Food & Agriculture Quarterly January 2019 | Page 13

FOOD & AGRICULTURE QUARTERLY | JANUARY 2019 Current antitrust suits for food and agriculture JETTA SANDIN Generally speaking, competitors in a market are prohibited by our antitrust laws from working together. But our laws make an exception for farmers and allow them, under certain circumstances, to come together and work cooperatively to market and sell their goods. This exception is known as the Capper-Volstead Act. If the farmers do not follow the requirements of the law to a T, they can find themselves entangled in very long, and very expensive, litigation, facing treble damages. Currently, there are several long running agricultural antitrust cases involving issues of supply management programs, the status of integrated producers, inadvertent inclusion of non-producer entities as members and other cooperative behaviors. This article provides a brief overview of some of these cases and where they stand. Cranberries In 2012, Ocean Spray, an agricultural cooperative made up of cranberry growers, was sued by a group of independent cranberry growers and some of its own members that belong to its “B Pool.” The B Pool came about in 2006 when Ocean Spray split its members into two groups: A Pool and B Pool. According to plaintiffs in Winters v. Ocean Spray Cranberries, Inc., No. 1:12-cv-12016 (D. Mass.), the manner in which the members of these two pools are compensated for their cranberries put the two groups at odds with one another. The plaintiffs allege that the operations of Ocean Spray’s B Pool and its cranberry concentrate commodity auction violate Sections 1 and 2 of the Sherman Act, the Capper-Volstead Act, a 1957 Consent Decree and Massachusetts’ unfair trade practices laws. While many of the claims have been dismissed as the result of two rounds of summary judgment motions, the B Pool members’ monopsonization claim has survived, as have as some state law claims. The case is currently pending before the U.S. Court of Appeals for the First Circuit on interlocutory appeal. Ocean Spray is seeking review of the lower court’s rulings regarding the applicability of Illinois Brick, which is a doctrine that precludes indirect purchasers from suing under federal antitrust laws. PAGE 13