Title 7 › Chapter CHAPTER 20A— - PERISHABLE AGRICULTURAL COMMODITIES › § 499g
The Secretary can order a commission merchant, dealer, or broker to pay money to a person who was harmed when the firm broke the rules. The Secretary can do this after a hearing, without a hearing in some cases, or if the firm fails to answer or show up. The Secretary will decide how much the injured person should get and set a payment date. The losing firm must also pay the winner’s reasonable fees and expenses for the hearing. If the firm admits part of the claim, the Secretary may order payment of the admitted amount right away and leave the rest to be decided later. If the firm does not pay on time, the injured person can sue within three years in federal district court where the person lives or where the firm’s main office is, or in a state court with general jurisdiction. The Secretary’s findings count as prima-facie evidence in court. Either side can appeal a reparation order to the proper federal district court within thirty days. To appeal, the appellant must file a notice and petition and, within thirty days, post a bond equal to twice the reparation amount (cash, marketable securities, or an approved surety). The district court will hold a new trial, and the Secretary’s findings remain prima-facie evidence. If a licensee does not pay or show within five days after the payment period that they have appealed or paid, their license is automatically suspended until they pay. If the appellee wins on appeal or the appeal is dismissed, suspension becomes effective thirty days after the appeal judgment, or ten days after any court stay ends unless the judgment has been satisfied.
Full Legal Text
Agriculture — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
7 U.S.C. § 499g
Title 7 — Agriculture
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73