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Corporate Farming Laws after Jones v. Gale. Anthony Schutz University of Nebraska College of Law. The DCC doctrine. A State Law that discriminates against interstate commerce will be invalid unless it serves a legitimate purpose
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Corporate Farming Laws after Jones v. Gale Anthony Schutz University of Nebraska College of Law
The DCC doctrine • A State Law that discriminates against interstate commerce will be invalid unless • it serves a legitimate purpose • AND there is no alternative non-discriminatory means available to achieve that purpose • A State Law that “regulates evenhandedly” is valid unless • the putative local benefits • are clearly outweighed by the burden imposed on interstate commerce • (and there are no less burdensome means of achieving the local benefits)
Discrimination • Three Types of Discrimination • Discriminatory Purpose • Explicit Discrimination • Discriminatory Effect • burden all outsiders, but no (or not all) insiders • Generally not, however, when only a lesser disproportionate impact • e.g. a larger percentage of outsiders are burdened than the percentage of insiders burdened • especially when it is unclear whether market correction will result in continued disparity • If no discrimination (or only a lesser disparate impact), then the measure “regulates evenhandedly”, but may place an “incidental burden” on interstate commerce
Corporate Farming Laws Synthesis • Restricted entities • Prohibited activities • Exceptions • Family Farm Entities & Authorized Entities • Ownership Structure • 2 Camps • Income and size • qualifying activities • Qualifying individual • Residency • Actively Farming
Nebraska’s Corporate Farming Law • No corporations may own agricultural land or engage in farming or ranching in this State • Except, a family farm corporation. • 50% or more of the voting stock is owned by members of a family • At least one of the family members • resides on the farm OR • is actively engaged in the day-to-day labor and management of the farm
What does it do?What is the burden? • prohibits some corporations from owning land or engaging in ag? • market access • prohibits some individuals from using the corporate form? • can’t raise capital in the form of equity • harder to access credit • (entity is not shielded from owner’s liability) • owner exposure to entity’s liabilities • harder to transfer assets • makes shareholder estate planning more difficult • keeps some players out of the game
The Farm Farm 2 Farming Operation Farm 1 (home) Farm 3 Farm 4 Operational View (residency or active engagement anywhere is sufficient) v. Separate Parcel View (residency or active engagement must occur on each farm)
Nebraska’s Discriminatory Purpose • Ballot Title: Shall a constitutional prohibition be created prohibiting ownership of Nebraska farm or ranch land by any corporation, domestic or foreign, which is not a Nebraska family farm corporation . . . ? • Explanatory Statement: A vote FOR will create a constitutional prohibition against further purchase of Nebraska farm and ranch lands by any corporation or syndicate other than a Nebraska family farm corporation. A vote AGAINST will reject such a constitutional restriction on ownership of Nebraska farm and ranch land. • Campaign Materials
Discriminatory Purpose • Must Entail • benevolence toward insiders • hostility toward outsiders • Problems • loose definitions • outsiders as outsiders or as representative of a larger problem? • problems for proactive legislation • too easily avoided • fictional, at best • whose purpose matters, how many must have it?
Lessons • Lessons for Corporate Farming Laws from Meeting the DCC • What is “the farm” as it relates to family farms • Stay away from restricting absentee ownership • Think and speak globally, act locally (avoid discriminatory purpose) • Lessons for the DCC from Meeting Corporate Farming Laws • Clarifying the role of purpose • Clarifying the role of effects
What States Survive • purpose? • effect? • location of qualifying activities • “the farm” • “actively engaged” & personal presence on “the farm” • other geographic concerns • foreign corporations
Nebraska’s Failed Legislation • Defined farm at operational level • Required labor and management as qualifying activities • Eliminated residency • Provided exception for associations of active farmers, one of which is actively engaged (l & m) in the association’s operation • limited # of owners at 5 • Fixed a variety of interpretational problems (e.g. Banks as Trustees, omission of term spouses, etc.)