Boyte v. Louisiana Ag Credit, PCA
This text of 899 So. 2d 765 (Boyte v. Louisiana Ag Credit, PCA) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Joyce H. BOYTE, Plaintiff-Appellee
v.
LOUISIANA AG CREDIT, PCA, Defendant-Appellant.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Second Circuit.
*766 Wiener, Weiss & Madison By M. Allyn Stroud, Shreveport, for Appellant.
John M. Lancaster, for Appellee.
Before STEWART, GASKINS and CARAWAY, JJ.
STEWART, J.
The plaintiff, Joyce Boyte, filed suit against the defendant, Louisiana Ag Credit, PCA ("PCA"), to recover input costs she had loaned to her brother, Charles L. Hayman, for planting his 2001 sweet potato crop on 35 acres of land owned by Boyte. Boyte's claim against PCA was based on a Forbearance Agreement between PCA, Hayman's creditor, and Hayman, acknowledging Boyte's "first lien" on the sweet potatoes planted on her 35 acres. The trial court found that Boyte was a third party beneficiary of the Forbearance Agreement and awarded her $12,987.54. PCA appealed. Finding that the Forbearance Agreement includes a stipulation pour autrui in favor of Boyte, we affirm the trial court's judgment.
FACTS
In the Spring of 2001, as in prior years, Charles Hayman entered a verbal agreement with his sister, Joyce Boyte, to lease 35 acres of land for farming, with one-fourth of the proceeds from the crop to be paid as rent. Because Hayman was having financial difficulties in 2001, Boyte also loaned him money for planting the crop on her 35 acres. This was the first time that Boyte had advanced input costs to Hayman for the crop.
As the planting season progressed, Hayman was negotiating with PCA, to whom he was indebted for a significant sum of money, to prevent foreclosure and to obtain financing for the 2001 crop. The negotiations resulted in a Forbearance Agreement confected on August 9, 2001, between Hayman and PCA. The agreement extended Hayman's indebtedness and set forth terms and conditions that Hayman would have to comply with to avoid foreclosure. Included in the agreement was the following language:
9. Debtors shall grant the Association [PCA] a first lien on the 2001 sweet potato crop. The Association acknowledges that Mrs. Boyte holds a first lien on 35 acres of the sweet potatoes planted on Mrs. Boyte's property. The Association will execute a non-disturbance agreement in favor of Mrs. Boyte for the 2001 sweet potato crop up to the amount of Mrs. Boyte's input costs, projected by the Debtors to be $27,926.66.
Upon entering this agreement, PCA loaned Hayman additional sums to complete his 2001 sweet potato crop, which included acreage in addition to that leased from Mrs. Boyte. We note that at the time of the Forbearance Agreement, PCA held an apparently valid security interest over all of Hayman's crops, growing or to be grown and harvested, as evidenced by a security agreement and a UCC-1F filed in *767 the Secretary of State's Central Registry in March 2000 and admitted into evidence at trial.
From the sale of Hayman's 2001 sweet potato crop, Boyte received one-fourth of the proceeds generated by the crop planted on her 35 acres as rental payment. The remaining three-fourths of the proceeds from the crop on Boyte's acreage was paid by the crop broker, Gerber Farms, to PCA because of its lien. When Mrs. Boyte did not recover all the input costs advanced to Hayman, she demanded reimbursement from PCA by letter on October 4, 2002. PCA refused reimbursement.
On June 19, 2003, Boyte filed suit against PCA to recover her input costs in the amount of $12,987.54. She alleged that she had a "first lien" acknowledged by PCA and that PCA had not reimbursed her costs from the crop proceeds. During a bench trial, Boyte's husband, Clevius Cecil Boyte, and PCA's chief credit officer, Leotis Hyde, Jr., testified.
Mr. Boyte testified as to the facts regarding Hayman's lease of the 35 acres and the input costs advanced by the Boytes. The parties stipulated that Mrs. Boyte's testimony would be the same as her husband's. Mr. Boyte explained that his wife had an oral agreement with Hayman providing that the input costs and rental would be paid when the crop was sold. The Boytes began contributing input costs in May 2001, but they paid nothing more after Hayman entered the Forbearance Agreement with PCA. On August 20, 2001, Mrs. Boyte and Hayman signed a written lease, but it was not recorded and did not refer to the input costs. Mr. Boyte also testified that neither he nor his wife had any contact with PCA or any part in negotiating the Forbearance Agreement. When asked what he thought Paragraph 9 of the agreement meant, he testified that it meant his wife had a first lien and that she would be reimbursed for rent and input costs ahead of other lenders.
Mr. Hyde testified that PCA was trying to find a way to avoid foreclosure on Hayman and to fund a crop loan for him. PCA initially denied Hayman's request for a 2001 crop loan, but later loaned him money after entering the Forbearance Agreement. Mr. Hyde explained that he and PCA's attorney drafted the agreement and that their objective was for PCA to have a valid first lien on all of Hayman's crops. Additionally, Hyde testified that PCA never agreed to reimburse Boyte's production costs or to have those costs reimbursed to Boyte out of the crop proceeds. Hyde insisted that if PCA intended to reimburse Boyte's costs, it would have done so at the time of the Forbearance Agreement. Moreover, Hyde testified that PCA did not grant Boyte a first lien in the Forbearance Agreement. He repeatedly insisted that Paragraph 9's reference to Boyte's first lien was merely intended to protect her by allowing her to recover her input costs in the event that PCA foreclosed on Hayman and seized all the crops. Hyde explained that in the absence of foreclosure, Boyte would get her rental payment from the sale of the crop and that Hayman could reimburse her input costs from any funds left over after he met his obligation to PCA under the Forbearance Agreement. However, if PCA foreclosed and took the crop, it wanted to be sure that Boyte received her input costs. Hyde also explained that the language of Paragraph 9 suggested foreclosure even though foreclosure was not expressly stated.
Three letters from June 2001 between counsel for PCA and counsel for Hayman were introduced into the record. The letters were part of the negotiations leading up to the Forbearance Agreement. Hyde testified that he was aware of the contents *768 of the letters and that he had discussed the matter with PCA's attorney. Hyde testified that negotiations leading up to the Forbearance Agreement with Hayman continued until the signing of the agreement.
In the first letter dated June 8, 2001, Hayman's attorney informed PCA that Hayman planted sweet potatoes on Mrs. Boyte's 35 acres and that Mrs. Boyte agreed to underwrite the expenses for planting the crop on her acreage. The letter indicated that Hayman did not have funds to plant additional acreage but that he was willing to sell certain bushel bins and use the proceeds to plant additional acreage over which PCA would be given a first lien.
In the second letter dated June 14, 2001, PCA set forth conditions for it to forbear from foreclosing until April 2002. One such condition was that Hayman grant a valid first lien on the sweet potato crop, including the crop grown on Mrs. Boyte's 35 acres, and that Hayman cause Mrs. Boyte to subordinate her interest in the crop to PCA and execute a non-disturbance agreement in favor of PCA.
In the third letter dated June 22, 2001, Hayman informed PCA that it could obtain a valid first lien on 88 acres but that Mrs.
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899 So. 2d 765, 2005 La. App. LEXIS 827, 2005 WL 767065, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boyte-v-louisiana-ag-credit-pca-lactapp-2005.