Avoca State Bank v. Merchants Mutual Bonding Co.

251 N.W.2d 533, 21 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 846, 1977 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 884
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMarch 16, 1977
Docket2-57959
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 251 N.W.2d 533 (Avoca State Bank v. Merchants Mutual Bonding Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Avoca State Bank v. Merchants Mutual Bonding Co., 251 N.W.2d 533, 21 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 846, 1977 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 884 (iowa 1977).

Opinion

UHLENHOPP, Justice.

This appeal involves the issue of a bank’s right to recover damages from a warehouseman’s surety on account of issuance of invalid warehouse receipts by the warehouseman. Other cases involving this bond are True v. Merchants Mut. Bonding Co., 251 N.W.2d 543 (Iowa), and Michael v. Merchants Mut. Bonding Co., 251 N.W.2d 531 (Iowa).

In 1971, Claude W. Myler entered into the grain business at Avoca, Iowa. He leased an elevator facility. He had very little capital and financed his operation by borrowing from plaintiff Avoca State Bank, ordinarily posting warehouse receipts or accounts receivable as security. The bank also took a security interest in his assets. Myler also had trucks which he used to transport grain.

Myler would buy grain from farmers and sell it at terminal elevators at a markup, he hoped, of 12 cents per bushel, to cover expenses, transportation, and profit. He trucked some grain directly from the farm to the terminal. Other grain, however, he trucked to his elevator, where he stored it for periods of time while financing it with the bank.

Myler applied to the Iowa Commerce Commission for a license as a warehouseman under chapter 543 of the Iowa Code. This required him to post a warehouseman’s bond. Defendant Merchants Mutual Bonding Company signed a bond as surety, and the Commission issued a license. The amount of the bond, as amended, was $52,-000. As required by § 543.28 of the Code, Myler established his tariffs (as No. W-3545). See Iowa C.C. Rule 12.17(543), 1971 I.D.R. 127.

*536 Ordinarily Myler would pay farmers for grain by check. If he immediately re-sold grain, he would ordinarily deposit with the bank the check he received from the terminal to cover his own check to the farmer. If however he received the grain into his elevator, he would ordinarily issue a warehouse receipt to himself, as permitted by § 543.20 of the Code, and then pledge the receipt to the bank as security for a loan to cover the check to the farmer. Upon subsequent sale of such grain to a terminal, he would take the terminal’s check to the bank to pay off the loan, and pick up the warehouse receipt.

In common with the experience of some other country elevator operators, Farmers Co-op. Elevator, Inc. v. State Bank, 236 N.W.2d 674 (Iowa), Myler went behind. The losses resulted in reduction of grain in the elevator as compared to outstanding warehouse receipts.

This case involves 26 warehouse receipts pledged to the Avoca State Bank as collateral for three unpaid notes the bank now holds. All of the receipts recite that Myler received specified grain for storage. The first receipts are Nos. 78 and 83. Receipt 78 came to the bank as collateral on January 22, 1972, and No. 83 came similarly on February 4, 1972. The evidence does not indicate that at those times the bank had any information Myler’s grain supply was depleted as compared to outstanding warehouse receipts. Subsequently receipts 78 and 83 were properly applied by the bank as collateral for other notes, and at the time Myler closed his doors in the fall of 1972 they constituted collateral for a note of $11,640 dated June 26, 1972, one of the three notes the bank now holds.

Between the issuance of Nos. 78 and 83 and issuance of later receipts now held by the bank, relevant events occurred. Following issuance of Nos. 78 and 83, the bank requested additional receipts as collateral for other notes, but the receipts were not forthcoming. The fact was that Myler did not have grain on which to issue receipts. In addition, someone acting for the bank lent Myler $25,000 at one point without getting receipts for collateral.

A conversation then occurred which constitutes the crux of the case as to the remaining warehouse receipts, Nos. 95 through 117. Richard M. Coe was executive vice president of the bank and actually ran it. Janice Tooley was Myler’s bookkeeper and actually ran the internal business affairs at the elevator. Tooley took some clothing into an Avoca laundromat, and Coe went there and conversed with her. These two witnesses disagree as to the date and substance of the conversation. Tooley testified:

Q. (Merchants’ attorney) Okay. Then would you explain what took place in the laundromat or what happened? A. Well, he came in and he wanted to know — or he wondered how come we hadn't gotten these warehouse receipts up there yet. And he wanted to — he said that there had better be enough grain to take care of them and I told him there wouldn’t be.
Q. Who first started talking about— . well, first of all, what was your answer to his statement? A. That there wouldn’t be enough grain?
Q. Yes. A. I just told him there wouldn’t be.
Q. There wouldn’t be enough grain? A. To take care of them.
Q. And how was it that you happened to tell him that there was a shortage? A. Just by his asking me. .
Q. (Bank’s attorney) Mrs. Tooley, when you and Mr. Myler’s son, Jim, took the warehouse receipts No. 95 through 117 down and delivered them to Mr. Coe at the bank, you didn’t tell him at that time that there was no grain to cover or the warehouse receipts were false or anything of that nature, did you? A. Well, no, I didn’t, because he knew it already then.

Coe, however, associated the conversation with a warehouse receipt as collateral for a loan of $8000. The Commerce Commission disapproved the warehouse receipt because the grain was stored in an unbonded quon- *537 set. Coe testified regarding the laundromat conversation:

Q. (Bank’s attorney) And then what happened? A. Well, I went in and asked her what was the trouble and she said that they had a warehouse receipt there that was under — that was in the quonset hut down there and they had to have it back to pay off so that their bonded warehouse receipts would be okay, and then she said, “But there isn’t any grain out in the quonset.” And I said, “Well, that doesn’t sound right, but all I have to do is call the Commerce Commission to find out exactly what there is,” but I said, “I’m going to get ahold of Myler. You have him up here in the morning.” According to my records, he was in there on the 18th. I took a new financial statement which was dated February the 18th on which he stated that he had warehouse grains stored in the warehouse on which it was bonded, total value of warehouse grains of $76,000.00, and that he had grain down in the warehouse or the quon-set valued at $98,356.00. And I said to him at the time, I said, “Red, your girl says you don’t have any grain down there.” He said, “Well, she don’t really know what’s going on only half of the time.”

(The trial court on motion struck the last remark.)

Coe testified further:

Q. (Merchants’ attorney) Okay. Now specifically speaking, the matter of the conversation in the laundromat, what records are you referring to as to that? A.

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Bluebook (online)
251 N.W.2d 533, 21 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 846, 1977 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 884, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/avoca-state-bank-v-merchants-mutual-bonding-co-iowa-1977.