Florida Citrus Exchange v. Folsom
Opinion of the Court
In the nineteen-thirties growers and packers of oranges in Florida and Texas began the practice of adding color to the rind of oranges. Early oranges, maturing during warm weather, will ripen to full maturity with the skin still green in color. Oranges maturing in the late winter or spring may fully ripen and undergo a “regreening” of the rind. The orange-purchasing public requires an orange-colored orange and will not accept those with green rinds. Representatives of a substantial number of those engaged in the growing and marketing of citrus fruits in the two states assert that severe economic reverses would result from a prohibition of adding color to the fruit; indeed it has been asserted that the future of the orange industry of these states is dependent upon the continued coloring of its product.
In 1938 the Congress enacted the present Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act. 52 Stat. 1040, 21 U.S.C.A. §§ 301-392. The adulteration of food in interstate commerce and the introduction of adulterated food into interstate commerce were prohibited. 21 U.S.C.A. § 331. Congressional standards for determining when food would be deemed adulterated were set up.
The Secretary of Agriculture, to whom the administration of the Act was originally committed, issued regulations on May 4, 1939, effective May 9, 1939, governing the listing of coal-tar colors.
The three colors were on the original list, prepared in 1939, of coal-tar colors available for certification. Some of the coal-tar colors on the list became suspect as toxic and possibly carcinogenic. This prompted further investigation which culminated in the hearings which formed the bases of the order which we here review. At the hearing evidence was intro
The order of the Secretary which we here review made findings of fact based upon the evidence of the tests of which Dr. Vos testified. At the conclusion of nine paragraphs of specific findings as to the effects of the various quantities of the colors given to animals with mention of one episode of illness resulting to man from eating popcorn colored with Orange 1 where the percentage level did not appear, the Secretary stated:
“There was no evidence on which findings could be made concerning how much of the three colors is likely to be ingested by man from his food, drugs, and cosmetics. Some interested persons, taking their own products, attempted to show that the amounts ingested would be small to the point of insignificance. But those contentions leave aside the occurrence of the colors in the products of others, as well as the fact that upon certification of a color the Department has no means of controlling the amounts of colors used in a variety of food, drugs, and cosmetics. Nor is there authority to limit a color, once certified, to a single food—for example, F D & C Red No. 32 for use in color-added oranges.”
By the order it was determined that Red 32 and the other two suspect coal-tar colors were not harmless and suitable for use in food, drugs and cosmetics and these colors were deleted from the approved list. The legal theory upon which the order.was based is found in paragraph 2 of the Secretary’s conclusions where it was held:
“Sections 406(b), 504, and 604 of the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act (21 U.S.C. 346(b), 354, and 364) provide for the listing of coal-tar colors that are harmless and suitable for use in food, drugs, and cosmetics. The act does not provide any method for listing toxic colors for specific food, drug, or cosmetic uses so as to limit their total use to small enough amounts that the toxicity might be disregarded. Under the statute a toxic color cannot be classified as a harmless color.”
The primary attack of the petitioners is upon the correctness of the principle as stated in the foregoing quotation.
“Provided further, That this paragraph shall not apply to oranges meeting minimum maturity standards established by or under the laws of the States in which the oranges were grown and not intended for processing (other than oranges designated by the trade as ‘packing house elimination’), the skins of which have been colored at any time prior to March 1, 1959, with the coal-tar color certified prior to the enactment of this proviso as F.D. & C. Red 32, or certified after such enactment as External D. & C. Red 14 in accordance with section 21, Code of Federal Regulations, part 9: And provided further, That the preceding proviso shall have no further effect if prior to March 1, 1959, another coal-tar color suitable for coloring oranges is listed under section 406”. 70 Stat. 512, 21 U.S. C.A. § 342(c).
While this amendment was pending before the House of Representatives where it had its origin,
The petitioners list twelve specifications of error upon which they ground their attack upon the Secretary’s order.
The Secretary has urged that the questions- presented for our review are the identical questions which were decided by the Second Circuit in Certified Color Industry Committee v. Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare, supra, and that we should follow that decision unless we are convinced it was clearly wrong. Where an identical issue is presented and no different principle is involved, the decision of another court of appeals is entitled to great weight and affords persuasive argument.
“Thus the problem is far different from the one presented recently to Congress when the act was amended to permit the use of Red 32 on orange skins not intended for processing. With only one product contaminated it was not too difficult to argue that such small amounts were
involved that a man would have to drink 5000 gallons of orange juice a day before experiencing any adverse effects.” 236 F.2d 871.
The problem we consider is not that which the Second Circuit had and the decision there is, as we hope to show, not in conflict with what we decide here.
In a brief filed with us by amicus curiae, he quotes from a letter to him from the Food and Drug Administration where it was said:
“Let me say at the outset that this Administration is in agreement with your conclusion that the usé of added color is inherently deceptive and is contrary to the interests of both consumers and producers.” This letter is not in the record and would not be the subject of comment by us but for a suggestion that it evidences a hostile and prejudiced attitude of the Food and Drug Administration. We think the record shows the contrary to be the case. It is shown that all oranges to which color is added are so marked and that immature fruit is not colored. The record reflects a departmental attitude of fairness and objectivity, and discloses that the ill-advised statement of the writer of the letter does not express the view of the Secretary or of the department.
It has been contended that the officers charged with the administration of the Act had, from the time the Act was passed until the time of the investigation which culminated in the hearings and in the order we here review, construed the Act as permitting, if not requiring, the fixing of tolerance for harmless uses of Red 32. Such administrative construction should be persuasive, so we are told, if not binding as an administrative construction of an ambiguous provision. The Secretary, on the other hand, asserts that the administrative interpretation has not altered, and that the change of position resulted from the
The decision we are to make is whether the Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare is required or permitted to determine if there is a minimum quantity of the coal-tar color designated as F D & C Red No. 32 which can be used in adding color to the skins of mature oranges without danger of impairing the health of those who consume such oranges; and if so required or permitted, and if it be determined that there is such minimum, should the Secretary list and certify such color for such use. In the construction of statutes courts will look to the entire act and to its objects and policy.
In the leading and often cited Lexington Mill case
“The statute upon its face shows, that the primary purpose of Congress was to prevent injury to the public health by the sale and transportation in interstate commerce of misbranded and adulterated foods. * * * As against adulteration, the statute was intended to protect the public health from possible injury by adding to articles of food consumption poisonous and deleterious substances which might, render such articles injurious to the health of consumers.” 232 U.S. 409, 34 S. Ct. 340.
The purpose to protect the public health is an important aim of the statute,
In some of the cases
The words “harm”, “harmful”, and “harmless” are terms of relation. In this sense they resemble “wrong” and “wrongful”.
In United States v. Lexington Mill & Elevator Co., supra, the Supreme Court reviewed the condemnation of a lot of flour to which had been added a poisonous ingredient but in a quantity so small that the health of a consumer could not be thereby injured. The statute then provided that an article of food should be deemed to be adulterated if it “contain any added poisonous or other added deleterious ingredient which may render such article injurious to health”. It was contended there, as it is contended here, that it is the character-—-not the quantity—of the added substance which is to determine the case. This contention was rejected. The Court said;
“If it cannot by any possibility, when the facts are reasonably considered, injure the health of any consumer, such flour, though having a small addition of poisonous or deleterious ingredients, may not be condemned under the act.” 232 U.S. 411, 34 S.Ct. 341.
As in the Lexington Mill case, it was held in the Seventh Circuit that “injurious” is a relative rather than an absolute term. W. B. Wood Mfg. Co. v. United States, 7 Cir., 1923, 286 F. 84. We think “harmless” is also to be so construed.
The Secretary would concede, apparently, the possibility that a person might consume Red 32 in such small quantities that no hazard to health would result. His guarded statement is that “the evidence so far available does not establish a likelihood of injury to man from the minute amount likely to find its way into the human diet from the consumption of such colored oranges at the level of use involved.”
Unless the quantities of Red 32 used in the coloring of oranges are dangerous to public health, the objects and purposes of the Act will not be promoted by a construction which prohibits that use in such quantities. The statute which we construe provides for the fixing of tolerances for added poisonous and deleterious substances required in the production of food
The Secretary found that Red 32 is toxic; in other words that it is poisonous. The evidence justified the finding. If the Secretary is correct in his construction of “harmless”, Section 402(a) of the Act is inapplicable to coal-tar colors. If his construction is erroneous, Section 402(a) would apply. If Section 402(a) applies, the colored oranges would be “adulterated” only if the added poisonous substance was unsafe within Section 406(a). Under this section poisonous substances are permitted to be added to food if it “is required in the production thereof” within such limits as to quantity or extent as the Secretary finds necessary for the protection of public health. The Committees of the Senate and the House af Representatives each found that the practice of coloring oranges has become an economic necessity for a major segment of the orange industry sinee a high percentage of the oranges grown in Florida and Texas would meet with strong consumer resistance if not colored.
We construe the Act as requiring the Secretary, under Section 406(a), to determine whether the use of the col- or Red 32 is required in the production for market of oranges grown by a substantial segment of the orange producing industry; and if he finds that such usé is so required, then to determine the quantity, if any, that can be tolerated as safe, and by regulation to limit the quantity to such extent as he finds necessary for the protection of public health. With “harmless”, as used in Section 406(b), construed as a relative rather than an absolute term, regulations promulgated by the Secretary under that section as well as under Section 406(a) could be issued if the prerequisite findings as to the necessity for using color had been made and the tolerance limits had been fixed.
In the order of the Secretary it is stated that there is no “authority to limit a color, once certified, to a single food—for example, F D & C Red No. 32 for use in color-added oranges”. Although there may be no express statutory provision authorizing the limiting of the use of a color to a single food, it is not prohibited. If the adding of a toxic substance to one food may be harmful, but harmless when added to another food in limited quantities fixed by a predetermined tolerance, we are of the opinion that the Secretary is empowered to permit its use in the latter instance. The Secretary at one time seemed of the same opinion. In the Food and Drug Administration Regulations promulgated in 1955, a number of coal-tar colors were listed for certification for use in food, drugs and cosmetics. Among these are colors designated as “lakes”. The regulations provide that “No lake listed in paragraph (a) of this section shall be certified for any use in food except external application to shell eggs.”
We are not unmindful of the admonition of the Second Circuit in the Certified Color Industry case, supra, that:
“Now that their toxicity has been amply demonstrated it would be unconscionable for any court to require the Secretary to permit their use without the clearest and most uncompromising evidence that usage at certain levels was absolutely safe.” 236 F.2d 870.
With this statement we are in accord. The findings of fact are to be made by the Secretary. Such findings, under Section 701(f) (3) of the Act,
“While the scientific evidence so far available does not establish what the lowest safe dosage would be to test animals, neither does it establish a likelihood of injury to man from the use of this color [Red 32] on the exterior of oranges at the levels of use involved. Before final conclusions can be drawn on this point, however, it is necessary to conduct adequate scientific studies of chronic toxicity on laboratory animals over their life span, which will involve feeding tests at levels related to the quantities of such externally applied color that might enter man’s diet. Such tests and studies will require approximately 3 years. We assume that the industry will make such studies.”35
Since the Secretary is authorized by Section 702(a) of the Act
In the Certified Color Industry case, supra, the court rejected the Secretary’s construction of the word “harmless”. It holds that the government need not prove that a coal-tar color is in fact injurious to health but it is enough if it shows that it “might render the article of food injurious”, adopting the quoted words from the Lexington Mill case. Because, in the quantities tested, the possibility of injury to health was indicated, the court sustained the order. It held that “under the circumstances disclosed in the record” the petitioning manufacturers of coal-tar colors could not require the Secretary to establish tolerances fixing safe levels of use. For this position two reasons were assigned, first that safe levels have not been established, and second, the department could not control uses within tolerance limits if such limits were prescribed. In connection with the first of these grounds the court comments that the industry made no investigation as to the effect of the colors at low levels of usage. The record bears out the court’s observation, but under the Secretary’s construction of the Act the effect of the colors at minimal levels would be immaterial. The inability to control the quantity used is no different, as we see it, in dealing with a coal-tar color than with respect to other toxic or poisonous substances where the Secretary is required to establish tolerances. In any event, as the court in the Certified Color Industry case points out, the situation before it was different from the case of a single color such as Red 32 applied to a single use such as the coloring of oranges. Such a case is the one before us.
After a hearing in 1939 Red 32 was found to be harmless and suitable for use in foods, drugs and cosmetics. The situation as presented on this review was briefly and accurately characterized in a letter from the Commissioner of Food and Drugs to Florida Senators and Congressmen written February 8, 1955. In speaking of Red 32 the Commissioner said:
“Recent investigations show that these colors when fed in substantial amounts, show evidence of toxicity. There is, however, no evidence that, in the amounts used, and in the manner of use, in the coloring of citrus fruit, the product so colored is not safe for human consumption.”
Unless there is evidence that, in the amounts used, and in the manner of use, oranges colored with Red 32 are unsafe for human consumption, the 1939 find
At the outset of this proceeding, upon agreement, a stay order was entered to permit the use of Red 32 in coloring oranges while the proceeding was pending. Except as to duration, the substance of the stay order’s provisions is followed in our disposition of the matter.
The order promulgated by Marion B. Folsom, Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare, on November 10, 1955, published in the Federal Register on November 16, 1955, (20 F.R. 8492) will be set aside in so far as said order removes the coal-tar color F D & C Red No. 32 from the list of colors which may be certified for use in coloring the skin of oranges meeting minimum maturity standards prescribed in the State of Florida and Texas; provided, that nothing herein or in the judgment of this Court entered pursuant hereto shall restore said coal-tar color to the list of colors which may be certified for unrestricted use in food, drugs and cosmetics but shall operate to authorize the certification of batches of said color conforming to the specifications for the color appearing at 21 C.F.R. 135.3 (1949 ed.) for the purpose of coloring the skin of mature oranges only; provided further, that the Secretary shall be required to certify only sufficient batches of F D & C Red No. 32 as may be necessary to col- or the skin of mature oranges from time to time; provided further, that the certificates issued for batches of F D & C Red No. 32 may be limited by their certificate for use in coloring mature oranges only; and provided further, that nothing herein or in the judgment of this Court entered pursuant hereto shall be deemed to restrict the Secretary from making further investigations and conducting hearings for a determination of whether the use of Red 32 is required in the production of oranges and to determine the tolerances, if any, that are safe and harmless, as harmless is herein construed and defined.
Judgment accordingly will be entered setting aside in part, as herein set forth, the aforesaid order of the Secretary.
. “A food shall be deemed to be adulterated—
“(a) (1) If it bears or contains any poisonous or deleterious substance which may render it injurious to health; but in case the substance is not an added substance such food shall not be considered adulterated under this clause if the quantity of such substance in such food does not ordinarily render it injurious to health; or (2) if it bears or contains any added poisonous or added deleterious substance which is unsafe within the meaning of Section 406; or (3) if it consists in whole or in part of any filthy, putrid, or decomposed substance, or if it is otherwise unfit for food; or (4) if it has been prepared, packed, or held under unsanitary conditions whereby it may have become contaminated with filth, or whereby it may have been rendered injurious to health; or (5) if it is, in whole or in pa:t, the product of a diseased animal or of an animal which has died otherwise than by slaughter; or (6) if its container is composed, in whole or in part, of any poisonous or deleterious substance which may render the contents injurious to health.
“(b) (1) If any valuable constituent has been in whole or in part omitted or abstracted therefrom; or (2) if any substance has been substituted wholly or in part therefor; or (3) if damage or inferiority has been concealed in any manner; or (4) if any substance has been added thereto or mixed or packed therewith so as to increase its bulk or weight, or reduce its quality or strength, or make it appear better or of greater value than it is.
“(c) If it bears or contains a coal-tar color other than one from a batch that has been certified in accordance with regulations as provided by Section 406; Provided, That this paragraph shall not apply to citrus fruit bearing or containing a coal-tar color if application for listing of such color has been made under this Act and such application has not*853 been acted on by the Secretary, if such color was commonly used prior to the enactment of this Act for the purpose of coloring citrus fruit. * * * ”
52 Stat. 1046, § 402, 21 U.S.C.A. § 342.
. “(a) Any poisonous or deleterious substance added to any food, except whore such substance is required in the production thereof or cannot be avoided by good manufacturing practice shall be deemed to be unsafe for purposes of the application of clause (2) of section 402(a); but when such substance is so required or cannot be so avoided, the Secretary shall promulgate regulations limiting the quantity therein or thereon to such extent as he finds necessary for the protection of public health, and any quantity exceeding the limits so fixed shall also be deemed to be unsafe for purposes of the application of clause (2) of section 402(a). While such a regulation is in effect limiting the quantity of any such substance in the case of any food, such food shall not, by reason of bearing or containing any added amount of such substance, be considered to be adulterated within the meaning of clause (1) of section 402(a). In determining the quantity of such added substance to be tolerated in or on different articles of food the Secretary shall take into account the extent to which the use of such substance is required or cannot be avoided in the production of each such article, and the other ways in which the consumer may be affected by the same or other poisonous or deleterious substances.
“(b) The Secretary shall promulgate regulations providing for the listing of coal-tar colors which are harmless and suitable for use in food and for the certification of batches of such colors, with or without harmless diluents.” 52 Stat. 1049, § 406, 21 U.S.C.A. § 346.
. 4 F.R. 1935, 1 C.F.R. 1939 Supp. 1214 et seq.
. 4 F.R. 3936, 1 C.F.R. 1939 Supp. 1214, 1218.
. Reorganization Plan No. 1 of 1953, 67 Stat. 631, 18 F.R. 2053 ; 67 Stat. 18, 5 U.S.C.A. § 623.
. 20 F.R. 8492.
. 21 U.S.C.A. § 371(f).
. Il.R. 7732.
. Hearing before a Subcommittee of the Committee on Interstate and Foreign Commerce House of Representatives, 84th Cong., 2d Sess. on H.R. 7732, pp. 2 and 3.
. Hearing, supra, pp. 17 and 18.
. H.R.Rep. No. 1982, 84th Cong.2d Sess.
. S.Rep. No. 2391, 84th Cong.2d Sess.
. Sokol Brothers Furniture Co. v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 5 Cir., 1950, 185 F.2d 222, rehearing denied 5 Cir., 185 F.2d 677, certiorari denied 340 U.S. 952, 71 S.Ct. 571, 95 L.Ed. 686.
. 82 C.J.S. Statutes § 359 b, p. 771.
. The purposes of the Act are discussed infra.
. Stark v. Brannan, D.C.D.C.1949, 82 F.Supp. 614, affirmed 87 U.S.App.D.C. 388, 185 F.2d 871, affirmed 342 U.S. 451, 72 S.Ct. 433, 96 L.Ed. 497.
. Mastro Plastics Corporation v. National Labor Relations Board, 350 U.S. 270, 76 S.Ct. 349, 100 L.Ed. 309; National Labor Relations Board v. Lion Oil Co., 352 U.S. 282, 77 S.Ct. 330, 1 L.Ed.2d 331; United States v. Witkovich, 353 U.S. 194, 77 S.Ct. 779, 1 L.Ed.2d 765.
. National Labor Relations Board v. Lion Oil Co., supra.
. United States v. American Trucking Associations, Inc., 310 U.S. 534, 60 S.Ct. 1059, 84 L.Ed. 1345; Fulford v. Forman, 5 Cir., 1957, 245 F.2d 145.
. Knowlton v. Moore, 178 U.S. 41, 20 S.Ct. 747, 44 L.Ed. 969.
. United States v. Freeman, 3 How. 556, 44 U.S. 556, 11 L.Ed. 724.
. United States v. Lexington Mill & Elevator Co., 232 U.S. 399, 34 S.Ct. 337, 58 L.Ed. 658.
. United States v. Forty Barrels and Twenty Kegs of Coca-Cola, 241 U.S. 265, 36 S.Ct. 573, 60 L.Ed. 995.
. United States v. Dotterweich, 320 U.S. 277, 64 S.Ct. 134, 88 L.Ed. 48, rehearing denied 320 U.S. 815, 64 S.Ct. 367, 88 L.Ed. 492; 62 Cases, More or Less, Each Containing Six Jars of Jam v. United States, 340 U.S. 593, 71 S.Ct. 515, 95 L.Ed. 566.
. United States v. 449 Cases, 2 Cir., 1954, 212 F.2d 567, 45 A.L.R.2d 846; 338 Cartons, More or Less, of Butter v. United States, 4 Cir., 1947, 165 F.2d 728; A. O. Andersen & Co. v. United States, 9 Cir., 1922, 284 F. 542; United States v. 298 Cases, D.C.Or.1949, 88 F.Supp. 450; United States v. 184 Barrels, D.C.E.D.Wis.1943, 53 F.Supp. 652; United States v. 133 Cases, D.C.E.D.Pa. 1938, 22 F.Supp. 515.
. Cf. Palsgraf v. Long Island Railroad Co., 248 N.Y. 339, 162 N.E. 99, 59 A.L.R. 1253.
. Hearing, supra, p. 3.
. Hearing, supra, p. 18.
. 21 TT.S.C.A. § 340(a).
. 68 Stat. 511, 21 U.S.C.A. § 346a.
. S.Rep. No. 2391, supra; H.R.Rep. No. 1982, supra.
. 20 F.R. 9554, 21 C.F.R. § 9.3(c).
. 52 Stat. 1055, 21 U.S.C.A. § 371(f) (3).
. See Byrd v. United States, 5 Cir., 1946, 154 F.2d 62.
. Hearing, supra, p. 3.
. 52 Stat. 1056, 21 U.S.C.A. § 372(a).
. 52 Stat 1055, 21 U.S.C.A. § 371(e).
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting).
I am of the clear opinion that the result reached and the conclusions stated by the majority are unwarranted in law, and also, with respect to the findings of the Secretary of Agriculture, represent a case of judicial fiating which, though it has sometimes found favor in other courts (Cf. Quaker Oats Co. v. Federal Security, 7 Cir., 129 F.2d 76, reversed 318 U.S. 218, 63 S.Ct. 589, 87 L.Ed. 724), has not until now found favor here. Cf. Byrd v. United States, 5 Cir., 154 F.2d 62.
Because I am of this opinion, I feel constrained not only to note my dissent but to point out as briefly and as effectively as I can the patent errors on which the opinion proceeds. Because, too, it is clear to me that, while certainly presenting matters material for legislative consideration, it as certainly does not present matters material to the determination of the issue presented here, which is not what the law ought to be but what it is, I pass, with no more than comment, the basic assumption of the opinion, that the effect upon the future of the industry of our construction of the statute is the controlling consideration in this case, to go at once to the controlling issues which are presented for decision here.
The second, as the majority opinion states it on page 857 of 246 F.2d, is “whether the Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare is required or permitted to determine if there is a minimum quantity of the coal-tar color, designated as F. D. & C. Red No. 32, which can be used in adding color to the skins of mature oranges without danger of impairing the health of those who consume such oranges; and, if so required or permitted and if it be determined that there is such a minimum, should the Secretary [be required to] list and certify such color for such use.”
The third and last, as stated in the majority opinion [246 F.2d 860] is whether “if it be found that the coloring of oranges with Red 32 is not injurious to humans and can be continued with safety, further legislation will be required”.
I take up these questions in turn to say of the first that I not only find myself in complete agreement with the respondent’s position that the decision in the Certified Color case is in point, is correct, and should be followed here, but I find completely unconvincing the arguments of the majority in support of its contrary view, that the case is not in point. Indeed, it seems to me that the fact alone that the orange industry was not a party to the appeal in the Certified Color case is, from the standpoint of that case as a precedent, as completely insubstantial as the classic difference claimed to exist between a white and a black horse case.
In short, the test of what was at issue and decided in, and what was the effect of, the decision in the Certified Color case, as compared to this one, is to be found in a resort to the opinion in that case. Such a resort will show that the precise question here argued, the meaning and effect of the statute, was determined not with particular reference to the nature and character of the business of particular appellants but upon the basis of a construction of the present statute as compared to former statutes, in the light of the decisions construing and applying them. With deference, the majority has completely misread and misapplied the statement in the opinion in the Certified Color case, 236 F.2d at page 871, “Thus the problem is far different from the one presented recently to Congress when the act was amended to permit the use of Red 32 on orange skins not intended for processing (Emphasis supplied.)
In making this statement, the court was not, as the majority in this case seems to think it was, stating that, as applied to oranges, the construction of the statute under review and the duty of the secretary under it would be different from the construction of the statute and the duty of the secretary as applied to products generally. In making the statement the court was stating correctly that, viewed from the standpoint of legislative relief by amendment, the problem presented was different from the one presented to the secretary in proceeding under, and the courts in construing, the statute before it was amended. The court was not at all suggesting that the existing statute gave the secretary any different discretion or authority in respect to oranges than in respect to other products. To have so held would have been in effect to hold that the statute under review here gave the secretary authority in his discretion to consider and determine, product by product, whether he could and should establish tolerances, and this in the face of a statute containing no such language and differently construed both by the Executive and the Legislative branch.
In its treatment of the second question, the majority, acting under the influence of the same idea which dictated its rejection of the result and the reasoning in the Certified Color case, that the
Finally, while the answer of the majority, to the third and final question, whether the needs of the industry can be taken care of without additional legislation, that it can be, follows naturally enough from what has gone before, it seems clear to me that it is nothing more than a complete tour de force, the substitution of judicial for congressional legislation. Though the Executive and Legislative branches of the government have determined that the 1956 amendment to Sec. 402(c) was necessary in order to give the secretary the power to determine tolerances as to coal tar products, the court, differing with both, has held that it can and should by its order in effect say; “We will construe the statute, and by order give effect to our construction, so as to make unnecessary, indeed useless, the 1956 amendment or any future congressional legislation.’’1 With the Secretary thus panoplied in the judicial fiat as to his authority under the statute before its amendment, and compelled by the judicial order to give that fiat effect, Congress, the Secretary and the Texas and Florida Industries need trouble themselves no more, but, resting securely upon this judicial legislation and order, they may all go about their business in the future untroubled and undisturbed.
It is one thing for a court to construe a statute. It is quite another for it to rewrite it. I respectfully Dissent from what I regard here not as a construction but a rewriting of the statute.
Rehearing denied:
Reference
- Full Case Name
- FLORIDA CITRUS EXCHANGE v. M. B. FOLSOM, Secretary of The Department of Health, Education and Welfare, Appellee Frank R. SCHELL v. M. B. FOLSOM, Secretary of The Department of Health, Education and Welfare
- Cited By
- 12 cases
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