Hawkins v. Agricultural Marketing Service, Department of Agriculture, U.S.A.

               IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS

                       FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT

                       _____________________

                            No. 92-5147
                       _____________________


          DAVID L. HAWKINS,

                               Petitioner,

          v.

          AGRICULTURAL MARKETING SERVICE,
          DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, U.S.A.,

                               Respondent.

_________________________________________________________________

             On Petition for Review of a Final Order
                 of the Secretary of Agriculture
_________________________________________________________________
                        (December 21, 1993)

Before REYNALDO G. GARZA, KING and DeMOSS, Circuit Judges.

KING, Circuit Judge:

     David L. Hawkins seeks review, pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2342,

of a final order of the administrator of the Agricultural

Marketing Service of the United States Department of Agriculture.

The administrator affirmed the presiding officer's decision,

which found that Hawkins was "responsibly connected" with Fruit

Jobbers, Inc., during a time when Fruit Jobbers committed

"repeated and flagrant" violations of the Perishable Agricultural

Commodities Act, 7 U.S.C. § 499a et seq.     We deny the petition

for review and affirm the order.
                           I.   BACKGROUND

       Fruit Jobbers was incorporated in Mississippi and licensed

as a dealer of perishable agricultural commodities by the United

States Department of Agriculture (USDA), pursuant to the

Perishable Agricultural Commodities Act (PACA), 7 U.S.C. § 499 et

seq.    Its office was in Jackson, Mississippi.   David L. Hawkins

(Hawkins) began working at Fruit Jobbers in 1950.    He became a

shareholder in 1960, at which time he also became vice-president

of the corporation.    Eventually, Hawkins was a member of the

board of directors.    From the time he became a shareholder until

August 1988, Hawkins received a salary and monthly stock

dividends from Fruit Jobbers.

       In August 1988, members of the Harrison family purchased

approximately 78 percent of Fruit Jobbers' stock.    At that time,

Harrison held approximately 22 percent of the stock.    Following

their purchase of the stock, the Harrison family removed Hawkins

as an officer and a member of the board of directors.    They also

offered to purchase Hawkins' shares for the same price as they

had purchased shares from other shareholders if Hawkins would

sign a non-competition agreement, effective for five years and

within a 150-mile radius of Jackson, Mississippi.    Hawkins

refused to sell his stock on those terms and resigned all

positions and offices that he held with Fruit Jobbers on August

3, 1988.    He received no salary or stock dividends from Fruit

Jobbers after that date.    He did, however, maintain his stock

holdings.    Hawkins subsequently went to work at D&D Produce,


                                  2
Hawkins' own produce business licensed under the PACA, and at

Capitol City Produce as a buyer.

     On July 7, 1989, Hawkins filed suit in the Chancery Court of

Hinds County, Mississippi, against Fruit Jobbers and the Harrison

family to force them to provide documentation of Fruit Jobbers'

financial affairs.    In the alternative, Hawkins petitioned the

court to compel the Harrison family to buy his stock, or for the

court to close the business and distribute the assets.

     On February 1, 1990, before the chancery court litigation

was completed, Fruit Jobbers filed a bankruptcy petition in

federal district court seeking relief pursuant to Chapter 11 of

the Bankruptcy Code.    The bankruptcy petition did not list

Hawkins as a shareholder, even though he still owned

approximately 22 percent of Fruit Jobbers' stock.

     The Director of the Fruit and Vegetable Division of the

Agricultural Marketing Service (AMS) of the USDA filed an

administrative complaint against Fruit Jobbers on August 31,

1990, alleging that during the period from July 1989 through

February 1990, Fruit Jobbers purchased, received, and accepted--

in interstate commerce--117 lots of perishable agricultural

commodities but failed to make full payment promptly of the

agreed purchase prices, which totaled $324,246.87.    Thus, Fruit

Jobbers was alleged to have violated 7 U.S.C. § 499b(4).1

     1
       Section   499b(4) states in pertinent part that it is
unlawful
     [f]or any   commission merchant, dealer, or broker to
     make, for   a fraudulent purpose, any false or misleading
     statement   in connection with any transaction involving

                                   3
Shortly thereafter, the AMS notified Hawkins that because he

owned approximately 22 percent of Fruit Jobbers' stock when the

corporation allegedly violated PACA provisions, he was determined

to be "responsibly connected" with the corporation pursuant to 7

U.S.C. § 499a(b)(9).   Hawkins then filed a petition for review of

the AMS decision.   On December 20, 1990, the AMS referred

Hawkins' petition to the presiding officer.

     An administrative law judge issued a default order against

Fruit Jobbers on January 11, 1991, finding that Fruit Jobbers had

committed willful, flagrant, and repeated violations of 7 U.S.C.

§ 499b and that therefore Fruit Jobbers' license would be revoked

pursuant to 7 U.S.C. § 499h.    That order became final on February

27, 1991.

     A hearing concerning Hawkins' "responsible connection" to

Fruit Jobbers was held in Jackson, Mississippi, on July 16, 1991,

before the presiding officer.   The presiding officer issued his

decision on May 11, 1992, in which he found Hawkins "responsibly

connected" with Fruit Jobbers when Fruit Jobbers committed PACA

violations because Hawkins was a holder of more than ten percent


     any perishable agricultural commodity which is received
     in interstate or foreign commerce by such commission
     merchant, or bought or sold, or contracted to be
     bought, sold, or consigned, in such commerce by such
     dealer, or the purchase or sale of which in such
     commerce is negotiated by such broker; or to fail or
     refuse truly and correctly to account and make full
     payment promptly in respect of any transaction in any
     such commodity to the person with whom such transaction
     is had; or to fail, without reasonable cause, to
     perform any specification or duty, express or implied,
     arising out of any undertaking in connection with any
     such transaction . . . .

                                  4
of Fruit Jobbers' stock during that time.   Hawkins thus became

subject to the PACA's employment restrictions,2 which mandate

that Hawkins is barred from employment by any PACA licensee for a

minimum period of one year.   The administrator of the AMS

affirmed the presiding officer's decision on November 9, 1992.

Hawkins now seeks review of the administrator's final order.



                      II.   STANDARD OF REVIEW

     This court upholds an agency's decision unless we determine

it to be arbitrary, capricious, or an abuse of discretion.     5

U.S.C. § 706(2)(A).   We uphold an agency's factual findings if

they are supported by substantial evidence.      Faour v. United

States Dep't of Agric., 985 F.2d 217 (5th Cir. 1993) (citing

Federal Trade Comm'n v. Indiana Fed'n of Dentists, 476 U.S. 447,

454 (1986)).   The substantial evidence standard requires only

     2
       Section 499h(b) states in pertinent part:
     [N]o licensee shall employ any person, or any person
     who is or has been responsibly connected with any
     person--
        (1) whose license has been revoked or is currently
        suspended by order of the Secretary;
        (2) who has been found after notice and opportunity
        for hearing to have committed any flagrant or
        repeated violation of section 499b of this title
        . . . .
     The Secretary may approve such employment at any time
     following nonpayment of a reparation award, or after
     one year following the revocation of finding of
     flagrant or repeated violation of section 499b of this
     title, if the licensee furnishes and maintains surety
     bond in form and amount satisfactory to the Secretary
     as assurance that such licensee's business will be
     conducted in accordance with this chapter. . . . The
     Secretary may approve employment without a surety bond
     after the expiration of two years from the effective
     date of the applicable disciplinary order.

                                  5
that an agency decision be supported by "'such relevant evidence

as a reasonable mind might accept as adequate to support a

conclusion.'"     Universal Camera Corp. v. NLRB, 340 U.S. 474, 477

(1951) (quoting Consolidated Edison Co. v. NLRB, 305 U.S. 197,

229 (1938)).

     Legal issues, however, are "'for the courts to resolve,

although even in considering such issues the courts are to give

some deference to the [agency's] informed judgment.'"     Faour, 985

F.2d at 219 (quoting Federal Trade Comm'n, 476 U.S. at 454).       Our

review of an agency's construction of a statute must give effect

to the unambiguously expressed intent of Congress.     Chevron

U.S.A. Inc. v. Natural Resources Defense Council, Inc., 467 U.S.

837, 842-43 (1984).



                            III. DISCUSSION

     Hawkins first asserts that the presiding officer erred in

applying a per se standard in determining whether Hawkins was

"responsibly connected" with Fruit Jobbers and not considering

evidence which demonstrated that Hawkins was not in fact

responsible for any of Fruit Jobbers' PACA violations.    Hawkins

further asserts that the per se analysis used by the presiding

officer violates Hawkins' right to equal protection under the

law, as guaranteed by the Fifth Amendment, and that any

employment sanctions imposed upon him as a result of the

presiding officer's decision violate his Fifth Amendment due

process rights.    He also contends that the presiding officer's


                                   6
decision reflecting Fruit Jobbers' flagrant or repeated PACA

violations is not supported in the record by substantial

evidence.   We address each of Hawkins' contentions in turn.

                    A. "Responsibly Connected"

     Hawkins first contends that the presiding officer erred in

applying a per se analysis to § 499a(b)(9), which defines

"responsibly connected."   Instead, according to Hawkins, the

presiding officer should have construed the language of

§ 499a(b)(9) as a "rebuttable presumption" to afford a person

falling within one of the categories delineated therein to

demonstrate that he was not actually responsibly connected to the

offending corporate licensee.

     Hawkins argues, in essence, for an interpretation under

which a person would be presumed "responsibly connected" if he

fits into any of the three categories listed in § 499a(b)(9), but

would be allowed to rebut this presumption by proving that his

position was a nominal one.   Thus, Hawkins argues that because he

was a minority shareholder and had resigned all of his positions

with Fruit Jobbers before the alleged violations occurred,

receiving no economic benefit from Fruit Jobbers and taking no

effective part whatsoever in the control of the corporation, he

was not "responsibly connected" to Fruit Jobbers.

     Section 499a(b)(9) defines "responsibly connected" as

     affiliated or connected with a commission merchant,
     dealer, or broker as (A) partner in a partnership, or
     (B) officer, director, or holder of more than 10 per
     centum of the outstanding stock of a corporation or
     association.


                                 7
In Faour, 985 F.2d at 219-21, a panel of this court was presented

with the precise issue Hawkins now raises.   In determining

whether § 499a(b)(9) fostered an interpretation which reads a

"rebuttable presumption" into the statute, this Court stated:

          We find the plain meaning of this statute
     unambiguous. If a person is an officer or director of,
     or holds over ten percent of the outstanding stock of,
     a corporation that has been found to have committed any
     flagrant or repeated violation of section 499b, that
     person is considered "responsibly connected" and
     subject to sanctions under PACA. The statute is
     explicit: If a person falls within one of the three
     enumerated categories, he is responsibly connected.
     The statute does not contemplate a defense that allows
     a person to show that even though he fits into one of
     the three categories, he never had enough actual
     authority to be considered truly responsibly connected.

Faour, 985 F.2d at 220 (emphasis added).   We thus disagreed with

the District of Columbia Circuit's interpretation of § 499a(b)(9)

as reading a rebuttable presumption into the statute, and instead

we joined other Circuits that had adopted the per se rule, which

we determined the plain language of § 499a(b)(9) commands.     Id.

at 220-21; see Pupillo v. United States, 755 F.2d 638, 643 (8th

Cir. 1985); Birkenfield v. United States, 369 F.2d 491, 494 (3d

Cir. 1966); see also Zwick v. Freeman, 373 F.2d 110, 119 (2d

Cir.) (citing with approval the per se standard enunciated in

Birkenfield), cert. denied, 389 U.S. 835 (1967).   We saw no

reason to look beyond the unambiguous language of the statute,

for we determined that this language shows that Congress intended

for any person who falls into one of the designated categories to

be deemed "responsibly connected."   Faour, 985 F.2d at 221.




                                8
     Hawkins contends, however, that his situation is different

from that of the petitioner in Faour.    Gary K. Faour was the

manager for institutional sales, a director, and an officer of

the Magnolia Fruit & Vegetable Company at the time it violated

the PACA--from August through December of 1987.     Id. at 218.

Although at one time he had owned 27.27 percent of the company's

stock, in 1986 he owned only 10.5 percent, which he had pledged

as collateral for a loan for the company.    Id.   Whether Faour

owned more than 10 percent of the stock at the time of the

alleged violations was not a factor in this court's determination

that Faour was "responsibly connected" because we found that

Faour was a vice-president and director of the company when it

violated the PACA.   Id. at 221-22.   Hawkins therefore argues that

in Faour we did not apply the per se rule in a case involving

only a minority stockholder and that Faour is thus

distinguishable from the instant case.

     To strengthen his position, Hawkins points out that he tried

to sell his stock to the Harrison family but that they refused to

buy it unless he would sign a non-competition agreement,

effective for five years within a 150-mile radius of Jackson,

Mississippi.   He also notes that his stock was "valueless"

because he was barred by the Harrison family, who controlled the

corporation, from ascertaining the value of his stock.    He

further maintains that because he was unable to readily determine

his stock's value, his stock did not represent a bona fide stake

in the corporation but instead had been rendered useless.


                                 9
Additionally, he explains that his refusal to sell his stock for

the price offered by the Harrison family was not unreasonable

because the non-competition agreement that was part of the

proposed sale would have essentially forced him to give up "his

ability to enjoy a livelihood in a field in which he had decades

of unblemished experience."

     We are unconvinced by Hawkins' arguments.    First, our

decision in Faour primarily focused not on Faour's status as a

corporate officer, but on the unambiguous language of

§ 499a(b)(9) and our recognition that in drafting the statute,

Congress intended to provide a clear definition of "responsibly

connected."3   Faour, 985 F.2d at 221.   Hawkins' attempt to

distinguish Faour on grounds that Hawkins is a stockholder

instead of a corporate officer is thus misplaced.

     Second, the PACA was enacted in 1930 and significantly

amended in 1956 and 1962.   Any dealer, merchant, broker, or

investor in perishable commodities must recognize that the PACA

is, as it has been for years, a "tough law."    As Congress

explained,

     3
       In a 1962 amendment to the PACA, Congress defined the term
"responsibly connected" in order to "[i]mprove and clarify
provisions dealing with the eligibility for license, or for
employment by licensees, of persons guilty of specified acts and
persons affiliated with them." H. Rep. No. 1546, 87th Cong., 2d
Sess. (1962), reprinted in 1962 U.S.C.C.A.N. 2749, 2750. The
House Report states that Congress believed this definition would
"give [the term 'responsibly connected'] specific meaning, thus
avoiding possible confusion as to interpretations." Id. at 2751.
The Report also made it clear that "responsible connection" could
be established under the amendment without showing that the
person "was responsible in whole or in part" for the conduct that
violated the statute. Id. at 2753.

                                10
     [t]he [PACA] . . . was enacted in 1930 for the purpose
     of providing a measure of control and regulation over a
     branch of industry which is engaged almost exclusively
     in interstate commerce, which is highly competitive,
     and in which the opportunities for sharp practices,
     irresponsible business conduct, and unfair methods are
     numerous. The law was designed primarily for the
     protection of producers of perishable agricultural
     products--most of whom must entrust their products to a
     buyer or commission merchant who may be thousands of
     miles away, and depend for their payment upon his
     business acumen and fair dealing--and for the
     protection of consumers who frequently have no more
     than the oral representation of the dealer that the
     product they buy is of the grade and quality they are
     paying for.
          The law has fostered an admirable degree of
     dependability and fairness in this industry chiefly
     through the method of requiring the [licensing] of all
     those who carry on an interstate business in perishable
     agricultural commodities and denying this [license] to
     those whose business tactics disqualify them.

H.R. Rep. No. 1196, 84th Cong., 1st Sess. (1956), reprinted in

1956 U.S.C.C.A.N. 3699, 3701.   Thus, any investor in a perishable

commodities corporation should know at the beginning of his

association with such a corporation that he is "buying into" a

corporation which is strictly regulated by the federal government

through the PACA.   That Hawkins was not given the opportunity to

sell his stock to the corporation on more favorable terms is

unfortunate, but as a veteran of the perishable commodities

business for more than thirty years, Hawkins was aware of the

"toughness" of the PACA and the risk he took when he became a

shareholder in Fruit Jobbers.

     Hawkins admits that he owned approximately 22 percent of the

stock in Fruit Jobbers at the time the PACA violations occurred.

Our decision in Faour will thus be dispositive of Hawkins' claim

concerning the application of the per se rule to the

                                11
interpretation of § 499a(b)(9) unless we determine that such an

interpretation violates Hawkins' equal protection rights or that

employment restrictions imposed upon him pursuant to § 499h as a

result of his being deemed "responsibly connected" violate his

due process rights, as Hawkins contends.    It is to those issues,

which were not raised in Faour, that we now turn.

              B.   Equal Protection and Due Process

     Hawkins first contends that because the District of Columbia

Circuit has determined that § 499a(b)(9) should be read to permit

a rebuttable presumption, any other interpretation--i.e., the

application of the per se rule--would treat him differently than

others similarly situated and thus violate his right to equal

protection under the law.   Hawkins also contends that the per se

standard renders the statute constitutionally infirm as applied

because it violates his right to due process.   In support of this

contention, Hawkins asserts that the hearing afforded him was

"not meaningful," i.e., he was not given a fair opportunity to

"rebut" the statutory presumption.   Hawkins also asserts that the

statute sweeps so broadly that it includes within its ambit

presumptions "not necessarily or universally true in fact" and

that reasonable alternative means exist by which the government

can make critical determinations of which persons were

"responsibly connected" to a corporation which violates the PACA.

We address each of his arguments in turn.




                                12
                         1. Equal Protection

       The basis of Hawkins' equal protection claim is that the

presiding officer's and this court's rejection of the "rebuttable

presumption" approach in interpreting § 499a(b)(9), an approach

which was taken by the District of Columbia Circuit, in favor of

the per se rule which we see as commanded by the plain language

of the statute, violates his right to equal protection under the

law.    Thus, Hawkins suggests that a difference of opinion among

the circuits or a circuit split violates such a right.       Although

we find Hawkins' argument a novel one, we disagree.      A

disagreement between circuits on the interpretation of a statute

is a matter which either the Supreme Court or Congress should

resolve; it does not violate the equal protection rights of the

person subjected to the "more burdensome interpretation."       United

States v. Palacio, 4 F.3d 150, 154 (2d Cir. 1993).      We thus find

Hawkins' equal protection argument to be without merit.

                           2. Due Process

               a. Arbitrary Governmental Interference

       Hawkins also argues that the application of the per se rule

to § 499a(b)(9) violates his Fifth Amendment due process rights

because it unreasonably subjects him to the employment

restriction provisions of § 499h and thus arbitrarily interferes

with his right to engage in his chosen profession.      He cites

specifically to Cleveland Bd. of Educ. v. LaFleur, 414 U.S. 632

(1974), and to cases cited within Cleveland for the proposition

that "permanent irrebuttable presumptions have long been


                                 13
disfavored under the Due Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment

and Fourteenth Amendments" because the Due Process Clause

requires "a more individualized determination."    Id. at 645-46

(internal quotations and citations omitted).

     In Cleveland, the Supreme Court held that mandatory

maternity leave provisions set forth by the Cleveland Board of

Education violated pregnant teachers' due process rights because

they created "irrebuttable presumptions" that every teacher who

was four months pregnant was physically incapable of continuing

her duties.   Id. at 643-48.   These provisions required a pregnant

teacher to take maternity leave without pay, beginning five

months before the expected birth of her child.    Id. at 634.     The

Court explained that a pregnant teacher's ability to continue

teaching past a fixed pregnancy period was an individual matter

and that the presumption embodied in the challenged provisions--

which did foster administrative convenience--were not

"universally true in fact" and that thus the provisions swept too

broadly.   Id. at 646-68.   After recognizing that freedom of

personal choice in matters of marriage and family life had been

long recognized as being one of the fundamental liberties

protected by the Due Process Clause, id. at 639, the Court

concluded that "neither the necessity for continuity of

instruction nor the [governmental] interest in keeping physically

unfit teachers out of the classroom can justify the sweeping

mandatory leave regulations that the . . . School Board[] ha[s]

adopted," id. at 647-48.    The Court therefore invalidated the


                                 14
challenged provisions because "they employ irrebuttable

presumptions that unduly penalize a female teacher for deciding

to bear a child."    Id. at 648.

     We find Hawkins' reliance on Cleveland and cases cited

within Cleveland as misplaced for several reasons.       First,

Cleveland was the last of a line of cases in which the Supreme

Court "ventured into 'irrebuttable presumptions' analysis,

purportedly an aspect of procedural due process but in substance

similar to very intensive scrutiny of legislative

generalizations."   GERALD GUNTHER, CONSTITUTIONAL LAW 876 (12th ed.

1991).   Shortly after its decision in Cleveland, the Court made

it clear that a type of heightened scrutiny of a statute or

regulation could not be triggered by merely asserting a claim

that the challenged statute or regulation contained an

"irrebuttable presumption."    See Weinberger v. Salfi, 422 U.S.

749, 777 (1975).    In Salfi, which involved a challenge to a

duration-of-relationship requirement for Social Security

eligibility for surviving wives and stepchildren of deceased wage

earners, the Court explained that

     the question . . . is not whether a statutory provision
     precisely filters out those, and only those, who are in
     the factual position which generated the congressional
     concern reflected in the statute. . . . Nor is the
     question whether the provision filters out a
     substantial part of the class which caused
     congressional concern, or whether it filters out more
     members of the class than nonmembers. The question is
     whether Congress, its concern having been reasonably
     aroused by the possibility of an abuse which it
     legitimately desired to avoid, could rationally have
     concluded both that a particular limitation or
     qualification would protect against its occurrence, and
     that the expense and other difficulties of individual

                                   15
     determinations justified the inherent imprecision of a
     prophylactic rule.

Salfi, 422 U.S. at 777 (emphasis added).     The Court then

distinguished Cleveland and other cases in the "irrebuttable

presumption" line--e.g., Vlandis v. Kline, 412 U.S. 441 (1973),

in which a residency requirement for in-state tuition was being

challenged and which arguably involved a student's right to

engage in interstate travel, and Bell v. Burson, 402 U.S. 535

(1971), in which the Court found the state's making a driver's

liability for an auto accident an important factor for denying

his driver's license incompatible with the application of the

challenged statute, which required a driver to post bond to cover

damages allegedly arising from an auto accident or face

suspension of his driver's license, without an opportunity to

rebut his alleged liability.   Id. at 772.    The Court saw this

line of cases as either involving interests which had

"constitutionally protected status," id. at 771-72, or involving

an only purported governmental interest in the statute or

regulation at issue, id. at 772.

     Most commentators view the Salfi decision as definitively

having repudiated the "irrebuttable presumption" analysis as a

generally acceptable mode of analysis in a constitutional

challenge to a statute or regulation.    See, e.g., GUNTHER, at 877

(noting that the Salfi decision was a "death blow" to the

"irrebuttable presumption" line of cases); LAURENCE H. TRIBE,

CONSTITUTIONAL LAW § 16-34, at 1622-24 (2d ed. 1988) (discussing

that with Salfi the Court severely limited the situations in

                                 16
which the irrebuttable presumption analysis might apply to those

in which "intermediate or strict scrutiny was independently

warranted either by the involvement of a sensitive classification

or by the presence of an important liberty or benefit"); D.

Michael Risinger, "Substance" and "Procedure" Revisited with Some

Afterthoughts on the Constitutional Problems of "Irrebuttable

Presumptions", 30 UCLA L. REV. 189, 215 (1982) (explaining that

the Salfi decision expressly returned the standard of review to

"rational basis").   Thus, Hawkins' promotion of an "irrebuttable

presumption" analysis as the type of analysis necessary in the

instant case is misguided.

     Second, we emphasize that the Constitution does not

guarantee an unrestricted privilege to engage in a particular

profession or a privilege to conduct a business as one pleases.

Nebbia v. People of State of New York, 291 U.S. 502, 527-28

(1934).   Moreover, the perishable commodities industry, as an

instrument of interstate commerce, is certainly an industry which

for more than fifty years has been subject to reasonable

congressional regulation.    Courts have thus reviewed the

constitutionality of various sections of the PACA using a

"rational basis" analysis.

     For example, in Zwick v. Freeman, 373 F.2d 110 (2d Cir.),

cert. denied, 389 U.S. 835 (1967), the court reviewed a

petitioner's claim that the harsh employment restrictions

embodied in § 499h for those persons deemed "responsibly

connected" under § 499a(b)(9) violated his due process rights "to


                                 17
earn a livelihood in the common occupations of the community."

Id. at 118.    After citing the Supreme Court's decision in Nebbia

for the proposition that the petitioner did not have a

constitutional guarantee for an unrestricted privilege to engage

in his chosen occupation, the court determined that the

employment restrictions of § 499h, although harsh in some cases,

were "reasonably designed to achieve the desired Congressional

purpose."     Id.   The court thus upheld these harsh employment

restrictions against the petitioner's due process challenge.        Id.

at 119; see also George Steinberg & Son, Inc. v. Butz, 491 F.2d

988, 994 (2d Cir.) (agreeing with the Zwick court's determination

that PACA's harsh restriction upon the employment of any person

"responsibly connected" to a licensee found to have violated the

PACA did not violate the Due Process Clause of the Fifth

Amendment), cert. denied, 419 U.S. 830 (1974).

     Likewise, the Third Circuit used a rational basis analysis

in Birkenfield v. United States, 369 F.2d 491, 494-95 (3d Cir.

1966), to determine that the per se standard which Congress

adopted in its 1962 amendment of § 499a(b)(9) was constitutional

and not violative of the petitioner's right to due process.        The

court first looked at the object of the PACA as being to suppress

unfair and fraudulent practices in the industry and thus protect

producers of perishable commodities.      Id. at 494.   After

examining the 1962 amendments to the PACA and Congress' reason

for defining "responsibly connected" as it had in amending the

statute, i.e., the previous difficulty in ascertaining the true


                                   18
nature of an employee's relationship with the licensee

corporation, the court explained that

     [t]he automatic exclusion of "responsibly connected"
     persons is not irrational or arbitrary under the
     circumstances. Surely, the relationships of director,
     officer or substantial shareholder form a sufficient
     nexus for the arbitrary conclusion of responsible
     connection. Moreover, the formation of such
     relationships with the sanctioned company is a
     voluntary act. The fact that an individual has not
     exercised "real" authority in the sanctioned company is
     not controlling: certainly the individual could have
     resigned as an officer and director [or] disposed of
     his stock. It was his free choice not to do so.
     Having made that choice, the appellant assumed the
     burdens imposed by the Act.

Id. at 494-95.   The court then upheld the per se exclusionary

standard of § 499a(b)(9) as constitutional.   Id. at 495.

     We therefore cannot say that the unambiguous language of

§ 499a(b)(9), which in Faour we determined commands the

application of the per se rule, was irrationally conceived or

arbitrary in effecting a legitimate governmental objective, i.e.,

the protection of producers of perishable agricultural products.

We also agree that the status of being a director, officer, or

substantial shareholder in a perishable commodities corporation

forms a "sufficient nexus" to the corporation so that a person of

such status can be deemed "responsibly connected" and thus held

to the strict provisions of the PACA, including employment

sanctions.4   See Faour, 985 F.2d at 220 (citing Birkenfield, 369

     4
       Additionally, as we noted earlier, the attainment of such
a status with a perishable commodities corporation is a
completely voluntary act. We thus agree with the Birkenfield
court that once an individual chooses to attain such a status, he
assumes not only the benefits of that status but also the burdens
of the PACA.

                                19
F.2d at 494).   We thus cannot see how the per se rule of

§ 499a(b)(9), which can subject to employment restrictions under

§ 499h those persons "responsibly connected" to a corporation

which has flagrantly or repeatedly violated the PACA,

unconstitutionally encroaches upon Hawkins' due process rights by

arbitrarily interfering with his chosen profession.

                        b. Scope of Hearing

     Hawkins also maintains that his due process rights were

violated because he was deprived of a "meaningful hearing" in

which to rebut the presumption of fault which § 499a(b)(9)

imposes upon him by making him subject to the employment

restrictions of § 499h if he falls into one of the delineated

categories of § 499a(b)(9).   In light of our above discussion,

see Part III.B.1 supra, we find that Hawkins was not entitled to

a hearing so that he might rebut the "responsibly connected"

presumption embodied in § 499a(b)(9).   He was entitled, however,

to an opportunity to show that at the time Fruit Jobbers

allegedly violated the PACA, he did not fall into one of the

three categories delineated in § 499a(b)(9).    Because he was

afforded such an opportunity, his due process rights were not

violated.   His argument with respect to being denied a meaningful

hearing is thus without merit.

                      C. Substantial Evidence

     Hawkins finally contends that the presiding officer's

decision reflecting Fruit Jobbers' flagrant or repeated PACA




                                 20
violations is not supported in the record by substantial

evidence.   We disagree.

      In making his determination, the presiding officer relied on

an administrative law judge's default order finding Fruit Jobbers

to have committed willful, repeated, and flagrant violations of

the PACA by failing to make full payment promptly of $324,246.87

to 50 sellers for 117 lots of fruits and vegetables.      See In re

Fruit Jobbers, 50 Agric. Dec. 1100 (1991).   Although served with

a complaint issued by the Department of Agriculture, Fruit

Jobbers never responded to deny the allegations.    Id.   After the

time for filing an answer had expired and upon the motion of the

Department of Agriculture, the judge issued a default order

pursuant to 7 C.F.R. § 1.139, finding that Fruit Jobbers had

committed willful, flagrant, and repeated violations of PACA.

Id.   Regulations governing PACA proceedings provide that

"[f]ailure to file an answer within the time prescribed shall

constitute a waiver of hearing and an admission of the facts

alleged in the complaint."   7 C.F.R. § 47.8(c).   The default

order became final on February 27, 1991--before Hawkins' hearing

before the presiding officer.   Thus, the presiding officer's

reliance on the administrative law judge's findings fully

supports his conclusion that Fruit Jobbers violated the PACA.

Hawkins' claim concerning the lack of substantial evidence is

without merit.




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                            IV.   CONCLUSION

     For the foregoing reasons, we DENY the petition for review

and AFFIRM the administrator's order.




DeMOSS, Circuit Judge, specially concurring.



     I concur in the reasoning and result of Judge King's well-

crafted opinion.    We have simply said that the law is what

Congress says is the law.    However, on rare occasions, in the

words of Mr. Bumble in Charles Dickens' Oliver Twist, "...the law

is a[n] ass," and this is one of those occasions.    To say that a

person is "responsibly connected" to an action of a corporation

simply by reason of being a minority shareholder of that

corporation, flies in the face of both logic and reality.      I

always thought it was hornbook law that a shareholder, even a

majority shareholder, was not responsible for the debts or torts

or criminal conduct of a corporation, simply by reason of being

such shareholder.    If the public policy behind PACA (as indicated

by the quotation from the House Report in Judge King's opinion)

is to require licensing for those who carry on a business in

perishable agricultural commodities, and to deny such licenses

"to those whose business tactics disqualify them," should not the

law focus on the perpetrators of the unacceptable business

tactics?   If not, the innocent investor/shareholder is branded

with guilt purely on the basis of association, a circumstance


                                   22
which I thought was clearly not acceptable as a basis for fixing

responsibility.             Consequently, I write this special concurrence

with the hope that somewhere in the Department of Agriculture

there is an administrator of this Act with the courage to suggest

to Congress that the definition of "responsibly connected" should

be amended by deleting the words "holder of more than 10 percent

of the outstanding stock of a corporation."




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