[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 7, Volume 2]
[Revised as of January 1, 2008]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 7CFR46.45]

[Page 283-285]
 
                          TITLE 7--AGRICULTURE
 
                        DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
 
PART 46_REGULATIONS (OTHER THAN RULES OF PRACTICE) UNDER THE 
PERISHABLE AGRICULTURAL COMMODITIES ACT, 1930--Table of Contents
 
Sec. 46.45  Procedure in administering section 2(5) of the Act.

    It is a violation of section 2(5) for a commission merchant, dealer, 
or broker to misrepresent by word, act, mark, stencil, label, statement, 
or deed, the character, kind, grade, quality, quantity, size, pack, 
weight, condition, degree, or maturity, or State, country, region of 
origin of any perishable agricultural commodity received, shipped, sold, 
or offered to be sold in interstate or foreign commerce. However, a 
person other than the first licensee handling misbranded perishable 
agricultural commodities shall not be held liable for a violation of 
section 2(5) of the Act by reason of the conduct of another if the 
person did not have knowledge of the violation or lacked the ability to 
correct the violation.
    (a) Violations. Violations are considered to be serious, very 
serious, or repeated and/or flagrant, depending upon the circumstances 
of the misrepresentation.
    (1) Serious violations. Include the following:
    (i) Any lot of a perishable agricultural commodity shown by official 
inspection to contain scorable defects, off-size, off-count, exceeding 
the tolerance(s) in an amount up to and including double the tolerance 
provided in the applicable grades, standards or inspection procedures;
    (ii) Any lot of perishable agricultural commodity officially 
certified as failing to meet the declared weight;
    (iii) Any lot of a perishable agricultural commodity in which the 
State, country, or region of origin of the produce is misrepresentated 
because the lot is made up of containers with various labels or markings 
that reflect more than one incorrect State, country or region of origin. 
Example: A lot with containers individually marked to show the origin as 
Idaho or Maine or Colorado when the produce was grown in Wisconsin; or
    (iv) Any other physical act, verbal or written declaration, or 
record entry that misrepresents a lot of a perishable agricultural 
commodity to the same extent as the examples listed.
    (2) Very serious violations. Include the following:
    (i) Any lot of a perishable agricultural commodity shown by official 
inspection to contain scorable defects, off-size, off-count, in excess 
of double the tolerance(s) provided in the applicable grades, standards 
or inspection procedures;
    (ii) Any lot of a perishable agricultural commodity packed in 
containers showing a single point of origin, which is other than that in 
which the produce was grown, such as containers marked ``California'' 
when the produce was grown in Arizona;
    (iii) Any lot of a perishable agricultural commodity officially 
certified as having an average net weight more than four percent below 
the declared weight;
    (iv) Multiple sales or shipments of a misrepresented perishable 
agricultural commodity within a seven day period that can be attributed 
to one cause; or

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    (v) Any other physical act, verbal or written declaration, or record 
entry that misrepresents a lot of a perishable agricultural commodity to 
the same extent as the examples listed.
    (3) Flagrant violations. Include, but are not necessarily limited 
to, the following examples:
    (i) Shipment or sale of a lot of a perishable agricultural commodity 
from shipping point after notification by official inspection that the 
inspected commodity fails to comply with any marking on the container 
without first correcting the misbranding;
    (ii) To offer for resale or consignment, a lot of a perishable 
agricultural commodity that has been officially inspected at destination 
and found to be misbranded without advising a prospective receiver that 
the lot is misbranded and that the misbranding must be corrected before 
resale. When a resale or consignment is finalized, written notice must 
be given that the lot is misbranded and must be corrected before resale; 
or
    (iii) To withhold or fail to disclose known material facts with 
respect to a misrepresentation or misbranding.
    (b) Evidence. (1) Evidence concerning a misrepresentation or 
misbranding includes official certificates of an inspection made by any 
person authorized by the Department to inspect fruits and vegetables or 
other public certifiers, and includes investigations and audit findings 
and any business records, testimony or other evidence bearing on the 
subject.
    (2) When a lot of a perishable agricultural commodity has been 
officially inspected, and certification is made that the descriptive 
container markings are correct, but a subsequent inspection reverses the 
original findings, both inspection certificates will be accepted as 
evidence to show that the shipper/seller has not misrepresented the lot. 
The receiver of the commodity will be in violation if the 
misrepresentation is not corrected before the commodity is shipped, sold 
or offered for resale.
    (c) Sanctions--(1) Informal. When liability for a violation of 
section 2(5) of the Act is to be settled informally, the violator may:
    (i) Be given written warnings; or
    (ii) Be given notice that liability for a violation may be settled 
by admitting the violation in writing and paying a penalty in an amount 
satisfactory to the Secretary in lieu of formal disciplinary action. In 
the event of a formal proceeding to suspend or revoke the license of 
such person because he has committed other violation(s), the admitted 
violation(s) will not be used to support the formal complaint but may be 
admitted to show a course of conduct prior to the filing of the formal 
complaint;
    (iii) (A) The schedule for informal disposition is as follows:

------------------------------------------------------------------------
                   Violation                                 Disposition
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1st...........................................  ...........        (\1\)
2d............................................  ...........        (\1\)
                                                      (\2\)        (\3\)
3d............................................         $200         $250
4th...........................................          350          500
5th...........................................          500        1,000
6th...........................................        1,000        2,200
7th...........................................        2,200       2,200
------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Warning letter.
\2\ If serious violation.
\3\ Very serious violation.

    (B) Informal disposition of misrepresentation violations is not 
limited to seven occurrences and will be considered for further 
violations.
    (2) Formal. Formal proceedings to suspend or revoke a license may be 
instituted at any time against a person who has committed repeated and/
or flagrant violations.
    (d) Cumulative record. A cumulative record of licensee's 
misrepresentation violations will be maintained with the following 
limitations:
    (1) Two years after the date it was committed or after payment of a 
monetary penalty, the violation will not be used as a basis for 
instituting formal disciplinary action. However, it may be cited as a 
part of the pattern of violations if formal proceedings are instituted 
and will be used in determining the level of monetary penalty for 
informal settlements.
    (2) The record of violations not involved in formal proceedings will 
be expunged if there are no violations during a twenty-four (24) month 
period from the date of the most recent violation, or after thirty-six 
(36) months from the date of said violation, unless it was made a part 
of a formal disciplinary complaint.

[[Page 285]]

    (e) Summary of procedure--(1) Compilation of authority. The rules 
defining misrepresentation, including misbranding, and for determining 
liability and disposition of violations are contained in the Act (7 
U.S.C. 499 et seq.), in particular sections 2(5) and 8 (7 U.S.C. 449b(5) 
and 499h), Sec. 46.45 of the Regulations (7 CFR 46.45), the Rules of 
Practice Governing Formal Adjudicatory Administrative Proceedings 
Instituted By the Secretary (7 CFR 1.130 et seq.), and in the 
Administrative Procedure Act (5 U.S.C. 551 et seq.).
    (2) Evidence of misrepresentation. Evidence of misrepresentation or 
misbranding violations includes results of official inspections, audit 
findings, business records, or other documentation or testimony bearing 
on the subject. When a lot of fruits and vegetables has been officially 
inspected, and certification made that the descriptive markings on the 
container do not misrepresent the produce, but a subsequent inspection 
reverses the original finding (such as to grade, size, weight, etc.), 
the shipper/seller will not be charged with violation of the Act. 
However, the misrepresentation must be corrected before the lot is 
shipped, sold, or offered for resale.
    (3) Warning letters. When informal settlement of liability is 
appropriate, violators are given two written warnings and an opportunity 
to take preventive action before formal action is considered. Warning 
letters include an explanation of the requirements of the Act and 
recommendations of actions which the violator can take to avoid future 
violations.
    (4) Informal sanctions. Violations subsquent to the sending of the 
warning letters referred to above, other than flagrant violations, may 
be settled informally pursuant to paragraph (c)(1) of this section. This 
procedure permits the violator to resolve the matter by payment of a 
monetary penalty pursuant to a schedule set out in lieu of a formal 
proceeding.
    (5) Formal sanctions. In cases involving repeated or flagrant 
violations of the Act, formal proceedings seeking the suspension or 
revocation of the violator's license may be instituted pursuant to the 
Rules of Practice governing such matters (7 CFR 1.130 et seq.). Except 
in cases of willfulness or where the public health, interest, or safety 
requires otherwise, a violator must be given written warning and 
opportunity to demonstrate or achieve compliance with the Act before its 
license can be suspended or revoked (5 U.S.C. 551 et seq.). The warning 
letters referred to above serve this purpose. If formal proceedings are 
instituted, the violator is afforded an oral hearing, if requested, 
before an Administrative Law Judge, an opportunity to appeal an adverse 
decision to the Department's Judicial Officer, and a further opportunity 
to appeal an adverse final decision to the appropriate United States 
Circuit Court of Appeals.
    (6) Use of record of misrepresentation. A cumulative record of 
misrepresentation is maintained. It is used as a basis for determining 
whether a warning letter should be considered, and, if so, the amount of 
monetary penalty which is appropriate, or whether there is cause for 
instituting a formal disciplinary proceeding seeking suspension or 
revocation of the violator's license. But after payment of a monetary 
penalty or after two years from the date of the last violation, no 
formal disciplinary use can be made of the previous record of violation. 
The record of misrepresentation shall be erased if there are no further 
violations in the twenty-four (24) month period immediately following 
the most recent violation, or after 36 months from the date of each 
individual violation unless it is involved in formal disciplinary 
proceedings.

[43 FR 4964, Feb. 7, 1978, as amended at 46 FR 22746, Apr. 21, 1981; 47 
FR 21234, May 18, 1982; 62 FR 15088, Mar. 31, 1997; 70 FR 29578, May 24, 
2005]

                             Statutory Trust