patrons. -- This objection, too, falls before the
answering argument that, inasmuch as Congress could place the Order
in effect without any vote, it is permissible for it to provide for
approval or disapproval in such way or manner as it may choose.
Cooperatives in the Equalization Fund. -- The
defendant, Central New York Cooperative Association, denies
liability under Articles VI, VII, and VIII of the Order on the
ground that it is not liable to pay its net pool obligation into
the administrative fund or to meet the expenses of administration.
The asserted reason for its freedom from liability is that it is a
cooperative composed of milk producers, and distributes the milk of
its members and others as agent.
The cooperative owns no farms. Its members are dairy farmers. By
their contract, they agree "to deliver . . . all . . . milk
produced . . . which said milk is to be marketed and distributed by
the [cooperative]. . . ." The latter "agrees to pay . . . for the
milk . . . a price . . . based upon the amount received . . . less
the expenses. . . ." Non-members' milk is marketed under the same
contract. The cooperative leases receiving and distributing
facilities from a business corporation. The milk is received by the
cooperative at receiving plants and shipped to the city depot. It
distributes through other business corporations which are wholly
owned subsidiaries of the cooperative. These distributing
subsidiaries use the leased physical facilities under verbal
contracts with the cooperative. The cooperative receives the net
amount from the sales, and distributes to its patrons under license
from the Director of the Division of
Page 307 U. S. 579
Milk Control of New York permitting the marketing in the manner
described.
Section 8c(5)(A) authorizes an order to classify milk and fix
minimum prices which all handlers shall pay for milk purchased from
producers. Section 8c(5)(C) authorizes the equalization pool and
the handlers' payment to this settlement fund. It is urged that
cooperatives which merely act as agents for their members are not
included in handlers purchasing from producers. This is said to be
definitely shown by the provisions of § 8c(5)(F) providing that
nothing contained in the subsection shall be construed to prevent a
Capper-Volstead cooperative from making distribution to its
"producers in accordance with the contract." The Order defines a
handler as including a cooperative association "with respect to any
milk received from producers at any plant operated by such
association or with respect to any milk which it causes to be
delivered" to other handlers. Under the provisions of the Order,
Article VII, §§ 8 and 9, cooperative handlers, as other handlers,
equalize their purchases by payment into the producer settlement
fund, even though they are not required to pay the uniform price to
their producers by reason of the exception of Article VII, § 1, and
the provisions of § 8c(5)(F), as explained at p.
307 U. S.
561.
Cooperative contracts are of two general types, sale and agency.
[
Footnote 65] The Central
New York Cooperative operates under the agency type.
It is obvious that the use of the word "purchased" in the Act,
§§ 8c(5)(A) and (C), would not exclude the "sale" type of
cooperative. When § 8c(5)(F) was drawn, however, it was made to
apply to both the "sale" and "agency" type without distinction.
This would indicate there had been no intention to distinguish
between the two types by (A) and (C). The section which
authorizes
Page 307 U. S. 580
all orders, § 8c(1), makes no distinction. The orders are to be
applicable to "processors, associations of producers, and others
engaged in the handling of commodities." The reports on the bill
show no effort to differentiate. [
Footnote 66] Neither do the debates in Congress. The
statutory provisions for equalization of the burdens of surplus
would be rendered nugatory by the exception of "agency"
cooperatives. The administrative construction has been to include
such organizations as handlers. [
Footnote 67] With this we agree. As here used, the word
"purchased" means "acquired for marketing." Subsection (A) cannot
be construed as freeing agents, cooperative or proprietary, from
the requirement to account at the minimum prices for milk
handled.
As a corollary, the contention is made also by Central
Cooperative that no cooperative may be required to pay its surplus
receipts over uniform prices into the equalization fund. This, too,
is based upon a construction of § 8c(5)(F) as permitting a
cooperative to make settlement with its members in accordance with
the terms of its own contract with them. If the cooperative members
were freed of the burden of carrying their proportion of milk going
to manufacturing use, the discrimination in their favor would be
most strongly marked. Such a construction is not required.
Cooperatives are covered by §§ 8c(1) and (5)(A) and (B), and by the
provisions of the Order, except as to the payment of the uniform
price. Any payments below the uniform price fall on their members.
We are of the view that the administrative construction is correct,
and that the "net proceeds" of (F) refer to the result of the
cooperative sales in the marketing area after complying with the
equalization requirements.
Page 307 U. S. 581
The defendant, Central New York Cooperative Association, raises
for itself a final point. In determining the net pool obligation of
any handler for milk received from producers, [
Footnote 68] the handler is authorized to
subtract
pro rata out of each class from the milk involved
in the pool "the quantity of milk received from the handler's own
farm." We have determined that this cooperative, though marketing
milk under an agency contract with its members, is a handler
subject to the Act and Order. The cooperative argues that as its
members, farmers, would not need to account to the pool for their
personal sales to consumers, the cooperative, being utilized as an
agent to market the farmers' milk, is under no obligation to
contribute to equalization. As the cooperative does not have its
own farm, but is itself a handler under the Act, it must pay into
the producer settlement fund.
Inasmuch as all the defendants in these appeals are handling
milk in interstate commerce, the petition for the enforcement of
Official Order No. 126, issued under c. 383 of the Laws of 1937 of
the New York, concerning milk not covered by Order No. 27 of the
Secretary of Agriculture, should be dismissed.
The order of the District Court in Nos. 771, 827, and 828 is
reversed, and the causes are remanded to that Court with
instructions to enter an order specifically enforcing up to the
time of suspension the provisions of Order No. 27, issued by the
Secretary of Agriculture August 15, 1938, regulating the handling
of milk in the New York marketing area as to all the defendants and
enjoining defendants, their officers, agents and servants, from
further violation of the Order.
The order of the District Court in dismissing the petition of
Holton V. Noyes, as Commissioner of Agriculture and Markets of the
New York, is affirmed.
Page 307 U. S. 582
MR. JUSTICE BLACK and MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS concur in the judgment
and opinion of the Court except insofar as the opinion appears to
imply that power of Congress to enact the marketing law depends
upon the use and nature of milk. They do not believe that we are
called upon in this case to indicate, as they think we do, that
there is such a constitutional limitation on the power of Congress
to regulate interstate commerce.
* Together with No. 826,
Noyes, Commissioner of Agriculture
and Markets of the New York v. Rock Royal Cooperative, Inc. et
al.; No. 827,
Dairymen's League Cooperative Assn., Inc. v.
Rock Royal Cooperative, Inc. et al., and No. 828,
Metropolitan Cooperative Milk Producers Bargaining Agency, Inc.
v. Rock Royal Cooperative, Inc. et al., also on appeals from
the District Court of the United States for the Northern District
of New York.
[
Footnote 1]
Act of June 3, 1937, 50 Stat. 246.
[
Footnote 2]
As authorized by N.Y.Laws 1937, c. 383.
See Noyes v. Erie
& Wyoming Farmers Co-op. Corp., 170 Misc. 42, 10 N.Y.S.2d
114.
[
Footnote 3]
Sec. 2, Act of Aug. 24, 1937, 50 Stat. 752, 28 U.S.C. §
349a.
[
Footnote 4]
Pertinent portions of the Act are as follows:
"Act, § 8c(1). The Secretary of Agriculture shall, subject to
the provisions of this section, issue, and from time to time amend,
orders applicable to processors, associations of producers, and
others engaged in the handling of any agricultural commodity or
product thereof specified in subsection (2) of this section."
"
* * * *"
"(2) Orders issued pursuant to this section shall be applicable
only to the following agricultural commodities and the products
thereof (except products of naval stores) . . . , or to any
regional, or market classification of any such commodity or
product: milk, fruits (including pecans and walnuts but not
including apples and not including fruits, other than olives, for
canning), tobacco, vegetables (not including vegetables other than
asparagus, for canning), soybeans . . . and naval stores as
included in the Naval Stores Act and standards established
thereunder (including refined or partially refined oleoresin)."
"(3) Whenever the Secretary of Agriculture has reason to believe
that the issuance of an order will tend to effectuate the declared
policy of this title with respect to any commodity or product
thereof specified in subsection (2) of this section, he shall give
due notice of and an opportunity for a hearing upon a proposed
order."
"(4) After such notice and opportunity for hearing, the
Secretary of Agriculture shall issue an order if he finds, and sets
forth in such order, upon the evidence introduced at such hearing
(in addition to such other findings as may be specifically required
by this section) that the issuance of such order and all of the
terms and conditions thereof will tend to effectuate the declared
policy of this title with respect to such commodity."
"(5) In the case of milk and its products, orders issued
pursuant to this section shall contain one or more of the following
terms and conditions, and (except as provided in subsection (7)) no
others:"
"(A) Classifying milk in accordance with the form in which or
the purpose for which it is used, and fixing, or providing a method
for fixing, minimum prices for each such use classification which
all handlers shall pay, and the time when payments shall be made,
for milk purchased from producers or associations of producers.
Such prices shall be uniform as to all handlers, subject only to
adjustments for (1) volume, market, and production differentials
customarily applied by the handlers subject to such order, (2) the
grade or quality of the milk purchased, and (3) the locations at
which delivery of such milk, or any use classification thereof, is
made to such handlers."
"(B) Providing:"
"
* * * *"
"(ii) for the payment to all producers and associations of
producers delivering milk to all handlers of uniform prices for all
milk so delivered, irrespective of the uses made of such milk by
the individual handler to whom it is delivered;"
"subject, in either case, only to adjustments for (a) volume,
market, and production differentials customarily applied by the
handlers subject to such order, (b) the grade or quality of the
milk delivered, (c) the locations at which delivery of such milk is
made, and (d) a further adjustment, equitably to apportion the
total value of the milk purchased by any handler, or by all
handlers, among producers and associations of producers, on the
basis of their marketings of milk during a representative period of
time."
"(C) In order to accomplish the purposes set forth in paragraphs
(A) and (B) of this subsection (5), providing a method for making
adjustments in payments, as among handlers (including producers who
are also handlers), to the end that the total sums paid by each
handler shall equal the value of the milk purchased by him at the
prices fixed in accordance with paragraph (A) hereof."
"
* * * *"
"(F) Nothing contained in this subsection (5) is intended or
shall be construed to prevent a cooperative marketing association
qualified under the provisions of the Act of Congress of February
18, 1922, as amended, known as the 'Capper-Volstead Act,' engaged
in making collective sales or marketing of milk or its products for
the producers thereof, from blending the net proceeds of all of its
sales in all markets in all use classifications, and making
distribution thereof to its producers in accordance with the
contract between the association and its producers:
Provided, That it shall not sell milk or its products to
any handler for use or consumption in any market at prices less
than the prices fixed pursuant to paragraph (A) of this subsection
(5) for such milk."
"(G) No marketing agreement or order applicable to milk and its
products in any marketing area shall prohibit or in any manner
limit, in the case of the products of milk, the marketing in that
area of any milk or product thereof produced in any production area
in the United States."
"[N.B. (6) relates to products other than milk.]"
"(7) In the case of the agricultural commodities and the
products thereof specified in subsection (2), orders shall contain
one or more of the following terms and conditions:"
"(A) Prohibiting unfair methods of competition and unfair trade
practices in the handling thereof."
"(B) Providing that (except for milk and cream to be sold for
consumption in fluid form) such commodity or product thereof, or
any grade, size, or quality thereof shall be sold by the handlers
thereof only at prices filed by such handlers in the manner
provided in such order."
"(C) Providing for the selection by the Secretary of
Agriculture, or a method for the selection, of an agency or
agencies and defining their powers and duties, which shall include
only the powers:"
"(i) To administer such order in accordance with its terms and
provisions;"
"(ii) To make rules and regulations to effectuate the terms and
provisions of such order;"
"(iii) To receive, investigate, and report to the Secretary of
Agriculture complaints of violations of such order; and"
"(iv) To recommend to the Secretary of Agriculture amendments to
such order."
"No person acting as a member of an agency established pursuant
to this paragraph (C) shall be deemed to be acting in an official
capacity, within the meaning of section 10(g) of this title, unless
such person receives compensation for his personal services from
funds of the United States."
"(D) Incidental to, and not inconsistent with, the terms and
conditions specified in subsections (5), (6), and (7) and necessary
to effectuate the other provisions of such order."
"(18) The Secretary of Agriculture, prior to prescribing any
term in any marketing agreement or order, or amendment thereto,
relating to milk or its products, if such term is to fix minimum
prices to be paid to producers or associations of producers, or
prior to modifying the price fixed in any such term, shall
ascertain, in accordance with section 2 and section 8e, the prices
that will give such commodities a purchasing power equivalent to
their purchasing power during the base period. The level of prices
which it is declared to be the policy of Congress to establish in
section 2 and section 8e shall, for the purposes of such agreement,
order, or amendment, be such level as will reflect the price of
feeds, the available supplies of feeds, and other economic
conditions which affect market supply and demand, for milk or its
products in the marketing area to which the contemplated marketing
agreement, order, or amendment relates. Whenever the Secretary
finds, upon the basis of the evidence adduced at the hearing
required by section 8b or 8c, as the case may be, that the prices
that will give such commodities a purchasing power equivalent to
their purchasing power during the base period as determined
pursuant to section 2 and section 8e are not reasonable in view of
the price of feeds, the available supplies of feeds, and other
economic conditions which affect market supply and demand for milk
and its products in the marketing area to which the contemplated
agreement, order, or amendment relates, he shall fix such prices as
he finds will reflect such factors, insure a sufficient quantity of
pure and wholesome milk, and be in the public interest. Thereafter,
as the Secretary finds necessary on account of changed
circumstances, he shall, after due notice and opportunity for
hearing, make adjustments in such prices."
[
Footnote 5]
Act of May 12, 1933, 48 Stat. 31, as amended Aug. 24, 1935, 49
Stat. 750.
[
Footnote 6]
§ 8c(2).
[
Footnote 7]
§ 8c(4).
[
Footnote 8]
§ 8c(5).
[
Footnote 9]
§ 8c(10).
[
Footnote 10]
§ 8c(8).
[
Footnote 11]
Certain of these powers were upheld in
Nebbia v. New
York, 291 U. S. 502.
[
Footnote 12]
N.Y.Laws 1937, c. 383.
[
Footnote 13]
Nebbia v. New York, 291 U. S. 502;
Baldwin v. Seelig, 294 U. S. 511;
Hegeman Farms Corp. v. Baldwin, 293 U.
S. 163.
[
Footnote 14]
Pertinent portions are as follows:
Order, Article VI, § 1.
"Net Pool Obligation of Handlers. -- The net pool obligation of
any handler for milk received from producers during each month
shall be a sum of money computed for such month as follows:"
"1. Determine the total quantity of milk in each class at each
plant;"
"2. Subtract from the quantity of milk in each class the
quantity of such milk received from other plants or from other
handlers;"
"3. Subtract
pro rata out of each class the quantity of
milk received from the handler's own farm;"
"4. Subtract from the remaining quantity of milk in each class,
the quantity of each to which the prices in section 1 of Article IV
do not apply, which result shall be known as the 'net pooled milk'
in each class;"
"5. Multiply the total quantity of net pooled milk in each class
at all plants of the handler combined by the respective class
prices set forth in section 1 of article IV, and add together the
resulting sums;"
"
* * * *"
"8. Deduct 20 cents per hundredweight for all net pooled milk
received from producers at plants in the counties or portions of
counties listed below in this section. The result thus obtained
shall be known as the 'handler's net pool obligation.'"
Counties --
New Jersey: Hunterdon, Somerset, Essex,
Union, Morris, Warren, Sussex, Passaic.
New York:
Columbia, Dutchess, Nassau, Orange, Putnam, Suffolk, Westchester.
Connecticut: Litchfield.
Massachusetts:
Berkshire.
Towns in Ulster County, New York: Marbletown,
Hurley, Kingstown, Ulster, Rosendale, Esopus, New Paltz, Lloyd,
Gardiner, Plattekill, Marlborough, Shawangunk.
"SEC 2. Computation of the Uniform Price. -- The market
administrator shall, on or before the 14th day of each month, audit
for mathematical correctness and obvious errors the final report
submitted for the preceding month by each handler and, on the 14th
day of such month, compute from all of such corrected reports the
uniform price in the following manner:"
"1. Combine into one total the net pool obligations of all
handlers;"
"2. Subtract the total of payments required to be made for such
month by section 5 of article VII and the total of payments claimed
pursuant to section 6 of article VII;"
"3. Add the amount of cash in the producer settlement fund;"
"4. Divide the result by the total quantity of milk represented
in the sum obtained pursuant to paragraph 1 of this section;
and"
"5. Subtract not less than 4 cents nor more than 5 cents to
provide against the contingency of errors in reports and payments
or of delinquencies in payments by handlers. This result shall be
known as the uniform price for such month for milk containing 3.5
percent butterfat received from producers at plants in the 201-210
mile zone."
"Article VII, § 1. Time of Payment. -- On or before the 25th day
of each month, each handler which is not a cooperative association
of producers shall make payment to each producer for all milk
delivered by such producer at any plant during the preceding month
at not less than the uniform price, subject to differentials set
forth in sections 2 and 3 of this article."
"Article VII, § 2. Transportation and Location Differentials. --
The uniform price shall be plus or minus the differential shown in
column B of the schedule contained in section 3 of article IV for
the zone of the plant as established for the purposes of section 3
of article IV, plus 25 cents in the case of plants located in the
counties listed in paragraph 8 of section 1 of article VI."
"Article VII, § 5. Payments to Cooperative Associations. -- Any
cooperative association of producers may apply to the Secretary for
a determination of its qualifications to receive payments pursuant
to this section by reason of its having and exercising full
authority in the sale of the milk of its members, using its best
efforts to supply, in times of short supply, Class I milk to the
marketing area and to secure utilization of milk, in times of long
supply, in a manner to assure the greatest possible returns to all
producers, and having its entire activities under the control of
its members. . . . Such payments shall be made to each cooperative
association of producers under the following conditions and at the
following rates:"
"1. One cent per hundredweight of net pooled milk at any
handler's plant which was caused to be delivered from its members
by such association and on which such handler has made the reports
and payments required by this order."
"2. Except as set forth in paragraph 3 of this section, 2 1/2
cents per hundredweight of net pooled milk at plants of other
handlers which was reported and collected for by such
association."
"3. Five cents per hundredweight of net pooled milk at plants
operated by such association and, if, in addition to the other
qualifications, such association has been determined by the
Secretary to have sufficient plant capacity to receive all the milk
of producers who are members and to be willing and able to receive
milk from producers not members, 5 cents per hundredweight of any
net pooled milk which was caused by it to be delivered to any other
handler and which is reported and collected for by such
association."
"SEC. 6. Market Service Payment. -- The market administrator
shall pay out of the producer settlement fund to any handler
immediately after audit of claim for such payment made on forms
supplied by the market administrator:"
"1. With respect to milk received from producers at a plant
operated by such handler equipped only for the receiving and
shipping of milk to the marketing area, which was, during any month
except November or December, moved to a plant where it was utilized
in Classes II-A, II-B, III-A, III-B, III-C, III-D, or, during the
month of October, IV-A, and from which, if operated by such
handler, no Class I milk was shipped to the marketing area during
such month, 23 cents per hundredweight of milk so moved, plus 4
cents per hundredweight for the first five miles or fraction
thereof, plus 1/4 cent per hundredweight per mile for the next 20
miles, and plus 1/10th of 1 cent per hundredweight per additional
mile, of the shortest highway distance between the two plants;
and"
"2. Thirty cents per hundredweight of Class I milk sold during
the months of November and December in the marketing area which was
received from producers at a plant which is equipped for condensing
or drying milk and from which, during the months of May and June
preceding, in terms of equivalent of milk received at such plant,
no milk in excess of 10 percent and no cream in excess of 50
percent was shipped to the marketing area."
[
Footnote 15]
4 Fed.Reg. 1259.
[
Footnote 16]
3 Fed.Reg. 2100.
[
Footnote 17]
§ 8c(12).
[
Footnote 18]
Cf. Isbrandtsen-Moller Co. v. United States,
300 U. S. 139,
300 U. S. 145;
California Water Service Co. v. Redding, 304 U.
S. 252,
304 U. S.
254.
[
Footnote 19]
Article VII, § 1.
[
Footnote 20]
Article VII, §§ 5 and 6.
[
Footnote 21]
Article VII, § 1.
[
Footnote 22]
Currin v. Wallace, 306 U. S. 1,
306 U. S. 18;
Board of Trade of Chicago v. Olsen, 262 U. S.
1,
262 U. S. 42;
Oliver Iron Mining Co. v. Lord, 262 U. S.
172,
262 U. S. 181;
Gorieb v. Fox, 274 U. S. 603,
274 U. S. 606;
cf. Carmichael v. Southern Coal Co., 301 U.
S. 495,
301 U. S. 513;
Steward Machine Co. v. Davis, 301 U.
S. 548,
301 U. S.
598.
[
Footnote 23]
Article I, § 1, subsec. 6.
[
Footnote 24]
42 Stat. 388.
[
Footnote 25]
United States -- The Clayton Act, § 6, 38 Stat. 731;
Robinson-Patman Act, § 4, 49 Stat. 1528; Capper-Volstead Act, 42
Stat. 388; War Finance Corporation Act, 40 Stat. 506, as amended 42
Stat. 181, 182; The Grain Futures Act, 42 Stat. 1000; The
Agricultural Marketing Act, 46 Stat. 19.
States --
See Hanna, The Law of Cooperative Marketing
Associations (1931), c. 3.
[
Footnote 26]
Agricultural Adjustment Act, § 10(b), 48 Stat. 37, as amended by
§ 16(b)(1) of the Act of August 24, 1935, 49 Stat. 767, as adopted
by § 1(h) of the Act of June 3, 1937, 50 Stat. 246.
[
Footnote 27]
Flint v. Stone Tracy Co., 220 U.
S. 107,
220 U. S. 173;
Brushaber v. Union Pacific Railroad Co., 240 U. S.
1,
240 U. S. 21;
Chicago Board of Trade v. Olsen, 262 U. S.
1,
262 U. S. 40;
Liberty Warehouse Co. v. Burley Tobacco Growers' Cooperative
Assn., 276 U. S. 71,
276 U. S. 89.
The Government furnishes us with a collection of state cases
approving the special advantages given cooperatives:
Tobacco
Growers' Coop. Assn. v. Jones, 185 N.C. 265, 117 S.E. 174;
Kansas Wheat Growers v. Schulte, 113 Kan. 672, 216 P. 311;
Brown v. Staple Cotton Growers Co-op. Assn., 132 Miss.
859, 96 So. 849;
Northern Wisconsin Co-op. T.P. v.
Bekkedal, 182 Wis. 571, 197 N.W. 936;
Dark Tobacco Gr.
Co-op. Assn. v. Dunn, 150 Tenn. 614, 266 S.W. 308;
Minnesota Wheat Growers v. Huggins, 162 Minn. 471, 203
N.W. 420;
List v. Burley Tobacco Growers' Co-op. Assn.,
114 Ohio St. 361, 151 N.E. 471;
Dark Tobacco Growers' Co-op.
Assn. v. Robertson, 84 Ind.App. 51, 150 N.E. 106;
Potter
v. Dark Tobacco Growers Co-op., 201 Ky. 441, 257 S.W. 33;
Harrell v. Cane Growers Co-op., 160 Ga. 30, 126 S.E. 531;
Nebraska Wheat Growers v. Norquest, 113 Neb. 731, 204 N.W.
798;
Warren v. Alabama Farm B. Cotton Assn., 213 Ala. 61,
104 So. 264;
Manchester Dairy System v. Hayward, 82
N.H.193, 132 A. 12, 19;
Clear Lake Cooperative Live Stock Assn.
v. Weir, 200 Iowa 1293, 206 N.W. 297;
Hollingsworth v.
Texas Hay Assn., 246 S.W. 1068;
Washington Cranberry Assn.
v. Moore, 117 Wash. 430, 201 P. 773, 204 P. 811;
Poultry
Producers v. Barlow, 189 Cal. 278, 208 P. 93;
Oregon
Growers Co-op. Assn. v. Lentz, 107 Or. 561, 212 P. 811;
South Carolina Cotton Growers English, 135 S.C.19, 133
S.E. 542;
Milk Producers Marketing Co. v. Bell, 234
Ill.App. 222, and
Barns v. Dairymen's Cooperative Assn.
Inc., 200 App.Div. 624, 222 N.Y.S. 294.
[
Footnote 28]
278 U. S. 278 U.S.
515.
[
Footnote 29]
Id., 278 U. S.
523.
[
Footnote 30]
Cf. N.Y. Co-Operative Corporations Law.
[
Footnote 31]
Railroad Co. v. Ellerman, 105 U.
S. 166;
Alabama Power Co. v. Ickes,
302 U. S. 464,
302 U. S.
480.
[
Footnote 32]
Order, Article VII, § 1.
[
Footnote 33]
Order, Article VI, § 1.
[
Footnote 34]
Order, Article VII, § 2.
[
Footnote 35]
Borden's Farm Products v. Baldwin, 293 U.
S. 194,
293 U. S. 209;
Pacific States Box & Basket Co. v. White, 296 U.
S. 176,
296 U. S.
185.
[
Footnote 36]
§ 8c(1).
[
Footnote 37]
Stafford v. Wallace, 258 U. S. 495;
Board of Trade of Chicago v. Olsen, 262 U. S.
1;
Houston & Texas Ry. Co. v. United
States, 234 U. S. 342,
234 U. S.
351-352;
Minnesota Rate Cases, 230 U.
S. 352,
230 U. S. 399;
Labor Board Cases, 301 U. S. 1;
Currin v. Wallace, 306 U. S. 1;
Mulford v. Smith, ante, p.
307 U. S. 38;
Labor Board v. Fainblatt, 306 U.
S. 601.
[
Footnote 38]
Dahnke-Walker Milling Co. v. Bondurant, 257 U.
S. 282,
257 U. S.
290-291;
Lemke v. Farmers' Grain Co.,
258 U. S. 50,
258 U. S. 54;
cf. Foster-Fountain Packing Co. v. Haydel, 278 U. S.
1,
278 U. S. 10.
[
Footnote 39]
Currin v. Wallace, 306 U. S. 1.
[
Footnote 40]
Consolidated Edison Co. v. Labor Board, 305 U.
S. 197,
305 U. S.
220.
[
Footnote 41]
Mulford v. Smith, supra, note 37
[
Footnote 42]
Gibbons v.
Ogden, 9 Wheat. 1,
22 U. S. 196;
Minnesota Rate Cases, 230 U. S. 352,
230 U. S.
398.
[
Footnote 43]
Wilson v. New, 243 U. S. 332,
243 U. S.
346.
[
Footnote 44]
34 Stat. 589, 49 U.S.C. § 15(1).
[
Footnote 45]
Tagg Bros. v. Moorhead, 280 U.
S. 420;
Stafford v. Wallace, 258 U.
S. 495.
[
Footnote 46]
Munn v. Illinois, 94 U. S. 113;
Budd v. New York, 143 U. S. 517;
Brass v. North Dakota, 153 U. S. 391;
German Alliance Insurance Co. v. Lewis, 233 U.
S. 389;
O'Gorman & Young v. Hartford Insurance
Co., 282 U. S. 251;
Nebbia v. New York, 291 U. S. 502;
West Coast Hotel Co. v. Parrish, 300 U.
S. 379;
Townsend v. Yeomans, 301 U.
S. 441.
Wolff Packing Co. v. Industrial Court, 262 U.
S. 522;
Tyson & Bro. v. Banton,
273 U. S. 418;
Fairmont Creamery Co. v. Minnesota, 274 U. S.
1;
Ribnik v. McBride, 277 U.
S. 350;
Williams v. Standard Oil Co.,
278 U. S. 235.
[
Footnote 47]
Nebbia v. New York, 291 U. S. 502,
291 U. S.
537.
[
Footnote 48]
Id.
[
Footnote 49]
Baldwin v. Seelig, 294 U. S. 511.
[
Footnote 50]
Milk Control Board v. Eisenberg Farm Products,
306 U. S. 346.
[
Footnote 51]
293 U. S. 293 U.S.
163.
[
Footnote 52]
Borden's Co. v. Ten Eyck, 297 U.
S. 251.
[
Footnote 53]
Nebbia v. New York, 291 U. S. 502;
Townsend v. Yeomans, 301 U. S. 441.
[
Footnote 54]
Supra, note
37
[
Footnote 55]
Mountain Timber Co. v. Washington, 243 U.
S. 219;
New York Central R. Co. v. White,
243 U. S. 188.
[
Footnote 56]
Noble State Bank v. Haskell, 219 U.
S. 104;
Abie State Bank v. Bryan, 282 U.
S. 765.
[
Footnote 57]
New England Divisions Case, 261 U.
S. 184;
Dayton Goose Creek Ry. v. United
States, 263 U. S. 456.
[
Footnote 58]
300 U. S. 300 U.S.
55,
300 U. S.
77-78.
[
Footnote 59]
295 U. S. 295 U.S.
330,
295 U. S. 355
et seq.
[
Footnote 60]
Panama Refining Co. v. Ryan, 293 U.
S. 388,
293 U. S. 421;
Schechter Corp. v. United States, 295 U.
S. 495,
295 U. S. 529;
Currin v. Wallace, 306 U. S. 1.
[
Footnote 61]
Buttfield v. Stranahan, 192 U.
S. 470,
192 U. S. 496;
United States v. Chemical Foundation, 272 U. S.
1,
272 U. S. 12;
Monongahela Bridge Co. v. United States, 216 U.
S. 177,
216 U. S. 193;
United States v. Grimaud, 220 U.
S. 506,
220 U. S. 516;
Avent v. United States, 266 U. S. 127,
266 U. S.
130.
[
Footnote 62]
"Section 1. A national emergency productive of widespread
unemployment and disorganization of industry, which burdens
interstate and foreign commerce, affects the public welfare, and
undermines the standards of living of the American people is hereby
declared to exist. It is hereby declared to be the policy of
Congress to remove obstructions to the free flow of interstate and
foreign commerce which tend to diminish the amount thereof, and to
provide for the general welfare by promoting the organization of
industry for the purpose of cooperative action among trade groups,
to induce and maintain united action of labor and management under
adequate governmental sanctions and supervision, eliminate unfair
competitive practices, to promote the fullest possible utilization
of the present productive capacity of industries, to avoid undue
restriction of production (except as may be temporarily required),
to increase the consumption of industrial and agricultural products
by increasing purchasing power, to reduce and relieve unemployment,
to improve standards of labor, and otherwise to rehabilitate
industry and to conserve natural resources."
48 Stat. 195.
[
Footnote 63]
Cf. Schechter Corp. v. United States, 295 U.S. at
295 U. S.
533.
[
Footnote 64]
Currin v. Wallace, 306 U. S. 1,
306 U. S. 15.
[
Footnote 65]
Hanna, Law of Cooperative Marketing Associations, pp. 210,
256.
[
Footnote 66]
House Report No. 1241, 74th Cong., 1st Sess.; Senate Report No.
1011, 74th Cong., 1st Sess.
[
Footnote 67]
Costanzo v. Tillinghast, 287 U.
S. 341,
287 U. S. 345;
United States v. Chicago, North Shore R. Co., 288 U. S.
1,
288 U. S.
13-14.
[
Footnote 68]
Article VI, § 1.
MR. JUSTICE McREYNOLDS and MR. JUSTICE BUTLER, dissenting.
We are of opinion that the decree below should be affirmed.
In our view, the challenged order of the Secretary must succumb
to two manifest objections. It is unnecessary for us to dissect the
record in search of other impediments.
First. Congress possesses the powers delegated by the
Constitution -- no others. The opinion of this Court in
Schechter Poultry Corp. v. United States, 295 U.
S. 495 -- noteworthy because of modernity and
reaffirmation of ancient doctrine -- sufficiently demonstrates the
absence of Congressional authority to manage private business
affairs under the transparent guise of regulating interstate
commerce. True, production and distribution of milk are most
important enterprises, not easy of wise execution; but so is
breeding the cows, authors of the commodity; also, sowing and
reaping the fodder which inspires them.
Second. If perchance Congress possesses power to manage
the milk business within the various states, authority so to do
cannot be committed to another. A cursory examination of the
statute shows clearly enough the design to allow a secretary to
prescribe according to his own errant will and then to execute.
This is not government by law, but by caprice. Whimseys may
displace deliberate
Page 307 U. S. 583
action by chosen representatives and become rules of conduct. To
us, the outcome seems wholly incompatible with the system under
which we are supposed to live.
MR. JUSTICE ROBERTS, dissenting.
In Nos. 772, 809, and 865, I have expressed my views as to the
unconstitutionality of the provisions of the Agricultural Marketing
Agreement Act of 1937, here involved, in view of their attempted
delegation of legislative powers. That matter is not pressed in the
present cases, and I need not here advert to the subject. I am of
opinion, nevertheless, that Order No. 27 is not, in the respects to
be discussed, authorized by the Act, but, if it is authorized,
deprives the appellees of their property without due process of law
in violation of the Fifth Amendment.
This conclusion is based upon findings of fact of the District
Court. While the findings in question are the subject of
assignments of error, the appellants failed, either in brief or in
oral argument, to point out that they lack substantial support in
the evidence. Examination of the record discloses that these
findings are based on uncontradicted testimony, authentic
documentary evidence, and a stipulation of the parties. They
should, therefore be accepted here. They may briefly be
recapitulated.
Under the terms of the Act and the order, all of the appellees
are handlers, and the Dairymen's League Cooperative Association,
the appellant in No. 827, is likewise a handler. By Art. VII, § 1,
of the order, on or before the 25th day of each month, each handler
which is not a cooperative association of producers is required to
pay to each producer the uniform price fixed by the order for all
milk delivered by the producer during the preceding month which was
sold in the marketing area. The cooperative associations which are
handlers are not required
Page 307 U. S. 584
to make payment for similar milk at the uniform price or at any
stated price. Art. VII, § 8, requires all handlers, on or before
the 18th day of each month, to pay to the market administrator for
the Producer Settlement Fund
"the amount by which his net pool obligation for the preceding
month is greater than the amount obtained by multiplying the net
pool milk of such handler, by the uniform price."
Thus, each handler is required to pay into the fund for all milk
used in the marketing area the difference between $2.45 per cwt.
and the uniform price for all Class I milk. Handlers selling milk
received from producers in the production area, but marketed
outside the marketing area, (denominated "unpriced milk") are not
required to pay a uniform price for such milk or to pay into the
fund the difference between the uniform price and the actual market
value of such milk, or any fixed amount in respect thereof. They
are permitted to blend prices paid or purported to have been paid
for unpriced milk with the uniform price announced by the
Administrator for milk sold in the marketing area, thereby reducing
the actual price paid by them for milk sold in the marketing area
in competition with other handlers who sell milk only in that area.
In a pamphlet issued by the Secretary, the provisions of the order
are so construed, and the method of accounting is described as
follows:
"Thus, the handler may multiply the total pounds of milk sold by
it in the area by the uniform price; multiply the total pounds of
milk sold in other markets and which is called 'unpriced milk' by
'such prices as it sees fit;' add the totals, and divide by the
total pounds of milk, to obtain the average of 'blended' price paid
producers for all milk. If the price figured by the handler for
unpriced milk is lower than its actual market value, the handler,
by blending, is thereby permitted to pay producers for all milk at
less than the Order price, and less than the actual value thereof.
"
Page 307 U. S. 585
The appellees' receiving stations in the production area supply
the marketing area defined by the order. The appellee, Jetter Dairy
Company, sells milk in competition with dealers operating milk
receiving stations in the production area in New York, who ship
milk received at their stations to the marketing area. Other
appellees buy milk which is sold to independent dealers in
competition with milk received at the other stations in the
producing area. Several of the appellees' largest competitors,
including the Dairymen's League Cooperative, sell large proportions
of their milk outside the marketing area in northern New Jersey.
The Milk Control Board of New Jersey fixed a base price of $2.76
per cwt. to producers for 3.5 milk f.o.b. country milk plants,
which price was in effect during the period covered by the order.
The same Board fixed wholesale prices from dealers to stores at
eleven cents per quart, bottled in glass, in two rural districts,
and twelve cents per quart, in glass, in three heavily populated
districts, and fixed a minimum price to consumers out of stores in
the two rural districts of twelve cents per quart and, in the more
heavily populated districts, of thirteen cents per quart. No resale
prices are fixed in the marketing area either from dealers to
stores or from stores to consumers. The fair market value of
"unpriced" Class I milk produced in the production area, and sold
by handlers in New Jersey, during the period the order was in
force, was $2.76 per cwt.
Whereas the uniform price for 3.5 milk fixed by the
Administrator was, for September, $1.87, October, $1.91, and
November, $2.10 per cwt., the Dairymen's League paid its producers
a base price for the same milk, in the same zone, for September,
$1.75, for October, $1.81, and, for November, $2.01 per cwt. Thus,
the difference between the value of Class I milk sold by the
Dairymen's League in New Jersey, and the prices paid for the same
to producers per cwt. was, in September $1.01, in October,
Page 307 U. S. 586
.95, and, in November, .75. $1.01 per cwt. on 10,208,500 pounds
of milk sold in New Jersey by the Dairymen's League amounts to
$103,105.85.
Sheffield Farms Company, a competitor of the appellees,
utilized, in September, 1938, 40,083,075 pounds of Class I milk in
New York State and 6,426,443 pounds of milk in New Jersey, as well
as milk in other markets. For out of market or unpriced milk, the
company negotiated with its producers to pay the uniform order
price for such out of market milk. The base price paid was
therefore $1.87, or eighty-nine cents per cwt. less than the price
fixed by the New Jersey Control Board. The difference amounted to
$57,194.96, or 14.27 cents per cwt. on such milk, and the price
paid for Class I milk was reduced by that amount. Similar spreads
are shown in the company's purchases for October, 1938.
Based upon these facts, the court further finds that prices paid
to producers delivering to handlers, whether cooperative or
proprietary, which sell fluid milk in the marketing area, and also
in the New Jersey and other markets, are less than the actual value
of the milk delivered, due to the process of blending prices for
milk sold outside of the marketing area, which bear no true
relation to the actual value thereof, with prices charged for milk
sold in the area.
It is evident from the terms of the order, and the Secretary's
construction of it, that handlers who use "unpriced" milk may fix
any price they choose to fix for it. Thus, contrary to the
requirement of § 8c(5)(A) of the statute, all producers do not
receive a uniform price for milk. This is a necessary effect of the
provision permitting the blending of the price paid producers for
milk sold in the marketing
Page 307 U. S. 587
area and an arbitrary price fixed for "unpriced" milk. The
effect upon a handler whose trade is solely in the marketing area
is disastrous. The lower price paid by those who are permitted to
blend makes it possible for them to resell the milk in the
marketing area, in which no resale price is fixed at a cut rate
which is destructive of their competitors' business. And there is
evidence that handlers, cooperative and proprietary, have taken
advantage of the terms of the order to cut the price of milk to
consumers in the marketing area to the disadvantage of their
competitors.
The appellants make no answer to the appellees' attack on this
feature of the order. The opinion of this court states that the
detriment to the smaller handlers who sell milk for use only in the
marketing area is the result of competitive conditions which the
order does not affect. But it is evident that the order freezes the
minimum price which is to be paid by many handlers, and leaves the
price of other handlers who compete with them open to reduction by
the device of blending.
There is nothing in the Act which authorizes the discrimination
worked by the order permitting handlers, whether proprietary or
cooperative, to blend the prices of unpriced milk with that of
milk, sold in the marketing area. § 8c(5)(F), as I read it,
prohibits such a practice by cooperatives. If the order had
provided that milk sold in New Jersey should be accounted for to
the pool at its actual value, and had the milk so sold been
accounted into the pool, competitors could not have obtained the
advantage which so seriously injures the business of appellees. As
the order is drawn and administered, it inevitably tends to destroy
the business of smaller handlers by placing them at the mercy of
their larger competitors. I think no such arrangement was
contemplated by the Act, but that, if it was, it operates to deny
the appellees due process of law.
I think that the decree should be affirmed.
THE CHIEF JUSTICE joins in this opinion so far as it relates to
the invalidity of the order on the ground stated; MR. JUSTICE
McREYNOLDS and MR. JUSTICE BUTLER also join in this opinion.