Agriliance, L.L.C. v. Farmpro Services, Inc., 328 F. Supp. 2d 958 (S.D. Iowa 2003)
* * *
I. FACTS
Marvin
and Marlene Mitchell ["the Mitchells"] farmed in central Iowa and in
parts of Louisiana. The dispute in this case centers around Agriliance having
provided the Mitchells a loan for their 2001 crop input expenses. As part of
this loan, the Mitchells made, executed, and delivered to Agriliance a written
Promissory Note and Security Agreement ["Note"] on March 5, 2001. The
original principal amount of the loan was $950,231.00, and the Note granted to
Agriliance a security interest in, among other things, all crops growing or to
be grown in 2001, all harvested crops, and cash and noncash proceeds from the
sale of any collateral described in the Note.
By the time Agriliance agreed to fund the Mitchells'
2001 crop input expenses, they had already experienced trouble meeting loan
obligations for their crop input expenses for previous years. For example, in
1998 and 1999, Farmpro loaned the Mitchells money for crop input expenses; at
the time they were made, the Mitchell loans were around 25 percent of the total
Farmpro business and were two of the largest loans ever made by Farmpro. By
December 1999, the Mitchells had not met their obligations under these loans and
owed Farmpro a substantial sum of money on both loans.
Marvin Mitchell's father, Third-Party Defendant
Maurice Mitchell, Sr. ["Mitchell Sr."], eventually became involved in
the Mitchells' obligations concerning these 1998 and 1999 Farmpro loans. In
January 2000, the Mitchells, Mitchell Sr., and Farmpro entered into a Debt
Settlement Agreement ["Settlement Agreement"], wherein the Mitchells'
1998 loan was restructured, the timeline for the Mitchells to pay off the 1999
loan was extended, Mitchell Sr. made guarantees as to the Mitchells' debts, and
Farmpro received mortgages on certain real estate to secure the loans.
Aware of Farmpro's history with the Mitchells, before
providing an input loan for the Mitchells' 2001 crops, Agriliance required
Farmpro to subordinate its interests in the Mitchells' 2001 crops and proceeds
thereof. On March 8, 2001, Farmpro's CEO, David Drey ["Drey"],
executed a Security Interest of Statutory Lien Subordination Agreement
["Subordination Agreement"], wherein Farmpro did subordinate its
interest in, among other things, the Mitchells' 2001 crops to Agriliance, as
well as all cash and noncash proceeds from the sale, exchange, collection, or
disposition of any of the collateral. On March 12, 2001, Agriliance properly
filed a financing statement describing its security interest in the collateral
described in the Note and addendum to the Note. Agriliance then provided a loan
to the Mitchells for their 2001 crop input expenses.
At some time during the fall of 2001, the Mitchells
harvested the 2001 crop subject to Agriliance's perfected security interest and
Subordination Agreement. In January 2002, after the Mitchells contacted
Agriliance seeking crop input financing for the 2002 growing year, Agriliance
came to believe the Mitchells sold their crops to Mitchell Sr. and were in
possession of and refusing to remit a $520,808.24 check from Mitchell Sr. made
payable to Agriliance, the Mitchells, and another entity. Agriliance alleges
the Mitchells placed conditions upon relinquishing this check, including, among
other things, the Mitchells receiving a loan for the 2002 crop input expenses.
Agriliance refused to make the additional loan, the Mitchells denied
Agriliance's request to make payments toward the prior loans, and Agriliance
filed a replevin action against the Mitchells in Iowa state court.
The record contains circumstantial evidence suggesting
that the Mitchells delivered and eventually sold the grain from their 2001
crops to ABC Grain in February 2002. [Footnote omitted.] On February 21, 2002,
ABC Grain issued two checks made payable to the Mitchells and Lost Prairie,
L.C. (a Mitchell created corporation), totaling $468,546.86 and drawn on
Citizens Bank. After receiving these checks, Citizens Bank transformed these
two ABC checks into one Cashier's Check drawn on Citizens Bank and made payable
to Farmpro in the exact same amount of $468,546.86. The Mitchells then went to
Farmpro and delivered this Cashier's Check, [FN2] along with another Cashier's
Check by Mitchell Sr., drawn on Wells Fargo, for $56,012.97. These payments
totaled the amount of the Mitchells' indebtedness to Farmpro.
FN2. For purposes of this order, it is the $468,546.86 Citizens Bank Cashier's Check ["Cashier's Check"] that Agriliance claims represents proceeds of the Mitchells' 2001 crop.
Shortly
thereafter, Drey of Farmpro contacted Tim Brown ["Brown"] of Central
Bank telling him he wanted to make sure the check was good. Brown called
Citizens Bank to determine if the check was good, although at his deposition
Brown indicated he believed Drey had no reason to believe the check would not
be good. Brown spoke with the secretary of the Citizen Bank President, who
allegedly told Brown "the check is good because Marvin has been meeting
with [the president of Citizens Bank] for the last two days." Brown asked
no more questions and spoke to no one else. Brown did not call Wells Fargo
regarding the validity of the Mitchell Sr. check because he believed Mitchell
Sr. had substantial financial resources. As the Mitchells had requested at the
time the checks were negotiated, Farmpro released the Mitchell Sr. guarantee
and the mortgages.
Once it came to believe Farmpro held proceeds from the
Mitchells' 2001 crop, Agriliance made written demand on Farmpro for the
Cashier's Check, which Farmpro refused. On May 24, 2002, Agriliance commenced
the present lawsuit against Farmpro, asserting conversion and breach of
contract claims, subsequently amending its complaint to add the conversion
claim against new Defendant Central Bank. [FN3]
FN3. Central Bank is involved because Farmpro would participate the loans it made, including this one, to Central Bank. Tim Brown held more than a 50 percent ownership interest in Central Bank and was also involved in Farmpro. After helping to establish Farmpro, he was a director and investor in the company. By January 2000, Farmpro had fallen on hard times and by January 1, 2002, of the original investors, only Tim Brown and one other remained at Farmpro. It is because of Brown's relationship with both Farmpro and Central Bank that Agriliance argues Central Bank should be imputed with the actions, notice, and knowledge of Farmpro.
At its
core, this suit relates a belief by Agriliance that the Cashier's Check was
funded with proceeds from the Mitchells' 2001 crop, and Agriliance, therefore,
believes Farmpro is liable for conversion after having accepted and refusing to
relinquish the Cashier's Check. The claim of conversion against Central Bank is
based on Farmpro having transferred an unknown amount of the Cashier's Check to
Central Bank for its participation in the Mitchell 2001 crop input expense
loan. [FN4] The breach of contract claim against Farmpro arises out of the
Subordination Agreement and Farmpro's acceptance of the Cashier's Check in
claimed contravention of Agriliance's interests. On March 12, 2003, Agriliance
requested summary judgment on all counts.
FN4. Farmpro and Central Bank point out that because Agriliance has not alleged nor argued that the Court should disregard the separateness of the identity between Farmpro and Central Bank, Agriliance's ability to recover against Central Bank rests upon a showing that Central Bank received proceeds of the Cashier's Check which was funded by the Mitchells' 2001 crop, and that Central Bank is not a holder in due course.
Resisting the Agriliance breach of
contract claim, Farmpro argues nothing in the Subordination Agreement required
Farmpro to remit all payments received from the Mitchells or Mitchell
Sr. unless and until Agriliance was paid in full. Believing Agriliance has
failed to establish a breach of any term in the agreement between them, Farmpro
argues Agriliance has failed to carry its burden of proof on the breach of
contract claim, and the Agriliance motion for summary judgment as to this count
should be denied. In resisting the Agriliance conversion claim, Farmpro and
Central Bank [Footnote omitted.] argue Agriliance has not demonstrated the
Cashier's Check was purchased with the proceeds of the sale of the Mitchells'
2001 crop, and, thus, the conversion claim fails as a matter of law. Farmpro
asserts that it subordinated only its interest to Marvin Mitchell's 2001
crop proceeds and points out that because the ABC checks were made payable to
both Mitchells and Lost Prairie, L.C., fairness requires that this Court not
infer that the ABC checks were written solely for purchasing the grain of only
one of the three payees on the check.
Additionally, Defendants have filed their own
cross-motion for summary judgment on all counts. In support, Farmpro initially
points out that despite Agriliance's knowledge that Farmpro was a creditor of
the Mitchells, Agriliance never notified Farmpro of Argiliance's early February
2002 suspicions that the Mitchells had sold the 2001 crop to Mitchell Sr. and
were not turning over a check. This is important because Farmpro alleges that
before tendering the two Cashier's Checks, Marvin Mitchell had called on two
occasions to inquire about paying off his indebtedness with Farmpro before
February 20, 2002, and had also asked what would be needed to have the
mortgages released instantly. Shortly thereafter, the Mitchells presented
Farmpro with the Cashier's Check, and Farmpro argues that in the absence of any
knowledge of the Agriliance concerns, Farmpro had no reason to question the
source of funding for the check at the time it was accepted.
Farmpro and Central Bank contend they believed the
checks were funded as a result of the Mitchells having refinanced with Citizens
Bank, financial assistance with Mitchell Sr., or a combination of both. They
also claim they believed the checks were funded by possible real estate
transactions. Farmpro and Central Bank point out that nothing on the face of
the Cashier's Check indicated the check was subject to a claim by Agriliance,
and nothing indicated the check was the result of the sale of grain.
Additionally, they argue the standard industry practice is for senior lenders
to take the necessary steps to ensure a grain elevator or a grain dealer issues
a two-party check for the sale of grain so that when they received the
Cashier's Check made out solely to Farmpro, neither Farmpro nor Central Bank
had any indication that proceeds from the Mitchells' 2001 crop funded the
check. Farmpro and Central Bank, therefore, argue they qualify as a holder in
due course of the Cashier's Check and take free of any Agriliance interest.
Assuming the Cashier's Check is funded by proceeds
from selling the Mitchells' 2001 crop, and because being a holder in due course
is an affirmative defense to a claim of conversion, Defendants argue they are
entitled to judgment as a matter of law on the conversion claim.
As between two innocent parties, Farmpro and Central
Bank argue the law favors leaving the loss that a third-party's misdeeds cause
with the party in the best position to have prevented the loss. [Citation
omitted.] They argue that, assuming the Agriliance allegations are true, the
culpable party in this case is Marvin Mitchell, while Farmpro and Central Bank
are innocent parties. As between Agriliance and them, Farmpro and Central Bank
argue that only Agriliance had actual knowledge in early February 2002 that
Marvin Mitchell sold the grain or
intended to do so prior to the time Farmpro and Central Bank acted in reliance
on the Cashier's Check and released the mortgages and guarantees in
satisfaction of the Mitchells' debt. According to Farmpro and Central Bank,
Agriliance was best able to prevent the loss by simply notifying Farmpro of
Agriliance's suspicions and, having failed to do that, under the general policy
of Deater, Agriliance should suffer the loss.
In reply, Agriliance argues the entire purpose of the
Subordination Agreement was that Agriliance would have priority over Farmpro to
the Mitchells' crop and proceeds, not just Marvin's share. Agriliance points
out that while the entire agreement may not have spelled out every conceivable
contingency, Farmpro's obligation to turn over money from the Mitchells' crop
is so obvious that it need not be expressly mentioned in the agreement.
Agriliance disagrees with Farmpro's assertion that, as between two innocent
parties, the law favors placing the loss at the one in the best position to
have prevented the loss, and argues the law places the loss on one who is not a
holder in due course.
II. SUMMARY JUDGMENT STANDARD
* * *
III. DISCUSSION
In
general, this case concerns secured transactions, and, thus, Article 9 of the
Uniform Commercial Code is applicable, Iowa's version being located at Iowa
Code § 554.9301, et seq. The Cashier's Check at issue in this case is a
negotiable instrument "subject to the priority rules of Article 3 of the
UCC." Agriliance, L.L.C. v. Runnells Grain Elevator, Inc., et al.,
272 F.Supp.2d 800, 810-11 (S.D.Iowa 2003) (citing Valley Nat'l Bank v.
Porter, 705 F.2d 1027, 1029-30 (8th Cir.1983)). Iowa Code § 554.9331(1)
indicates that the priority rules of Article 3 govern over the priority rules
of Article 9. See Iowa Code § 554.9331(1) (stating "[t]his Article
does not limit the rights of a holder in due course of a negotiable instrument....
These holders [in due course] ... take priority over an earlier security
interest, even if perfected, to the extent provided in Articles 3, 7, and
8."); see also Iowa Code § 554.3306 (discussing that "[a]
person taking an instrument, other than a person having rights of a holder in
due course, is subject to a claim of a property or possessory interest in the
instrument or its proceeds.... A person having rights of a holder in due course
takes free of the claim to the instrument.").
While Farmpro and Central Bank argue Agriliance has
not carried its burden of proof in showing the $468,564.86 Cashier's Check was
funded with proceeds of the Mitchells' 2001 crop, the Court disagrees and finds
the record adequately demonstrates the $468,564.86 Cashier's Check represents
proceeds from the sale of the Mitchells' 2001 crop. [Footnote omitted.]
Additionally, the Court agrees with Agriliance and finds that the record
supports imputing the conduct, notice, and knowledge of Farmpro to Central
Bank. Therefore, the Court refers to Defendants Farmpro Services Inc. and
Central Bank collectively as Farmpro. As the Court is of the view that one may
possess a negotiable instrument, not be liable for the intentional tort of
conversion for lack of the requisite knowledge that one's control is
inconsistent with another's right, yet still not be a holder in due course for
failure to exercise good faith under the attendant circumstances, the Court
will separately analyze the conversion claim and then address the affirmative
defenses raised by Farmpro, including its status as holders in due course.
A.
Agriliance Motion for Summary Judgment.
1. Conversion claim against Farmpro and Central
Bank.
In Iowa, the exercise of "wrongful control or
dominion over another's property contrary to that person's possessory right to
the property" is conversion. [Citations omitted.] To prevail on its
conversion claim, Agriliance must have had a possessory right to the 2001
Mitchell crop.
Although Farmpro makes much of the Subordination
Agreement referring to Marvin Mitchell, nothing in the record suggests
either of the Mitchells have specific rights to crops to the exclusion of the
other. Despite their current argument to the contrary, paragraph six (6) of the
Debt Settlement Agreement demonstrates that prior to this litigation, Farmpro
considered the Mitchells' farming endeavors as a joint operation. The Court
finds that the evidence in the record, which includes correspondence and
negotiable instruments, demonstrates that the farming activities in question
were a joint venture of the Mitchells. Thus, Marvin Mitchell's actions, as
relating to the farming operations, bind Marlene Mitchell equally. See,
e.g., Iowa Code § 486A.301(1) (stating "[e]ach partner is an agent of
the partnership for the purposes of its business. An act of a partner ... for
apparently carrying on in the ordinary course of the partnership business ...
binds the partnership...."). The essential purpose of the Subordination
Agreement was that Farmpro would subordinate its interest in the 2001 crop of
the Mitchells in favor of Agriliance, and "[a] contract includes not only
what is expressly stated but also what is necessarily to be implied from the
language used; and terms which may clearly be implied from a consideration of
the entire contract are as much a part thereof as though plainly written on its
face." [Citations omitted.]
Having filed the appropriate financial statement with
the Iowa Secretary of State on March 12, 2001, Agriliance holds a perfected
security interest in the Mitchells' 2001 crops. See Agriliance,
272 F.Supp.2d at 802. "Agriliance's security interest gives it a
possessory right to the Mitchells' 2001 crops, as against junior competing
claims." Id. at 804.
The issue becomes whether Farmpro and Central Bank
have "exercised wrongful control over the crops that were the subject of
Agriliance's security interest." Id. at 805-06. To prevail on a
claim for conversion, the "wrongful control must amount to a serious
interference with the other person's right to control the property." Id.
(quoting Condon Auto Sales & Serv., 604 N.W.2d at 593). In Iowa, to
determine whether conduct amounts to a "serious interference" with
the possessory rights of another, the following factors are used: (1) the
extent and duration of the exercise of dominion and control; (2) the actor's
intent to assert a right inconsistent with the other's right; (3) the actor's
good faith; (4) the extent and duration of resulting interference; (5) the harm
to the chattel; and (6) the inconvenience/expense of the other. Id.
[Citations omitted.] There is no question that the Defendants have exercised
total control over the proceeds of the Mitchells' 2001 crop since receiving the
Cashier's Check in February of 2002.
In their pleadings and at oral argument, the parties
treat the analysis of the good faith element of intentional conversion as
equivalent with the good faith element of holder in due course status. For
instance, Agriliance argues that the only Rowe factor requiring
discussion was the "good faith" of Defendants, and then proceeded to
analyze the good faith element simultaneously with the good faith requirement
needing to be met in order to be according holder in due course status.
Agriliance points to the following factors as
demonstrating bad faith, which justifies a finding of conversion while denying
Defendants status as holders in due course: (1) 98 percent of all Farmpro
business was related to financing crop inputs, suggesting Farmpro knew how this
business was or should be run; (2) 25 percent of Farmpro's business was
comprised of the Mitchells' loans, and Farmpro had some difficulty with the
Mitchells repaying these loans; (3) Farmpro had never before been presented
with a Cashier's Check when the Mitchells delivered the two on February 28,
2002; and (4) in light of the fact that Cashier's Checks, by definition, are
"good funds", that Farmpro called to verify whether the funds were
"good" indicates Farmpro was suspicious of the Mitchells.
Additionally, Agriliance points out the dispute
surrounding the Mitchells' repaying Farmpro resulted in all parties obtaining
attorneys, leading to a settlement agreement being reached. This type of
settlement agreement was the first Farmpro had entered into with a borrower,
and Agriliance argues that between 1999 and 2002, Farmpro had only two crop
input loans which needed to be restructured and secured by real estate in
similar fashion.
Alluding to the fact that at the time the Cashier's
Checks were accepted, Farmpro had restructured these loans so that paying them
off was not due for years, Agriliance views the Farmpro and Central Bank
actions as indicative of only being concerned about being paid and adhering to
the adage "take the money now and ask questions later." [FN7]
Challenging Farmpro's assertion that when it accepted the checks it believed a
possible source of funding was Mitchell Sr., Agriliance asks why Mitchell Sr.
would not have used one cashier's check rather than two from two separate
banks.
FN7. The Court notes that Brown testified that at the time the Cashier's Checks were accepted, Farmpro was no longer loaning money, but instead focusing on collecting the loans it had provided and had run into difficult times. By January 2002, of the original investors in Farmpro, only Brown and one other remained involved.
Thus,
Agriliance asserts Farmpro's acceptance of the Cashier's Check, passing some
along to Central Bank, and then both entities refusing to return the proceeds
despite Agriliance demands, [FN8] is an act in contravention of Agriliance's
interest (i.e. under Rowe, indicates an intent to assert a right
inconsistent with another's right). At oral argument, Agriliance asserted that
the Court did not need to decide whether "good faith" is subject to a
negligence standard because Farmpro and Central Bank were not incompetent, but
instead, under the circumstances of this case, their acts rose to the level of
willful acts sufficient to find them liable for the intentional tort of
conversion.
FN8. Agriliance points out it did not make a demand on Central Bank for the return of crop proceeds before initiating this action because only became aware of Central Bank possessing proceeds from the Cashier's Check after certain depositions took place on November 25, 2002. Having imputed the knowledge of Farmpro to Central Bank, via Tim Brown, Central Bank cannot claim it was unaware of the Agriliance claims prior to this suit being filed.
As more thoroughly discussed in the
holder in due course analysis which follows, Farmpro relies on their assertion
that nothing indicated Agriliance made a claim to the actual Cashier's Check,
argues it acted in good faith, and argues its status as a holder in due course
controls, under Iowa Code § 554.9331(1) and § 554.3306.
In this case, although Agriliance asks this Court to
infer bad faith from Farmpro's actions, the Court points out, as did
Agriliance, that this Cashier's Check was one of the first Farmpro had ever
received. When the Cashier's Check was accepted, nowhere did it indicate the
Mitchells' 2001 crops funded the check. See Allison-Kesley Ag. Ctr.
v. Hildebrand, 485 N.W.2d 841, 844 (Iowa 1992) (indicating that the proper
time to determine whether a recipient has notice of a claim is at the time the
instrument was negotiated). The record does not support a finding that the
actions rise to a level beyond incompetence or negligence to the degree of
intentional willfulness sufficient to establish conversion. The
"commercial standards of fair dealing" part of the definition of good
faith now included in Article 3 is not concerned with standards of care. Iowa
Code § 554.3103(d) cmt. (4). Under the circumstances of this case, the Court
does not find that Farmpro and Central Bank's actions rise to a degree of
willful blindness indicating such bad faith and intentional conduct as to find
them liable, as a matter of law, for the intentional claim of conversion.
Absent evidence that Farmpro and Central Bank acted with knowledge that their
exercise of control over the funds was inconsistent with the rights of
Agriliance, the Court does not find conversion; thus, the Agriliance claim for
conversion does not withstand summary judgment analysis.
2. Breach of Contract Claim against Farmpro.
In Iowa, a party seeking to recover for breach of
contract must prove (1) the existence of a contract; (2) the terms of the
contract; (3) that the party suing for breach of contract has performed all of
the terms of the contract; (4) that the defendant breached the contract; and
(5) that the plaintiff has suffered damages as a result of the breach. [Citation
omitted.] A contract may be breached through the negligence of one of the
contracting parties. [Citations omitted.]
Defendants argue they are holders in due course and,
therefore, take the Cashier's Check free of Agriliance's prior security
interest. "[A] holder in due course takes a negotiable instrument free of
any claim to the instrument, including claims of prior secured parties." Agriliance, 272 F.Supp.2d at 810-11 (citing Iowa Code
§§ 554.3302, 554.3306, 554.9331). To qualify as holders in due course, the
instrument must have been taken "a) for value, b) in good faith, and c)
without notice that it was overdue or had been dishonored, or of any contrary
claim to rights in the instrument, and without notice that any party has a
defense or claim in recoupment." See id. (citing Iowa Code §
554.3302). The Cashier's Check was accepted for value, with Farmpro receiving
the check as repayment of loans and Central Bank taking some of the funds for
its participation in this loan. Their status as holders in due course,
therefore, hinges on whether they meet the good faith and notice elements of
holder in due course status.
1. Good Faith.
Farmpro argues that good faith "means honesty in
fact in the conduct or transaction concerned." Iowa Code § 554.1201(19).
Farmpro argues this definition is purely a subjective test focusing exclusively
on the holder's actual knowledge. [Citation omitted.] Continuing, Farmpro
asserts the focus is on whether the holder had actual notice of the secured
party's claim to the check, not just general knowledge that the secured party
had a general lien. Farmpro asserts that negligence or even knowledge of
suspicious circumstances is not sufficient to show bad faith. [Citation
omitted.]
At the time it accepted the checks, Farmpro argues it
was unaware that the Mitchells had sold their 2001 crops, and while it had
knowledge that Agriliance had a general claim to Marvin Mitchell's 2001 crops,
there was no indication that the Cashier's Check was related to Marvin
Mitchell's 2001 crop. Since it did not have actual knowledge of Agriliance's
interest in the $468,564.86 Cashier's Check, Farmpro argues, as a matter of
law, it acted in good faith when it accepted the check. [Citations omitted.]
The problem for Farmpro and Central Bank is that while
they cite to Iowa Code § 554.1201(19) for a purely subjective standard of
"good faith", section 1201 begins with the qualification that it is
"subject to additional definitions in the subsequent Articles in this
chapter...." Iowa Code § 554.1201. Article 3 was amended in 1995 to add an
objective component to the definition of good faith, changing a definition
which was purely subjective. See Agriliance, 272 F.Supp.2d at
811, n. 9. Under Article 3, good faith is now defined as "honesty in fact
and the observance of reasonable commercial standards of fair dealing." Id.
at 810 (citing Iowa Code § 554.3103(1)(d)).
Observing reasonable commercial standards of fair
dealing, Agriliance argues, means a person has a duty to inquire where facts
exist which would put a reasonable person on notice of the possibility of a
prior claim to the instrument. A significant point not lost on the Court is
that UCC comment 5 to section 554.9331 specifically indicates that after the
amended definition of good faith, "[d]ecisions such as Financial
Management Services, Inc. v. Familian, [which Farmpro cites as support for
finding it acted in good faith and is a holder in due course] could be
determined differently under this application of the good-faith
requirement". Thus, observing reasonable commercial standards of fair
dealing is judged from a reasonable bank/lending institution perspective
sitting in the shoes of Farmpro and Central Bank, and while " 'good faith'
does not impose a general duty of inquiry, ... there may be circumstances in
which reasonable commercial standards of fair dealing" may call for it. See
generally Agriliance, 272 F.Supp.2d at 810 (referring to Iowa Code §
554.9331 UCC cmt. (5)).
Whether reasonable commercial standards of fair
dealing were observed when the Cashier's Check was accepted without making
inquiry as to the source of the funds is ultimately a question of whether a
reasonable lender (Farmpro) and reasonable bank (Central Bank) would have had
reason to know of the potential competing claim to the Cashier's Check at the
time the check was accepted, such that they should have inquired about how the
check was funded before accepting it. See generally, Agriliance,
272 F.Supp.2d at 812-13. In this sense then, the analysis of good faith merges
with the determination of whether Defendants had notice of the competing claim
to the $468,564.86 check. Agriliance, 272 F.Supp.2d at 812-13; see
also Joe Morgan, Inc. v. Amsouth Bank N.A., 985 F.2d 1554, 1562
(11th Cir.1993) (indicating that where an objective component to the Article 3
definition of "good faith" exists, the good faith and notice elements
of the holder in due course analysis frequently merges).
2. Notice.
Although Farmpro had actual knowledge of the superior
Agriliance interest in the Mitchells' 2001 crops, an interest which Agriliance
perfected, this fact alone does not put Farmpro on notice of the Agriliance
claim to the Cashier's Check and does not limit one's ability to be afforded
status as a holder in due course. Agriliance, 272 F.Supp.2d at 810-11
(citing Iowa Code § 554.9331(3), which says "[f]iling under this Article
does not constitute notice of a claim or defense to [holders in due course of
negotiable instruments]."). In this case, unless Farmpro had constructive
notice of the Agriliance claim to the Cashier's Check, the general rule that
"good faith" imposes no general duty of inquiry, see Iowa Code
§ 554.9331 cmt. (5), protects Farmpro, and Farmpro and Central Bank will be
afforded holder in due course status.
Farmpro argues that while good faith under Iowa law is
subjective, the test for notice has an objective component. One has notice of a
fact where a person "has actual knowledge of it, ... has received a notice
or notification of it, or from all the facts and circumstances known to the
person at the time in question, the person has reason to know that it
exists." Agriliance, 272 F.Supp.2d at 812-13 (quoting Iowa Code §
554.1201(25)). This is "essentially an objective test of what a reasonable
person in the holder's position would know." Valley Nat'l Bank, 705
F.2d at 1029.
Agriliance attempts to distinguish many of the Farmpro
and Central Bank authorities by arguing they predate the 1995 revision to
Article 3's "good faith" definition. While cases such as Valley
Nat'l Bank are no longer persuasive regarding the "good faith" analysis,
the case discussion on notice was "unaffected by the 1995 amendments to
the good faith test." Agriliance, 272 F.Supp.2d at 812-13.
"Where ... the objective good faith and notice tests are the same, the
analysis of [these earlier cases and their discussion on notice] also has
bearing on the objective prong of the good faith analysis." Agriliance,
272 F.Supp.2d at 812-13. "Under Iowa law, a court must determine whether
[Farmpro and Central Bank] actual knowledge is, under the circumstances,
sufficient to allow the holder to 'reasonably infer the probable existence of
the claim.' " Id. at 812-13 (citing Valley Nat'l Bank, 705
F.2d at 1029, which in turn quotes Eldon's Super Fresh Stores v. Merrill
Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith, Inc., 296 Minn. 130, 207 N.W.2d 282, 287
(1973)).
Agriliance claims that since its motion relates to the
objective component of the good faith test rather than the subjective one,
Farmpro's argument that it did not know the proceeds of the Cashier's Check
were from the Mitchells' 2001 crop does not address the issue. Agriliance
argues that observing reasonable commercial standards of fair dealing means
there is a duty to make inquiry when facts would put a reasonable person on
notice of the possibility of a prior claim to the instrument. Agriliance
further argues that the totality of circumstances (including the previous
discussion of the good faith element of conversion) indicates Farmpro did not
observe reasonable commercial standards of fair dealing when they accepted the
checks because they had notice of facts which ought to have aroused suspicion
in a reasonable bank/lending institution, thereby imposing an obligation to
investigate before accepting the Cashier's Check.
Farmpro avers that under Article 3, the constructive
notice standard is higher than mere negligence, and that a lack of diligence
does not impute a party with inquiry notice. At oral argument, Defendants
reminded the Court that it had mortgages on real estate and was well secured in
the debt the Mitchells owed, implying it would not have accepted the check and
immediately released these mortgages had it believed there was a potential
claim to the Cashier's Check. Farmpro also urges the Court to recognize that
Farmpro could not have called Citizens Bank to inquire about the source of
funding for the Cashier's Check, as confidentiality would have prevented
Citizens Bank from reporting it had accepted two checks from ABC Grain to fund
the Cashier's Check. Moreover, Farmpro argues it risked being liable for not
releasing mortgages upon receiving the checks.
Furthermore, they point out that where a holder of a
negotiable instrument is suspicious, the law only requires the holder to make
inquiry sufficient to satisfy these suspicions. [Citation omitted.] Here,
Farmpro asserts it had, at most, a general suspicion about the check, but, by
calling Citizen's Bank and speaking with the secretary to the president of
Citizens Bank, who told them the Mitchells had met with the Citizen Bank
president for the last two days and the check was "good", it assuaged
its concerns. Therefore, when it received the Cashier's Check which was plain
on its face and drawn on the bank with whom Farmpro assumed the Mitchells had
refinanced, coupled with a demand that Farmpro release the mortgages, Farmpro
argues it was reasonable to believe a refinancing or selling of real estate had
occurred.
As indicated, the "fair dealing" in Article
3 is not concerned with the care with which an act is performed. See
Iowa Code § 554.3103, cmt. (4). It is, instead, "concerned with the
fairness of conduct rather than the care with which an act is performed.
Failure to exercise ordinary care in conducting a transaction is an entirely
different concept than failure to deal fairly in conducting the transaction."
See Agriliance, 272 F.Supp.2d at 812 (citing Iowa Code §
554.3103, cmt. (4) and State Bank of the Lakes v. Kansas Bankers Sur. Co.,
328 F.3d 906, 909 (7th Cir.2003) (discussing that the fair dealing prong of the
Article 3 good faith test focuses on "avoidance of advantage-taking, which
... differs from due care")). Under this authority, while Farmpro's
actions do not rise to the level of the intentional tort of conversion,
Farmpro's conduct does impact the holder in due course analysis.
The Mitchells' loans constituted nearly a quarter of
Farmpro's business. Dealing almost exclusively in funding crop inputs, Farmpro
knew or should have known that it often received payment from farmers on its
outstanding loans in January and February, the time of year farmers receive
money from the sale from the previous year's crop. The Court notes that in this
case, Farmpro and Central Bank received the Cashier's Check from the Mitchells
in late February 2002. Farmpro was aware that it had subordinated its interest
in the 2001 Mitchell crop, was aware of having restructured these loans, and
was aware that a few years prior, the Mitchells were unable to make loan
payments. In addition to actually knowing the terms of the Subordination
Agreement, Farmpro also knew that Marvin Mitchell had previously withheld grain
proceeds in 1999 though never knew him to have ever converted these funds. In
Iowa, knowledge of unscrupulous behavior has been enough to impose a duty to
inquire. [Citation omitted.] (determining a bank had a duty to inquire into the
authenticity of a mortgage because, along with other reasons, the bank knew the
defendant to be a "scoundrel and a rascal"). The Court finds
Farmpro's lack of suspicion that the funding of the Cashier's Check was from
the Mitchells' 2001 crops was not in observance of reasonable commercial
standards of fair dealing under the unique circumstances of this case.
Farmpro's assumption that both Cashier's Checks were funded by Mitchell Sr. was
not a reasonable assumption to make, especially where, as here, Farmpro
received two separate checks drawn on two separate banks, with one clearly
being funded by Mitchell Sr.
As explained, "[t]he proper time for determining
whether the recipient of an instrument has notice of a claim or defense is the
time of negotiation of the instrument to the holder." Allison-Kesley
Ag. Ctr. v. Hildebrand, 485 N.W.2d 841, 844 (Iowa 1992). The Court finds
unpersuasive Farmpro's argument that their general suspicions of the Mitchells'
ability to pay back their loans in 1999 did not impact their thinking when the
check was negotiated to Farmpro in February, 2002. The Court is also
unpersuaded by Farmpro's plea that, had it not released these mortgages at the
time the check was negotiated, it was at risk of being fined. Nothing required
it to release the mortgages at the time of negotiation, and the Iowa Code
provided Farmpro up to thirty (30) days in which to release its mortgages in
satisfaction of outstanding debts. See Iowa Code § 655.3. The Court is
unpersuaded by the citation to Indus. Credit Co., 119 N.W.2d at 244, a
1963 case which Farmpro provides for its position that there is only a duty to
investigate to satisfy one's suspicions. After the 1995 amendment to the
definition of good faith, the question has become whether this type of
investigation demonstrates good faith and the observance of reasonable
commercial standards of fair dealing where the facts suggest (i.e. one is on
constructive notice) that the negotiable instrument being presented could
potentially be subject to claims and defenses. [Citations omitted.]
In the context of a bank accepting indorsed negotiable
instruments, the Iowa Court of Appeals has indicated that, along with other
things, a bank president's knowing that one who converted funds had a
"significant history of returned checks and overdrafts" should have
aroused the bank's suspicion, causing it to investigate. [Citation omitted.]
Here, despite knowing of the Mitchells' previous financial difficulties and the
circumstances surrounding the Subordination Agreement, rather than specifically
asking the source of the funds, which they could have done, Farmpro and Central
Bank assumed a refinancing occurred, assumed a real estate transaction
occurred, and assumed financial assistance from Mitchell Sr. was involved.
These assumptions were made entirely based on a single conversation Brown had
with the secretary to the president of Citizens Bank. In the context of
accepting indorsed instruments, which the Court concedes is factually different
than the situation presented, the Iowa Supreme Court has indicated assumptions
made by banks who are on constructive notice is not a commercially reasonable
activity. [Citation omitted.]
"Whether a junior secured party qualifies as a
holder in due course is fact-sensitive and should be decided on a case-by-case
basis in light of those circumstances." Iowa Code § 554.9331 cmt. (5).
Under all of the foregoing facts and evidence presented, the Court finds
Farmpro should have known that the Cashier's Check was quite possibly funded by
the Mitchells' 2001 crops and could, therefore, potentially be subject to the
Agriliance interest. [Citation omitted.] Additionally, Farmpro had actual
knowledge of having subordinated its interest to the Mitchells' 2001 crop. In
this case, Farmpro received this Cashier's Check from the Mitchells only
because of Agriliance having provided the Mitchells a crop input loan for 2001.
There is a certain irony in finding, as the Court does, that under the
circumstances of this case, when it accepted the Cashier's Check, Farmpro did
not avoid taking advantage of Agriliance. [Citation omitted.]
Farmpro (and Central Bank) cannot be seen to have
taken the Cashier's Check without notice of the potential Agriliance claim to
the check because Farmpro had "actual knowledge of facts from which it
could be reasonably infer the probable existence 74 of [the Agriliance]
claim." [Citations omitted.] Neither Farmpro nor Central Bank are holders
in due course and both took the Cashier's Check subject to all claims and defenses.
See Iowa Code § 554.3306. The UCC's policy of placing a loss on
whomever, as between two innocent parties, is the party most easily or best
able to have prevented the loss, see Nat'l Union Fire Ins. Co. of
Pittsburgh v. Riggs Nat'l Bank of Washington, D.C., 5 F.3d 554, 557
(D.C.Cir.1993), is inapplicable here since the Court concludes Farmpro and
Central Bank are not innocent parties. Having determined that the Cashier's
Check was funded by proceeds from the Mitchells' 2001 crops, which Agriliance has
a superior interest in as compared to either Farmpro or Central Bank, and
determining neither are holders in due course, Agriliance is entitled to
$468,564.86, the amount of proceeds from the Mitchells' 2001 crop, even though
the Cashier's Check was not intentionally converted. The cross-motion of
Farmpro and Central Bank for summary judgment must be denied.
IV. CONCLUSION
There are no genuine issues of
material fact, and judgment may be entered as a matter of law. Based on the
foregoing analysis, Plaintiff's Motion for Summary Judgment (Clerk's No. 32) is
granted in part and denied in part, and Defendants' Motion for Summary
Judgment (Clerk's No. 37) is denied. The Clerk shall enter judgment in
favor of the Plaintiff and against the Defendants in the amount of $468,546.86
plus interest and costs.
IT IS SO ORDERED.