Bradley Grain Co. v. Peterson

267 N.W.2d 836, 1978 S.D. LEXIS 183
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 13, 1978
Docket12179, 12180
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 267 N.W.2d 836 (Bradley Grain Co. v. Peterson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bradley Grain Co. v. Peterson, 267 N.W.2d 836, 1978 S.D. LEXIS 183 (S.D. 1978).

Opinions

MORGAN, Justice.

Appellant brought these actions to recover damages from respondents for failure to deliver grain in accordance with oral agreements entered into via telephone. Among the defenses interposed by the respondents was the illegality of the contracts under SDCL 38-14-5 and SDCL 38-14-6, and upon motion by the respondents, the trial court granted summary judgment in each of the cases based on this defense. From [837]*837these summary judgments, appellant appeals. By order of this court, the appeals were consolidated for written and oral arguments. We reverse the actions of the trial court.

It is undisputed that the contracts entered into were oral contracts for future delivery of grain. There was never any written memo showing the date, kind, grade and quality, number of bushels, price agreed upon, and period allowed for delivery signed by the parties or their agents in conformity with SDCL 38-14-5.1

Under the provisions of SDCL 38-14-6, violation of the provisions of SDCL Chapter 38-14 is a Class 2 misdemeanor, punishable by up to thirty days imprisonment in the county jail or a one hundred dollar fine, or both.

Appellant seeks to avoid compliance with the statute on two grounds. First, appellant contends that the statute refers only to a present purchase where title passes at the time of the agreement as opposed to an agreement to purchase. The trial court determined that the statute does not make the distinction characterized by the appellant, noting that under U.C.C. § 1-201, as codified in SDCL 57-1-2(29), purchase includes any voluntary transaction creating an interest in property and does not necessarily require title transference. With this holding we agree.

Appellant next contends that, assuming the contracts violate the statute, they are not thereby rendered unenforceable on the grounds of public policy. He first points out that the statute is part of an original enactment to prevent grain warehousemen, who operate at more than one station (line operators), from driving a warehouseman with only a single elevator out of business by offering higher prices at one station than it does at others in order to destroy the competition, and declares anyone in violation to be guilty of discrimination, which is prohibited and declared unlawful. Appellant then reasons that the subsequent section regarding written contracts is only for the purpose of furnishing evidence that would be available to the Public Utilities Commission (then the Board of Railroad Commissioners) for investigation. He urges that it is unrealistic to conclude that the legislature intended to take aim at the local elevators when the intent was to police line elevators.

A careful reading of the statute, both as originally enacted and in its present codified form, does not support appellant’s argument. While it is beyond question that the discrimination by line operators against locals is the basis for the legislation as set out in the first section, it is the subsequent section that says in pertinent point:

Every public warehouseman engaged in the purchase of grain . within the state, shall (emphasis added) during each day keep posted, . all prices offered that day by such warehouseman2 . . . . When any grain . is purchased for delivery after the purchase agreement is made, the terms of such agreement shall (emphasis supplied) be reduced to writing . . ,3

That the duty is imposed on every warehouseman as opposed to line operators cannot be questioned; nor is it unreasonable to expect that documented evidence of the single operator’s sales are equally important to an investigation of discrimination. Another section of the statute 4 authorizes the line operator to raise prices at a location where necessary to meet, but not exceed, [838]*838prices offered by another buyer, which could be a single operator. Had the legislature intended to relieve single operators from the burden of posting prices and reducing agreements to writing, they easily could have done so, but, lacking any manifestation of such intent, we must construe the statute as a whole and as we find it.

SDCL 38-14-6 provides that the violation of any section is a misdemeanor; but appellant contends that this does not mandate a holding that the contracts were void as against public policy. In this regard, his argument is multiple. First, the legislature did not specifically declare such contract void. Second, that avoidance of the contract is not necessary to accomplish the purpose of prevention of monopolization through unfair trade practices on the part of line operators. Third, the contracts are not malum in se. Finally, avoidance would leave both parties to such a contract without remedy, so that a farmer who delivered his grain could not collect for it.

The respondents argued and the trial court noted in its memorandum decision that SDCL 53-9-1 provides that: “A contract provision contrary to an express provision of law or to the policy of express law, though not expressly prohibited or otherwise contrary to good morals, is unlawful.” The court went on to state that a court will refuse to adjudicate rights under an unlawful contract, and will not allow itself to be made an instrument of enforcing obligations arising out of an oral contract prohibited by law and declared illegal. With this holding of the trial court we disagree.

We think that the statute is inapplicable in this case, inasmuch as it refers to a “contract provision,” that is unlawful. None of the provisions of the contracts between appellant and respondents are unlawful. It is the failure to reduce them to writing and sign the writing that runs afoul of the law. The substance is lawful, but the form is illegal.

Professor Jaeger in Williston on Contracts, 3rd ed., § 1752 states:

A bargain although in itself neither unlawful in what it promises, nor in the consideration for the promise, may be obnoxious as part of a general scheme to bring about an unlawful result, or may be closely connected with some unlawful plan or act. * * * If the contract is merely collaterally connected with an unlawful purpose or act, however, the rule generally adopted is that the contract is valid if it is only remotely connected with an unlawful transaction and rests upon an independent and legal consideration, and the plaintiff can establish his ease without relying upon the unlawful transaction.

In this case, the unlawful purpose or act against which the statutes are addressed is the discrimination in the purchase of grain. Respondents do not plead that appellant was discriminatory, nor was there any evidence of discrimination presented to the trial judge on the motions for summary judgment.

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Related

Terminal Grain Corp. v. Freeman
270 N.W.2d 806 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 1978)
Bradley Grain Co. v. Peterson
267 N.W.2d 836 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 1978)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
267 N.W.2d 836, 1978 S.D. LEXIS 183, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bradley-grain-co-v-peterson-sd-1978.