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SPYKE`S GROVE, INC., D/B/A FRESH FRUIT EXPRESS, EMERALD ESTATE, NATURE`S CLASSIC vs A AND J PAK SHIP, INC. AND OLD REPUBLIC SURETY COMPANY, 01-002811 (2001)
Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Filed:Fort Lauderdale, Florida Jul. 16, 2001 Number: 01-002811 Latest Update: Oct. 31, 2001

The Issue Whether Respondent A & J Pak Ship, Inc., owes Petitioner $551.16 for "gift fruit,” as alleged in Petitioner's Complaint.

Findings Of Fact Based upon the evidence adduced at the final hearing and the record as a whole, the following findings of fact are made: At all times material to the instant case, Petitioner and A & J have been licensed by the Department of Citrus as "citrus fruit dealers." As part of its operations, A & J sells "gift fruit" to retail customers. The "gift fruit" consists of oranges or grapefruits, or both, that are packaged and sent to third parties identified by the customers. In November and December of 1999, A & J took orders for "gift fruit" from retail customers that it contracted with Petitioner (doing business as Fresh Fruit Express) to fill. Under the agreement between A & J and Petitioner (which was not reduced to writing), it was Petitioner's obligation to make sure that the "gift fruit" specified in each order was delivered, in an appropriate package, to the person or business identified in the order as the intended recipient at the particular address indicated in the order. Among the intended recipients identified in the orders that Petitioner agreed to fill were: the Uthe family, the Weckbachs, Mr. and Mrs. T. Martin, Angelo's, Susan Booth, Mr. and Mrs. E. Coello, Mr. and Mrs. Dalbey, Carol Baker and family, the Tarvin family, Shelly and Mark Koontz, Pamela McGuffey, Jerome Melrose, Russell Oberer, Mrs. Josephine Scelfo, Curt and Becky Tarvin, Heidi Wiseman, Kay and Artie Witt, and the William Woodard family, who collectively will be referred to hereinafter as the "Intended Recipients in Question." A & J agreed to pay Petitioner a total of $438.18 to provide "gift fruit" to the Intended Recipients in Question, broken down as follows: $21.70 for the Uthe family order, $21.70 for the Weckbachs order, $22.82 for the Mr. and Mrs. T. Martin order, $27.09 for the Angelo's order, $21.70 for the Susan Booth order, $31.67 for the Mr. and Mrs. E. Coello order, $17.50 for the Mr. and Mrs. Dalbey order, $21.70 for the Carol Baker and family order, $27.09 for the Tarvin family order, $21.70 for the Shelly and Mark Koontz order, $21.70 for the Pamela McGuffey order, $32.44 for the Jerome Melrose order, $21.70 for the Russell Oberer order, $17.60 for the Mrs. Josephine Scelfo order, $21.70 for the Curt and Becky Tarvin order, $17.50 for the Heidi Wiseman order, $17.50 for the Kay and Artie Witt order, and $31.67 for the William Woodard family order. All of these orders, which will be referred to hereinafter as the "Intended Recipients in Question 'gift fruit' orders," were to be delivered, under the agreement between A & J and Petitioner, by Christmas day, 1999. On Sunday night, December 12, 1999, fire destroyed Petitioner's packing house and did considerable damage to Petitioner's offices. With the help of others in the community, Petitioner was able to obtain other space to house its offices and packing house operations. By around noon on Tuesday, December 14, 1999, Petitioner again had telephone service, and by Friday, December 17, 1999, it resumed shipping fruit. Scott Wiley, A & J's President, who had learned of the fire and had been unsuccessful in his previous attempts to contact Petitioner, was finally able to reach Petitioner by telephone on Monday, December 20, 1999. After asking about the status of the Intended Recipients in Question “gift fruit” orders and being told by the employee with whom he was speaking that she was unable to tell him whether or not these orders had been shipped, Mr. Wiley advised the employee that A & J was "cancelling" all "gift fruit" orders that had not been shipped prior to the fire. Mr. Wiley followed up this telephone conversation by sending, that same day, the following facsimile transmission to Petitioner: As per our conversation on 12-20-99, please cancel all orders sent to you from A & J Pak-Ship (Fresh Fruit Express). After trying to contact your company numerous times on December 13, I called the Davie Police Department, who [sic] informed me that you had experienced a major fire. I tried to contact you daily the entire week with no luck. Since I had no way to contact you, it was your responsibility to contact me with information about your business status. Without that contact, I had to assume that you were unable to continue doing business. With Christmas fast approaching and with no contact from anyone on your end, I had no choice but to begin to issue refunds. While I understand the fire was devastating for you, understand that my fruit business is ruined, and will take years to reestablish. Please note that I will not pay for any orders shipped past the date of your fire, 12-13-99, as I have already issued refunds, and I will need proof of delivery for all those orders delivered before the fire. Again, cancel all orders including the remainder of multi-month packages, and honeybell orders. Your lack of communication has put me in a very bad situation with my customers. One short phone call to me could have avoided all this difficulty. Had I not tried your phone on 12-20, I would still have no information from you. Petitioner did not contact Mr. Wiley and tell him about the fire because it did not think that the fire would hamper its ability to fulfill its obligations under its agreement with A & J. By the time Mr. Wiley made telephone contact with Petitioner on Monday, December 20, 1999, Petitioner had already shipped (that is, placed in the possession of a carrier and made arrangements for the delivery of) all of the Intended Recipients in Question "gift fruit" orders (although it had not notified A & J it had done so). Petitioner did not ship any A & J "gift fruit" orders after receiving Mr. Wiley's December 20, 1999, telephone call. On or about February 18, 2000, Petitioner sent A & J an invoice requesting payment for "gift fruit" orders it had shipped for A & J. Among the orders on the invoice for which Petitioner was seeking payment were the Intended Recipients in Question "gift fruit" orders (for which Petitioner was seeking $438.18). The invoice erroneously reflected that all of these orders had been shipped on December 25, 1999. They, in fact, had been shipped on December 18, 1999, or earlier. 1/ Mr. Wiley, acting on behalf of A & J, wrote a check in the amount of $858.26, covering all of the invoiced orders except the Intended Recipients in Question "gift fruit" orders, and sent it to Petitioner, along with the following letter dated February 22, 1999: As per my conversation on 12/20/90 at 11:20 a.m. with Yvette we cancelled all orders shipped after the fire, and also followed up with a certified letter. We had to reorder all of those orders and also refunded a lot of orders as they were not there in time for Xmas as all orders are required to arrive before Xmas. As I said in my certified letter to you it was a[n] unfortunate fire but all you had to do was to inform me what was going on and we could have worked something out. Our fruit business has been ruined by this incident, and quite possibly our entire company. It is unbelievable that more than sixty days after the fire we still have had no correspondence from you whatsoever. We have deducted those orders that were cancelled and arrived well after Xmas and remitted the remainder. A & J has not yet paid Petitioner the $438.18 for the Intended Recipients in Question "gift fruit" orders.

Recommendation Based upon the foregoing Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, it is hereby RECOMMENDED that the Department enter a final order dismissing Petitioner’s Complaint. DONE AND ENTERED this 12th day of September, 2001, in Tallahassee, Leon County, Florida. STUART M. LERNER Administrative Law Judge Division of Administrative Hearings The DeSoto Building 1230 Apalachee Parkway Tallahassee, Florida 32399-3060 (850) 488-9675 SUNCOM 278-9675 Fax Filing (850) 921-6847 www.doah.state.fl.us Filed with the Clerk of the Division of Administrative Hearings this 12th day of September, 2001.

Florida Laws (7) 120.57601.01601.03601.55601.61601.64601.66
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BROWARD COUNTY, CITY OF POMPANO BEACH, AND CITY OF PLANTATION vs DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE AND CONSUMER SERVICES, 00-004520RX (2000)
Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Filed:Fort Lauderdale, Florida Nov. 01, 2000 Number: 00-004520RX Latest Update: Aug. 19, 2002

The Issue In summary, the issues for decision in this case are: (1) Whether in pari materia rule provisions in Chapter 5B-58, Florida Administrative Code, which define and make operative the term "exposed" to citrus canker disease, together constitute an invalid exercise of delegated legislative authority within the meaning of Section 120.52(8), Florida Statutes; and (2) Whether the Department's policy of removing so-called "exposed" trees located within a 1900-foot radius of infected trees is an unpromulgated rule-by-definition in violation of Section 120.54(1)(a), Florida Statutes.

Findings Of Fact Citrus Canker Background Citrus canker is a bacterial disease that afflicts citrus plants, attacking their fruits, leaves, and stems and causing defoliation, fruit drop, and loss of yield. The disease also causes blemishes on the fruit and loss of quality, which negatively affect marketability, and it can be fatal to the plant. Citrus canker spreads in two ways. First, it can be transmitted through human movement, since the bacteria can, for example, attach to the equipment and clothing of lawn maintenance workers. Second, citrus canker can spread from an infected citrus tree to a previously uninfected citrus tree by wind-driven rain. The Department is the state agency charged with the responsibilities of eradicating, controlling, and preventing the spread of citrus canker in Florida. Although the events that have led to the instant dispute began in 1995 when the Department detected Asian strain citrus canker in Miami-Dade County near the International Airport, the Department’s earlier experience with an outbreak of the disease in the 1980’s sheds light on its recent actions; as well, these past events illuminate a presently-relevant legislative enactment, namely, Section 581.184(2), Florida Statutes. Briefly, in September 1984, the Department’s field inspectors discovered a bacterial plant disease in Ward’s Citrus Nursery. Samples were sent to the U.S. Department of Agriculture (“USDA”) for analysis, and the federal agency mistakenly identified the bacteria as Asian strain citrus canker. On October 16, 1984, the Secretary of the USDA declared an extraordinary emergency in the State of Florida because of citrus canker. See generally Chapter 89-91, Laws of Florida; see also Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services v. Polk, 568 So. 2d 35 (Fla. 1990). Then-Governor Bob Graham summoned the legislature to convene on December 6, 1984, in special session to consider, among other things, “[l]egislation relating to the research and eradication of citrus canker, indemnification for certain private losses relating to citrus canker eradication, and consideration of supplemental appropriations relating to citrus canker.” 1995 Laws of Florida, Vol. I, Part One, pg. xix. During the special session, the legislature enacted an appropriations bill that made funds available for inspection, control, and eradication of citrus canker, and for financial assistance to persons suffering losses because of citrus canker. See Chapter 84-547, Laws of Florida. Meantime, the Department, working with the USDA, began implementing a joint federal-state citrus canker eradication program (from which the federal government later would withdraw in March 1986 due to inadequate funding). See Chapter 89-91, Laws of Florida. The Department promulgated extensive and detailed rules governing this program. These rules, set forth in Chapter 5B-49, Florida Administrative Code, took effect on March 6, 1985. Included within these rules were provisions requiring the destruction of certain commercial plants located within 125 feet in every direction from an infected plant. The legislature’s interest in the apparent citrus canker emergency continued beyond the December 1984 special session. During the 1985 regular session, it passed a bill that enhanced the Department’s powers to respond to the perceived citrus canker threat. See Chapter 85-283, Laws of Florida. Most important to this case, the following year, 1986, the legislature enacted a law that directed the Department to “adopt rules specifying facts and circumstances that, if present, would require the destruction of plants for purposes of [stopping the spread] of citrus canker in this state.” See Chapter 86-128, Laws of Florida. This rulemaking directive, which took effect July 1, 1986, is currently codified in Section 581.184(2), Florida Statutes. The Department responded promptly, publishing proposed revisions to Chapter 5B-49, Florida Administrative Code, in the September 5, 1986, Florida Administrative Weekly. These proposed rules, which took effect March 4, 1987, provided clearer, more comprehensive regulations in the form of a Florida Citrus Canker Action Plan, which was incorporated by reference into the rules. As it turned out, the strain of citrus canker found in Ward’s Citrus Nursery was not the virulent Asian strain after all, but a nonaggressive and less dangerous type of canker later dubbed Florida Nursery strain. See Chapter 89-91, Laws of Florida. After the putative emergency had ended, the Department repealed the remaining provisions of Chapter 5B-49, Florida Administrative Code, effective November 29, 1994. The Current Crisis In 1995, when the Department detected Asian strain citrus canker in Miami-Dade County, it quickly became alarmed that the disease could spread to commercial citrus groves, and accordingly implemented a new Citrus Canker Eradication Program (“Eradication Program”) to eradicate and prevent the spread of citrus canker to other parts of the state.1 Since the initial detection in Miami-Dade County in 1995, the Department has found citrus canker in six additional Florida counties: Hillsborough, Manatee, Hendry, Collier, Broward, and Palm Beach. At the time of the 1995 outbreak, the Department’s policy and practice was to destroy each “infected” tree and all “exposed” trees, the latter which the Department, following historical precedent, then considered to be all citrus trees within a 125-foot radius of an infected tree. In November 1995, the Department commenced rulemaking to adopt regulations governing the Eradication Program. Initially taking effect January 17, 1996, the Department’s citrus canker rules, found in Chapter 5B-58, Florida Administrative Code, have since been amended and revised from time to time. The Department, however, did not adopt its 125-foot radius policy as a rule, then or ever. The primary methods for eradicating and controlling the spread of citrus canker pursuant to the Eradication Program are the prevention of spread by human means and the prevention of spread from infected trees to uninfected trees by wind-driven rain. Chapter 5B-58, Florida Administrative Code, contains numerous, detailed provisions designed to prevent human spread of citrus canker bacteria. Petitioners do not challenge these provisions. The Department also seeks to prevent the spread of the bacteria by removing trees that can host the bacteria. To that end, the Department cuts down two separate categories of trees. The removal of these trees, defined as “infected” or “exposed” to citrus canker, is foundational to the Eradication Program. “Infected” trees are defined in the rule as being trees that harbor the citrus canker bacteria and express visible symptoms. See Rule 5B-58.001(1)(i), Florida Administrative Code. The Rule’s definition of “infected” is substantially the same as the statutory definition of the term “infected or infested,” which is located in Section 581.184(1)(a), Florida Statutes. The Department’s current policy, as expressed in Rule 5B-58.001(5), is that “[a]ll citrus trees which are infected or infested shall be removed.” Pursuant to this policy, the Department is removing every infected tree it finds. Petitioners do not challenge the Department’s policy decision to remove all infected trees. The second category of trees removed by the Department comprises those it defines as “exposed.” In Rule 5B-58.001(h), the Department has defined “exposed” trees as being those that are without visible symptoms of citrus canker but which have been “[d]etermined by the department to likely harbor citrus canker bacteria because of their proximity to infected plants or probable contact with [sources of human spread].” It is the Department’s policy regarding the removal of “exposed” trees that is at the core of Petitioners’ challenge. In Section 581.184(3), Florida Statutes, the Department is given authority to remove healthy trees——that is, trees that are neither infected, nor exposed, nor suspected of being exposed——to create a citrus canker host-free buffer area to “retard the spread of citrus canker from known infected areas.” Unlike trees that are destroyed on grounds of infection or suspected exposure to infection, however, trees removed from a rule-designated buffer area are considered valuable property, and their owners must be paid “subject to annual legislative appropriation.” Id. It is undisputed that the Department is not removing any trees under its authority to establish buffer zones. The “1900-Foot Radius Policy” Despite the Department’s efforts in the early years of the citrus canker outbreak discovered in 1995, the disease continued to spread into other parts of Miami-Dade County and into Broward County. In 1998, the Department commissioned Dr. Timothy R. Gottwald, a plant pathologist with the USDA, to conduct a study that would measure the distances that citrus canker could spread in South Florida. The objectives of the study, which commenced in August 1998, included: determining the amount of citrus canker spread from bacterial hosts (foci of infection); (b) examining the spread resulting from normal and severe weather events; (c) evaluating whether the Department’s then-current use of the 125-foot radius for defining and destroying “exposed” trees was adequate to control spread; and (d) providing, if necessary, evidence for any adjustment of the radius distance. By December 1998, before his report was completed, Dr. Gottwald’s data were sufficiently conclusive that he was able to present his study in Orlando to a group of Department officials, scientists, and citrus industry representatives. As Dr. Gottwald testified during the trial in Broward County circuit court, at that meeting in December 1998, the group reviewed his data and “came to a consensus . . . that we’re using 1,900 feet,” meaning that all trees within a 1900-foot radius of a diseased tree should be destroyed to prevent the further spread of citrus canker. A few months later, Dr. Gottwald presented his study to the Citrus Canker Risk Assessment Group (the “Risk Assessment Group”).2 A creature of the Department, the Risk Assessment Group, as defined in Rule 5B-58.001(1)(e), Florida Administrative Code, is a committee composed of knowledgeable scientists and regulatory officials that makes recommendations for the control and eradication of citrus canker; the Director of the Division of Plant Industry appoints its members.3 Dr. Gottwald persuaded the Risk Assessment Group to recommend that a 1900-foot zone be employed. Accordingly, in May 1999, the Risk Assessment Group recommended to the Department that all “exposed” trees, i.e. all trees within 1900 feet of an infected tree, should be destroyed in order to eradicate citrus canker. Dr. Gottwald completed his preliminary report on or about October 13, 1999. Although the title of his report describes it as a draft, Dr. Gottwald’s cover letter to the Department assures that the “data will not change, so for regulatory purposes this report may be useful for planning eradication/disease suppression activities.” In December 1999, then-Commissioner Bob Crawford approved the previous recommendation of the Risk Assessment Group, adopting on behalf of the Department a policy to remove citrus trees within 1900 feet of infected trees beginning January 1, 2000. This new policy was a bold and aggressive step——breathtaking in scope——that significantly ratcheted-up the Department’s eradication efforts. To grasp its magnitude, consider that the 1900-foot radius policy entails a swath of tree destruction that encompasses approximately 262 acres for each infected tree found. The science underpinning the 1900-foot radius policy has not changed materially or become more refined. After December 1999, any scientific or technical data received by the Department has served to confirm or provide additional support for the decision to adopt the 1900-foot radius policy. The parties disagree about——and the evidence is somewhat in conflict concerning——the substance of the Department's 1900-foot radius policy. Petitioners urge that the policy has two facets: (1) it determines which trees are deemed “exposed”; and (2) it dictates that all trees so identified shall be removed. Both aspects of the Department’s policy, as Petitioners describe it, can be conflated into a single statement: All trees within 1900 feet of an infected tree shall be removed. Petitioners acknowledge that the Department has, in a very few instances in commercial grove settings, spared some trees within the 1900-foot radius, but they maintain that the few exceptions which have been made do not alter the essentially mandatory nature of the Department’s removal policy as it relates to "exposed" trees. The Department counters that its policy is less rigid than Petitioners would have it. While admitting that the 1900-foot radius policy determines which trees are considered “exposed,” the Department denies that all trees so identified must be removed. Instead, claims the department, the 1900-foot radius establishes a bright-line starting point that may be adjusted outward or inward based upon the recommendations of the Risk Assessment Group. The greater weight of the evidence establishes that Petitioners have correctly summarized the Department’s policy. In public statements, such as press releases, in actual practice, and through the sworn testimony of its officials, the Department has made clear that its policy is, in fact, to remove all trees within 1900 feet of an infected tree, barring extraordinary circumstances that have presented only occasionally in commercial grove settings (and never, to date, in noncommercial or residential settings). Indeed, the general applicability, widespread implementation, and public articulation of the Department’s policy are such that three district courts of appeal have described its essence in terms substantially similar to Petitioners’ allegations: “Trees are deemed exposed if they lie within a 1900-foot radius of an infected tree.” Sapp Farms, Inc. v. Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services, 761 So. 2d 347, 348 (Fla. 3d DCA 2000). “The Citrus Canker Risk Assessment Group has determined that in order to assure at least 99% eradication, all trees within 1900 feet of a canker-infested tree must be destroyed.” State v. Sun Gardens Citrus, LLP, 780 So. 2d 922, 924 (Fla. 2d DCA 2001)(emphasis added). “On January 1, 2000, Commissioner Bob Crawford adopted the recommendation of the task force [that the Department adopt a policy to destroy trees within a 1900 foot radius of a diseased tree in order to eradicate citrus canker] and the 1900 foot buffer zone policy became effective.” Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services v. City of Pompano Beach, 2001 WL 770096, *2 (Fla. 4th DCA July 11, 2001). In addition, the legislature described the Department’s policy indirectly in a statement of legislative findings made during the year 2000 regular session: “WHEREAS, the Third District Court of Appeals [sic], in Sapp Farms, Inc., v. Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services, DCA Case No. 3D00-487, held that citrus trees within a certain radius of infection (originally thought to be 125 feet but now scientifically determined to be at least 1,900 feet) necessarily harbor the citrus canker bacteria and thus are diseased and have no value . . . . ” Chapter 2000-308, Laws of Florida, at pg. 3226 (emphasis added).4 Thus, a preponderance of evidence persuasively establishes that the Department adopted a policy of general applicability in December 1999 that took effect on January 1, 2000, and has been applied consistently since that time. A succinct and accurate expression of that policy, taking into account the relatively remote but nevertheless unexcluded possibility that adjustments might be made in exceptional situations in accordance with recommendations arising from the risk assessment process, emerges clearly and convincingly from the evidence as follows: All trees located within a 1900-foot radius (the "Presumptive Removal Zone") of any infected tree shall be removed; provided, however, that the Commissioner, after taking into consideration the recommendations of the Risk Assessment Group, may determine that some or all of the trees within the Presumptive Removal Zone need not be destroyed if such tree(s), which will be specifically identified by the Department, do not pose an imminent danger in the spread of the citrus canker disease. This agency statement will be referred to hereinafter as the "PRZ Policy."5 The Department’s Proposed Rule Revisions Shortly before the final hearing of this matter, the Department initiated rulemaking to amend the existing provisions of Rule 5B-58.001, Florida Administrative Code. The rule amendments proposed by the Department (the “Proposed Amendments”), if adopted, would, among other things: Replace the existing definition of “exposed” found in Rule 5B-58.001(1)(h) with a new definition for the term “exposed to infection” and substitute the newly-defined term “exposed to infection” in place of “exposed” wherever the latter appears in the existing rule. The new definition of “exposed to infection” would be identical to the definition of the same term found in Section 581.184(1)(b), Florida Statutes;6 and Define the phrase “citrus trees harboring the citrus canker bacteria due to their proximity to infected citrus trees,” which is the determinative component of the proposed definition for the term “exposed to infection,” to mean citrus trees located within 1900 feet of an infected citrus tree. The effect of these revisions would be to specify that the Department considers all trees within 1900 feet of an infected tree to be, by definition, “exposed to infection” and subject to removal. Critically, however, the Proposed Amendments do not specify the Department’s policy of general applicability, which exists in fact and has been in effect since January 1, 2000, that all trees within the 1900-foot-radius removal zone shall be destroyed except those, if any, designated by the Commissioner of Agriculture as not posing an imminent danger in the spread of the citrus canker disease. Pursuant to Section 120.54(2), Florida Statutes, a Notice of Proposed Rule Development with respect to the Proposed Amendments was published in the Florida Administrative Weekly on July 6, 2001. Thereafter, on July 20, 2001, the Department caused to be published a notice of proposed rulemaking concerning the Proposed Amendments pursuant to Section 120.54(3), Florida Statutes. As of the date of the final hearing, the Department had scheduled a workshop on the Proposed Amendments to be held in Broward County on Tuesday, July 24, 2001. The Department is currently engaged in the rulemaking process with respect to the Proposed Amendments both expeditiously and, as far as the record in this case shows, in good faith. For reasons that will be discussed in the following Conclusions of Law, however, the Proposed Amendments do not “address” the PRZ Policy as that term (“address”) is used in Section 120.54(1)(a)1.c., Florida Statutes. About the Challengers As set forth more particularly below, Petitioners and Intervenors each own residential or noncommercial citrus trees in Broward or Miami-Dade County that are located within a citrus canker quarantine area and hence are immediately subject to the Department’s PRZ Policy.7 Petitioner Broward County owns a noncommercial citrus grove that is situated in a residential area and lies within 1900 feet of other citrus trees. Broward County owns other residential citrus trees as well, including trees within 1900 feet of infected citrus trees. Petitioner City of Plantation owns at least one “exposed” citrus tree that the Department has earmarked for destruction through the issuance of an IFO. Intervenors John and Patricia Haire own several “exposed” residential citrus trees in Broward County; they have received an IFO notifying them that all such trees will be removed. Intervenor Dr. Melvyn Greenstein owns residential citrus trees in Miami-Dade County that the Department has deemed “exposed.” He, too, has received an IFO giving notice that his “exposed” citrus trees will be removed. CONCUSIONS OF LAW The Division of Administrative Hearings has personal and subject matter jurisdiction in this proceeding pursuant to Sections 120.56, 120.569, and 120.57(1), Florida Statutes. Standing The Department contends that Petitioners Broward County and Pompano Beach lack standing to maintain this proceeding because, according to the Department, they have failed to prove that they are “substantially affected” by the challenged agency statement. See Section 120.56(4)(a), Florida Statutes (“Any person substantially affected by an agency statement may seek an administrative determination that the statement violates s. 120.54(1)(a).”). In particular, the Department argues that these Petitioners have failed to demonstrate that they are subject to a real and sufficiently immediate injury-in-fact as a result of the alleged statement, namely, the PRZ Policy. The burden rests on Petitioners to prove their respective rights to maintain this action. To show that they are “substantially affected” by the alleged rule-by-definition, each Petitioner must establish: (a) a real and immediate injury-in-fact; and (b) that the interest invaded is arguably within the zone of interests to be protected or regulated. E.g. Lanoue v. Florida Department of Law Enforcement, 751 So. 2d 94, 96 (Fla. 1st DCA 2000). The Department does not dispute that the property interests asserted by these Petitioners are within a protected “zone of interests,” and it is concluded that they are. To satisfy the injury-in-fact element, “the injury must not be based on pure speculation or conjecture.” Ward v. Board of Trustees of the Internal Improvement Trust Fund, 651 So. 2d 1236, 1237 (Fla. 4th DCA 1995). These Petitioners have carried their burden on this issue. Each owns trees within a citrus canker quarantine area in Broward County. Clearly, under the Department’s PRZ Policy, Petitioners’ trees are presently located within a potential path of destruction, even if these trees have not already been targeted for removal, and even if they do not all lie within 1900 feet of an infected tree. The threat of danger to these trees——indeed all citrus trees in a quarantine area——is neither speculative nor conjectural but rather real and immediate. Without question, Petitioners and Intervenors have standing to maintain this proceeding. The Existing Rules Section 120.56(1)(a), Florida Statutes, provides that "[a]ny person substantially affected by a rule or a proposed rule may seek an administrative determination of the invalidity of the rule on the ground that the rule is an invalid exercise of delegated legislative authority." The burden is on the challenger to show that an existing rule is an invalid exercise of delegated legislative authority within the meaning of Section 120.52(8), Florida Statutes. See Cortes v. State Board of Regents, 655 So. 2d 132, 136 (Fla. 1st DCA 1995). The phrase "invalid exercise of delegated legislative authority" is defined in Section 120.52(8), Florida Statutes, as "action which goes beyond the powers, functions, and duties delegated by the Legislature." The statute then enumerates seven alternative grounds, upon any one of which a rule must be invalidated: The agency has materially failed to follow the applicable rulemaking procedures or requirements set forth in this chapter; The agency has exceeded its grant of rulemaking authority, citation to which is required by s. 120.54(3)(a)1.; The rule enlarges, modifies, or contravenes the specific provisions of law implemented, citation to which is required by s. 120.54(3)(a)1.; The rule is vague, fails to establish adequate standards for agency decisions, or vests unbridled discretion in the agency; The rule is arbitrary or capricious; The rule is not supported by competent substantial evidence; or The rule imposes regulatory costs on the regulated person, county, or city which could be reduced by the adoption of less costly alternatives that substantially accomplish the statutory objectives. In addition to these grounds, the statute provides general standards "to be used in determining the validity of a rule in all cases." Southwest Florida Water Management District v. Save the Manatee Club, Inc., 773 So. 2d 594, 597-98 (Fla. 1st DCA 2000). Contained in the closing paragraph of Section 120.52(8), Florida Statutes, these general standards consist of the following: A grant of rulemaking authority is necessary but not sufficient to allow an agency to adopt a rule; a specific law to be implemented is also required. An agency may adopt only rules that implement or interpret the specific powers and duties granted by the enabling statute. No agency shall have authority to adopt a rule only because it is reasonably related to the purpose of the enabling legislation and is not arbitrary and capricious or is within the agency's class of powers and duties, nor shall an agency have the authority to implement statutory provisions setting forth general legislative intent or policy. Statutory language granting rulemaking authority or generally describing the powers and functions of an agency shall be construed to extend no further than implementing or interpreting the specific powers and duties conferred by the same statute. See also Section 120.536(1), Florida Statutes (reiterating these general standards regarding rulemaking authority). Plainly, a grant of rulemaking authority, while essential, is not enough, without more, to authorize a rule. Rather, as summarized by the first district, the general rulemaking standards make clear that "authority to adopt an administrative rule must be based on an explicit power or duty identified in the enabling statute." Save the Manatee Club, 773 So. 2d at 599. "Either the enabling statute authorizes the rule at issue or it does not[, and] this question is one that must be determined on a case-by-case basis." Id. Here, the legislature has vested the Department with rulemaking authority through several statutory grants, ranging from the broadest permissible warrant (Section 570.07(23), Florida Statutes8), to a duty-specific commission (Section 581.031(17), Florida Statutes), to the narrowly focused, citrus- canker-oriented charge in Section 581.184(2), Florida Statutes. Through these grants, the legislature clearly has given the Department the general rulemaking authority which is necessary, as a threshold matter, to permit the promulgation of the challenged existing rule; the determinative question, then, is whether the enabling statutes explicitly authorize the rule provisions at issue. In examining the Department’s specific authority to make the existing rules, Section 581.184(2) is of particular interest, not only because it deals directly with citrus canker- related rules, but also because this statute’s mandatory nature distinguishes it from the other grants of rulemaking authority extended to the Department. Enacted in 1986,9 the first sentence of Section 581.184(2)10 requires careful scrutiny: In addition to the powers and duties set forth under this chapter, the department is directed to adopt rules specifying facts and circumstances that, if present, would require the destruction of plants for purposes of eradicating, controlling, or preventing the dissemination of citrus canker disease in the state. Such rules shall be in effect for any period during which, in the judgment of the Commissioner of Agriculture, there is the threat of the spread disease in the state. Section 581.184(2), Florida Statutes (emphasis added). The legislature's use of the verb "direct" (in passive form) in this statute plainly manifests an intent to command the Department to act——and connotes the legislature's expectation that the Department will obey. This, then, is more than a mere grant of authority to make rules; it is also, according to its plain language, an order that requires compliance. By directing (rather than simply authorizing) the Department to promulgate rules specifying facts and circumstances that, if present, would require the destruction of plants to control citrus canker, the legislature effectively, albeit indirectly, placed a qualification——which will be discussed in due course below——on the broad "mandate and grant of authority to deal with problems such as the one at hand"11 found in Section 581.031(17), Florida Statutes. It is this latter section that delegates to the Department the state's power to destroy plants in the interests of controlling citrus canker (among other plant pests).12 Section 581.031(17) provides: The Department has the following powers and duties: * * * (17) To supervise, or cause to be supervised, the treatment, cutting, and destruction of plants, plant parts, fruit, soil, containers, equipment, and other articles capable of harboring plant pests, noxious weeds, or arthropods, if they are infested or located in an area which may be suspected of being infested or infected due to its proximity to a known infestation, or if they were reasonably exposed to infestation, to prevent or control the dissemination of or to eradicate plant pests, noxious weeds, or arthropods, and to make rules governing these procedures.13 As the final clause of Section 581.031(17) makes clear, at the time the legislature directed the Department to adopt rules relating to citrus canker,14 the Department already had the power to adopt rules implementing and interpreting that statute’s specific grant of legislative authority to oversee the destruction of plants infected by or infested with plant pests, or suspected of being infected, or exposed to infestation—— including rules specifying the facts and circumstances under which plants would be destroyed to control citrus canker (a major plant pest). Thus, the first sentence of Section 581.184(2) conferred no new rulemaking authority or regulatory jurisdiction upon the Department. Instead, when in 1986 the legislature enacted the bill that ultimately became Section 581.184(2), Florida Statutes, it imposed a new duty on the Department: the obligation to develop, and adopt as rules, statements of general applicability setting forth, clearly and precisely, facts and circumstances requiring the destruction of plants for purposes of controlling citrus canker. While the Department, if left to its own devices, might have elected to specify such facts and circumstances on a case-by-case basis through adjudication, eschewing the articulation of generally applicable principles (and hence evading the burden of rulemaking), with the passage of the law that is now Section 581.184(2), the legislature took that option away from the agency. The legislature’s rulemaking directive to the Department had (and continues to have) profound consequences for the Department’s regulatory authority because, as a matter of law——and as the legislature is presumed to have known when it gave the command——the rules required by Section 581.184(2) necessarily will control the Department’s exercise of its power and duty to destroy plants for purposes of citrus canker eradication. See Cleveland Clinic Florida Hospital v. Agency for Health Care Administration, 679 So. 2d 1237, 1242 (Fla. 1st DCA 1996), rev. denied, 695 So. 2d 701 (1997)(agencies must follow their own rules.) Accordingly, by ordering the Department to adopt particular rules, the legislature purposefully qualified the Department’s authority under Section 581.031(17)——not by diminishing that authority (no power was taken away), but by requiring that the authority be carried out pursuant to certain pre-determined and publicly available guidelines. It follows, then, that the scope of the Department’s rulemaking authority with regard to citrus canker eradication must be determined based on a reading together of Sections 581.031(17) and 581.184(2), which are, on the common subject of citrus canker, in pari materia;15 these enabling statutes, taken as a whole, either authorize the Department’s existing rules, or they do not. See Southwest Florida Water Management District v. Save the Manatee Club, Inc., 773 So. 2d 594, 599 (Fla. 1st DCA 2000). If the Department’s existing rules fail to comply with the rulemaking directive of Section 581.184(2), then, to the extent of the deficiency, the Department has exceeded its rulemaking authority, by adopting rules that would permit the Department to exercise its power and duty to destroy plants in the absence of legislatively mandated (though Department devised) guidelines. Obviously, therefore, the legislative intent behind the 1986 rulemaking directive is crucial. The plain and unambiguous statutory language is determinative, as it should be, and reveals several important points about the legislative mindset. First, as just mentioned, but to repeat for emphasis, the legislature clearly intended that the Department's citrus canker eradication program be implemented according to, and hence to that extent be governed by, rules specifying the generally applicable facts and circumstances that will require plant destruction. In this regard, it is significant that the legislature did not direct the Department to adopt rules specifying “factors” or “variables” to consider in deciding whether a plant should be destroyed, nor did it mandate that the desired rules specify facts that “might” require the destruction of plants, depending on the presence of other, non-specified circumstances or at the Department’s discretion; rather, the plain language of the statute leaves room for only one contingency: whether the rule- prescribed facts and circumstances exist. When those facts and circumstances are present, the destruction of plants will be required, not as a discretionary matter, but as a function of the statutorily compelled regulatory framework.16 Second, the legislature evidently concluded that the adoption of rules specifying facts and circumstances that would require the destruction of plants in the interests of eradicating citrus canker was, in 1986, feasible and practicable, for it did not condition the directive to make rules on the later concurrence of these or any other factors. Then, as now, whenever the legislature adopts an act that “requires implementation of the act by rules of an agency . . . , such rules shall be drafted and formally proposed . . . within 180 days after the effective date of the act, unless the provisions of the act provide otherwise.” See Section 120.54(12), Florida Statutes (1985). Having said nothing to the contrary, the legislature intended that the Department complete its assigned rulemaking task within 180 days. Third, although this might go without saying, the legislature clearly intended that the Department do more in its rules than merely restate the language in Section 581.031(17) that confers the agency’s powers and duties. That is, because the statute itself already provided (and continues to provide) unambiguously that the Department has the power and duty to supervise the destruction of a plant if the plant is (1) infested; or (2) suspected of being infested or infected due to its proximity to a known infestation; or (3) reasonably exposed to infestation, a rule that simply repeats or paraphrases these statutorily prescribed categories of plants subject to destruction would serve no useful purpose, and so the legislature, being presumed to have had a useful goal in mind, must have intended that the compulsory, rule-specified “facts and circumstances” be more explicit than the existing statute. As the First District Court of Appeal explained (in describing agencies’ rulemaking authority generally): [Agencies have authority] to “implement or interpret” specific powers and duties contained in the enabling statute. A rule that is used to implement or carry out a directive will necessarily contain language more detailed than that used in the directive itself. Likewise, the use of the term “interpret” suggests that a rule will be more detailed than the applicable enabling statute. There would be no need for interpretation if all the details were contained in the statute itself. Southwest Florida Water Management District v. Save the Manatee Club, Inc., 773 So. 2d 594, 599 (Fla. 1st DCA 2000)(emphasis added). In sum, the legislature plainly intended that the Department “flesh out” the broad legislative policy articulated in Section 581.031(17) by formulating specific facts and circumstances pertinent to citrus canker eradication. In addition to examining the plain statutory language, a complete and accurate understanding of the legislative intent is facilitated by the knowledge that before the 1986 regular legislative session began, the Department had adopted a number of rules prescribing detailed guidelines for citrus canker eradication and treatments. First published, as proposed rules, on January 25, 1985, in Volume 11, Number 4, of the Florida Administrative Weekly, Chapter 5B-49, Florida Administrative Code, consisting of Rules 5B-49.01 through 5B-49.21, took effect on March 6, 1985. See Florida Administrative Weekly, Vol. 11, No. 8, at pg. 663 (Feb. 22, 1985). These rules were published in the 1985 Annual Supplement to the Florida Administrative Code Annotated, Volume 2, Titles 4, 5, which was issued about the time the 1986 legislature convened.17 The legislature is presumed to have been aware of and familiar with these then-existing rules at the time it directed the Department to adopt rules specifying the facts and circumstances that would require the destruction of plants in connection with citrus canker eradication. That the legislature directed the Department to make the rules described in Section 581.184(2), with knowledge that the Department recently had promulgated extensive rules on the very subject of the legislative directive, is telling. Presumably aware of the Department’s then-existing citrus canker rules, the legislature must have determined that those rules did not adequately specify the facts and circumstances that, if present, would require the destruction of plants. This observation is as self-evident as the common-sense converse proposition: If the legislature had been completely satisfied with Chapter 5B-49, Florida Administrative Code, as it existed at the time of the 1986 session, then the rulemaking directive not only would have been unnecessary, but also, by gratuitously ordering the Department to write additional or amended rules where none were needed or wanted, it would have engendered a potential for mischief. It is presumed that the legislature did not intend to put the Department to a pointless task but rather desired that the Department supplement its then-existing rules with missing information that the legislature deemed necessary for inclusion within them. With that in mind, the rules that existed as of the 1986 legislative session stand as a benchmark, for whatever else the legislature meant by “rules specifying facts and circumstances,” it surely meant rules that would set forth the required information with greater clarity and precision than had been done to date (i.e. mid-1986).18 Turning now to the existing rules to determine whether the challenged provisions are valid or not, it will be seen, initially, that Chapter 5B-58, Florida Administrative Code, specifies surprisingly few facts and circumstances that, if present, would require the destruction of plants. There are, to be precise, only two. The first such circumstance is the one most expected: “All citrus trees which are infected or infested shall be removed.” Rule 5B-58.001(5)(a), Florida Administrative Code. The term “infected” is defined as “[h]arboring citrus canker bacteria and expressing visible symptoms.” Rule 5B- 58.001(1)(i), Florida Administrative Code. Thus, in other words, if a knowledgeable person can tell just by looking at a plant that it is suffering from citrus canker infection, that plant will be destroyed. Petitioners have not challenged the provisions dealing with the destruction of visibly infected or infested trees. The other circumstance is found in Rule 5B-58.001(15), Florida Administrative Code, which provides that “[c]itrus plants in containers found in quarantine areas will be confiscated immediately and destroyed without compensation,” unless such storage is authorized under one of two narrow exceptions stated in the same subsection. Petitioners have not challenged these provisions either. The bone of contention, of course, concerns the facts and circumstances under which trees not visibly affected by citrus canker bacteria will be destroyed. On this subject, the existing rule is notably non-committal and evasive. It says, in the fourth sentence of Rule 5B-58.001(5)(a), Florida Administrative Code, that "[t]he decision to remove exposed trees will take into consideration the recommendations of the Citrus Canker Risk Assessment Group." (Emphasis added). Although the rule fails to specify any facts and circumstances that would require the removal of "exposed" trees, the implications are that every "exposed" tree is subject to destruction at the discretion of the Department, and that the Department is inclined to exercise its discretion in favor of destruction.19 The critical term "exposed," which is made to operate through and hence must be read in conjunction with the just- quoted sentence of Rule 5B-58.001(5)(a), is defined in the rule to mean: [1] Determined by the department [2] to likely harbor citrus canker bacteria [3] because of [a] proximity to infected plants, or [b] probable contact with personnel, or regulated articles, or other articles that may have been contaminated with bacteria that cause citrus canker, [4] but not expressing visible symptoms. Rule 5B-58.001(1)(h), Florida Administrative Code (bracketed numbers and letters added). Petitioners complain that this definition constitutes an invalid exercise of delegated legislative authority. They are correct. The rule's definition of "exposed" is constructed of four parts. The first clause——"[d]etermined by the department"——makes plain that the Department is the exclusive arbiter of the evidence, the decision-maker. The second clause is a summary statement of the conclusion that the Department must make and frames the ultimate issue for the Department's determination thusly: whether a plant is likely to harbor citrus canker bacteria. The third part, ushered in by the words "because of," purports to set out the factual premises upon which the Department will base its decision. It consists of two clauses, call them (a) the "proximity clause" and (b) the "probable contact" clause. The fourth and final clause confirms that all plants not visibly suffering from citrus canker (which set consists of all plants not "infected" therewith) are subject to being deemed "exposed." As the introductory words "because of" suggest, the third clause is the only structural component of this definition that could plausibly satisfy the rulemaking directive to specify dispositive facts and circumstances. The others make no genuine attempt. To begin, the first clause plainly does not set forth a specific fact and circumstance that would require the destruction of plants. Continuing, the second clause also does not comply with the directive, for reasons that, while equally compelling, are perhaps less plain. Consider whether, if a person were asked to specify facts and circumstances that, if present, would require a finding of negligence, the following would be responsive: a likely failure to have used reasonable care. The answer obviously is "no," because the statement does not, in and of itself, describe a particular factual scenario that can be perceived by the senses; it reflects, rather, a judgment about facts observed but not specified.20 The same is true of the phrase "likely [to] harbor citrus canker bacteria;" it fails to specify a particular factual occurrence capable of objective observation and instead reflects a judgment about perceivable facts. Skipping over the third part momentarily, the fourth clause, unlike the first two, does express a fact—— but it is not one that, if present without more, would require the destruction of plants. Whether the proximity and probable contact clauses that comprise the "exposed" definition's third part comply with the legislative directive requires a closer look. The starting point is Section 581.184(2), Florida Statutes. When, as here, the statute in question does not contain a specific definition of its terms, it is assumed that the words contained therein were used according to their ordinary dictionary definitions. See Save the Manatee Club, 773 So. 2d at 599 (citing WFTV, Inc. v. Wilken, 675 So. 2d 674 (Fla. 4th DCA 1996)). The ordinary meaning of the verb “specify” is “to name or state explicitly[21] or in detail.” See Merriam-Webster’s Online Collegiate® Dictionary (hereafter Merriam-Webster’s)(http://www.m-w.com/). The term "fact," as used in everyday discourse, denotes “information presented as having objective reality.” Id. "Circumstance" commonly means "a condition, fact, or event accompanying, conditioning, or determining another: an essential or inevitable concomitant." Id. Putting these common definitions of ordinary words together, it becomes apparent that the directive in Section 581.184(2), Florida Statutes——to "specify[] facts and circumstances"——requires the Department to state explicitly, that is, with clarity and precision and thus without vagueness or room for doubt, particular pieces of information having objective reality (i.e. that describe perceivable scenarios) which, if found to exist in the real world, will require the destruction of plants. Against this statutory backdrop the subject definition's shortcomings stand out in bold relief. The phrase “proximity to infected plants” does not have intrinsic objective reality; it does not, without more, communicate information that is observable, provable, or falsifiable; it is not, therefore, a “fact.”22 While the phrase may, in a loose sense, describe a “circumstance,” it cannot seriously be contended that “proximity to infected plants” is meaningfully precise or explicit, as the statute requires; in fact, it is neither, being instead both elastic and malleable, an empty vessel for the Department to fill with content at its sole discretion. Indeed, for all that appears in the rule, “proximity” might be ten (or 1900) feet, or ten miles, or ten thousand miles, depending on the unstated facts and circumstances. At bottom, a conclusion of “proximity to infected plants” constitutes a subjective judgment or opinion that must be based upon objective facts and circumstances, in the same way that the judgment whether a plant is "likely [to] harbor citrus canker bacteria" also requires a factual foundation upon which to rest. The puzzle piece missing from the existing rule is the description of facts and circumstances that, if present, would require that conclusions of "proximity"——and hence "likelihood"——be drawn. The definition allows the Department to reach the ultimate conclusion ("likely [to] harbor citrus canker bacteria") based upon an opinion ("proximity to infected plants") grounded upon unspecified facts and circumstances. This deficiency is fatal to the rule’s validity. The probable contact clause contains greater detail but is likewise defective. It says that the Department may consider a plant "exposed" if the plant has probably come into contact with a possibly contaminated person or thing. The problem with this provision is that it is vague and leaves too much unsaid; it fails to set forth facts and circumstances upon which the Department will base determinations of probable contact and possible contamination. It does not, in short, "specify[] facts and circumstances that, if present, would require the destruction of plants," as required by Section 581.184(2), Florida Statutes. In view of these flaws in the definition of "exposed," it is evident that, while the Department has announced in Rule 5B-58.001(5)(a) its intent and power to destroy potentially all trees that are not visibly affected by citrus canker bacteria, it has failed to specify the facts and circumstances under which it will remove such trees, despite a clear legislative directive to articulate those facts and circumstances, precisely and in detail, in its rules. Instead of submitting itself to pre- determined guidelines of its own making, as directed by the legislature, the Department has promulgated a rule that, with regard to “exposed” trees, retains maximum——indeed, essentially unfettered——discretion. The plainest and most egregious example of this is the proximity clause. Nothing in the existing rules would prevent the Department from declaring that the entire state of Florida is exposed to citrus canker because of proximity to infected plants and thereupon commencing to destroy every fruit tree in the state. As the plain language of Section 581.184(2), Florida Statutes, makes clear, the legislature intended and expected a more explicit and informative rule. Contrary to the legislative directive, the rule’s definition of “exposed,” as well as the fourth sentence of Rule 5B-58.001(5)(a), Florida Administrative Code, which expresses the Department’s intent to destroy some or all “exposed” trees (but only after listening to the Risk Assessment Group’s non-binding recommendations), do nothing whatsoever to “flesh out” Section 581.031(17), Florida Statutes. At best, the Department has merely restated its statutory duty to oversee the destruction of plants “located in an area which may be suspected of being infested or infected due to its proximity to a known infestation” or "reasonably exposed to infestation." Id. This is inadequate.23 Reinforcing these conclusions is an examination of the citrus canker rules that were in effect at the time the legislature enacted the law that is now codified at Section 581.184(2), Florida Statutes. As it existed in mid-1986, Chapter 5B-49, Florida Administrative Code, was far more detailed and explicit regarding the facts and circumstances under which plants would be destroyed than is the present rule. See, e.g., Rules 5B-49.09 (provisions for eradication of citrus canker); 5B-49.10 (requirements for greenhouses, slathouses, shadehouses or bench-growing facilities); 5B-49.11 (requirements for ornamental nurseries, dooryard citrus nurseries, stock dealers or agents); 5B-49.13 (requirements for public and private properties not considered to be commercial citrus groves, nurseries, stock dealers, or agent establishments), Florida Administrative Code Annotated, Vol. 2, pp. 167-69 (1985 Supp.) These rules even contained a precursor to the unpromulgated 1900-foot radius policy now under attack: a 125- foot radius rule that applied under certain circumstances. See, e.g., Rules 5B-49.09(2)(b); 5B-49.11(1), Florida Administrative Code Annotated, Vol. 2, pp. 167-68 (1985 Supp.). These relatively detailed citrus canker rules were already in effect when the legislature directed the Department to make rules specifying facts and circumstances that would require the destruction of plants. From that it can only be presumed that the legislature wanted more detailed rules on the subject of plant destruction. By any reasonable measure, however, existing Chapter 5B-58, Florida Administrative Code, is less detailed and explicit than the citrus canker rules which the legislature, by directing the adoption of specific rules, implicitly deemed imprecise. This confirms the conclusion that existing Rule 5B-58.001, as it relates to the destruction of “exposed” plants, fails to satisfy the legislative directive to make particular citrus canker rules. The existing rule is not saved by its enumeration of two dozen or so “variables” that the Risk Assessment Group is supposed to consider in formulating its non-binding recommendation to the Department whether to remove “exposed” trees. Rule 5B-58.001(5)(a) states, in pertinent part: In developing [its] recommendations, the Citrus Canker Risk Assessment Group will take the following variables into consideration: property type, cultivar, cultivar susceptibility, tree size and age, size of block, tree spacing, horticultural condition, tree distribution, tree density, weather events, wind breaks, movement factors, disease strain, exposure, infection age, infection distribution, disease incidence, Asian citrus leafminer damage, survey access, security of property, sanitation, management practices, closeness of other host properties, and closeness of other infected properties. These “variables” provide at most a patina of precision. On inspection, it is clear that the rule merely sets forth a laundry list of potentially relevant factors that conveys little more information than if the rule had simply stated that the Risk Assessment Group will consider all pertinent data. Moreover, Section 581.184(2) requires dispositive “facts and circumstances,” not “variables” for consideration. Listing two dozen unweighted factors for an agency-appointed committee to consider in making a non-binding recommendation is a far cry from “specifying facts and circumstances that, if present, would require the destruction of plants for purposes of eradicating . . . citrus canker[.]” Section 581.184(2), Florida Statutes. Finally, and most important, the Risk Assessment Group is not the Department, and its recommendations, according to Rule 5B-58.001(5)(a), need only be “take[n] into consideration” by the Department in making a decision whether to order the destruction of an “exposed” tree. The Rule pointedly does not require the Department to consider the “variables” (or any other objective criteria) either in determining whether a tree is "exposed" or in deciding to remove an "exposed" tree. The bottom line is that the risk assessment provisions and the definition of "exposed," taken together, do not communicate the information required by Section 581.184(2), Florida Statutes, with anything approaching the intended clarity, precision, and detail. In connection with “exposed” trees (a set that potentially includes all citrus trees in the state that are not visibly affected by citrus canker bacteria), the Department has failed to implement its citrus canker eradication program according to the kind of specific rules that the legislature intended be in place. For that reason, the enabling statutes do not authorize either Rule 5B-58.001(1)(h) or the fourth sentence of Rule 5B-58.001(5)(a), Florida Administrative Code, which implements the “exposed” definition.24 Accordingly, these provisions are invalid exercises of delegated legislative authority. See Section 120.52(8)(b), Florida Statutes. In addition to being unauthorized by the enabling statutes, the fourth sentence of Rule 5B-58.001(5)(a), Florida Administrative Code, is invalid for an independent reason: it “fails to establish adequate standards for agency decisions, [and] vests unbridled discretion in the agency.” Section 120.52(8)(d), Florida Statutes. The leading case on rule-engendered standardless discretion is Cortes v. State Board of Regents, 655 So. 2d 132 (Fla. 1st DCA 1995). There, a rule was challenged that granted university presidents not only (1) the exclusive power to decide, upon being presented with a petition signed by at least a majority of the student body requesting such action, whether to authorize the collection of fees for funding "public interest research groups," but also (2) the "sole discretion" to determine by which of two rule-prescribed means students would be required to assent to the fee, if approved: either a positive checkoff or a negative checkoff on the registration card. Id. at 135. The court held that the enabling statutes authorized the rule to the extent it empowered university presidents to decide, in the first instance, whether to allow the collection of such student fees at their respective institutions. Id. at 140. The court reached a different conclusion, however, regarding the rule's grant of unbridled presidential discretion to decide between the two different methods of obtaining students' consent to pay the fee. The court's analysis is instructive and warrants a lengthy quotation: In one respect, however, the challenged rule itself confers unguided discretion on university presidents that they did not have before the rule was promulgated, viz., the "sole discretion" to decide between a "positive checkoff" and a "negative checkoff." While student contributions are no novelty as a source of funds for student activities, the rule calls certain mechanics into being. Until the rule was adopted, university presidents had no need to choose between "positive" and "negative checkoffs," which [the rule] now requires, under circumstances specified in the rule. An administrative rule which creates discretion not articulated in the statute it implements must specify the basis on which the discretion is to be exercised. Otherwise the "lack of . . . standards . . . for the exercise of discretion vested under the . . . rule renders it incapable of understanding . . . and incapable of application in a manner susceptible of review." Staten v. Couch, 507 So. 2d 702 (Fla. 1st DCA 1987). Because a reviewing "court shall not substitute its judgment for that of the agency on an issue of discretion," § 120.68(12), Fla. Stat. (1993), an agency rule that confers standardless discretion insulates agency action from judicial scrutiny. By statute, a rule or part of a rule which "fails to establish adequate standards for agency decisions, or vests unbridled discretion in the agency," § 120.52(8)(d), Fla. Stat. (1983), is invalid. * * * [T]he rule [under review] "fails to establish adequate standards for agency decisions," . . . for or against employing the "negative checkoff," i.e., collecting "donations" from registering students unless they expressly decline to contribute. In this one respect, [the challenged rule] itself "vests unbridled discretion in the agency." [The challenged rule] is devoid of any standards purporting to guide this exercise of discretion. No such standards are implicit in the statutes implemented. Even students who have signed a petition will not necessarily be alerted that a "negative checkoff" choice must be made when they register for classes. [The rule] supplies no principled basis on which a university president can decide whether a registering student's failure to indicate otherwise should be taken as a decision to contribute to the funding of a public interest research organization. No statute creates the "negative checkoff" device or requires that it be sprung on entering freshmen or other unwary registrants. Id. at 138-39; see also Florida Public Service Commission v. Florida Waterworks Association, 731 So. 2d 836, 843 (Fla. 1st DCA 1999)(distinguishing Cortes and upholding proposed rule against attack because, unlike the rule in Cortes, it did not create discretion not articulated in the enabling statute). In Cortes, the court invalidated the negative checkoff option, and thereby effectively eliminated the rule's unlawful delegation of unfettered discretion. Cortes, 655 So. 2d at 140. Like the rule at issue in Cortes, sentence number four in Rule 5B-58.001(5)(a), Florida Administrative Code, confers unguided discretion on the Department that it did not have before the rule was promulgated, namely, the discretion to accept or reject the Risk Assessment Group's recommendations concerning whether to destroy "exposed" trees. Similar to the negative checkoff device, no statute creates the Risk Assessment Group or requires the Department to consider that committee's recommendations. Just as the board in Cortez created by rule discretion for university presidents that was not articulated in the enabling statute, so too the Department, having created the Risk Assessment Group and devised a non-binding risk assessment process, has conferred upon itself a new and exclusively rule- based discretionary power. Consequently, to be valid, the Department's Rule must specify the bases upon which the newly-created discretion is to be exercised. See Section 120,52(8)(d), Florida Statutes. The existing Rule is devoid of standards purporting to guide this exercise of discretion, however, and no standards are implicit in the enabling statutes. The Rule supplies no principled basis on which the Department can decide, for example, whether to override the Risk Assessment Group's recommendation that a tree be spared or, conversely, to reject its advice that a tree be cut down. The fourth sentence of Rule 5B-58.001(5)(a) must be invalidated because it confers standardless discretion and thereby unlawfully insulates the Department from judicial scrutiny. Cortes, 655 So. 2d at 138. This unlawful grant of discretion is particularly troublesome in light of the context in which it is exercised. The Department wields its power to destroy trees in furtherance of the Eradication Program pursuant to immediate final orders premised on the conclusion that the targeted trees are a source of immediate public danger. Because the exigency of the situation precludes the development of a traditional trial-level record, appellate review is somewhat limited, as the first district explained: When an agency enters an immediate final order as a result of a determination that there exists an immediate danger to the public health, safety, or welfare, [appellate] review will determine whether the order recites with particularity the facts underlying such finding. Denney v. Conner, 462 So. 2d 534, 535-36 (Fla. 1st DCA 1985); see also Nordmann v. Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services, 473 So. 2d 278, 279 (Fla. 5th DCA 1985)("Appellate review centers on the particularity with which the order recites the factual findings"). Plainly, the Department is shielded from searching judicial review simply by virtue of the type of decision it is making——and that shield would remain difficult to penetrate even if the rule were filled with adequate standards to guide the agency's discretion. The existing Rule's conspicuous failure to specify the bases upon which the Department's extraordinarily broad discretion in these matters is to be exercised, however, results, intolerably, in the Department being doubly insulated from judicial scrutiny, to the point of being practically immune. The absence of meaningful appellate review in these circumstances led an obviously fed-up panel of the Third District Court of Appeal to vent its frustration recently in Markus v. Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services, 785 So. 2d 595 (Fla. 3d DCA 2001), a homeowners' appeal from an immediate final order pursuant to which their three fruit trees were destroyed. In a seething opinion, the court wrote: Property owners as well as judicial tribunals are struggling with the issue of how and why the Department of Agriculture embarked on its dogged obliteration of the healthy back (or front) yard citrus tree. The frustrations of challenging this policy, either in a Chapter 120 proceeding or before this court, are staggering. Both infected and condemned trees are removed and ground into dust before any meaningful action can be taken by the property owner. The "final agency order" is nothing but a "Dear Resident" form from the Department of Agriculture. A "record on appeal" is an oxymoron. There is no record. Hence there is no meaningful appeal. We find that situation unacceptable as a mater of law, policy, and principle, yet we must affirm. Id. at 596 (emphasis added). Requiring the Department to promulgate rules setting forth principled grounds upon which to exercise its considerable discretion whether to follow the Risk Assessment Group's recommendations will provide meaningful opportunities, through the rulemaking and rule challenge procedures, for public comment and input, legislative oversight, and, ultimately, judicial scrutiny, based on a complete evidentiary record developed in a Chapter 120 proceeding, of the Department's heretofore hidden factual and policy premises. Such vehicles for accountability are the very least the law should (and does) demand of an executive branch agency that has been vested with enormous discretion to implement a program capable of summarily depriving large numbers of citizens of their private property. The Rule-By-Definition The burden of proof is on the party seeking to prove the affirmative of an issue unless a statute provides otherwise. Florida Department of Transportation v. J.W.C. Company, Inc., 396 So. 2d 778, 786-87 (Fla. 1st DCA 1981). In a proceeding under Section 120.56(4) to determine a violation of Section 120.54(1)(a), Florida Statutes, therefore, the burden is on the petitioner to establish by a preponderance of evidence: (1) the substance of the agency statement; (2) facts sufficient to show that the statement constitutes a rule-by-definition; and (3) that the agency has not adopted the statement according to the rulemaking procedures. Section 120.56(4)(a), Florida Statutes. If the petitioner meets its burden, then the agency must carry the burden of proving that rulemaking is not feasible and practicable as provided in Section 120.54(1)(a). Section 120.56(4)(b), Florida Statutes. Section 120.52(15), Florida Statutes, defines the term “rule” to mean “each agency statement of general applicability that implements, interprets, or prescribes law or policy or describes the procedure or practice requirements of an agency and includes any form which imposes any requirement or solicits any information not specifically required by statute or by an existing rule.” A statement is a rule if it has the effect of a rule regardless whether the agency calls it a rule. In determining whether a statement meets the statutory definition of a rule, the important question is: What consequences does this statement cause within its field of operation? As the Court of Appeal, First District, explained, the breadth of the definition in Section 120.52(1[5]) indicates that the legislature intended the term to cover a great variety of agency statements regardless of how the agency designates them. Any agency statement is a rule if it "purports in and of itself to create certain rights and adversely affect others," [State Department of Administration v.] Stevens, 344 So. 2d [290,] 296 [(Fla. 1st DCA 1977)], or serves "by [its] own effect to create rights, or to require compliance, or otherwise to have the direct and consistent effect of law." McDonald v. Dep't of Banking & Fin., 346 So. 2d 569, 581 (Fla. 1st DCA 1977). State Department of Administration v. Harvey, 356 So. 2d 323, 325 (Fla. 1st DCA 1978); see also Amos v. Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services, 444 So. 2d 43, 46 (Fla. 1st DCA 1983). Because the focus is on effect rather than form, a statement need not be in writing to be a rule-by-definition. See Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles v. Schluter, 705 So. 2d 81, 84 (Fla. 1st DCA 1998). Given the circumstances of this case, it is instructive to take special note that the definition of “rule” expressly includes statements of general applicability that implement or interpret law. An agency’s interpretation of a statute that gives the statute a meaning not readily apparent from its literal reading and purports to create rights, require compliance, or otherwise have the direct and consistent effect of law, is a rule. See Beverly Enterprises-Florida, Inc. v. Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services, 573 So. 2d 19, 22 (Fla. 1st DCA 1990); St. Francis Hospital, Inc. v. Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services, 553 So. 2d 1351, 1354 (Fla. 1st DCA 1989). As set forth in the Findings of Fact, Petitioners have proved, by the required quantum of evidence, that the Department adopted and has implemented a statement of general applicability which has been denominated herein, for convenience, the PRZ Policy.25 The PRZ Policy is, ironically, the kind of rule that Section 581.184(2), Florida Statutes, requires, because (unlike the Department's adopted rules) it specifies facts and circumstances that, if present, would require the destruction of asymptomatic plants for purposes of eradicating citrus canker. That the PRZ Policy includes an exception under which some trees within the Presumptive Removal Zone might be spared does not diminish its general applicability or dampen its effect, which is that of a rule. Rules often have exceptions; there is nothing novel about that, just as there is nothing extraordinary about rule provisions, such as the PRZ Policy's exception, that authorize a discretionary act.26 In addition, the PRZ Policy implements, and constitutes the Department's interpretation of, Section 581.031(17), Florida Statutes, bringing rigor to the inexact statutory phrase: "area which may be suspected of being infested or infected due to its proximity to a known infestation." The wisdom of this interpretation is not presently before the undersigned. The unavoidable conclusion regarding this interpretation, however, is that it gives the statute a meaning which is not readily apparent from a literal reading thereof and, moreover, requires compliance, adversely affects the rights of property owners, and has the direct and consistent effect of law. In sum, the PRZ Policy falls squarely within the meaning of the term "rule" as defined in Section 120.52(1); it is, put simply, a rule-by-definition. According to Section 120.54(1)(a), “[r]ulemaking is not a matter of agency discretion. Each agency statement defined as a rule by s. 120.52 [such as the PRZ Policy] shall be adopted by the rulemaking procedure provided by this section as soon as feasible and practicable.” (Emphasis added). Once Petitioners met their obligation at hearing to prove that the challenged statement is a rule-by-definition, it became the Department’s burden to prove that adopting the PRZ Policy as a rule would have been either unfeasible or impracticable. Section 120.56(4)(b), Florida Statutes. The Department failed to rebut by a preponderance of evidence the presumption, established in Section 120.54(1)(a)2., Florida Statutes, that rulemaking is practicable. Accordingly, it has been presumed that rulemaking was in fact practicable as of January 1, 2000, when the PRZ Policy took effect. In contrast, the Department did prove that it is currently using the rulemaking process expeditiously and in good faith to adopt rules that articulate the PRZ Policy in part, as discussed below. Thus, in accordance with Section 120.54(1)(a)1.c., Florida Statutes, the Department arguably rebutted the statutory prescription that rulemaking "shall be presumed feasible." The Proposed Amendments to Chapter 5B-58, Florida Administrative Code, effectively incorporate so much of the PRZ Policy as deems trees within a 1900-foot radius of an infected tree to be "exposed" (or, in the proposed rule's terminology, "exposed to infection") and hence subject to destruction. The Proposed Amendments do not, however, address that part of the PRZ Policy which requires the destruction of all trees located within the Presumptive Removal Zone except those designated by the Commissioner as posing a less-than-imminent danger. Indeed, the invalid fourth sentence of Rule 5B- 58.001(5) would subsist substantially intact, save only for the substitution of the term "exposed to infection" for "exposed," after adoption of the Proposed Amendments. Thus, the Proposed Amendments are silent on a crucial aspect of the PRZ Policy. To rebut the presumption of feasibility pursuant to Section 120.54(1)(a)1.c., Florida Statutes, an agency must show that it "is currently using the rulemaking procedure expeditiously and in good faith to adopt rules which address the statement." Whether an agency that it is actively attempting to adopt rules which address some portion of a rule-by-definition, as the Department is doing, should be found to have rebutted the presumption of feasibility is the question. Guidance on this issue is found in a closely related statutory provision, Section 120.56(4)(e), Florida Statutes, which provides in relevant part: Prior to entry of a final order that all or part of an agency statement violates s. 120.54(1)(a), if an agency publishes, pursuant to s. 120.54(3)(a), proposed rules which address the statement and proceeds expeditiously and in good faith to adopt rules which address the statement, the agency shall be permitted to rely upon the statement or a substantially similar statement as a basis for agency action if the statement meets the requirements of s. 120.57(1)(e). (Emphasis added). The "substantially similar" statement upon which an agency in such circumstances is permitted to rely should be found, presumably, within its proposed rules. (Why should the agency be allowed to apply a third variation on the same theme?) Sections 120.54(1)(a)1.c. and 120.56(4)(e), being in pari materia, should be construed together to achieve a unified legislative purpose. Accordingly, it is concluded that, for a proposed rule to "address" an agency statement for purposes of Section 120.54(1)(a)1.c., it must be, if not identical, at least "substantially similar" to the statement. The proposed revisions to Chapter 5B-58.001, Florida Administrative Code, do not, taken as a whole, constitute a statement "substantially similar" to the PRZ Policy. The missing component——which specifies the requirement that trees in the Presumptive Removal Zone be destroyed unless exempted by the Commissioner's discretionary act——is fundamental to the rule-by- definition. Without it, the Proposed Amendments fail to articulate——to "address"——the Department's generally applicable policy. As a result, the Department has failed to rebut the presumption of feasibility. The outcome would be the same, however, even if the Department were given the benefit of a decision that its proposed rule revisions "address" the challenged agency statement for purposes of Section 120.54(1)(a)1.c., Florida Statutes. The reason is that, in this alternative ruling, all the Department has done is erase the presumption of feasibility to which Petitioners otherwise would be entitled in aid of their proof. Evidence that an agency is currently engaged in rulemaking with regard to a statement is not, without more than the Department showed, the equivalent of proof that the agency began the rulemaking process as soon as feasible.27 And an agency that belatedly has commenced rulemaking on a statement of general applicability is no less in violation of Section 120.54(1)(a), Florida Statutes, than one that has not begun at all——although the consequences of a violation may be less severe for the dilatory, as opposed to the recalcitrant, agency. See Section 120.54(4)(e), Florida Statutes. Naturally, however, without the benefit of the presumption, the burden returns to the challenger to establish that the agency failed to timely (i.e. as soon as feasible) begin to adopt the statement as a rule.28 In this case, the evidence showed that the Department feasibly could have started to adopt the PRZ Policy as a rule as early as December 1999, if not sooner. It is concluded that rulemaking was feasible as of, and not later than, January 1, 2000, the date upon which the PRZ Policy took effect.29 In short, the Department's current rulemaking efforts are not only too little for it to benefit from Section 120.54(1)(a)1.c., Florida Statutes, but also come too late to avoid a finding that Section 120.54(1)(a) has been violated. Consequently, it is concluded that the Department has violated Section 120.54(1)(a), Florida Statutes, in connection with the PRZ Policy. Attorneys’ Fees and Costs Section 120.595(4)(a), Florida Statutes, provides that “[u]pon entry of a final order that all or part of an agency statement violates s. 120.54(1)(a), the administrative law judge shall award reasonable costs and reasonable attorneys' fees to the petitioner, unless the agency demonstrates that the statement is required by the Federal Government to implement or retain a delegated or approved program or to meet a condition to receipt of federal funds." The Department has not proved the applicability of an exception to the mandate that attorneys’ fees and costs be awarded to the successful petitioner in a Section 120.56(4) proceeding. Accordingly, it is hereby determined that Petitioners are entitled to recover a reasonable sum for the attorneys’ fees and costs they have incurred in the prosecution of this action. The amount of the award shall be determined by separate order.

Florida Laws (10) 120.52120.536120.54120.56120.57120.595120.68570.07581.031581.184 Florida Administrative Code (1) 5B-58.001
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EMMITT KING, JR., D/B/A KAD HARVESTING AND HAULING, LLC vs DELICIOUS CITRUS PACKING, LLC, AND PLATTE RIVER INSURANCE COMPANY, AS SURETY, 16-006841 (2016)
Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Filed:Port St. Lucie, Florida Nov. 17, 2016 Number: 16-006841 Latest Update: Sep. 20, 2017

The Issue The issues are whether Respondent Delicious Citrus Packing, LLC (Respondent), as a citrus fruit dealer, has failed to pay Petitioner for citrus fruit, as required by section 601.64(4), Florida Statutes; and, if so, the amount that Respondent owes Petitioner.

Findings Of Fact Respondent holds a Citrus Fruit Dealer's License number 252, effective August 31, 2015, for the 2015-16 season. The surety is Respondent Platte River Insurance Company. During the 2015-16 season, Petitioner picked citrus fruit from the groves of various third parties and transported the fruit to Respondent, which cleaned, waxed, and graded the fruit prior to selling it to various retailers, primarily, it seems, in South Florida. During the 2014-15 season, Petitioner and Respondent entered into contracts covering their respective rights and obligations in connection with transactions identical to those set forth in the preceding paragraph. An example is a contract dated April 10, 2015, signed by Petitioner and Respondent, specifying that Petitioner would purchase from a named third party from a named portion of a grove approximately 2000 citrus fruit for a delivered price of $16 per box with payment due upon delivery. The contract provides that Petitioner makes no allowance for fruit not meeting Respondent's specifications because Respondent had examined and preapproved the fruit on the tree. The parties did not document their agreement during the 2015-16 season, but the conditions were identical, although the price per box decreased, as set forth below. As was their practice during the preceding season, prior to the purchase and delivery by Petitioner, representatives of both companies visited the grove with the fruit still on the tree, and Respondent's representative approved the fruit, so, again, the agreement permitted no allowances for nonconforming fruit. Petitioner produced trip tickets documenting the delivery of 791 boxes of citrus fruit--all oranges--from September 25, 2015, through October 24, 2015. At this point, representatives of Petitioner and Respondent met to discuss the price of the fruit. Respondent complained that the fruit was too expensive based on what it could charge its purchasers, so Petitioner went back to the grove owners and negotiated a reduction in price. On November 2, 2015, Petitioner agreed to reduce its price from an undisclosed price per box to $15.50 per box, so as to reduce the outstanding balance for the 7791 boxes already delivered to $120,760.50. At that time, Respondent paid $85,250.50, leaving a balance due of $35,510. The parties promptly resumed their business dealings. A trip ticket dated November 2, 2015, documented the delivery of 550 boxes, for which the agreed-upon price was the $15.50 that the parties had set for the previous deliveries. However, even this price proved too high for Respondent, so the next two trip tickets, dated November 3 and 4, 2015, for a total of 1072 boxes, were priced at $13.50 per box. At some point, Respondent made two payments totaling $8811, and Respondent processed other fruit for Petitioner, earning a total credit of $2486 to be applied to the outstanding balance. These transactions reduced the balance to $47,210, which is the amount that Respondent presently owes Petitioner. The finding in the preceding paragraph reduced Petitioner's claim by $7157. As shown on the invoice dated April 6, 2016, received into evidence as Petitioner Exhibit 5, this balance was carried forward from the 2014-15 season. As explained in the Conclusions of Law, this case is limited to the 2015-16 season due to the timing of the filing of the Complaint. The findings in the preceding paragraphs discredit the testimony of Respondent's witnesses as to bad fruit that could not be sold. First, Respondent bore the risk of fruit that could not be sold for any reason, including spoilage. Second, Respondent did not assert this complaint when it negotiated a new purchase price on November 2, 2015. Third, Respondent did not object to the series of invoices that Petitioner submitted to Respondent, culminating in the April 6 invoice. Fourth, the testimony of Respondent's owner was vague and confusing, but twice seemed to confirm the indebtedness.

Recommendation It is RECOMMENDED that the Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services enter a final order determining that Respondent has violated section 601.64(4) by failing to pay Petitioner the sum of $47,210 for citrus fruit that Petitioner sold to Respondent during the 2015-16 shipping season and fixing a reasonable time within which Respondent shall pay such sum to Petitioner. DONE AND ENTERED this 6th day of March, 2017, in Tallahassee, Leon County, Florida. S ROBERT E. MEALE Administrative Law Judge Division of Administrative Hearings The DeSoto Building 1230 Apalachee Parkway Tallahassee, Florida 32399-3060 (850) 488-9675 Fax Filing (850) 921-6847 www.doah.state.fl.us Filed with the Clerk of the Division of Administrative Hearings this 6th day of March, 2017. COPIES FURNISHED: W. Alan Parkinson, Bureau Chief Bureau of Mediation and Enforcement Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services Rhodes Building, R-3 2005 Apalachee Parkway Tallahassee, Florida 32399-6500 (eServed) Emmitt King, Jr. KAD Harvesting and Hauling, LLC 850 South 21st Street Fort Pierce, Florida 34950 Platte River Insurance Company Attn: Claims Department Post Office Box 5900 Madison, Wisconsin 53705-0900 Douglas A. Lockwood, Esquire Straughn & Turner, P.A. 255 Magnolia Avenue Southwest Post Office Box 2295 Winter Haven, Florida 33880 (eServed) Dwight Johnathan Rhodeback, Esquire Rooney & Rooney, P.A. 1517 20th Street Vero Beach, Florida 32960 (eServed) Lorena Holley, General Counsel Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services 407 South Calhoun Street, Suite 520 Tallahassee, Florida 32399-0800 (eServed) Honorable Adam Putnam Commissioner of Agriculture Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services The Capitol, Plaza Level 10 Tallahassee, Florida 32399-0810

Florida Laws (7) 120.569120.57601.03601.64601.65601.66760.50
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LOUIS DEL FAVERO ORCHIDS, INC. vs FLORIDA DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH, OFFICE OF COMPASSIONATE USE, 19-001035F (2019)
Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Filed:Tallahassee, Florida Feb. 26, 2019 Number: 19-001035F Latest Update: Apr. 24, 2020

The Issue Whether there is substantial justification or special circumstances to preclude Petitioner from receiving an award of attorneys’ fees and costs pursuant to section 120.595(2), Florida Statutes (2017).1/

Findings Of Fact Based on the oral and documentary evidence, written submissions from the parties following issuance of ALJ McKibben’s Final Order, and the entire record in this proceeding, the following Findings of Fact are made: Section 381.986(8), Florida Statutes and the Proposed Rule Section 381.986(8), Florida Statutes, establishes a mechanism for the licensing of medical marijuana treatment centers (“MMTC”). The statute was amended in 2017 to provide, in pertinent part, that: (8) MEDICAL MARIJUANA TREATMENT CENTERS. (a) The department shall license medical marijuana treatment centers to ensure reasonable statewide accessibility and availability as necessary for qualified patients registered in the medical marijuana use registry and who are issued a physician certification under this section. * * * The department shall license as medical marijuana treatment centers 10 applicants that meet the requirements of this section, under the following parameters: [Previously denied applicants meeting certain requirements not relevant to the instant action.] [One applicant from a specific class pursuant to a federal lawsuit.] As soon as practicable, but no later than October 3, 2017, the department shall license applicants that meet the requirements of this section in sufficient numbers to result in 10 total licenses issued under this subparagraph, while accounting for the number of licenses issued under sub-subparagraphs a. and b. For up to two of the licenses issued under subparagraph 2., the department shall give preference to applicants that demonstrate in their applications that they own one or more facilities that are, or were, used for the canning, concentrating, or otherwise processing of citrus fruit or citrus molasses and will use or convert the facility or facilities for the processing of marijuana. (emphasis added). The Proposed Rule was intended to implement the changes to section 381.986; but, where section 381.986(8)(a)3., uses the term “facility,” the Proposed Rule substitutes the term “property.” For instance, the Proposed Rule provides, in pertinent part, that: (1)(f) For applicants seeking preference for registration as a medical marijuana treatment center pursuant to ss. 381.986(8)(a)3., F.S., the applicant must provide evidence that: The property at issue currently is or was previously used for the canning, concentrating, or otherwise processing of citrus fruit or citrus molasses. In order to demonstrate the property meets this criteria, the applicant may provide documentation that the applicant currently holds or has held a registration certificate pursuant to section 601.40, F.S. A letter from the Department of Citrus certifying that the property currently is or was previously used for the canning, concentrating, or otherwise processing of citrus fruit or citrus molasses will be accepted as sufficient evidence; The applicant as an individual holds, in his or her name, or the applicant as an entity holds, in the legal name of the entity, the deed to property meeting the criteria set forth in subparagraph 1. above; and A brief explanation of how the property will be used for purposes of growing, processing, or dispensing medical marijuana if the applicant is selected for registration. * * * Subject matter experts will substantively and comparatively review, evaluate, and score applications using [the Scorecard incorporated by reference]. * * * (a)7.(b) Scores for each section of the application will be combined to create an applicant’s total score. The department shall generate a final ranking of the applicants in order of highest to lowest scores. . . . (c) In accordance with ss. 381.986(8)(a)3., F.S., the two highest scoring applicants that own one or more facilities that are, or were, used for the canning, concentrating, or otherwise processing of citrus fruit or citrus molasses and will use or convert the facility or facilities for the processing of marijuana will receive an additional 35 points to their respective total score. Licenses will be awarded, subject to availability as set forth in ss. 381.986(8)(a)2. and 381.986(8)(a)4., F.S., based on the highest total score in the following manner: The highest scoring applicant that is a recognized member of Pigford or [African American Farmers Discrimination Litigation] will receive a license. The remaining highest scoring applicants, after the addition of the preference points for applicants pursuant to paragraph (7)(c) above, will receive licenses up to the statutory cap set forth in ss. 381.986(8)(a)2., F.S. The remaining highest scoring applications, after removing any preference points received under paragraph (7)(c), will receive licenses up to the statutory cap set forth in ss. 381.986(8)(a)4., F.S. (emphasis added). The Parties The Department is the state agency charged with implementing the Compassionate Medical Cannabis Act of 2014. See § 381.986, Fla. Stat. Del Favero has been incorporated since 1974 and has been primarily engaged in the business of growing orchids. At the time of the final hearing in this matter, Del Favero aspired to apply for licensure as a medical marijuana treatment center. After Senate Bill 8A became law and substantially rewrote section 381.986, Del Favero elected to seek the citrus preference described in section 381.986(8)(a)3. In order to accomplish that goal, Del Favero purchased the real property and facilities of a citrus processing business in Safety Harbor, Florida, for approximately $775,000. The purchase occurred prior to the Proposed Rule’s publication. Del Favero intends to convert the citrus processing facility located on the Safety Harbor property into a medical marijuana processing facility if Del Favero becomes a licensed MMTC. Pertinent Portions of ALJ McKibben’s Analysis In ruling that the Proposed Rule was invalid, ALJ McKibben made the following findings: The Legislature clearly intended to give a preference to applicants who “own . . . facilities that are, or were, used for canning, concentrating, or otherwise processing of citrus . . . and will use or convert the . . . facilities for the processing of medical marijuana.” The Legislature failed, however, to provide guidance by way of definitions. While the Legislature chose the words “facility or facilities” in the Preference Statute, the Department complicated the issue by using the word “property” for the most part, but also using the words “facility” and “facilities” at times. Favero contends that a property is much broader in scope than a facility, and the Department therefore exceeded its delegated legislative authority. The Department argues that facilities used to process citrus must be located on some property, obviously. But, facilities located on a property might be leased, so that the fee simple owner of the property is different from the leaseholder of that facility. Thus, if an applicant for a medical marijuana treatment center license wants to avail itself of the preference, it would need to own the facility. Whether that means the applicant must own the property on which the facility is located is not clear in the Preference Statute or in the Proposed Rule. The Department argues that the way to show ownership of a facility is by way of a deed to the property on which the facility is located. In fact, Favero will use a warranty deed to prove ownership of the facilities it purchased in order to obtain the preference. But if Favero purchased land on which citrus had been grown but not processed, i.e., if there had been no facilities on the land to can, concentrate or otherwise process the fruit, except in fresh fruit form, the preference would not apply. And if an applicant obtained a leasehold interest in a facility, it would not be able to “show ownership” by way of a deed to the property. The Preference Statute requires the applicant to convert the facility in order to gain the preference. It is unclear how a piece of unimproved property can be “converted” to another use; land is land. This begs the question of whether growing citrus on a piece of property, and then removing all the citrus trees in order to grow medical marijuana, is a “conversion” of a facility as contemplated by the Legislature. Neither the Preference Statute nor the Proposed Rule contain any definitional assistance to answer that question. An important question to be answered is whether the growing of citrus constitutes “processing” as alluded to by the Legislature. The Preference Statute provides no definition of the word. The Citrus Code (chapter 601, Florida Statutes) also does not define “processing,” but does describe a “processor” of citrus as: ‘[A]ny person engaged within this state in the business of canning, concentrating, or otherwise processing citrus fruit for market other than for shipment in fresh fruit form.” § 601.03(32), Fla. Stat. (Emphasis added) (sic). Processing must therefore mean something other than merely growing citrus and packing it up for shipment. That being the case, a property where citrus is grown that is “converted” to a property growing marijuana would not afford an applicant a preference. There must be some “facility” that is or has been used to process citrus, i.e., doing something more with the raw product, in order to constitute “processing.” Therefore, a “packinghouse,” i.e., “[a]ny building, structure, or place where citrus fruit is packed or otherwise prepared for market or shipment in fresh fruit form,” would not be engaged in “processing” citrus. See § 601.03(29), Fla. Stat. (emphasis added). ALJ McKibben then made the following Conclusions of Law: In this instance, the Department interprets the statutory language concerning “facility or facilities” to include “property.” It is impossible to reconcile that interpretation, especially in light of the fact the Legislature contemplated conversion of the facilities. The Department’s interpretation is hereby rejected as being outside the range of permissible interpretations. See Cleveland v. Fla. Dep’t of Child. & Fams., 868 So. 2d 1227 (Fla. 1st DCA 2004).[2/] The test is whether the agency’s proposed rule properly implements specific laws. See § 120.52(8)(f), Fla. Stat. The Preference Statute specifically provided a preference for using or converting citrus facilities, not properties. The Proposed Rule does not implement that specific provision of the law. (emphasis added). The Department’s Rationale for Substituting “Property” for “Facility” The Department asserted during the final hearing that it consulted with the Citrus Department on how to interpret the phrase “otherwise processing.”3/ See § 381.986(8)(a)3. (providing that “the department shall give preference to applicants that demonstrate in their applications that they own one or more facilities that are, or were, used for the canning, concentrating, or otherwise processing of citrus fruit . . .”). (emphasis added). Ms. Shepp, the Citrus Department’s executive director, testified that activities such as picking, grading, sorting, polishing, and packing citrus fruit constitute “otherwise processing.” She also testified that a packinghouse conducts the aforementioned activities. Section 601.03(29), Florida Statutes, defines a “packinghouse” as “any building, structure, or place where citrus is packed or otherwise prepared for market or shipment in fresh form.” (emphasis added) See the Department’s Proposed Final Order at 9, 10, and 15. Because “a place” can be an area without a physical structure, the Department concluded that using the word “property” in the Proposed Rule rather than “facility” would enable applicants who engage in “otherwise processing” to be eligible for the preference. The Department also argued that this substitution is justified because “it is not uncommon in the citrus industry to conduct citrus operations in the open air or in a tent.” See Department’s Memorandum of Law in Opposition to Petitioner’s Motion for Attorney’s Fees at 9.4/ Ms. Coppola explained that the Department substituted “property” for “facility” in order to assist the distressed citrus industry. Finally, Ms. Coppola stated that using the term “property” serves the legislative intent to extend the preference to applicants that are not presently engaged in canning, concentrating, or otherwise processing but had been in the past.5/ As discussed below in the Conclusions of Law, the Department had no substantial justification for substituting the word “property” for “facility” and thus extending the citrus preference beyond what the Florida Legislature had intended. Moreover, there are no special circumstances that would make an award of attorneys’ fees to Del Favero unjust.

Florida Laws (8) 120.52120.56120.595120.68381.98657.111601.03601.40 Florida Administrative Code (1) 64-4.002 DOAH Case (4) 02-2230BID02-3138RP02-3922F19-1035F
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LOUIS DREYFUS CITRUS, INC.; TAMPA JUICE SERVICE, INC.; PASCO BEVERAGE COMPANY; AND JUICE SOURCE, L.L.C. vs DEPARTMENT OF CITRUS, 03-000595RP (2003)
Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Filed:Tallahassee, Florida Feb. 24, 2003 Number: 03-000595RP Latest Update: May 20, 2003

The Issue The issue presented for decision is whether Proposed Rules 20-15.001, 20-15.002, and 20-15.003 constitute an invalid exercise of delegated legislative authority pursuant to Section 120.52(8)(a)-(e), Florida Statutes.

Findings Of Fact Based on the stipulated facts, and the entire record in this proceeding, the following findings of fact are made: The Florida Citrus Commission was established in 1935 to organize and promote the growing and sale of various citrus products, fresh and processed, in the State of Florida. The purpose of the Citrus Commission is today reflected in Section 601.02, Florida Statutes. The powers of the Florida Citrus Commission ("the Commission") and the Department, are set forth in full in Section 601.10, Florida Statutes. The powers of the Department include the power to tax and raise other revenue to achieve the purposes of the Department. In particular, Section 601.10(1) and (2), Florida Statutes, state: The Department of Citrus shall have and shall exercise such general and specific powers as are delegated to it by this chapter and other statutes of the state, which powers shall include, but shall not be confined to, the following: To adopt and, from time to time, alter, rescind, modify, or amend all proper and necessary rules, regulations, and orders for the exercise of its powers and the performance of its duties under this chapter and other statutes of the state, which rules and regulations shall have the force and effect of law when not inconsistent therewith. To act as the general supervisory authority over the administration and enforcement of this chapter and to exercise such other powers and perform such other duties as may be imposed upon it by other laws of the state. The Department is authorized to set standards by Section 601.11, Florida Statutes, as follows: The Department of Citrus shall have full and plenary power to, and may, establish state grades and minimum maturity and quality standards not inconsistent with existing laws for citrus fruits and food products thereof containing 20 percent or more citrus or citrus juice, whether canned or concentrated, or otherwise processed, including standards for frozen concentrate for manufacturing purposes, and for containers therefor, and shall prescribe rules or regulations governing the marking, branding, labeling, tagging, or stamping of citrus fruit, or products thereof whether canned or concentrated, or otherwise processed, and upon containers therefor for the purpose of showing the name and address of the person marketing such citrus fruit or products thereof whether canned or concentrated or otherwise processed; the grade, quality, variety, type, or size of citrus fruit, the grade, quality, variety, type, and amount of the products thereof whether canned or concentrated or otherwise processed, and the quality, type, size, dimensions, and shape of containers therefor, and to regulate or prohibit the use of containers which have been previously used for the sale, transportation, or shipment of citrus fruit or the products thereof whether canned or concentrated or otherwise processed, or any other commodity; provided, however, that the use of secondhand containers for sale and delivery of citrus fruit for retail consumption within the state shall not be prohibited; provided, however, that no standard, regulation, rule, or order under this section which is repugnant to any requirement made mandatory under federal law or regulations shall apply to citrus fruit, or the products thereof, whether canned or concentrated or otherwise processed, or to containers therefor, which are being shipped from this state in interstate commerce. All citrus fruit and the products thereof whether canned or concentrated or otherwise processed sold, or offered for sale, or offered for shipment within or without the state shall be graded and marked as required by this section and the regulations, rules, and orders adopted and made under authority of this section, which regulations, rules, and orders shall, when not inconsistent with state or federal law, have the force and effect of law. The Department is authorized to conduct citrus research by Section 601.13, Florida Statutes. To help pay for these duties of the Department, the Legislature first enacted the "box tax" in 1949. The box tax is now codified as Section 601.15(3), Florida Statutes. Section 601.15(3)(a), Florida Statutes, provides in relevant part: There is hereby levied and imposed upon each standard-packed box of citrus fruit grown and placed into the primary channel of trade in this state an excise tax at annual rates for each citrus season as determined from the tables in this paragraph and based upon the previous season's actual statewide production as reported in the United States Department of Agriculture Citrus Crop Production Forecast as of June 1. Section 601.15(3)(a), Florida Statutes, goes on to set forth specific rates for fresh grapefruit, processed grapefruit, fresh oranges, processed oranges, and fresh or processed tangerines and citrus hybrids. Section 601.15(1), Florida Statutes, sets forth the Department's authority to administer the box tax, as follows: The administration of this section shall be vested in the Department of Citrus, which shall prescribe suitable and reasonable rules and regulations for the enforcement hereof, and the Department of Citrus shall administer the taxes levied and imposed hereby. All funds collected under this section and the interest accrued on such funds are consideration for a social contract between the state and the citrus growers of the state whereby the state must hold such funds in trust and inviolate and use them only for the purposes prescribed in this chapter. The Department of Citrus shall have power to cause its duly authorized agent or representative to enter upon the premises of any handler of citrus fruits and to examine or cause to be examined any books, papers, records, or memoranda bearing on the amount of taxes payable and to secure other information directly or indirectly concerned in the enforcement hereof. Any person who is required to pay the taxes levied and imposed and who by any practice or evasion makes it difficult to enforce the provisions hereof by inspection, or any person who, after demand by the Department of Citrus or any agent or representative designated by it for that purpose, refuses to allow full inspection of the premises or any part thereof or any books, records, documents, or other instruments in any manner relating to the liability of the taxpayer for the tax imposed or hinders or in anywise delays or prevents such inspection, is guilty of a misdemeanor of the second degree, punishable as provided in s. 775.082 or s. 775.083. The box tax was challenged in 1936 under various provisions of the Florida Constitution as well as the Export Clause, Article 1, s. 9, cl. 5, of the United States Constitution. The Florida Supreme Court issued an opinion in 1937 upholding the validity of the box tax. C.V. Floyd Fruit Company v. Florida Citrus Commission, 128 Fla. 565, 175 So. 248 (1937). In 1970, the Legislature enacted the "equalization tax," codified as Section 601.155, Florida Statutes. The statute mirrored Section 601.15, Florida Statutes, but added certain processors who were mixing foreign citrus products with Florida products. The purpose of the equalization tax was to have all Florida processors of citrus products help pay for the costs of the Department, rather than have the burden fall entirely on the Florida growers subject to the box tax. Section 601.155, Florida Statutes, provides, in relevant part: The first person who exercises in this state the privilege of processing, reprocessing, blending, or mixing processed orange products or processed grapefruit products or the privilege of packaging or repackaging processed orange products or processed grapefruit products into retail or institutional size containers or, except as provided in subsection (9) or except if a tax is levied and collected on the exercise of one of the foregoing privileges, the first person having title to or possession of any processed orange product or any processed grapefruit product who exercises the privilege in this state of storing such product or removing any portion of such product from the original container in which it arrived in this state for purposes other than official inspection or direct consumption by the consumer and not for resale shall be assessed and shall pay an excise tax upon the exercise of such privilege at the rate described in subsection (2). Upon the exercise of any privilege described in subsection (1), the excise tax levied by this section shall be at the same rate per box of oranges or grapefruit utilized in the initial production of the processed citrus products so handled as that imposed, at the time of exercise of the taxable privilege, by s. 601.15 per box of oranges. In order to administer the tax, the Legislature provided the following relevant provisions in Section 601.155, Florida Statutes: Every person liable for the excise tax imposed by this section shall keep a complete and accurate record of the receipt, storage, handling, exercise of any taxable privilege under this section, and shipment of all products subject to the tax imposed by this section. Such record shall be preserved for a period of 1 year and shall be offered for inspection upon oral or written request by the Department of Citrus or its duly authorized agent. Every person liable for the excise tax imposed by this section shall, at such times and in such manner as the Department of Citrus may by rule require, file with the Department of Citrus a return, certified as true and correct, on forms to be prescribed and furnished by the Department of Citrus, stating, in addition to other information reasonably required by the Department of Citrus, the number of units of processed orange or grapefruit products subject to this section upon which any taxable privilege under this section was exercised during the period of time covered by the return. Full payment of excise taxes due for the period reported shall accompany each return. All taxes levied and imposed by this section shall be due and payable within 61 days after the first of the taxable privileges is exercised in this state. Periodic payment of the excise taxes imposed by this section by the person first exercising the taxable privileges and liable for such payment shall be permitted only in accordance with Department of Citrus rules, and the payment thereof shall be guaranteed by the posting of an appropriate certificate of deposit, approved surety bond, or cash deposit in an amount and manner as prescribed by the Department of Citrus. * * * (11) This section shall be liberally construed to effectuate the purposes set forth and as additional and supplemental powers vested in the Department of Citrus under the police power of this state. In March 2000, certain citrus businesses challenged Section 601.155(5), Florida Statutes, as being unconstitutional. At the time of the suit, Section 601.155(5), Florida Statutes, read as follows: All products subject to the taxable privileges under this section, which products are produced in whole or in part from citrus fruit grown within the United States, are exempt from the tax imposed by this section to the extent that the products are derived from oranges or grapefruit grown within the United States. In the case of products made in part from citrus fruit grown within the United States, it shall be the burden of the persons liable for the excise tax to show the Department of Citrus, through competent evidence, proof of that part which is not subject to a taxable privilege. The citrus businesses claimed the exemption in Section 601.155(5) rendered the tax unconstitutionally discriminatory, in that processors who imported juice from foreign countries to be blended with Florida juice were subject to the equalization tax, whereas processors who imported juice from places such as California, Arizona and Texas enjoyed an exemption from the tax. The case, Tampa Juice Service, Inc., et al. v. Department of Citrus, Case No. GCG-00-3718 (Consolidated) ("Tampa Juice"), was brought in the Tenth Judicial Circuit Court, in and for Polk County. Judge Dennis P. Maloney of that court continues to preside over that case. In a partial final declaratory judgment effective March 15, 2002, Judge Maloney found Section 601.155, Florida Statutes, unconstitutional because it violated the Commerce Clause of the United States Constitution due to its discriminatory effect in favor of non-Florida United States juice. In an order dated April 15, 2002, Judge Maloney severed the exemption in Section 601.155(5), Florida Statutes, from the remainder of the statute. The court's decision necessitated the formulation of a remedy for the injured plaintiffs. While the parties were briefing the issue before the court, the Florida Legislature met and passed Chapter 2002-26, Laws of Florida, which amended Section 601.155(5), Florida Statutes, to read as follows: Products made in whole or in part from citrus fruit on which an equivalent tax is levied pursuant to s. 601.15 are exempt from the tax imposed by this section. In the case of products made in part from citrus fruit exempt from the tax imposed by this section, it shall be the burden of the persons liable for the excise tax to show the Department of Citrus, through competent evidence, proof of that part which is not subject to a taxable privilege. Chapter 2002-26, Laws of Florida, was given an effective date of July 1, 2002. By order dated August 8, 2002, Judge Maloney set forth his decision as to the remedy for the plaintiffs injured by the discriminatory effect of Section 601.155(5), Florida Statutes. Judge Maloney expressly relied on the rationale set forth in Division of Alcoholic Beverages and Tobacco v. McKesson Corporation, 574 So. 2d 114 (Fla. 1991)("McKesson II"). In its initial McKesson decision, Division of Alcoholic Beverages and Tobacco v. McKesson Corporation, 524 So. 2d 1000 (Fla. 1988), the Florida Supreme Court affirmed a summary judgment ruling that Florida's alcoholic beverage tax scheme, which gave tax preferences and exemptions to certain alcoholic beverages made from Florida crops, unconstitutionally discriminated against interstate commerce. The Florida Supreme Court also affirmed that portion of the summary judgment giving the ruling prospective effect, thus denying the plaintiff a refund of taxes paid pursuant to the unconstitutional scheme. The decision was appealed to the United States Supreme Court. In McKesson Corporation v. Division of Alcoholic Beverages and Tobacco, 496 U.S. 18 (1990), the United States Supreme Court reversed the Florida Supreme Court's decision as to the prospective effect of its decision. The United States Supreme Court held that: The question before us is whether prospective relief, by itself, exhausts the requirements of federal law. The answer is no: If a State places a taxpayer under duress promptly to pay a tax when due and relegates him to a postpayment refund action in which he can challenge the tax's legality, the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment obligates the State to provide meaningful backward-looking relief to rectify any unconstitutional deprivation. 496 U.S. at 31 (footnotes omitted). The United States Supreme Court set forth the following options by which the state could meet its obligation to provide "meaningful backward-looking relief": [T]he State may cure the invalidity of the Liquor Tax by refunding to petitioner the difference between the tax it paid and the tax it would have been assessed were it extended the same rate reductions that its competitors actually received. . . . Alternatively, to the extent consistent with other constitutional restrictions, the State may assess and collect back taxes from petitioner's competitors who benefited from the rate reductions during the contested tax period, calibrating the retroactive assessment to create in hindsight a nondiscriminatory scheme. . . . Finally, a combination of a partial refund to petitioner and a partial retroactive assessment of tax increases on favored competitors, so long as the resultant tax actually assessed during the contested tax period reflects a scheme that does not discriminate against interstate commerce, would render Petitioner's resultant deprivation lawful and therefore satisfy the Due Process Clause's requirement of a fully adequate postdeprivation procedure. 496 U.S. at 40-41 (citations and footnotes omitted). The United States Supreme Court expressly provided that the state has the option of choosing the form of relief it will grant. In keeping with the United States Supreme Court opinion, the Florida Supreme Court granted the Division of Alcoholic Beverages and Tobacco (the "Division") leave to advise the Court as to the form of relief the state wished to provide. The Division proposed to retroactively assess and collect taxes from those of McKesson's competitors who had benefited from the discriminatory tax scheme. McKesson contended that a refund of the taxes it had paid was the only clear and certain remedy, because retroactive taxation of its competitors would violate their due process rights. McKesson II, 574 So. 2d at 116. The Florida Supreme Court remanded the case to the trial court for further proceedings on McKesson's refund claim, with the following instructions: While McKesson may not necessarily be entitled to a refund, it is entitled to a "clear and certain remedy," as outlined in the Supreme Court's opinion. Because nonparties, such as amici, will be directly affected by the retroactive tax scheme proposed by the state, all affected by the proposed emergency rule must be given notice and an opportunity to intervene in this action. Therefore, on remand, the trial court not only must determine whether the state's proposal meets "the minimum federal requirements" outlined in the Supreme Court's opinion, it also must determine whether the proposal comports with federal and state protections afforded those against whom the proposed tax will be assessed. We emphasize that the state has the option of choosing the manner in which it will reformulate the alcoholic beverage tax during the contested period so that the resultant tax actually assessed during that period reflects a scheme which does not discriminate against interstate commerce. Therefore, if the trial court should rule that the state's proposal to retroactively assess and collect taxes from McKesson's competitors does not meet constitutional muster and such ruling is upheld on appeal, the state may offer an alternative remedy for the trial court's review. However, any such proposal likewise must satisfy the standards set forth by the Supreme Court as well as be consistent with other constitutional restrictions. 574 So. 2d at 116. In the Tampa Juice case, Judge Maloney assessed the options prescribed by the series of McKesson cases and concluded that the only fair remedy was to assess and collect back assessments from those who benefited from the unconstitutional equalization tax exemption. His August 8, 2002, order directed the Department to "take appropriate steps, consistent with existing law, to assess and collect the Equalization tax from those entities which [benefited] from the unconstitutional exemption." On September 18, 2002, the Department promulgated the Emergency Rules that were at issue in DOAH Case No. 02-3648RE. The Emergency Rules were filed with the Department of State on September 24, 2002, and took effect on that date. Those emergency rules were held invalid in Peace River, and are not at issue in the instant case. In the November 15, 2002 issue of the Florida Administrative Weekly (vol. 28, no. 46, pp. 4996-4998), the Department published the Proposed Rules that were at issue in DOAH Case No. 02-4607RP. In the March 7, 2003, issue of the Florida Administrative Weekly (vol. 29, no. 10, p. 1036), the Department published amendments to the Proposed Rule. The Proposed Rules, as amended, read as follows: EQUALIZATION TAX ON NON-FLORIDA UNITED STATES JUICE 20-15.001 Intent. The Court in Tampa Juice Service, et al v. Florida Department of Citrus in Consolidated Case Number GCG-003718 (Circuit Court in and for Polk County, Florida) severed the exemption contained in Section 601.155(5), Florida Statutes, that provided an exemption for persons who exercised one of the enumerated Equalization Tax privileges on non-Florida, United States juice. The Court had previously determined that the stricken provisions operated in a manner that violated the Commerce Clause of the United States Constitution. On August 8, 2002, the Court ordered that the Florida Department of Citrus "take appropriate steps, consistent with existing law, to assess and collect the Equalization tax from those entities which [benefited] from the unconstitutional exemption." It is the Florida Department of Citrus' intent by promulgating the following remedial rule to implement a non- discriminatory tax scheme, which does not impose a significant tax burden that is so harsh and oppressive as to transgress constitutional limitations. These rules shall be applicable to those previously favored persons who received favorable tax treatment under the statutory sections cited above. Specific Authority 601.02, 601.10, 601.15, 601.155 FS. Law Implemented 601.02, 601.10, , 601.155 FS. History-- New . 20-15.002 Definitions. "Previously favored persons" shall be defined as any person who exercised an enumerated Equalization Tax privilege as defined by Section 601.155, Florida Statutes, but who was exempt from payment of the Equalization Tax due to the exemption for non-Florida, United States juice set forth in the statutory provision, which was ultimately determined to be unconstitutional and severed from Section 601.155(5), Florida Statutes. The "tax period" during which the severed provisions of Section 601.155(5), Florida Statutes, were in effect shall be defined as commencing on October 6, 1997, and ending on March 14, 2002. "Tax liability" shall be defined as the total amount of taxes due to the Florida Department of Citrus during the "tax period," at the following rates per box for each respective fiscal year: Fiscal Year Processed Rate Orange Grapefruit 1997-1998 .175 .30 1998-1999 .17 .30 1999-2000 .18 .325 2000-2001 .175 .30 2001-2002 .165 .18 Specific Authority 601.02, 601.10, 601.15, 601.155 FS. Law Implemented 601.02, 601.10, , 601.155 FS. History-- New . 20-15.003 Collection. The Florida Department of Citrus shall calculate the tax liability for each person or entity that exercised an enumerated Equalization Tax privilege outlined in section 601.155, Florida Statutes, upon non-Florida, United States juice based upon inspection records maintained by Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services and the United States Department of Agriculture. Subsequent to adoption of this rule, the Florida Department of Citrus will provide to the previously favored persons by certified mail a Notice of Tax Liability which shall contain a demand for payment consistent with the above-referenced itemized statement. The Department will deem late payment of Equalization Taxes owed by previously favored persons to constitute good cause, and shall waive the 5 percent penalty authorized by Section 601.155(10), F.S., as compliance with either of the following is established by Department [sic]: Lump sum payment of the tax liability remitted with the filing of Department of Citrus Form 4R (incorporated by reference in Rule 20-100.004, F.A.C.) for the relevant years and then-applicable tax rate(s) per subsection 20-15.002(3), F.A.C., within 61 days of receiving Notice of Tax Liability; or Equal installment payments remitted with the filing of Department of Citrus Form 4R (incorporated by reference in Rule 20- 100.004, F.A.C.) for the relevant years and then-applicable tax rate(s) per subsection subsection [sic] 20-15.002(3), F.A.C., over a 60-month period, the first payment being due within 61 days of receiving Notice of Tax Liability pursuant to subsection 20- 15.003(2), F.A.C.; or The Good Cause provisions of 601.155(10), F.S., shall not apply to persons who do not comply with paragraph 20- 15.003(2)(a), F.A.C., or paragraph 20- 15.003(2)(b), F.A.C. Failure to pay the taxes or penalties due under 601.155, F.S. and Chapter 20-15, F.A.C., shall constitute grounds for revocation or suspension of a previously favored person's citrus fruit dealer's license pursuant to 601.56(4), F.S., 601.64(6), F.S., 601.64(7), F.S., and/or 601.67(1), F.S. The Florida Department of Citrus will not oppose the timely intervention of persons who previously enjoyed the subject exemption that wish to present a claim to the Court in the Tampa Juice Service, Inc., et al v. Florida Department of Citrus. However, the Florida Department of Citrus does not waive any argument regarding the validity of the calculation of the tax liability or that imposition of this tax is constitutional. Specific Authority 601.02, 601.10, 601.15, 601.155 FS. Law Implemented 601.02, 601.10, 601.15, 601.155 FS. History-- New . The Final Order in Peace River held that the Proposed Rules were not an invalid exercise of delegated legislative authority, for reasons discussed in the Conclusions of Law below. Judge Maloney has yet to rule on the backward-looking remedy proposed by the Department. On March 26, 2003, Judge Maloney entered an order extending until May 1, 2003, the time for interested parties to file motions to intervene with regard to the Department's proposed backward-looking relief. The order noted that the parties have stipulated to the suspension of the back tax as to plaintiffs and objecting non-parties until further order of the court. On February 19, 2003, Judge Maloney entered an "Order Granting Plaintiffs' Motion for Partial Summary Judgment-- Import-Export." The sole issue before Judge Maloney was "whether Section 601.155, Florida Statutes, (the 'Equalization Tax'), as it existed in 1997, violates Article I, Section 10, clause 2 of the Constitution of the United States (the 'Import- Export Clause')." (Emphasis in original) After setting forth the standard for analysis of whether a taxing scheme violates the Import-Export Clause under Michelin Tire Corp. v. Wages, 423 U.S. 276, 96 S. Ct. 535, 46 L.Ed.2d 495 (1976), Judge Maloney ruled as follows: It is precisely [the exemption for United States products found in 601.155(5), Florida Statutes] that causes the 1997 Equalization Tax to contravene the Import-Export Clause. Specifically, the court finds that because the statute exempts "citrus fruit grown within the United States," but does not exempt citrus fruit grown in foreign countries, the exemption causes the tax to "fall on imports as such simply because of their place of origin." Michelin, 423 U.S. at 286. Additionally, because the tax falls on foreign-grown citrus as such simply because of its origin but does not fall on domestic-grown citrus, the Equalization Tax, with the exemption, creates a "special tariff or particular preference for certain domestic goods." Id. (i.e. California, Arizona, and Texas citrus products). * * * In conclusion, because the court finds the exemption contained within the 1997 Equalization Tax violates both the first and third elements of the Michelin test,1 the court finds the 1997 Equalization Tax violates Article I, Section 10, clause 2 of the Constitution of the United States (the "Import-Export Clause"). On March 31, 2003, Judge Maloney entered an "Order Granting Plaintiffs' Motion for Partial Summary Judgment." In this order, Judge Maloney found that the box tax itself, Section 601.15, Florida Statutes, violates the First Amendment to the United States Constitution. Petitioners and Intervenor in the instant case are licensed citrus fruit dealers regulated by Chapter 601, Florida Statutes. As such, they are subject to the rules of the Department. Petitioners and Intervenor buy, sell, and manufacture citrus juices. They shipped products made with non- Florida U.S. juice during the tax period without paying equalization taxes. Petitioners and Intervenor have been notified by the Department that they are liable to pay back taxes pursuant to the Proposed Rules, as well as the invalid Emergency Rules.

Florida Laws (14) 120.52120.54120.56601.02601.10601.11601.13601.15601.155601.56601.64601.67775.082775.083
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SPYKE`S GROVE, INC., D/B/A FRESH FRUIT EXPRESS, EMERALD ESTATE, NATURE`S CLASSIC vs DOOLEY GROVES, INC., AND RELIANCE INSURANCE COMPANY, 01-002417 (2001)
Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Filed:Tallahassee, Florida Jun. 18, 2001 Number: 01-002417 Latest Update: Feb. 06, 2002

The Issue The issue in this case is whether Respondent Dooley Groves, Inc. owes Petitioner a sum of money for shipments of citrus fruit.

Findings Of Fact The evidence presented at final hearing established the facts that follow. The Parties and Their Problem Spyke's Grove and Dooley are "citrus fruit dealers" operating within the Department's regulatory jurisdiction. As a wholesale shipper, Spyke's Grove packages and arranges for delivery of citrus products pursuant to purchase orders that retail sellers such as Dooley submit. The packages typically are labeled with the retail seller's name (e.g. Dooley), and thus the retail buyer (and the recipient, if the citrus is purchased as a gift) usually will not be aware of Spyke's Grove's involvement. The instant case involves a series of orders that Dooley placed with Spyke's Grove between November and December 1999 for packages of gift fruit. Under a number of informal, largely unwritten contracts, Spyke's Grove agreed, each time it received an order from Dooley, to ship a gift fruit box or basket to the donee designated by Dooley's retail customer, for which fruit shipment Dooley agreed to pay Spyke's Grove. Spyke's Grove alleges that Dooley failed to pay in full for all of the gift fruit packages that Dooley ordered and Spyke's Grove duly shipped. Dooley contends (though not precisely in these terms) that Spyke's Grove materially breached the contracts, thereby discharging Dooley from further performance thereunder. Dooley also claims, as an affirmative defense, that the alleged debt was extinguished pursuant to an accord and satisfaction. The Transactions From mid-November 1999 until around December 12, 1999, Dooley faxed to Spyke's Grove approximately 150 individual orders for gift fruit packages. Each order consisted of a shipping label that identified the product (e.g. the type of gift box or basket), the intended recipient, the destination, and a proposed shipping date. Spyke's Grove manifested its intent to fill these orders by faxing statements of acknowledgment to Dooley. Although the many contracts that arose from these transactions were thus documented, the writings left much unsaid. For example, contrary to Dooley's assertion, the parties did not agree in writing that Spyke's Grove would deliver the subject gift baskets to the donees before Christmas, nor did they make any express oral agreements to this effect. Further, the parties did not specifically agree that Spyke's Grove would be obligated to deliver the gift fruit into the hands of the donees and bear the risk of loss until such tender of delivery. Rather, the contracts between Spyke's Grove and Dooley were ordinary shipment contracts that required Spyke's Grove to put the goods into the possession of carriers (such as the U.S. Postal Service or United Parcel Service) who in due course would deliver the packages to the donees. For several weeks, until early December 1999, Dooley placed orders, and Spyke's Grove filled them, under the arrangement just described, without controversy. The Fire On the night of Sunday, December 12, 1999, a devastating fire at Spyke's Grove's premises caused substantial damage, temporarily disrupting its citrus packing and shipping operations at the peak of the holiday season. Working through and around the loss, Spyke's Grove soon recovered sufficiently to reopen for business. By around noon on Tuesday, December 14, 1999, its telephone service had been restored, and activities relating to shipping resumed on Friday, December 17, 1999. Dooley's Response Dooley did not immediately learn about the fire that had interrupted Spyke's Grove's operations. Continuing with business as usual on Monday, December 13, 1999, Dooley attempted then and throughout the week to fax orders to Spyke's Grove but consistently failed to connect because the lines were busy. With unplaced orders piling up, Dooley began to worry that the gift baskets its customers had ordered earlier in the month——orders that Sypke's Grove already had agreed to fill—— would not arrive by Christmas, as Dooley had guaranteed when taking those orders. Then, on December 16, word of the Spyke's Grove fire reached Dooley. Dooley's worry escalated into alarm. That same day, Dooley placed telephone calls to as many of its retail customers or their donees as it could reach, to ascertain whether Spyke's Grove had shipped any of the gift fruit baskets that Dooley had ordered before December 12, 1999. Dooley was unable to confirm the receipt of a single package—— and it panicked. Disregarding its existing contractual obligations and with no advance notice to Spyke's Grove, Dooley made alternative arrangements for filling all of the orders that it had faxed to Spyke's Grove in December 1999. Dooley packaged and shipped some of the subject gift boxes on its own, and it placed orders for the rest with another wholesale shipper. These substitute packages were being shipped as early as December 17 or 18, 1999. Even after the fact, Dooley failed to inform Spyke's Grove that it had, in effect, repudiated the existing shipment contracts between them. Having no knowledge of Dooley's actions, Spyke's Grove packaged and shipped all of the gift fruit that Dooley had ordered pursuant to the contracts entered into before December 12, 1999. The Inevitable Dispute On January 27, 2000, Spyke's Grove sent three invoices to Dooley seeking payment for most of the citrus shipped pursuant to Dooley's orders. These bills totaled $3,242.55. A fourth and final invoice, for $70.57, was sent on February 18, 2000. Combined with the other bills, this last brought the grand total to $3,313.12. Each of these invoices contained the following boilerplate "terms": Net 14 days prompt payment is expected and appreciated. A 1 1/2% monthly service charge (A.P.R. 18% per annum) may be charged on all past due accounts. Customer agrees to pay all costs of collection, including attorneys [sic] fees and court costs, should collection efforts ever become necessary. Dooley did not remit payment or otherwise respond to Spyke's Grove's statements. Accordingly, on June 20, 2000, Spyke's Grove sent a letter to the Department requesting assistance. Dooley was provided a copy of this letter. On June 30, 2000, Dooley sent a letter to Spyke's Grove in which it explained the reasons why Dooley believed Spyke's Grove was not entitled to full payment of $3,313.12. Dooley had decided, unilaterally, that a deduction of $1,723.53 was in order. In its letter, Dooley described the remaining balance of $1,589.59 as the "final total payment," and a check for that amount was enclosed therewith. Nothing in Dooley's letter fairly apprised Spyke's Grove that the check for $1,589.59 was being tendered, in good faith, in full satisfaction of Spyke's Grove's demand for payment of $3,313.12. No language in that June 30, 2000, letter so much as hinted that Spyke's Grove's acceptance of the check would be considered a manifestation of assent to Dooley's position or an agreement to accept the lesser sum in satisfaction of a greater claim. In short, the parties did not make a mutual agreement, either expressly or by implication, to settle Spyke's Grove's claim for a total payment of $1,589.59. Spyke's Grove was entitled to accept Dooley's check for $1,589.59 as a partial payment against the total indebtedness, and it did. Shortly thereafter, Spyke's Grove filed a Complaint with the Department, initiating the instant proceeding. Ultimate Factual Determinations Dooley's refusal to pay in full for the goods it ordered from Spyke's Grove constituted a breach of the contracts between the parties. Spyke's Grove did not materially breach the agreements, nor was the indebtedness discharged pursuant to an accord and satisfaction. Spyke's Grove has suffered an injury as a result of Dooley's breach. Spyke's Grove's damages consist of the principal amount of the debt together with pre-award interest at the statutory rate, less the partial payment that Dooley made on June 30, 2000. Accordingly, Spyke's Grove is entitled to recover the following amounts from Dooley: Principal Due Date Statutory Interest $3,242.55 2/10/99 $ 18.66 (2/10/99 - 3/03/99) $ 70.57 3/04/99 $3,313.12 3/04/99 LESS: <$1,589.59> $ 437.56 (3/04/99 - 6/29/00) $1,723.53 6/30/00 $ 86.89 (6/30/00 - 12/31/00) $ 157.92 (1/01/01 - 10/31/01) $1,723.53 $ 701.03 Interest will continue to accrue on the outstanding balance of $1,723.53 in the amount of $0.52 per day from November 1, 2001, until the date of the final order.

Recommendation Based on the foregoing Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, it is RECOMMENDED that the Department enter a final order awarding Spyke's Grove the sum of $1,723.53, together with pre- award interest in the amount of $701.03 (through October 31, 2001), plus additional interest from November 1, 2001, until the date of the final order, which will accrue in the amount of $0.52 per day. DONE AND ENTERED this 12th day of October, 2001, in Tallahassee, Leon County, Florida. COPIES FURNISHED: JOHN G. VAN LANINGHAM Administrative Law Judge Division of Administrative Hearings The DeSoto Building 1230 Apalachee Parkway Tallahassee, Florida 32399-3060 (850) 488-9675 SUNCOM 278-9675 Fax Filing (850) 921-6847 www.doah.state.fl.us Filed with the Clerk of the Division of Administrative Hearings this 12th day of October, 2001. Barbara Spiece, President Spyke's Grove, Inc. 7250 Griffin Road Davie, Florida 33314 Diane M. Houghtaling, Vice President Dooley Groves, Inc. 1651 Stephens Road Post Office Box 7038 Sun City, Florida 33586-7038 Reliance Insurance Company Three Parkway Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19102 Honorable Charles H. Bronson Commissioner of Agriculture Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services The Capitol, Plaza Level 10 Tallahassee, Florida 32399-0810 Richard D. Tritschler, General Counsel Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services The Capitol, Plaza Level 10 Tallahassee, Florida 32399-0810 Brenda D. Hyatt, Bureau Chief Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services 500 Third Street Northwest Post Office Box 1072 Winter Haven, Florida 33882-1072

Florida Laws (23) 120.569120.5755.03601.01601.03601.55601.61601.64601.65601.66672.102672.105672.204672.207672.208672.310672.504672.601672.607672.608673.3111687.01701.03
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SPYKE`S GROVE, INC., D/B/A FRESH FRUIT EXPRESS, EMERALD ESTATE, NATURE`S CLASSIC vs CARLYN R. KULICK, D/B/A CARLYN`S AND WESTERN SURETY COMPANY, 01-002649 (2001)
Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Filed:Fort Lauderdale, Florida Jul. 05, 2001 Number: 01-002649 Latest Update: Jan. 11, 2002

The Issue Whether the Respondent Carlyn R. Kulick, d/b/a Carlyn's, failed to pay amounts owing to the Petitioner for the shipment of citrus fruit, as set forth in the Complaint dated April 30, 2001, and, if so, the amount the Petitioner is entitled to recover.

Findings Of Fact At all times material to this proceeding, Spyke's Grove and Carlyn's were "citrus fruit dealers" licensed by the Department. As part of its business, Carlyn's sells to its retail customers "gift fruit" consisting of oranges and grapefruit for shipment to third persons identified by the customers. Carlyn R. Kulick is the owner of Carlyn's and acted on its behalf with respect to the transactions that are the subject of this proceeding. Spyke's Grove is in the business of packaging and shipping "gift fruit" consisting of oranges and grapefruit pursuant to orders placed by other citrus fruit dealers. Barbara Spiece is the president of Spyke's Grove and acted on its behalf with respect to the transactions that are the subject of this proceeding. In November and December 1999, Spyke's Grove received a number of orders for "gift fruit" from Carlyn's. Most of the orders were for single shipments of fruit. One order was for six monthly shipments of fruit. This was the first year Carlyn's had done business with Spyke's Grove, and Carlyn's and Spyke's Grove did not execute a written contract governing their business relationship. On the night of Sunday, December 12, 1999, the Spyke's Grove's packinghouse was destroyed by fire, and its offices were substantially damaged. The fire could not have happened at a worse time because it was at the peak of the holiday fruit- shipping season. Spyke's Grove was able to move into temporary offices and to obtain the use of another packinghouse very quickly. It had telephone service at approximately noon on Tuesday, December 14, 1999, and it began shipping "gift fruit" packages on Friday, December 17, 1999, to fill the orders it had received. Carlyn R. Kulick, the owner of Carlyn's, learned of the fire at Spyke's Grove and attempted to contact the Spyke's Grove offices for an update on the orders Carlyn's had placed for shipment during the holidays. Mr. Kulick was unable to contact anyone at Spyke's Grove for three or four days after the fire, and he was worried that his customers' orders for "gift fruit" would not be shipped on time. Mr. Kulick called another packinghouse and placed orders duplicating some of the orders Carlyn's had placed with Spyke's Grove. Meanwhile, Spyke's Grove was giving priority to its smaller wholesale customers such as Carlyn's, and it shipped all of the orders it had received from Carlyn's. Carlyn's did not cancel its orders with Spyke's Grove or otherwise notify Spyke's Grove that it should not ship the fruit; Mr. Kulick assumed that Spyke's Grove would contact him if it intended to ship the fruit ordered by Carlyn's. Spyke's Grove sent numerous invoices and statements of account to Carlyn's Regarding the gift fruit at issue here. According to the statement of account dated June 1, 2001, as of that date Carlyn's owed Spyke's Grove $1,069.78 for the gift fruit at issue here. Most of the invoices to Carlyn's that were submitted by Spyke's Grove contain the following: "Terms: Net 14 days prompt payment is expected and appreciated. A 1½% monthly service charge (A.P.R. 18% per annum) may be charged on all past due accounts. . . ." Relying on this language, Spyke's Grove also seeks to recover a monthly service charge for each month that Carlyn's account was past due. Carlyn's does not dispute Spyke's Grove's claim that $1,069.78 worth of "gift fruit" was shipped by Spyke's Grove pursuant to orders Carlyn's placed in November and December 1999. Carlyn's' basic position is that it need not pay Spyke's Grove for the fruit because Spyke's Grove did not notify it after the December 12, 1999, fire that it would ship the orders and because Carlyn's had to make sure that its customers' orders were filled. The uncontroverted evidence establishes that Carlyn's was, at the times material to this proceeding, a Florida- licensed and bonded citrus fruit dealer; that, in November and December 1999, Carlyn's submitted orders to Spyke's Grove for the shipment of "gift fruit" consisting of oranges and grapefruit; that Spyke's Grove shipped all of the "gift fruit" ordered by Carlyn's in November and December 1999; that the price of the "gift fruit" shipped by Spyke's Grove pursuant to Carlyn's' orders totaled $1,069.78; and that Spyke's Grove timely filed its complaint alleging that Carlyn's failed to promptly pay its indebtedness to Spyke's Grove for citrus products shipped pursuant to orders placed by Carlyn's. Spyke's Grove is, therefore, entitled to payment of the principal amount of $1,069.78, plus pre-judgment interest. Based on the date of the last invoice which contained a charge for any of the gift fruit at issue here, the prehearing interest would run from May 1, 2000.

Recommendation Based on the foregoing Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, it is RECOMMENDED that the Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services enter a final order ordering Carlyn R. Kulick, d/b/a Carlyn's, to pay $1,069.78 to Spyke's Grove, Inc., d/b/a Fresh Fruit Express, Emerald Estate, Nature's Classic, together with pre-judgment interest calculated at the rate specified in Section 55.03, Florida Statutes, on the amounts owing. DONE AND ENTERED this 1st day of November, 2001, in Tallahassee, Leon County, Florida. MICHAEL M. PARRISH Administrative Law Judge Division of Administrative Hearings The DeSoto Building 1230 Apalachee Parkway Tallahassee, Florida 32399-3060 (850) 488-9675 SUNCOM 278-9675 Fax Filing (850) 921-6847 www.doah.state.fl.us Filed with the Clerk of the Division of Administrative Hearings this 1st day of November, 2001. COPIES FURNISHED: Carlyn R. Kulick, Owner Carlyn's 1601 Fifth Avenue, North St. Petersburg, Florida 33713 Barbara Spiece, President Spyke's Grove, Inc. 7250 Griffin Road Davie, Florida 33314 Western Surety Company Post Office Box 5077 Sioux Falls, South Dakota 57117 Honorable Charles H. Bronson Commissioner of Agriculture Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services The Capitol, Plaza Level 10 Tallahassee, Florida 32399-0810 Richard D. Tritschler, General Counsel Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services The Capitol, Plaza Level 10 Tallahassee, Florida 32399-0810 Brenda D. Hyatt, Bureau Chief Bureau of License and Bond Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services 541 East Tennessee Street India Building Tallahassee, Florida 32308

Florida Laws (10) 120.5755.03601.01601.03601.55601.61601.64601.65601.66687.01
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GBS GROVES, INC., AND CITRUS GROWERS ASSOCIATES, INC. vs DEPARTMENT OF CITRUS, 02-002936RP (2002)
Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Filed:Lakeland, Florida Jul. 22, 2002 Number: 02-002936RP Latest Update: Dec. 04, 2002

The Issue Whether Respondent's, Department of Citrus, proposed changes to Rules 20-71.005, 20-71.006, and 20-72.009, Florida Administrative Code, are invalid exercises of delegated legislative authority.

Findings Of Fact Based on the evidence and the testimony of witnesses presented and the entire record in this proceeding, the following findings of fact are made: In Florida, all citrus processing plant operations are under continuous inspection by USDA inspectors as a result of a Cooperative Agreement, which has an effective date of July 1, 1968, between the Consumer and Marketing Services (now known as Agricultural Marketing Services), the USDA, and the Florida Department of Agriculture (now known as Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services). By its terms, the Cooperative Agreement contemplates that the State of Florida agency (Respondent herein) may develop standards for processed citrus products under authority granted by Florida state law. As such, Respondent establishes policy and the USDA implements the policy established by Respondent. Since 1949, Chapter 601, Florida Statutes (the "Florida Citrus Code"), has vested Respondent with general and specific legislative authority to inspect, grade, develop minimum quality and maturity standards, and to do myriad other things to ensure the quality of processed citrus products. In addition, the Florida citrus industry has implemented internal quality control testing and standards in an effort to instill consumer confidence in Florida citrus products. Not unlike many other segments of commerce, the Florida citrus industry has evolved from small, local operators to large multi-state conglomerates. Innovation and consolidation has resulted in new products, production techniques, and citrus processing methodology. Where bulk concentrate was stored in 55-gallon drums in the 1950s, it is now stored in 100,000-gallon tanks, and can be transported in huge container trailers towed by semi-tractors. As the Florida citrus industry has changed, so too has governmental and internal testing for product wholesomeness, maturity, grade, and safety. Upon delivery to a citrus processing plant, all citrus fruit is tested for wholesomeness and maturity before it is processed. This initial inspection is accomplished by the arbitrary selection of approximately 38-45 pounds of citrus from throughout a 500-box load. If the citrus passes this initial testing, it proceeds to be processed. Processed citrus product is later tested for grade and, finally, undergoes microbial, pathogen, and safety testing by the Food and Drug Administration. In addition, processors undertake private testing to assure particular quality assurance. In 2001, the Florida Legislature repealed Subsection 601.48(1), Florida Statutes, and, as a result, deleted the statutory requirement for inspections of grade standards in registered citrus processing plants. The repeal of Subsection 601.48(1), Florida Statutes, eliminated legislative direction for a grade inspection; however, there remained other inspection requirements. Section 601.49, Florida Statutes, provides that it is unlawful for any person to sell or transport canned or concentrated products unless the same has been inspected and accompanied by a certificate of inspection or manifest indicating that an inspection has taken place. Subsection 601.48(3), Florida Statutes, exempts intrastate shipment of processed citrus products between licensed citrus fruit dealers who operate processing plants from grade labeling requirements. In 2000, Respondent, by Rule 20-71.005, Florida Administrative Code, established manifest requirements and statements for in-state transport of processed citrus products between registered facilities owned by the same processor. This was the precursor to the proposed rule changes, which are the subject of this rule challenge. Proposed Rule 20-71.005, Florida Administrative Code, allows the intrastate transport of bulk processed citrus products between registered facilities, eliminating the requirement that both facilities be owned by the same individual or entity and establishes informational requirements for the shipping manifest. One of the informational requirements for the shipping manifest established in the proposed rule is a certified statement that "the processed citrus products are being transported in bulk as processor grade." "Processor grade" is a new designation. Proposed Rule 20-71.006, Florida Administrative Code, establishes manifest requirements for transport of processed citrus products with the exception of bulk processed citrus product shipments specified in Rule 20-71.009, Florida Administrative Code. Proposed Rule 20-71.009, Florida Administrative Code, authorizes an inspector to issue a certificate of processor grade, which reflects that the bulk processed citrus product has been inspected for wholesomeness and maturity and ensures that the bulk processed citrus product will be inspected and/or re- graded before final shipment. The proposed rules reflect changes that are taking place in citrus processing methodology; the rule changes ensure that inspection as required by Section 601.49, Florida Statutes, takes place.

Florida Laws (9) 120.52120.536120.56120.68601.02601.10601.48601.49601.50
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BETTY H. SHINN, D/B/A SHINN GROVES vs H AND R PACKING AND SALES COMPANY AND OLD REPUBLIC SURETY COMPANY, 05-003540 (2005)
Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Filed:Lake Alfred, Florida Sep. 26, 2005 Number: 05-003540 Latest Update: May 04, 2006

The Issue The issue in this case is whether Respondent H & R Packing & Sales Company, LLC, must pay Petitioner the full contract price for citrus fruit that said Respondent accepted upon tender despite knowing that the goods were nonconforming.

Findings Of Fact Petitioner Betty H. Shinn, d/b/a Shinn Groves ("Shinn"), is in the business of growing citrus fruit and hence is a "producer" within the regulatory jurisdiction of the Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services ("Department"). Respondent H & R Packing & Sales Company, LLC ("HRPS"), is a "citrus fruit dealer" operating within the Department's jurisdiction. On November 3, 2004, Shinn and HRPS entered into a contract (the "Contract") whereby HRPS agreed to harvest "fresh fruit quality" navel oranges from a particular section of Shinn's grove, which oranges Shinn agreed to sell to HRPS for the price of $8.00 per field box. The Contract provided, in pertinent part, as follows: The SELLER [that is, Shinn] shall take all reasonable and normal precautions to maintain fresh fruit quality during the life of this agreement. Failure to exercise close control to mites and other pests shall constitute a violation of this agreement. Further, the BUYER [i.e. HRPS] may at his option cancel this contract or renegotiate the price to be paid and the conditions of sale. In addition, the parties agreed that HRPS would pick the fruit no later than January 1, 2005, and pay for the oranges "within 45 days of the week of the harvest." An agent of HRPS's named Frederick Gaines inspected the crop identified to the Contract on a couple of occasions in November and December 2004. At some point he notified Shinn that the oranges were being damaged by rust mites. Shinn arranged to have the crop sprayed with Thiolux (a miticide), which was done around December 6, 2004. HRPS harvested the crop on January 3, 2005. (HRPS's performance in this regard was nonconforming, because the oranges were to be picked no later than January 1, 2005. By allowing HRPS to proceed after the deadline, however, Shinn waived HRPS's untimely performance.) At or about the time of the harvest, Mr. Gaines orally notified Charles Shinn (who is the son——and an agent——of Petitioner Betty Shinn) that the oranges had been damaged by rust mites and consequently were not fresh fruit quality. Mr. Shinn suggested that the oranges be "run through" the packing house (where the fruit would be graded on its quality), after which the parties could renegotiate the price, if necessary, to adjust for any material deficiencies in the quality of the crop. This proposal was evidently acceptable to HRPS, for it proceeded to harvest the oranges with knowledge that the crop was (or might not be) fresh fruit quality. HRPS picked 790 field boxes of oranges from Shinn's grove pursuant to the Contract. When these oranges were graded at the packing house, an unusually small percentage (approximately 34%) could be "packed out," that is, packaged and delivered for sale as fresh fruit.i The rest "graded out," i.e. failed to meet the standards for sale as fresh fruit, and were sold, at a loss, to juice processors. HRPS was obligated under the Contract to pay Shinn for the oranges on or before February 22, 2005, but HRPS let the deadline pass without either paying for the oranges or notifying Shinn of a breach with respect thereto. By letter dated March 17, 2005, Shinn demanded that HRPS pay the full contact price of $6,320 for the fruit harvested under the Contract.ii HRPS responded to Shinn's demand-letter via correspondence dated March 24, 2005. In this letter, HRPS acknowledged the Contract's existence but disclaimed the duty to pay in full due to the fruit's generally poor quality. HRPS expressed some willingness to resolve the matter amicably but offered no payment. Shinn was not satisfied and initiated this administrative proceeding. Ultimate Factual Determinations HRPS harvested and hauled away the oranges identified to the Contract. This performance constituted acceptance of the goods, and such acceptance was made with knowledge of a (possible) nonconformity, namely that the oranges were not fresh fruit quality due to rust mite damage. The apparent nonconformity was made manifest to HRPS shortly after the harvest, when an unusually small percentage of the pertinent crop was "packed out." HRPS failed, however, to notify Shinn of the breach within a reasonable time after confirming the nonconformity. Consequently, HRPS is barred from any remedy for breach. HRPS's failure to pay for the oranges at the Contract rate constituted a breach of the Contract entitling Shinn to recover the full price, together with pre-award interest. Accordingly, HRPS is obligated to pay Shinn the principal amount of $6,320.00, together with statutory interest of $378.20 (for the period 02/22/05 - 12/31/05). Interest will continue to accrue on the outstanding balance of $6,320.00 in the amount of $1.56 per day from January 1, 2006, until the date of the final order.

Recommendation Based on the foregoing Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, it is RECOMMENDED that the Department enter a final order awarding Shinn the sum of $6,320.00, together with pre-award interest in the amount of $378.20 (through December 31, 2005), plus additional interest from January 1 2006, until the date of the final order, which will accrue in the amount of $1.56 per day. DONE AND ENTERED this 13th day of December, 2005, in Tallahassee, Leon County, Florida. S JOHN G. VAN LANINGHAM Administrative Law Judge Division of Administrative Hearings The DeSoto Building 1230 Apalachee Parkway Tallahassee, Florida 32399-3060 (850) 488-9675 SUNCOM 278-9675 Fax Filing (850) 921-6847 www.doah.state.fl.us Filed with the Clerk of the Division of Administrative Hearings this 13th day of December, 2005.

Florida Laws (14) 120.569120.57601.01601.03601.55601.61601.64601.65601.66672.102672.105672.607672.608687.01
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NEWBERN GROVES, INC. vs INTER-FLORIDANA, INC.M, AND OHIO CASUALTY INSURANCE COMPANY, 94-006775 (1994)
Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Filed:Tampa, Florida Dec. 02, 1994 Number: 94-006775 Latest Update: Jun. 01, 2009

The Issue The issues in this case are whether, and to what extent, the Respondent, a licensed citrus fruit dealer, is liable to the Petitioner for damages resulting from the purchase, handling, sale, and accounting of purchases and sales occurring during the 1992-1993 growing season, and further whether the Co- Respondent, Surety Company, is therefore liable on the citrus fruit dealer's bond issued to the Respondent.

Findings Of Fact Petitioner, Newbern Groves Inc., is a Florida corporation engaged in the business of producing, buying, and selling citrus fruit. Petitioner's business address is in Tampa, Florida. Newbern Groves, Inc. was founded in 1947 by Copeland Newbern, who at all relevant times in this case served as Chairman of the Board of Directors. The President of Newbern Groves, Inc., is John Shepard. The Secretary- Treasurer of Newbern Groves, Inc., is Peter Skemp. At all relevant times, Respondent, Inter-Floridana, Inc., (full name, Inter-Floridana Imports and Exports, Inc.) was a citrus fruit dealer, licensed by the State of Florida during the 1992-1993 growing season. Respondent's business address was Brooksville, Florida, where Respondent operated a processing plant. The 1992-1993 growing season was the first year Respondent operated this processing plant. Respondent also maintained offices and warehouses in Orange County, Florida. In addition to its citrus fruit business, Respondent corporation also engaged in other business enterprises including blending other fruit drinks, processing tomato juice concentrate, and the sale of imported beer. At all relevant times, Jacques Bobbe was President and Chief Executive Officer of Inter-Floridana, Inc. At all relevant times, Larry Cail was the manager of the Respondent's processing plant in Brooksville, Florida. Beginning in May of 1992, Jacques Bobbe, on behalf of Inter-Floridana, and Peter Skemp and Copeland Newbern, on behalf of Newbern Groves, entered into discussions relating to Newbern's supplying Inter-Floridana with citrus fruit for the Inter-Floridana plant in Brooksville, Florida. Prior to this time the parties had not met, and there was no established course of business dealings between the parties. Specific meetings between the parties took place on July 30, 1992 in Brooksville; September 2, 1992 in Tampa; September 17, 1992 in Tampa; September 29, 1992 in Orlando; and November 25, 1992 in Tampa. The discussions conducted by the parties generally related to Newbern supplying Inter-Floridana with 1,500,000 boxes of citrus fruit which would accommodate the capacity of Inter-Floridana's Brooksville plant. The parties also generally discussed prices of various citrus fruit. There is no written documentation of the parties' negotiations. It is common practice in the citrus fruit industry to purchase and sell citrus fruit without written contracts. On November 3, 1992, Newbern delivered its first shipment of citrus fruit to Inter-Floridana's Brooksville plant. The shipment was delivered pursuant to Inter-Floridana's request to conduct a test-run of the processing plant's production capability. In December of 1992, Larry Cail of Inter- Floridana specifically requested grapefruit be delivered from Newbern. At that time Newbern was selling grapefruit to Chapman Fruit Company at $1.15 a pound. Thereafter Newbern continued to deliver citrus fruit shipments to Inter- Floridana's Brooksville plant on a regular basis until April 14, 1993. Inter- Floridana accepted the deliveries of citrus fruit from Newbern. The total pounds solids of Newbern fruit delivered to Inter-Floridana was 1,375,359.98, consisting of: 1,261,323.38 pound solids of orange juice 8,087.87 pound solids of mandarin 63,426.55 pound solids of white grapefruit juice 42,522.18 pound solids of red grapefruit juice. Beginning in December of 1992 Newbern representatives Peter Skemp and Copeland Newbern demanded payment for the fruit delivered to the Inter-Floridana plant in Brooksville. The customary practice in the citrus fruit business is payment is due one week after delivery. In this case, however, Newbern had agreed to a two-week after delivery payment. The price of the citrus fruit was to be calculated on the cost to Newbern of obtaining the fruit from the growers plus .05 for Newbern's expenses in making the deliveries to Inter-Floridana. On February 26, 1993, Inter-Floridana made its first payment to Newbern in the amount of $80,000. Thereafter Inter-Floridana made three more payments of $40,000, $40,000, and $30,000. The final payment from Inter-Floridana was made on April 1, 1993. After the April 1, 1993 payment, representatives of Newbern continued to demand payment from Inter-Floridana. No further payments were received, and Newbern ceased delivery of citrus fruit to Inter-Floridana on April 14, 1993. On May 12, 1993 the parties met in Brooksville, Florida. At this meeting Jacques Bobbe informed Peter Skemp and Copeland Newbern that Inter- Floridana's position was that Inter-Floridana was not purchasing citrus fruit from Newbern, but processing the citrus fruit for Newbern, and accordingly, Newbern owed Inter-Floridana approximately $400,000 for the costs of production, which was documented in a letter from Inter-Floridana to Newbern on May 14, 1993. At hearing on May 10, 1994, Jacques Bobbe testified that Inter-Floridana retracted its previous position, and did purchase citrus fruit from Newbern during the 1992-1993 growing season. On May 24, 1993, Copeland Newbern sent a letter to Jacques Bobbe demanding payment of $789,374.01 based on the Florida Citrus Mutual citrus statistics for the citrus fruit at that time, plus .05 for Newbern's services. On June 1, 1993, Jacques Bobbe sent a letter to Copeland Newbern requesting additional information regarding the calculation of the payment demanded from Newbern. On June 23, 1993, Copeland Newbern sent a certified letter to Jacques Bobbe detailing the problems associated with this transaction, and requesting assistance in resolving the matter in a timely manner. On June 25, 1993, Newbern filed the formal complaint against Inter- Floridana with the Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services which is the basis for this proceeding. Representatives of the parties met again on July 8, 1993; and on July 9, 1993, Jacques Bobbe sent a letter to John Shepard offering to resolve this matter as follows: Inter-Floridana would sell the frozen concentrated orange juice at $1.29 per pound solid; Newbern would receive $.83 per pound solid; Inter-Floridana would receive $.29 for packing and $.17 profit per pound solid. If the product sold for more than $1.29 per pound solid, the parties would divide the excess profit equally. On July 16, 1993, John Shepard, as President of Newbern Groves Inc., wrote to Jacques Bobbe and accepted this agreement. On July 19, 1993, Inter-Floridana filed its answer to the formal complaint filed by Newbern. The answer was verified by Jacques Bobbe. The answer denied that Inter-Floridana purchased citrus fruit from Newbern, and further claimed Newbern owed Inter-Floridana $442,133.21 for various services in connection with the processing and storage of the Newbern fruit. As set forth above, this position was subsequently retracted, and Inter-Floridana acknowledged the purchase of citrus fruit from Newbern. On August 5, 1993, Jacques Bobbe, on behalf of Inter-Floridana, filed a verified statement with the Department of Citrus attesting that Inter-Floridana did not purchase any fruit during the 1992-1993 growing season. The verified statement further attested that Inter-Floridana processed fruit for Newbern, and that Inter-Floridana had accounts payable of $978,580, and accounts receivable of $489,378.83. The accounts payable represented funds owed by Inter-Floridana to Newbern, and the accounts receivable consisted of the various production charges from Newbern as claimed by Inter-Floridana. On August 26, 1993, Newbern received an accounting from Inter-Floridana showing 500,651.26 pound solids of orange juice, 2,512.02 pound solids of mandarin, 39,809 pound solids of white grapefruit, and 11,602.50 pound solids of red grapefruit. This balance was substantially less than the amount delivered to Inter-Floridana. Unbeknown to Newbern, in February of 1993, Inter-Floridana had sold a substantial portion of the Newbern product to Windsor-Premium (Premium), a European business concern that Jacques Bobbe had been negotiating with since February of 1992. On February 26, 1993 Premium paid Inter-Floridana $807,825.29 for the product. This sale was the first part of a proposed ongoing transaction between Premium and Inter-Floridana to market citrus products in Europe. The proposed transaction would have been approximately $2 million; however, Premium did not complete the transaction with Inter-Floridana, and Premium eventually filed for bankruptcy in the United States District Court for the Southern District of Florida. The four payments totalling $190,000 that Inter-Floridana made to Newbern were derived from the proceeds of the sale to Premium. On October 1, 1993 Inter-Floridana sent a letter to John Shepard informing Newbern that of 1,375,359.57 pound solids, 848,558.76 had been sold. Thereafter in October of 1993, Inter-Floridana returned to Newbern 501,130.73 pound solids of orange, 18,018.92 pound solids of white grapefruit, and 11,614.39 pound solids of pink grapefruit. Newbern resold the returned orange citrus product to Indian River Fruits by means of a citrus broker, Merrill Lynch, which received a brokerage fee of $5,011.30. Some of the grapefruit citrus product had gelled and could not be resold.

Recommendation Based on the foregoing, it is, hereby, RECOMMENDED: That the Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services enter a final order adjudicating that the amount of indebtedness owed to the Petitioner from Respondent is $543,126.53, that the Respondent shall have thirty (30) days in which to satisfy such indebtedness, and upon failure of the Respondent to satisfy such indebtedness, the citrus fruit dealer's bond in the amount of $24,000 shall be distributed to Petitioner. DONE AND RECOMMENDED this 13th day of February, 1995, in Tallahassee, Leon County, Florida. RICHARD HIXSON Hearing Officer Division of Administrative Hearings The DeSoto Building 1230 Apalachee Parkway Tallahassee, Florida 32399-1550 (904) 488-9675 Filed with the Clerk of the Division of Administrative Hearings this 13th day of February, 1995. APPENDIX TO RECOMMENDED ORDER, CASE NO. 94-6775 Petitioner's proposed findings of fact. Accepted. Accepted. Accepted. Accepted. Accepted. Accepted. Accepted. Accepted. Accepted. Accepted. Accepted. Accepted. Accepted. Accepted. Accepted. Accepted in part. Respondent acknowledged discussion of prices for the citrus fruit. Accepted in part. Respondent acknowledged an indebtedness of $978,580. Accepted. Accepted. Rejected as not supported by the evidence. Respondent's proposed findings of fact. Accepted. Accepted. Accepted. Rejected as not supported by the evidence. Rejected as not supported by the evidence. Rejected as not supported by the evidence. Accepted. Rejected in part. Rejected as to the frozen concentrated orange juice, accepted as to grapefruit. Rejected as irrelevant. Rejected as not supported by the evidence. Rejected as not supported by the evidence. Rejected as not supported by the evidence. Rejected as not supported by the evidence. COPIES FURNISHED: Timothy G. Hayes, Esquire 21859 State Road 54, Suite 200 Lutz, Florida 33549 Eric S. Mashburn, Esquire Post Office Box 771277 Winter Garden, Florida 34777-1277 The Honorable Bob Crawford Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services The Capitol, PL-10 Tallahassee, Florida 32399-0810 Richard Tritschler, General Counsel Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services The Capitol, PL-10 Tallahassee, Florida 32399-0810 Brenda Hyatt, Chief Bureau of Licensing & Bond Department of Agriculture 508 Mayo Building Tallahassee, Florida 32399-0800

Florida Laws (6) 120.57120.68601.65601.66671.103672.706
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