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Misasi v. Jacobsen

California Court of Appeals, Third District
Apr 15, 1960
3 Cal. Rptr. 849 (Cal. Ct. App. 1960)

Opinion

Rehearing Denied May 11, 1960.

Hearing Granted June 8, 1960.

Opinion vacated 10 Cal.Rptr. 850.

Paul A. Schumann, San Francisco, Emil Steck, Jr., Pasadena, Guernsey Carson, San Francisco, for appellants.

Stanley Mosk, Atty. Gen., by Paul M. Joseph and Marcus Vanderlaan, Deputies Atty. Gen., Sacramento, for respondent Dept. of Agriculture.

Lawrence Edwards, Stockton, and Alan Short, Stockton, for other respondents.


VAN DYKE, Presiding Justice.

This is an appeal from a judgment of the Superior Court in San Joaquin County denying relief to plaintiffs and appellants in a declaratory relief action, wherein they sought to have declared void part of an order prescribing minimum retail prices for fluid milk established by the Director of Agriculture for the San Joaquin Marketing Area. Appellants, who conduct retail stores, sought to have declared void that part of the order referred to in the record as Provision No. 2, reading as follows: 'The minimum retail prices for fluid milk sold f. o. b. distributor's processing plant shall be eight cents ($0.08) per gallon container; four cents ($0.04) per half-gallon container; two cents ($0.02) per quart container; and one cent ($0.01) per pint container below the minimum retail store carry-out prices provided in Schedule 1.' (Italics ours.)

The legislation which authorizes the fixing by the Director in an established marketing area of minimum wholesale and minimum retail prices for fluid milk is found in Chapter 17 of Division 6 of the Agricultural Code, sections numbered 4200 through 4420. Article 10 of that chapter is devoted to the subject of minimum wholesale and retail prices and contains sections 4350 through 4363. The legislation prescribes standards for the fixing of minimum prices, and procedures which the Director must follow in doing so. It is conceded herein that the Director followed the established procedures. We are concerned herein only with the production and marketing of 'fluid milk' as defined in Section 4212: The Legislature has classified those engaged in the production and marketing of milk into 'producers', who operate the dairy herds, 'distributors', who purchase or handle milk for resale, and 'retail stores', that is, those who own and operate retail grocery stores, restaurants, confectionaries and other similar businesses where milk is sold to the general public. More specifically, distributors are declared to be persons who purchase or handle milk for resale, including brokers, agents, copartnerships, cooperative corporations and incorporated and unincorporated associations, but excluding any retail store which is not engaged in processing or packaging milk, any establishment where milk is sold only for consumption on the premises and which is not engaged in processing or packaging milk, and any producer who delivers milk only to a distributor.

Section 4360 of the code is entitled 'Establishment of prices; findings.' It establishes the basis for the fixing of minimum prices. It requires the Director to establish minimum wholesale and minimum retail prices for distributors in the area and minimum retail prices for retail stores therein. It declares that the prices established shall be 'sufficient, but not more than reasonably sufficient, to cover costs, as such costs are described in Section 4355 of this code, according to method of distribution, and reasonable return upon necessary capital investment.' Section 4355 declares that the cost of milk in the marketing area, to distributors, shall be the reasonably necessary cost incurred by distributors in handling milk, including all cost of hauling, processing, selling and delivering and reasonable return on necessary capital investment for each of the several methods of distribution used in the area in accomplishing such hauling, processing, selling and delivery, but excluding costs not reasonably necessary to efficient operation. Costs are to be determined by impartial cost surveys or examination of the books and records, or both, of all or such portion of the distributors in the area as are reasonably determined by the Director to be sufficiently representative to indicate the reasonably necessary costs of sufficient, efficient, distribution for such marketing area. Costs with respect to retail stores shall be the reasonably necessary cost incurred by retail stores in handling milk as such costs are determined by impartial cost surveys or examination of the books and records, or both, of such portion of the retail stores in the marketing area as are reasonably determined by the Director to be sufficiently representative to indicate such costs of all retail stores in such marketing area. In determining these costs incurred by retail stores handling commodities in addition to fluid milk, the Director is required to determine the cost of doing business for each such representative retail store and for such purpose must consider all costs and expenses of doing business, including depreciation on inventory and equipment. It is further provided that in the absence of satisfactory evidence to the contrary, the cost of handling the milk shall be presumed to be the same percentage as the cost of doing business of such retail store in conducting its entire business.

It is obvious that minimum prices reflect costs incurred by distributors and by retail stores, and that the factors to be considered in ascertaining distributor costs differ materially from those to be considered in ascertaining retail store costs. Only minimum prices are fixed and sales above the minimums are not forbidden. The legislative purpose in tying minimum prices to costs was a part of its plan to stabilize the industry which had been disastrously affected by below cost selling. There has been and will be varying methods of distribution, wholesale and retail, and these methods will, from time to time, change as conditions change. For instance, methods The subject legislation was enacted under the police power. The Legislature has declared that it is to be liberally construed in order that the legislative purposes may be achieved. The legislative plan for the orderly production and distribution of milk of high quality at reasonable prices to consumers, while yielding reasonable returns to producers, distributors and retailers, presents tremendous complexities, constantly recurring, and demanding constant supervision by the administrative agency. Therefore, there has been vested in the Director a broad discretion in all things he must do in the performance of his duties under the subject legislation to achieve the legislative purposes. It is axiomatic that in such a situation the agency will be given a comparatively free hand by the courts.

Appellants place great reliance upon the decision of the Supreme Court in Challenge Cream & Butter Association v. Parker, 23 Cal.2d 137, 142 P.2d 737, 149 A.L.R. 1203. They contend that the decision is determinative of the issues here. We do not agree. In the Challenge case the court affirmed a judgment of the trial court enjoining the Director from enforcing a pricing order established in the Alamada County Marketing Area. The particular portion of the order objected to by the plaintiff in that case was a provision that minimum wholesale prices (that is, prices to stores) for milk sold in fibre containers should be onehalf cent higher than such wholesale prices for milk sold in glass containers. The court held that in determining minimum prices the Director could not include as a cost factor any differential in the type of container used for the delivery of the same quantity and quality of milk under the method of delivery involved. We find nothing in that case which conflicts with what we have here said.

Appellants contend further that, even assuming, arguendo, that Provision 2 is valid, yet the distributor defendants do not come within its scope because they are themselves retail stores when selling processed and packaged milk f. o. b. their plants on the carry-out basis. But the defendant distributors are distributors as defined by the statutes and the appellants are retail Although extensive briefs have been filed by the parties and by amicus curiae, we think it would unduly prolong this opinion to treat of all of the contentions therein advanced and the arguments therein made in support of them and we think it is unnecessary to do so.

The judgment appealed from is affirmed.

SCHOTTKY and PEEK, JJ., concur.

On Petition for Rehearing

PER CURIAM.

The petition for rehearing is denied. However, it has been suggested by the parties that our opinion may be construed as limiting the Director inflexibly to ascertained costs and reasonable return on capital investment when fixing minimum prices.

Nothing in the opinion was intended to deny or disparage the authority of the Director under Section 4360 of the Agricultural Code in fixing minimum prices to depart from ascertained costs, according to method of distribution and reasonable return on capital investment if the statutory conditions for such departure are found to exist.


Summaries of

Misasi v. Jacobsen

California Court of Appeals, Third District
Apr 15, 1960
3 Cal. Rptr. 849 (Cal. Ct. App. 1960)
Case details for

Misasi v. Jacobsen

Case Details

Full title:Silvio MISASI, dba Sib's Variety Market, et al., Plaintiffs and…

Court:California Court of Appeals, Third District

Date published: Apr 15, 1960

Citations

3 Cal. Rptr. 849 (Cal. Ct. App. 1960)