Food & Agriculture Quarterly January 2019 | Page 14

Mushrooms Mushroom growers and one of their cooperatives have defended a supply management program since 2006 when they were first sued for alleged antitrust violations in Pennsylvania federal court, In re Mushroom Direct Purchaser Antitrust Litig., No. 2:06-cv-00620 (E.D. Pa.). Plaintiffs claimed that, starting in 2001, the cooperative and its members agreed to increase prices and reduce supply by, among other things, purchasing mushroom farms and reselling the land with restrictive deed covenants preventing its use as mushroom farms. The mushrooms plaintiffs argue that such conduct is not protected by Capper-Volstead because the Act does not protect pre-production supply management activities, monopolization of trade, or suppression of competition with non-members. Additionally, plaintiffs alleged, and the court agreed, that the cooperative and its members are not Capper-Volstead protected because at least one member of the cooperative was not a true “farmer” under the definition of the Act. The alleged non- farmer defendant was the sister corporation of an actual farmer and had the same ownership as the non-farmer entity. However, the court found that because, among other reasons, the owner signed the cooperative membership form in the name of the non-farmer entity (which defendants argued was by mistake), neither the cooperative nor its members were protected by the Capper-Volstead Act. Defendants’ filed a motion asking that plaintiffs’ antitrust claims be judged under the rule of reason, and at the same time, the plaintiffs filed a cross- motion for partial summary judgment, asserting that the defendants have engaged in a per se illegal horizontal conspiracy to fix prices and restrict supply. In May 2015, the Judge ruled that the price-fixing claims would be subject to “rule of reason” analysis while the “supply restriction” claims were per se illegal. Trial has tentatively been set for May 2019. Cooperatives Working Together program In September and October of 2011, complaints were filed in the Northern District of California against Agri-mark, Inc., Dairy Farmers of America, Inc. (DFA), Dairylea Cooperative Inc., Land O’ Lakes, Inc., and PAGE 14 National Milk Producers Federation. The plaintiffs in these cases attack the Cooperatives Working Together (CWT) program. The CWT utilized both a herd retirement program and the export assistance program aimed at improving farm-level prices. The lawsuits all allege that the CWT program constituted a conspiracy to reduce the supply of dairy cattle and thereby artificially raise the price of milk in violation of the antitrust laws. Plaintiffs claim that pre-production supply management — retiring cows before they could produce milk — was not protected conduct under the Capper-Volstead Act. Dairy farmers have already agreed to settle the indirect purchaser claims, i.e., claims by people who purchased milk and milk products at the grocery store, for $52 million. No trial date has been set for this action. Similar cases were filed and ended up in the Southern District of Illinois, where they remain pending. In September 2015, a separate case was filed in the Middle District of Florida based upon allegations that are substantially the same as those in the previously filed case. The parties in this case have finished discovery and are currently awaiting summary judgment rulings. The case is set for a trial the first half of 2019. Dairy Farmers In the last 10 years, multiple antitrust class action lawsuits have been filed against Dairy Farmers of America, Inc. (DFA), a national milk marketing cooperative, as well as against Dean Foods Company, and various alleged co-conspirators in federal courts in Vermont, Tennessee, California, Mississippi and Illinois. Unlike in the lawsuits involving the CWT program, the plaintiffs in these cases are farmers who sold milk through DFA and its affiliates. Plaintiffs allege that DFA conspired with purchasers of milk to reduce the price paid for milk to the farmers. Various defendants and cases have settled, but several cases remain. 115 farmers have opted-out of the class action and filed a complaint alleging monopolization and restraint-of-trade claims under the Sherman Act. The central allegation is that through various acquisitions and agreements with other dairy companies (such as Dean and National Dairy), DFA has reduced the