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LEONARD VITO MECCA FARMS vs EMERALD PACKING COMPANY, INC. AND OLD REPUBLIC SURETY COMPANY, AS SURETY, 06-003725 (2006)
Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Filed:Orlando, Florida Oct. 02, 2006 Number: 06-003725 Latest Update: May 29, 2007

The Issue Whether Respondent, a citrus dealer, owes Petitioner, a citrus producer/grower, compensation for breach of a contract to buy, pick, haul, and sell fruit from Petitioner’s grove. If so, what is the reasonable amount of compensation.

Findings Of Fact Mecca includes a thirty-six acre Murcott tangerine grove in Lakeworth, Florida, purchased by Leonard Mecca in 2003. Murcott tangerines are primarily sold as fresh fruit. Through its owner, Mr. Mecca, Petitioner entered into a contract, on January 3, 2006, Emerald to pick fruit from the grove by April 10, 2006. Old Republic Surety Company is surety on the contract performance bond for $59,000.00, the maximum amount of compensation that can be recovered, if any. On behalf of Emerald, Keith Emmett, a fruit buyer with 25 years of experience, personally visited the Mecca grove and, on January 3, 2006, estimated the number of boxes of fruit at 5,000 boxes and sales price at $14.00 a box. Mr. Emmett’s estimate was the basis for the terms of the contract that was accepted by Mr. Mecca. Mr. Mecca also testified that he contracted with another organization, River Citrus, to be the caretaker of the grove. Mr. Mecca’s contract with Emerald included the statement that “[g]rower agrees to keep said fruit clean and to protect said fruit against fire, and to dust, spray and fertilize the same in such a manner that will not cause injury to said fruit or groves.” Emerald was, under the terms of the contract, required to pay for all “merchantable” fruit at picking time. At sometime in February or March, Mr. Mecca (not his caretaker) discovered that the irrigation system at the grove was not working. Mr. Mecca testified that he had the system repaired within two days. Weed control at the grove was to be done by the use of herbicides and mowing. Mr. Mecca testified that he had a conversation about the condition of the grove with Mr. Emmett, but only about water. Mr. Emmett visited the Mecca grove in late February or early March to see if the fruit was ready to pick to fill pending orders. He described the condition of the grove as having a “hard wilt,” meaning leaves curled, with soft, spongy green fruit. The weeds indicated to him an absence of mowing and herbicides. Mr. Emmett returned to the grove in April and described the fruit as still soft to the touch with a green cast. He also testified that he notified Mr. Mecca, in conversations through the month of March, that the grove needed watering and that the fruit was soft and needed more time. Mr. Mecca testified that he contacted Mr. Emmett several times in March and April to find out when the fruit would be picked because he believed it was getting overripe. Mr. Mecca testified that Mr. Emmett was waiting to pick the fruit late in the season when market prices rose enough to justify the $14.00 a box contract price. Mr. Mecca also testified regarding when he decided to stop negotiating with Emerald and to use another packing house, as follows: It had to be the day that Keith Emmett had his man, Bill Turner, call me to tell me that he was not going to be able to use the fruit unless I wanted -- to wait another two weeks. So -- which would have been around the 20th of April. Q. So that would have been the -- on or about the time that the -- you were informed that the fruit couldn’t be used as fresh fruit; is that correct? By Emerald? A. I was informed -- I was informed by Emerald that they didn’t want to pick any more fruit unless I wanted to wait two more weeks and try again, which was the story I heard every two weeks. Bill Turner, who was in charge of harvesting the fruit for Ridge Harvesting, previously had visited and inspected the Mecca grove in February, after Emerald received a report that the well was broken. He testified that he found wilted trees and lots of weeds. By the time he talked to Mr. Mecca about the condition of the grove, he recalled that the well had already been fixed. One load of 500 boxes of Mecca fruit was picked by Ridge Harvesting for Emerald on April 19, 2006, but failed to pass state inspection. Emerald, nevertheless, paid Mecca $14.00 a box for the 500 boxes, or $7,000.00, and on April 20, 2006, sent a letter to Mecca releasing the fruit back to Mecca and, in effect, terminating the January contract based on the poor condition of the fruit. The letter specified that the fruit was “. . . spongy, soft and indented from the weight of the fruit in the box.” Mr. Emmett testified that he suggested that Mr. Mecca agree to sell the fruit at lower prices for juice, rather than as fresh fruit. He testified that Mr. Mecca declined the offer and notified Mr. Emmett that he was going to use a different packing house. Donald Owens, a field buyer for Rio Citrus (Rio) had driven by the Mecca grove some time in April, and noticed that the fruit had not been picked. He was familiar with the grove, having picked it in prior years before it changed ownership. Mr. Owens searched out the new grower and called Mr. Mecca about picking the fruit, but was told that the fruit was under contract with another picker. On or about April 20, 2006, after Emerald’s representative notified him that they were not going to use the fruit, Mr. Mecca called Donald Owens back, met him at the grove and entered into a verbal contract for Rio to pick the fruit in what Mr. Mecca and Mr. Owens described as a “salvage operation.” When Donald Owens saw the grove, on or about April 20, 2006, he testified that the grass was high, the fruit was small but, he believed, within the criteria that you can pack as fresh fruit and otherwise merchantable. He testified that he told Mr. Mecca that, before he did anything, the grass had to be mowed. Mr. Owen’s company picked a total of 2,106 boxes of tangerines on April 24, April 25, May 1, and May 4, 2006, based on the dates on the trip tickets. Of those, according to Donald Owens and his settlement statements, 69 percent passed inspection and were packed to sell as fresh fruit, but 31 percent were so-called “eliminations” and had to be taken to a canning processing plant to be juiced. Mr. Owens testified that his company, Rio, stopped picking fruit because the canning processing plant stopped taking Murcotts. If Rio had continued, then he estimated that from 25 to 30 percent of the fruit would have ended up in cow pastures at a significant financial loss, considering the expense of picking, loading, hauling, separating, and hauling fruit by grade to a cow pasture. Rio paid Mecca approximately $12,000 for the fruit it picked and sold. The remaining fruit in the grove fell to the ground. In 2004, Emerald picked 9,000 boxes of fruit from the Mecca grove. Donald Owens, whose Rio company picked 2,106 boxes from a part of one of the three divisions of the grove, estimates that each of the three sections could have provided about 3,000 boxes each, or an approximate total of 9,000 boxes of fruit from the Mecca grove, of which approximately 6,000 remained after Rio stopped picking the fruit. In 2005, Mecca produced only 600 boxes of fruit due to hurricane damage and also because Murcott tangerines produce in large volumes every other year. In the Mecca contract with Emerald in 2006, Mr. Emmett estimated the number of boxes at 5,000 merchantable boxes for the 2006 growing season. Although Emerald picked 9,000 boxes in 2004, it is reasonable to believe that the yield would be lower after some trees were damaged during the hurricanes of 2005. The estimate and agreement made prior to this contractual dispute, 5,000 boxes, is accepted as the most reasonable estimate for the 2006 growing season. Stuart Arost, the owner of Emerald, testified that he had contracts to sell elimination Murcott tangerines through April and into the first part of May to canning plants in Umatilla and Haines City. One of those plants, he testified, is cooperative-owned and will take Murcotts as long as the owners are still harvesting the fruit, even into June. Emerald, more likely than not, could have sold the fruit for juice for $10.00 a box with net proceeds to Mecca of $8.00 a box if allowed to further revise the contract or mitigate damages. Mr. Arost testified that further damages could have been mitigated if Don Owens and Rio had continued to pick fruit and used the available processors for the elimination, but there is no evidence that Mr. Owens was aware of the alternative. The evidence, based on the testimony of all of the witnesses who entered the grove, supports a conclusion that some of the fruit in the grove was damaged due to lack of proper care, and that, more likely than not, resulted in the initial failure to pass inspection and the subsequent rate of eliminations. Although 500 boxes taken by Emerald failed USDA inspection, the fact that 2,106 boxes subsequently passed inspection indicates that Emerald correctly advised Mr. Mecca to wait another two weeks until about the time that Rio harvested the fruit rather than insisting that Emerald resume harvesting before the fruit was firm. While Mr. Mecca had agreed to the two-week extensions in the past, his refusal to agree on or about April 20, 2006, resulted in Emerald’s termination of the contract and his decision to use a different packing house.

Recommendation Based on the foregoing Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law it is RECOMMENDED that a final order be entered denying any recovery by Petitioner Mecca Farms from Respondents Emerald Packing Company, Inc. and Old Republic Surety Company, as Surety. DONE AND ENTERED this 23rd day of January, 2007, in Tallahassee, Leon County, Florida. S ELEANOR M. HUNTER 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 23rd day of January, 2007. COPIES FURNISHED: Christopher E. Green Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services Office of Citrus License and Bond Mayo Building, M-38 Tallahassee, Florida 32399-0800 Franklin T. Walden, Esquire Law Offices of Franklin T. Walden 1936 Lee Road, Suite 100 Winter Park, Florida 32789 Eric Severson, Esquire Alley, Maass, Rogers & Lindsay, P.A. 340 Royal Poinciana Way, Suite 321 Palm Beach, Florida 33480-0431 Old Republic Surety Company Post Office Box 1635 Milwaukee, Wisconsin 53201 Richard D. Tritschler, General Counsel Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services 407 South Calhoun Street, Suite 520 Tallahassee, Florida 32399-0800 Honorable Charles H. Bronson Commissioner of Agriculture Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services The Capitol, Plaza Level 10 Tallahassee, Florida 32399-0810

Florida Laws (8) 120.569120.57601.01601.03601.61601.66672.602672.606
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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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CUSHMAN FRUIT COMPANY, INC. vs CARLA DUPLEICH, BRIAN D. JEROME, D/B/A J AND G CITRUS GROVES AND GREAT AMERICAN INSURANCE COMPANY, AS SURETY, 08-005359 (2008)
Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Filed:West Palm Beach, Florida Oct. 24, 2008 Number: 08-005359 Latest Update: Oct. 25, 2019

The Issue Whether Respondent is indebted to Petitioner for Florida- grown citrus products sold to Respondent.

Findings Of Fact Petitioner and Respondent are Florida-licensed citrus fruit dealers operating within the Department's regulatory jurisdiction. Great American was the surety for J and G Citrus' fruit dealer's license for the 2006-2007 citrus shipping season. J and G Citrus is Petitioner's customer. Petitioner ships fruit on behalf of J and G Citrus under their name for a service charge and fee for fruit, the cost of packing, and shipping. Petitioner and Respondent entered a written contract on November 12, 2004, for such services. Cushman's replacements policy provides that a customer should notify Cushman of any problem and the company will refund the monies for the order or replace the package. Cushman guarantees to "honor all replacement requests in a timely manner at no cost to you." J and G Citrus utilized the policy during its contract with Cushman. Cushman delivered the following fruit orders for J and G Citrus from December 22, 2006, to February 16, 2007: 292 navel fruit trays at $3.35 a tray; 168 grapefruit trays at $3.35 a tray; 87 honeybells trays at $6.88 a tray; and 29 tangerine trays for $6.88 at tray. The costs for the fruit shipped totaled $2,339.00. J and G Citrus was invoiced this amount. Accordingly, Respondent was obligated to pay Petitioner the total sum for the fruit. After Cushman Fruit invoiced J and G Citrus for the outstanding balance, no payment was received. On March 28, 2007, Cushman informed J and G Citrus of its bill and told Respondent that "You need to get current." J and G Citrus responded on the same day that it would provide a payment schedule by Monday. On April 23, 2007, J and G Citrus confirmed by email that they were going to start paying and would provide a payment. On May 7, 2007, Cushman requested the payment schedule from J and G Citrus again and informed the company, "I need a response from you today." Cushman never heard further from Respondent regarding payment. To date, the invoices are unpaid and the monies are owed to Cushman. Petitioner performed all of its duties under the contract with J and G Citrus and Respondent failed to pay for the services. J and G Citrus is, therefore, indebted to Petitioner.

Recommendation Based on the foregoing Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, it is RECOMMENDED: That a final order be entered requiring Respondent pay to Petitioner the sum of $2,339.00 DONE AND ENTERED this 11th day of February, 2009, in Tallahassee, Leon County, Florida. S JUNE C. McKINNEY 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 11th day of February, 2009. COPIES FURNISHED: Elizabeth Alvarez Cushman Fruit Company, Inc. 3325 Forest Hill Boulevard West Palm Beach, Florida 33406 Rob Brehm Great American Insurance Company Post Office Box 2119 Cincinnati, Ohio 45201 Christopher E. Green, Esquire Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services Office of Citrus License and Bond Mayo Building, M-38 Tallahassee, Florida 32399-0800 Brian D. Jerome Carla Dupleich J & G Citrus Groves 5781 Seminole Way Fort Lauderdale, Florida 33314 Honorable Charles 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 407 South Calhoun Street, Suite 520 Tallahassee, Florida 32399-0800

Florida Laws (8) 120.569120.57601.03601.55601.61601.64601.65601.66
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ROLLING MEADOW RANCH, INC. vs GOLDEN GEM GROWERS, INC., AND FIDELITY AND DEPOSIT COMPANY OF MARYLAND, 02-003109 (2002)
Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Filed:Bartow, Florida Aug. 05, 2002 Number: 02-003109 Latest Update: Mar. 19, 2003

The Issue The issue is whether Respondent, Golden Gem Growers, Inc. (Golden Gem), owes Petitioner the money alleged in the Amended Complaint based on two written contracts between Petitioner and Golden Gem.

Findings Of Fact During the citrus growing season of 2000-2001, Golden Gem was a citrus fruit dealer defined in Subsection 601.03(8) and was licensed and bonded in accordance with Chapter 601. Golden Gem operated a packinghouse in Alturas, Florida, and regularly purchased citrus fruit for sale in the fresh fruit market. Fidelity & Deposit Company of Maryland (Fidelity) is the surety on the fruit dealer's bond issued to Golden Gem for the 2000-2001 season. On September 14, 2000, Petitioner and Golden Gem entered into Contract No. AS-7199. The contract provided, in relevant part, that Petitioner was to deliver Valencia oranges and other citrus fruit to Golden Gem and that Golden Gem was to handle, pack, ship, sell, and market the fresh fruit provided by Petitioner. On May 9, 2001, Petitioner and Golden Gem entered into Contract No. AS-7208. The contract provided, in relevant part, that Petitioner was to deliver Valencia oranges to Golden Gem and that Golden Gem was to handle, pack, ship, sell, and market the fresh fruit provided by Petitioner. Contracts AS-7199 and AS-7208 require Golden Gem to detail and account for all the Valencia oranges delivered by Petitioner and packed by Golden Gem. Each contract provides for attorney's fees to the prevailing party. Petitioner delivered 115,740 boxes of Valencia oranges to Golden Gem and Golden Gem processed all 115,740 boxes. Golden Gem packed the oranges into 182,650 cartons but accounted to Petitioner for only 159,731 cartons. Golden Gem collected $1,172,715.40 for 159,731 cartons of Petitioner's Valencia oranges. Golden Gem was entitled to deduct expenses for packing, shipping, and handling in the total amount of $630,475.10. Golden Gem owed a net payment to Petitioner of $542,240.30. Golden Gem paid $518,284.82 to Petitioner. The balance owed for the fruit accounted for by Golden Gem is $23,955.48. Golden Gem owes Petitioner an additional $85,757.36 for the proceeds of an additional 22,919 cartons of Valencia oranges for which Golden Gem has not accounted to Petitioner. The amount due is net after adjusting the gross price for handling charges that Golden Gem is entitled to under the terms of the contracts. Golden Gem owes Petitioner a total amount of $109,712.84 for Valencia oranges that Petitioner delivered to Golden Gem in the 2000-2001 shipping season. Petitioner is the prevailing party. Petitioner incurred reasonable attorney's fees of $10,570.00 and costs of $398.24.

Recommendation Based on the foregoing Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, it is RECOMMENDED that the Department enter a Final Order adopting the findings and conclusions in this Recommended Order and requiring Respondents to pay Petitioner the sum of $109,712.84. DONE AND ENTERED this 25th day of October, 2002, in Tallahassee, Leon County, Florida. DANIEL MANRY 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 25th day of October, 2002. COPIES FURNISHED: Kathy Alves Fidelity & Deposit Company of Maryland Post Office Box 87 Baltimore, Maryland 21203 Golden Gem Growers, Inc. Post Office Drawer 9 Umatilla, Florida 32784 Maggie Evans, Esquire 131 Waterman Avenue Mount Dora, Florida 32757 Brenda D. Hyatt, Bureau Chief Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services 500 Third Street, Northwest Post Office Box 1072 Winter Haven, Florida 33882-1072 Brandon J. Rafool, Esquire Post Office Box 7286 Winter Haven, Florida 33883-7286 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 of License and Bond Department of Agriculture 407 South Calhoun Street Mayo Building, Mail Stop 38 Tallahassee, Florida 32399-0800

Florida Laws (8) 120.57475.10601.03601.61601.64601.65601.66601.69
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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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THE CITRUS HILL MANUFACTURING COMPANY vs. DEPARTMENT OF CITRUS, 87-003078RX (1987)
Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Number: 87-003078RX Latest Update: Dec. 09, 1987

Findings Of Fact Upon consideration of the oral and documentary evidence adduced at the hearing, the following relevant facts are found: Citrus Hill Manufacturing Company (Citrus Hill) is a wholly owned subsidiary of Proctor and Gamble. Citrus Hill is in the business of producing, manufacturing, packaging and distributing citrus products throughout the United States. It's main product has been "Select" orange juice which is 100 percent orange juice. Its principal manufacturing facility is located in Frostproof, Florida. While Citrus Hill has four other manufacturing sites outside the State of Florida, its Florida plant is the only facility for manufacturing frozen products. While it can produce chilled products at its plants located outside Florida, Citrus Hill's Florida plant is necessary to supply the demand for its chilled products on a national basis. In an effort to expand its market, Citrus Hill developed three products which it produces and packs at its plant in Frostproof, Florida. These products are and have been labeled as follows: "Lite Citrus Hill Orange Juice Beverage - 60 percent Orange Juice," "Lite Citrus Hill Grapefruit Juice Beverage - 45 percent Grapefruit Juice," and "Plus Calcium Citrus Hill, Calcium Fortified Grapefruit Juice Beverage - 60 percent Grapefruit Juice." The "lite" beverages are reduced calorie diluted juice beverages with the addition of Nutrasweet. The third product is a diluted grapefruit juice beverage fortified with calcium. By a letter dated March 19, 1987, the Department of Citrus ordered Citrus Hill to change its diluted citrus products labels and informed Citrus Hill that the Department would enforce Rule 20-66.001(4), Florida Administrative Code. That rule provides "Labels for diluted citrus products shall not include the word "juice" in the name of the product." As noted above, Citrus Hill markets and sells its product line throughout the United States. It desires to utilize the names of its diluted juice products as indicated in paragraph two above for three reasons. First, Citrus Hill believes that its labeling is in compliance with federal law. Second, it believes that a product name which includes the word "juice" more fully informs the consumer of the nature of the product because it is more exact, descriptive and less ambiguous than any name not using the word "juice", such as "drink", "ade", or "beverage". Third, Citrus Hill fears that if it were unable to disclose through its product name that the product is primarily a juice product, it would be placed at a competitive disadvantage in the national marketplace where non-Florida producers of similar products would not be bound by the challenged Rule's ban on the use of the word "juice" in the name of diluted juice products. While Citrus Hill could move its packaging facilities outside the state and utilize two product labels (one for Florida shipment and one for the non-Florida market), this alternative would be extremely expensive and would constitute a "distribution nightmare." Many distributors and large retail grocery stores work in multi-state regions and may not be willing to segregate and keep track of petitioner's different product labels for shipment in Florida and in non-Florida states. No other state in the United States prohibits the word "juice" in the labeling of diluted citrus juice products. In the late 1960's and early 1970's, the subject of proper labeling of diluted fruit juice beverages was under discussion by both the Florida Department of Citrus and the Federal Food and Drug Administration (FDA) under the Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act. The FDA ultimately rejected the proposal of prohibiting the word "juice" from the name of any product that was not 100 percent pure juice, and also rejected the approach of defining different products through "standards of identity." This latter method of labeling products would have defined a product as "ades" only if containing more than 10 percent, but less than 20 percent, juice, and various other category names based upon the percentage of fruit juice contained in the product. The prohibition against the word "juice" and the "standards of identity" proposals for the labeling of diluted juice products were rejected by the FDA in favor of a common or usual name approach, with a percent declaration of any characterizing ingredient. The pertinent federal regulations addressing the labeling of food products are contained in 21 C.F.R. Chapter 1. The more general regulation appears in 21 C.F.R. 102.5(a) and (b), and states, in pertinent part, as follows: Section 102.5 General Principles. The common or usual name of a food . . . shall accurately identify or describe, in as simple and direct terms as possible, the basic nature of the food or its characterizing properties or ingredients. The name shall be uniform among all identical or similar products and may not be confusingly similar to the name of any other food that is not reasonably encompassed within the same name. Each class or subclass of food shall be given its own common or usual name that states, in clear terms, what it is in a way that distinguishes it from different foods. The common or usual name of a food shall include the percentage(s) of any characterizing ingredient(s) or component(s) when the . . . component(s) . . . has a material bearing on . . . consumer acceptance or when the labeling . . . may otherwise create an erroneous impression that such . . . component(s) is present in an amount greater than is actually the case. The following requirements shall apply unless modified by a specific regulation in Subpart B of this part. The percentage of a characterizing ingredient or component shall be declared on the basis of its quantity in the finished product. . . . The percentage of a characterizing ingredient or component shall be declared-by the words "containing (or contains) --- percent (or percent) ---" . . . with the first blank filled in with the percentage expressed as a whole number not greater than the actual percentage of the ingredient or component named and the second blank filled in with the common or usual name of the ingredient or component. The FDA has also promulgated regulations dealing with the labeling of specific nonstandardized foods, including diluted orange juice beverages and diluted fruit or vegetable juice beverages other than diluted orange juice beverages. With respect to diluted orange juice beverages, 21 C.F.R. Section provides as follows: Diluted Orange Juice Beverages. The common or usual name of a non- carbonated beverage containing less than 100 percent and more than 0 percent orange juice shall be as follows: A descriptive name for the product meeting the requirements of Section 102.5(a) (e.g., diluted orange juice beverage or another descriptive phrase), and A statement of the percent of each juice contained in the beverage in the manner set forth in Section 102.5(b)(2). The percent of the juice shall be declared in 5 percent increments, expressed as a multiple of five not greater than the actual percentage of orange juice in the product, except that the percent of orange juice in products containing more than 0 percent but less than 5-percent orange juice shall be declared in the statement as "less than 5" percent. Diluted fruit or vegetable juice beverages other than diluted orange juice beverages are the subject of 21 C.F.R. Section 102.33, 1/ which provides as follows: Diluted fruit or vegetable juice beverages other than diluted orange juice beverages. The common or usual name of a non- carbonated beverage containing less than 100 percent and more than zero percent fruit or vegetable juice(s), other than only orange juice, shall be as follows: A descriptive name meeting the requirements of Section 102.5(a)(e.g., "diluted grape juice beverage", "grape juice drink", or another descriptive phrase) and A statement of the percent of each juice contained in the beverage in the manner set forth in Section 102.5(b)(2). The percent of the juice shall be declared in five percent increments, expressed as a multiple of five not greater than the actual percentage of juice in the beverage except that the percentage of any juice in beverages containing more than zero percent but less than 5 percent of that juice shall be declared in the statement as "less than 5" percent. The Department of Citrus has conducted two consumer surveys for the purpose of determining whether the word "juice" in a product name of a diluted citrus juice product is confusing or misleading. The Drossler study was conducted in 1972, and concluded that consumers are confused by the word "juice." However, that conclusion appears to be founded on the premise that the only proper use of the word "juice" is in the technical sense of "100 percent pure juice." In other words, what was measured in the survey was the consumer's failure to use the word "juice" in a limited sense to mean "100 percent pure juice." The surveyed consumer was asked to look at several products, and then state "what kind of product is this?" The products viewed consisted of several different dairy products and a citrus beverage. If the consumer used the word "juice" to describe the kind of product pointed to, he was treated as being confused if the product was less than 100 percent juice. No follow-up questions were asked concerning the consumer's understanding of the content of the product. The Chelsea study was conducted at the request of the Department of Citrus in 1987. It, too, concludes that there would be less consumer confusion if the word "juice" were eliminated from products comprised of less than 100 percent pure citrus juice. However, there was evidence that this study attempted to address too many issues, including consumer preferences, and that "question contamination" could well have occurred. This refers to the intentional or unintentional biasing of the interviewees by the ordering or phraseology of the questions asked. Both the Burke study and the Chelsea study indicate that consumers are not confused by a beverage label using the word juice in the product name when it is accompanied by the declaration of the percentage of juice contained in the product. The Burke study was conducted on behalf of the petitioner in 1987. After conducting interviews of 1200 people from all age groups in six different cities throughout the United States, it concluded that there was no significant difference in consumer confusion between the use of the word "juice" and "beverage" in the product name when the percentage of citrus juice content is indicated on the label. In other words, whether the label identified the product as a "juice beverage" or a "beverage", the respondents were able to determine the amount of actual juice contained in the product.

USC (4) 21 CFR 121 CFR 102.3221 CFR 102.3321 CFR 102.5(a) Florida Laws (5) 120.56120.68601.02601.10601.11 Florida Administrative Code (1) 20-66.004
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THOMAS E. DAVIS, INC. vs D. L. SCOTTO AND COMPANY, INC., D/B/A TUXEDO FRUIT COMPANY AND T. D. BANK, AS SURETY, 14-000200 (2014)
Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Filed:Fort Pierce, Florida Jan. 14, 2014 Number: 14-000200 Latest Update: Nov. 02, 2018

The Issue What is the amount owed by D. L. Scotto and Company, Inc., d/b/a Tuxedo Fruit Company, to Thomas E. Davis, Inc., for Valencia oranges purchased in January, April, and May 2013?

Findings Of Fact A "dealer in agricultural products" is defined as a person, partnership, corporation, or other business entity, "engaged within this state in the business of purchasing, receiving, or soliciting agricultural products from the producer . . . for resale or processing for sale " § 604.15(2), Fla. Stat. (2013).1/ Respondent is licensed as a dealer in agricultural products. Petitioner is a "producer" for purposes of sections through 604.34, Florida Statutes. See § 604.15(9), Fla. Stat. (defining "producer" as "any producer of agricultural products produced in the state"). Contract #077 On January 25, 2013, Petitioner and Respondent entered into citrus fruit contract #077 wherein Respondent, for the price of $9.50 per box, agreed to purchase 5,000 boxes of Valencia oranges from Petitioner's Cock Pen grove. Petitioner delivered, and Respondent accepted, 2,925 boxes of the promised oranges. To date, Respondent has only paid Petitioner for 1,962 ($9.50 x 1,962 = $18,639) boxes of oranges from the Cock Pen grove. Contract #078 On January 25, 2013, Petitioner and Respondent entered into a second citrus fruit contract (#078) wherein Respondent, for the price of $9.50 per box, agreed to purchase 4,500 boxes of Valencia oranges from Petitioner's Patrick grove. Petitioner delivered, and Respondent accepted, 2,988 boxes of the promised oranges. To date, Respondent has only paid Petitioner for 792 ($9.50 x 792 = $7,524) boxes of oranges from the Patrick grove. Contract #M012 On April 25, 2013, Petitioner and Respondent entered into a third citrus fruit contract (#M012) wherein Respondent, for the price of $11.00 per box, agreed to purchase 1,200 boxes of Valencia oranges from Petitioner's Johnson grove and 1,500 boxes of Valencia oranges from Petitioner's Allegato grove. Petitioner delivered, and Respondent accepted, 1,161 boxes of the promised oranges from the Johnson grove and 1,296 boxes of oranges from the Allegato grove. To date, Respondent has not paid Petitioner for the oranges received from the Johnson and Allegato groves. Contract #M013 On May 2, 2013, Petitioner and Respondent entered into a fourth citrus fruit contract (#M013) wherein Respondent, for the price of $11.00 per box, agreed to purchase 1,500 boxes of Valencia oranges from Petitioner's Tommy Ann grove. Petitioner delivered, and Respondent accepted, 1,674 boxes of the promised oranges from the Tommy Ann grove. To date, Respondent has not paid Petitioner for the oranges received from the Tommy Ann grove. Respondent's defense Each of the citrus fruit contracts at issue provides that the oranges "must be merchantable for fresh usage at the time of harvest and delivery." Respondent claims that significant quantities of the oranges that were received from Petitioner were not merchantable for fresh usage at the time of harvest and delivery. In reviewing the documentary evidence presented by both parties, it is evident that Petitioner's oranges were harvested and delivered to Respondent during the months of January through May 2013. From this period forward to the date of the final hearing held herein, Respondent never informed Petitioner that there was an issue with the merchantability of the oranges. Instead, whenever Petitioner contacted Respondent about the status of payment for the oranges, Respondent repeatedly assured Petitioner that payment was forthcoming. Respondent's testimony regarding the alleged compromised merchantability of the oranges that he received from Petitioner is not credible.

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 finding that D. L. Scotto and Company, Inc., d/b/a Tuxedo Fruit Company, is indebted to Thomas E. Davis, Inc., in the amount of $75,501.50 (includes filing fee) for the balance due for the oranges it purchased from Petitioner on January 25, April 25, and May 2, 2013. DONE AND ENTERED this 17th day of April, 2014, in Tallahassee, Leon County, Florida. S LINZIE F. BOGAN 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 17th day of April, 2014.

Florida Laws (10) 120.569120.57120.68601.03601.61601.64601.66604.15604.21604.34
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DEERFIELD GROVES COMPANY vs. DEPARTMENT OF CITRUS AND DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE AND CONSUMER SERVICES, 85-000925RX (1985)
Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Number: 85-000925RX Latest Update: Dec. 10, 1985

Findings Of Fact Petitioner, Deerfield Groves Company (Deerfield), is a licensed citrus fruit dealer under Chapter 601, Florida Statutes, and Chapter 20-34, Florida Administrative Code. As a licensee, Deerfield is subject to administrative and criminal prosecution for violation of the statutes and rules governing licensed citrus fruit dealers and was under administrative prosecution for alleged violations of Section 601.33, Florida Statutes, and Rule 20-34.11, Florida Administrative Code, at the time of the final hearing. Deerfield has legal standing as a party petitioner in this case. Respondent, Department Of Citrus (DOC), promulgated Rule 20-34.11, Florida Administrative Code, under the authority of Section 601.10, Florida Statutes. Rule 20-34.11 is designed to implement Section 601.33, Florida Statutes. Respondent, Department Of Agriculture And Consumer Services, (DACS), is the agency charged with the duty to enforce Section 601.33, Florida Statutes, and Rule 20- 34.11, Florida Administrative Code. Personnel of DACS' Division Of Fruit And Vegetable Inspection also are responsible for testing fresh citrus for maturity under Chapter 20-34, Florida Administrative Code. Licensees such as Deerfield furnish a testing room for DACS inspectors to perform maturity tests and certify fresh citrus, as required for marketing fresh fruit. DACS leases an extractor, used for squeezing juice from fruit samples, and subleases the extractor to the licensee. Under the sublease, the extractor is kept in the testing room for use by DACS inspectors and, when not being used by DACS inspectors, for use by the licensee in performing its own tests. Typically, the licensee furnishes the testing room with a table for two and a chair or two. When DACS inspectors perform maturity tests at the beginning of the early harvest, they bring most of the things they need for testing. The licensee provides the bins in which the fruit samples are carried into the testing room. The inspectors bring either a DACS slicing knife or their own. The licensee provides buckets it owns for use by the inspector during the test to collect juice extracted from fruit samples. The DACS inspectors also bring: a sizer to measure the fruit samples; a 2000 c.c. graduated cylinder to measure juice quantities; a 500 c.c. graduated cylinder to hold juice being tested for solids content and for temperature; aluminum pans to hold the graduated cylinders; a combination hydrometer for measuring juice solids content and temperature; a 25 m.1. pipet for transferring a measured amount of juice into a flask; the flask; a bottle of phenothaline with eyedropper top used for adding measured amounts of phenothaline to the flask of measured juice; a bottle of alkaline solution; and a burette for adding a measured amount of the alkaline solution to the flask of measured juice. During the harvest season, DACS leaves its equipment, instruments and solutions referred to in the preceding paragraph in the testing room. They are kept separate from the licensee's property and are not supposed to be used by the licensee. However, DACS allows the licensee to use its own bins and buckets and the extractor to conduct its own tests in the testing room when DACS inspectors are not using it. 1/ Some DACS inspectors request or allow licensees to assist during testing or to handle the fruit samples. 2/ Some allow licensees to attempt to influence the inspector's judgment by questioning the validity of the test or the accuracy of the inspector's observations or by comparing the inspector's results with the results of its own tests. Sometimes, this results in correction of an error the inspector otherwise would have made. It was not proved, however that there is an agency policy of requesting or allowing licensees to conduct themselves in those ways during testing. DACS has a policy to allow only one licensee representative in the testing room with the DACS inspector during testing. Violation of this policy is viewed as a violation of Section 601.33, Florida Statutes (1983). However, not all DACS inspectors strictly enforce this policy. Some allow more than one licensee representative in the testing room.

Florida Laws (7) 120.52120.56120.57601.10601.24601.25601.33
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THOMPSON FRUIT COMPANY vs GOLDEN GEM GROWERS, INC., AND FIDELITY AND DEPOSIT COMPANY OF MARYLAND, 94-005398 (1994)
Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Filed:Lakeland, Florida Sep. 26, 1994 Number: 94-005398 Latest Update: Aug. 21, 1995

The Issue The issues for determination in this case are whether Respondent, as a licensed citrus fruit dealer, misappropriated and marketed citrus fruit owned by Petitioner during the 1992-1993 shipping season, and further, whether such actions constitute a violation of the Florida Citrus Code for which proceeds of the citrus fruit dealer's bond executed by Co-Respondent should be paid to Petitioner in satisfaction of Petitioner's claim pursuant to Section 601.66, Florida Statutes.

Findings Of Fact Petitioner, Thompson Fruit Company, is a Florida company with an office in Winter Haven, Florida. Petitioner has been in the business of buying and selling citrus fruit for many years. James Thompson, Jr., (Thompson) is the President of Petitioner. Petitioner was actively engaged in the business of buying and selling citrus fruit during the 1992-1993 shipping season. Respondent, Golden Gem Growers, Inc., is a Florida corporation located in Umatilla, Florida, and was, at all material times, a licensed citrus fruit dealer under the provisions of chapter 601, Florida Statutes. Respondent is a cooperative organization comprised of citrus fruit grower members. Respondent offers various services to its members including harvesting and marketing services. Respondent enters into individual contracts with its grower members to accept and market citrus fruit. During the 1992-1993 shipping season Respondent entered into more than one hundred contracts with its grower members relating to the acceptance and marketing of citrus fruit. Co-Respondent, Fidelity & Deposit Company of Maryland, is a surety company qualified to do business in Florida, which, pursuant to section 601.61, Florida Statutes, during the 1992-1993 shipping season, executed a citrus fruit dealer's bond for Respondent in the amount of $100,000. E.J. Higgins (Higgins) at all material times hereto was a citrus fruit grower and member of Respondent's cooperative organization. On July 23, 1991, Higgins entered into a Revised Grower Member Agreement with Respondent. In accordance with its contract with Higgins, Respondent was obligated to provide citrus fruit harvesting and marketing services to Higgins. On July 5,1990, Higgins had entered into a Crop Agreement and a separate Lease Agreement relating to a citrus grove owned by Pomco Associates, Inc., (Pomco) in Manatee, County, Florida. The grove consisted of approximately 52 acres of red grapefruit trees. The Crop Agreement made no reference to the duration of the agreement. The separate Lease Agreement between Higgins and Pomco expressly stated that the lease ended one year from the date of signing. Higgins provided Respondent with a copy of his July 5, 1990 Crop Agreement and Lease Agreement with Pomco. Respondent thereafter accepted citrus fruit from Higgins which was harvested in the Pomco grove in the 1991-1992 season, and Respondent paid Higgins for the citrus fruit from the Pomco grove at that time. In 1992 and early 1993, Higgins informed Phillip Conant, a Vice- President and Director of the Grower Division of Respondent, that Higgins was a holdover lessee under the Pomco lease, and was entitled to harvest the fruit from the Pomco grove. Under Higgins' contract with Respondent, Respondent was required to provide Higgins with harvesting equipment including trailers and boxes. Respondent was further required under the contract to accept and market the citrus fruit on Higgins' behalf. Respondent advanced Higgins $2,400 toward the marketing of the citrus fruit from the Pomco grove. On January 23, 1993, Higgins requested that Respondent provide him with trailers and boxes to set up Higgins' crew for harvesting the Pomco grove. Respondent complied with Higgins' request, and dispatched a truck and trailer with a load of boxes to the Pomco grove. The truck, trailer and boxes were clearly marked and identified as belonging to Respondent. Prior to this time, on or about December 2, 1992, Petitoner, by and through its President, James Thompson, Jr., had entered into a Purchase Contract and Agreement for the citrus fruit on the same Pomco grove in Manatee County, Florida, for the 1992-1993 season. Under the terms of the contract, Petitioner advanced Pomco $3,000 toward the purchase of the citrus fruit from the Pomco grove. Shortly after Respondent dispatched its equipment to the Pomco grove on January 23, 1993, Thompson was informed that citrus fruit was being harvested from the Pomco grove. Thompson went to the grove, observed the boxes and trailers which were identified as belonging to Respondent, and called Phillip Conant to inform Conant that Thompson had a purchase contract and agreement for the citrus fruit from the Pomco grove. Thompson furnished Conant with a copy of the Petitioner's contract with Pomco. Thompson also contacted the Manatee County Sheriff's Department to remove Higgins' harvesting crew from the Pomco grove. Respondent, by and through its director, Conant, then contacted Higgins who stated that he had obtained a legal opinion that as a holdover lessee under his prior crop agreement and lease with Pomco, he had a right to harvest the fruit from the Pomco grove. Higgins further stated that he expected Respondent to fulfill its contractual obligations to provide harvesting services and to market the citrus fruit. Conant, by telephone, informed Thompson that in light of Higgins' representations, Respondent was unsure as to whether Higgins or Petitioner had a right to harvest the fruit. In response to this information, Thompson stated that he would pursue judicial remedies to resolve the dispute. By letter dated February 4, 1993, Conant confirmed to Thompson that Respondent was taking a "hands off" position as to the dispute between Petitioner and Higgins over the citrus fruit from the Pomco grove. On February 5, 1993, Conant also sent a facsimile copy of the February 4, 1993, letter to Thompson and reiterated to Thompson that Respondent was not knowledgeable of the facts of Petitioner's dispute with Higgins, and would not be involved in the dispute. Between February 7, 1993, and February 13, 1993, Respondent accepted three shipments of citrus fruit from the Pomco grove harvested by Higgins. The three shipments totalled 1,230 boxes. All the fruit accepted by Respondent from the Pomco grove was red grapefruit. At that point in the season, the market for red grapefruit was not good. The net value received by Respondent for the red grapefruit from the Pomco grove was $.9889 per box. A reasonable average price for red grapefruit at that time was $.97 per box. Respondent received a reasonable price per box for the red grapefruit from the Pomco grove during the 1992-1993 shipping season. Respondent received a total of $2,418.86 for the red grapefruit from the Pomco grove. The harvesting costs incurred by Respondent during the 1992- 1993 relating to the Pomco fruit were $1,402.40, leaving a balance of $1,216.34. Respondent has placed the funds received from the Pomco grove fruit during the 1992-1993 shipping season in its escrow account pending a determination as to who is the rightful owner of the funds. Respondent has provided an accurate accounting of the harvesting and marketing of the Pomco grove citrus fruit during the 1992-1993 season. There has not been a judicial resolution of the dispute between Petitioner and Higgins.

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 pursuant to Section 601.66(4), Florida Statutes, dismissing the proceeding. RECOMMENDED in Tallahassee, Leon County, Florida, this 18th day of May, 1995. 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 18th day of May, 1995. APPENDIX Respondent's Proposed Findings: Paragraphs 1 through 21 adopted and incorporated. Paragraphs 22 revised as to amount remaining due. COPIES FURNISHED: Commissioner Bob Crawford Commissioner of Agriculture The Capitol, PL-10 Tallahassee, FL 32399-0810 Brenda Hyatt, Chief Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services Mayo Building, Room 508 Tallahassee, FL 32399-0800 Richard Tritschler, Esquire Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services The Capitol, PL-10 Tallahassee, FL 32399-0810 Jerri A. Blair, Esquire Post Office Box 130 Tavares, FL 32778 Ray Mattox, Esquire 170 East Central Avenue Post Office Box 917 Winter Haven, FL 33882-0917 Golden Gem Growers Post Office Box 9 Umatilla, FL 32784 Fidelity & Deposit Company of Maryland Post Office Box 1227 Baltimore MD 31203

Florida Laws (6) 120.57402.40601.61601.64601.6690.804
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PEACE RIVER CITRUS PRODUCTS, INC.; FRESH JUICE OF FLORIDA, INC.; AND SUN ORCHARD OF FLORIDA, INC. vs DEPARTMENT OF CITRUS, 02-004607RP (2002)
Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Filed:Arcadia, Florida Dec. 02, 2002 Number: 02-004607RP Latest Update: Mar. 03, 2004

The Issue The issue in DOAH Case No. 02-3648RE is whether Emergency Rules 20ER02-01, 20ER02-02, and 20ER02-03 constitute an invalid exercise of delegated legislative authority. The issue in DOAH Case No. 02-4607RP is whether Proposed Rules 20-15.001, 20- 15.002, and 20-15.003, Florida Administrative Code, constitute an invalid exercise of delegated legislative authority.

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 and 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), 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, 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 115. 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 instant 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 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. They were published in the October 4, 2002 issue of the Florida Administrative Weekly (vol. 28, no. 40, pp. 4271-4272). The full text of the Emergency Rules is: EQUALIZATION TAX ON NON-FLORIDA UNITED STATES JUICE 20ER02-1 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 20ER02-01 and Chapter 20-15, F.A.C., 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, 601.15, 601.155 FS. History-- New 9-24-02. 20ER02-2 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, 601.15, 601.155 FS. History-- New 9-24-02. 20ER02-3 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. Additionally, the Florida Department of Citrus will provide notice of the calculation to the previously favored persons by certified mail. The notice of the calculation shall contain a statement including the following categories: (a) Tax liability; (b) Gallons; Brix; Type of product; (e) Total solids; (f) Conversion rate; (g) Total boxes; (h) Delineation of non-Florida, United States juice. (2)(a) Contained within the notice will be the various legal options available to those who previously enjoyed the exemption, set forth in proposed Rule 20- 15.003(2), F.A.C. (b) Persons who previously enjoyed the exemption may petition to intervene in the case of Tampa Juice Service, Inc., et al, Consolidated Case No. GCG-003718, presently pending before the Circuit Court of the Tenth Judicial Circuit in and for Polk County. A hearing to consider arguments made by any intervenor, the Plaintiffs and the Florida Department of Citrus is currently scheduled to be heard by the Honorable Dennis Maloney on November 12, 2002, in Bartow, Florida. (3) 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 9-24-02. The Department's "Specific Reasons for Finding an Immediate Danger to the Public Health, Safety or Welfare" were set forth as follows: On March 18, 2002, the Court in the Tenth Judicial Circuit, State of Florida, in and for Polk County, entered a Partial Final Declaratory Judgment in the case of Tampa Juice Service, Inc., et al v. Florida Department of Citrus, Consolidated Case Number GCG-003718. In this order the Court ruled that the exemption in Section 601.155, F.S., for non-Florida, United States juice was unconstitutional. On or about April 15, 2002, the Court severed the exemption for non-Florida, United States juice from section 601.155(5), F.S. On August 8, 2002, the Court held that the Florida Department of Citrus was required to cure the invalidity of the equalization taxing scheme. To cure this invalidity, the Florida Department of Citrus promulgates Rule 20ER02-1, F.A.C., which will serve to implement the Court's order for a nondiscriminatory tax scheme and provide due process protections for the previously favored taxpayers. These rules are being promulgated on an emergency basis to meet time constraints associated with litigation and to establish guidelines which protect the public's and state's interest for the orderly and efficient collection and payment of the tax liability. Without these guidelines, the welfare of the citizens and the state would be adversely affected because of the immediate and widespread impact of the failure of previously favored persons to properly remit the tax. The Department's "Reason for Concluding that the Procedure is Fair Under the Circumstances" was set forth as follows: Promulgation of these guidelines using the emergency rule procedures is the only available mechanism which adequately protects the public interests under the circumstances which require collection and payment of the tax liability. This procedure is fair to the public and to the previously favored persons. It permits promulgation of the necessary guidelines within a time frame which allows the industry to be adequately informed of their duties, responsibilities and rights with respect to the tax liability. In the November 15, 2002 issue of the Florida Administrative Weekly (vol. 28, no. 46, pp. 4996-4998), the Department published the Proposed Rules at issue in DOAH Case No. 02-4607RP. The text of Proposed Rule 20-15.001, Florida Administrative Code, is identical to that of Emergency Rule 20ER02-1, set forth above. The text of Proposed Rule 20-15.002, Florida Administrative Code, is identical to that of Emergency Rule 20ER02-2, set forth above. The text of Proposed Rule 20- 15.003(1)&(3), Florida Administrative Code, is identical to that of Emergency Rule 20ER02-3(1)&(3), set forth above. The text of Proposed Rule 15.003(2), Florida Administrative Code, varies from the text of Emergency Rule 20ER02-3(2), and reads as follows: 20-15.003 Collection. 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. Peace River is a Florida corporation and licensed citrus fruit dealer regulated by Chapter 601, Florida Statutes. As such, Peace River is subject to the rules of the Department. Peace River buys, sells, and manufactures bulk citrus juices. By correspondence dated October 2, 2002, Peace River was notified by the Department that Peace River would be liable for payment of $86,242.41 in Equalization taxes for the tax period of October 6, 1997 through March 14, 2002 (the "tax period"), pursuant to the terms of the Emergency Rules. Fresh Juice is a Florida corporation and licensed citrus fruit dealer regulated by Chapter 601, Florida Statutes. As such, Fresh Juice is subject to the rules of the Department. Fresh Juice buys, sells, and manufactures citrus juices. By correspondence dated October 2, 2002, Fresh Juice was notified by the Department that Fresh Juice would be liable for payment of $45,052.19 in Equalization taxes for the tax period, pursuant to the terms of the Emergency Rules. Sun Orchard is a Florida corporation and licensed citrus fruit dealer regulated by Chapter 601, Florida Statutes. As such, Sun Orchard is subject to the rules of the Department. Sun Orchard buys, sells, and manufactures citrus juices. By correspondence dated October 2, 2002, Sun Orchard was notified by the Department that Sun Orchard would be liable for payment of $45,052.19 in Equalization taxes for the tax period, pursuant to the terms of the Emergency Rules. During the tax period, Peace River, Fresh Juice, and Sun Orchard imported, stored and blended non-Florida, United States citrus juices. Neither Peace River, Fresh Juice, nor Sun Orchard is a party to the lawsuit styled Tampa Juice Service, Inc., et al. v. Department of Citrus, Case No. GCG-00-3718 (Consolidated). Peace River, Fresh Juice, and Sun Orchard contend that they relied on the tax exemption in making business decisions and had no notice that their activities regarding non-Florida, United States juice would be taxable upon the court's striking of the exemption in Section 601.155(5), Florida Statutes. Accordingly, Peace River, Fresh Juice, and Sun Orchard contend that, during the tax period, they had no opportunity to conform their conduct to avoid the tax or position themselves to claim a refund allowed by Section 601.155, Florida Statutes. Peace River, Fresh Juice, and Sun Orchard contend that they have not been obligated by Chapter 601, Florida Statutes, to keep specific records on their use of non-Florida United States citrus juices for the tax period, but admit they keep business records required by law, which may include some business records related to non-Florida United States juice during the tax period. Peace River, Fresh Juice, and Sun Orchard shipped products made with non-Florida, United States juice during the tax period without payment of the Equalization Tax.

Florida Laws (21) 120.52120.54120.56212.13212.21601.02601.10601.11601.13601.15601.155601.29601.47601.49601.51601.56601.64601.67775.08775.082775.083
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