Title 7 › Chapter CHAPTER 20A— - PERISHABLE AGRICULTURAL COMMODITIES › § 499e
If a commission merchant, dealer, or broker breaks the rules about perishable agricultural commodities, they must pay anyone harmed. That payment must cover all damages, including any handling fee the injured person paid. A harmed person can complain to the Secretary or sue in court. Those options do not replace other legal remedies already available. Perishable commodities, any food or products made from them, and any money owed from selling them must be kept in trust by the merchant, dealer, or broker for unpaid suppliers, sellers, or agents until those people are paid in full. Payment does not count if a check or other payment is dishonored. The trust rule does not apply to transactions between a cooperative association and its members. To keep the trust right, an unpaid supplier, seller, or agent must give written notice within 30 calendar days after the payment deadline set by the Secretary, after an agreed payment deadline expires, or after being told a payment instrument was dishonored. The notice must identify the transaction. Parties who agree to a different payment time must keep a copy of that agreement and show the payment terms on invoices and other documents. A licensee may also preserve the trust by putting the required notice and a clear statement on regular bills or invoices. Federal district courts can hear cases by trust beneficiaries to get payment and cases by the Secretary to stop the trust from being emptied.
Full Legal Text
Agriculture — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
7 U.S.C. § 499e
Title 7 — Agriculture
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73