| Posted March 15, 2007:
Judge Jonathan P. Hein of Ohio’s Darke County Court of Common
Pleas issued a decision on December 29, 2006, in the case of Carol
Schmitmeyer, a Versailles, Ohio dairy producer who had been operating
a herdshare program in order to make raw milk legally available
to people who wanted to consume it.
Judge Hein’s decision vacated an earlier decision of the
Director of Agriculture that revoked Ms. Schmitmeyer’s dairy
producer’s license because Director Dailey believed Ms. Schmitmeyer’s
herdshare operation constituted an illegal “sale” of
raw milk. In his decision, however, Judge Hein stated that there
are “various deficiencies” in the law which are “fundamental
to a correct interpretation of the law” and that the Director’s
decision to revoke Ms. Schmitmeyer’s license was “similarly
deficient.”
A herdshare operates on the principle that persons (usually city
dwellers) buy an ownership interest in a herd of dairy cows; they
board those cows at a farmer’s farm; and they pay a periodic
boarding fee to the farmer in exchange for the farmer taking care
of, tending to and providing feed to the herd. The herdshare owners
in essence become “shareholders” in the dairy farm and
receive as a dividend on their investment the raw milk that comes
from their share.
The farmer earns extra income by receiving the boarding fee and
the purchase price of the “shares” in the herd, while
the shareholders receive raw milk in accordance with the law and
have the satisfaction of knowing where their milk comes from and
how it is produced. It is an arrangement that pleases everyone involved.
Everyone, that is, except the Ohio Department of Agriculture (ODA).
In 2006, the ODA relentlessly and ruthlessly pursued herdshare operators
throughout the state, claiming they were illegally selling raw milk
and putting the entire public’s health at risk. For example,
just in 2006 alone, ODA revoked the license of an Amish farmer who
took a $2 donation for one gallon of raw milk; arrested in conjunction
with federal authorities a farmer in Cincinnati who was delivering
raw milk to his shareholders (and who was carried away in an ambulance
because he suffered a mild heart attack); attempted to revoke the
commercial feed registration of two Washington County women who
use raw milk as an ingredient in their pet food products; and attempted
to conduct a secret investigation into a herdshare program operated
by a married couple in Butler County.
And in September, ODA revoked the producer’s license of Carol
Schmitmeyer which could have put her out of business because her
family derived 87 percent of its economic livelihood from her producer’s
license.
Ms. Schmitmeyer argued in her appeal that because the law was
so vague, i.e., “sale” or “sold” were not
defined, that there was no way to determine whether ODA’s
interpretation and application of the law was reasonable, arbitrary
or capricious. ODA had gone on record in the past as allowing a
farmer and his family to consume raw milk from the family farm’s
cows, but insisted that shareholders in a herdshare did not have
similar rights.
Judge Hein in his decision stated that “if the herd share
agreement is a circumvention of the law, so is the Department’s
inexact practice of allowing owners and their families, etc. to
consume raw milk.” Consequently, too much subjectivity results
from the “Department’s practice of allowing some as
yet undefined persons (owners, family members, etc.) to consume
raw milk at as yet undefined locations (on farm, etc.).”
Ms. Schmitmeyer also argued that before her license could be revoked,
ODA was required by law to provide her with “a reasonable
amount of time” to correct the alleged violations. Indeed,
and as a precautionary measure, Ms. Schmitmeyer had sent two letters
to ODA in the spring of 2006 requesting assistance and guidance
from ODA on what her herdshare operation needed to do to comply
with the law, yet both letters were ignored by ODA.
As it turned out, the first time Ms. Schmitmeyer had a hint that
something was wrong was when she received a letter in the mail from
ODA proposing to revoke her license. Judge Hein stated in his decision
that “the Department avoided its duty to [Ms. Schmitmeyer]
by not engaging in discussion with her (and other herdshare owners)
regarding the issues now before this Court. Due to the failure of
the Department to articulate specific problems with the herdshare
agreement,” ODA failed to provide Ms. Schmitmeyer with an
opportunity to correct the alleged violations.
In essence, Judge Hein’s decision vindicates Ms. Schmitmeyer
in her ordeal. Judge Hein’s decision also validates herdshare
agreements in Ohio when they are drafted in a manner consistent
with contract law and when they provide for a transfer of ownership
in the herd, whether partial or complete transfer, from the farmer
to the shareholder. Therefore, unless and until the statute is changed
or administrative regulations are issued to provide clarity on the
issue, herdshare agreements appear to be legal in Ohio.
Ms. Schmitmeyer has filed with Judge Hein a motion to recover her
attorney’s fees and costs from ODA. She hopes for a favorable
ruling given the facts of this case. 
Editor's Note:
Atty. Cox reported in late February that the ODA is appealing
Judge Hein's decision. The department also submitted to Schmitmeyer
what was termed a settlement offer, and she is preparing a counter
offer. Briefs on the appeal are due by both sides by the end of
April.
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