Chaves v. Modesto Livestock Com. Co. CA5

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 14, 2021
DocketF080130
StatusUnpublished

This text of Chaves v. Modesto Livestock Com. Co. CA5 (Chaves v. Modesto Livestock Com. Co. CA5) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chaves v. Modesto Livestock Com. Co. CA5, (Cal. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

Filed 9/14/21 Chaves v. Modesto Livestock Com. Co. CA5

NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FIFTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

DAVID CHAVES, F080130 Cross-complainant and Respondent, (Super. Ct. No. 2024694) v.

MODESTO LIVESTOCK COMMISSION OPINION COMPANY, INC.,

Cross-defendant and Appellant.

APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Stanislaus County. John D. Freeland, Judge. Mayol & Barringer and Bart Barringer, for Cross-defendant and Appellant. Law Office of Curtis D. Colaw and Curtis D. Colaw, for Cross-complainant and Respondent. -ooOoo- This matter stems from the January 22, 2016 sale of 400 dairy cattle by cross- complainant and respondent, David Chaves, to one Sean Hodges, pursuant to a commercial sales agreement, a purchase money secured promissory note, and a purchase money security interest agreement. The agreements and promissory note were executed on January 22, 2016, the date of sale. The cattle were sold for $740,000, which was the amount reflected in the agreements and promissory note. Chaves perfected his security interest in the cattle sold to Hodges by filing a Uniform Commercial Code (UCC) Financing Statement with the California Secretary of State on the date of sale. Hodges, a third-party debtor for purposes of this matter, defaulted on the secured promissory note in January 2017. Modesto Livestock Commission Company, Inc. (MLCC or Modesto Livestock), cross-defendant and appellant, is a “Modesto, California based livestock auction,” that “acted as a sales broker” in purchasing and selling cattle for Hodges, after Hodges’s purchase of Chaves’s cattle. Here, Chaves brought a conversion action in tort against MLCC to enforce the purchase money security interest in the cattle—and any proceeds arising from the cattle—that Chaves had sold to Hodges. As mentioned, Hodges would buy and sell cattle through MLCC. He had an “open account,” essentially an unsecured credit account, with the company. MLCC kept track of the account balances by means of a ledger. On January 5, 2017, Hodges’s account with MLCC had an outstanding balance of $18,957.40 related to cattle purchases made by Hodges. Thereafter, between January 12, 2017 and February 20, 2017, MLCC sold 49 cattle for Hodges. Although Chaves had a lien against the proceeds of cattle sold by Hodges, MLCC retained $18,957.40 in proceeds from the sale of Hodges’s cattle to zero out the outstanding balance in that amount owed on Hodges’s account with MLCC. Chaves sought to reclaim the cattle sale proceeds retained by MLCC on grounds he had a prior secured interest in them.

2. The matter was tried before the superior court in a two-day bench trial. Four witnesses testified: Chaves, Emanuel Borges Silva, Jr.,1 Lary Gremp of MLCC,2 and Sean Hodges. Following the trial, the superior court found that “the 49 cows sold at MLCC were subject to Chaves’[s] Purchase Money Security Agreement for Dairy Livestock with Hodges,” and that “Chaves’[s] security interest is superior to the claimed security interest of MLCC.” (Unnecessary capitalization omitted.) The court consequently determined that “judgment is to be entered in favor of Chaves and against MLCC in the sum of $18,95[7].40.” (Unnecessary capitalization omitted.) We affirm. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND This appeal arises from a cross-complaint filed by Chaves regarding a sub-dispute between Chaves and MLCC, in the context of a larger lawsuit involving the California Department of Food and Agriculture (CDFA) and multiple other parties. The parties to the present appeal have not addressed or explained the larger context of the instant matter, and the details of the broader lawsuit are not fully reflected in the limited record on appeal provided here. Accordingly, we will not further address the larger lawsuit connected to the instant matter. The instant dispute arose from Chaves’s sale of 400 dairy cattle to Hodges on January 22, 2016, pursuant to a sales agreement, a purchase money secured promissory note, and a purchase money security agreement, all executed on the same date (i.e., January 22, 2016).3 The sales price for the cattle was $740,000, extended as a secured loan from Chaves to Hodges, and the purchase money secured promissory note specified that Hodges would pay Chaves $22,955.55 monthly, starting on March 5, 2016. Chaves

1 Silva was a friend of Chaves’s and veteran of the dairy industry. 2 Gremp’s position with MLCC is not reflected in the record. 3 The cattle were bought by Hodges, Hodges’s wife (Heidi Hodges), and Hodges’s mother (Lisa Goulart); all three were cosignatories on documents related to the sale. However, for purposes of the instant matter, Hodges is the relevant third-party debtor.

3. filed a UCC financing statement with the California Secretary of State on January 22, 2016, to perfect his security interest as described in the purchase money security interest agreement. All the relevant documents were admitted into evidence at trial as exhibits. Chaves received, through January 2017, the monthly payments due on the promissory note, and thereafter the payments stopped. Chaves received the payments through a milk assignment from the National Farmers Organization that bought the milk Hodges obtained from the cattle purchased from Chaves. After Chaves received the last payment, he was still owed approximately $530,000, towards which amount he eventually obtained $29,000 through various efforts. The outstanding balance remained unpaid. The purchase money security agreement executed by Chaves and Hodges provided that the cattle subject to the agreement would be kept at a specified location in Livingston, in a clean environment, with adequate food, water, and veterinary care. However, the cattle were moved to a new location in Hilmar about six or seven months after Hodges purchased them. Chaves drove by the new location a few times and “observed a muddy mess.” He testified: “[A] lot of cows that were there appeared not to be mine.” By the time the payments to Chaves ceased in January 2017, Hodges had cows at two locations, one in Hilmar and the other in Turlock. At that time, Chaves conducted additional inspections at both facilities; he conducted approximately four or five such inspections. The cattle sold by Chaves to Hodges were branded with a diamond C pattern (Chaves’s brand). However, Chaves saw that Hodges had commingled cattle of various brands together at the Hilmar and Turlock facilities. More specifically, the number of cattle branded with the diamond C appeared to have declined in numbers relative to their numbers at the time of sale and were commingled with other cattle. Chaves was assisted by a friend and veteran of the dairy industry, Emanuel Borges Silva, Jr., who testified most of the cattle on Hodges’s lots were unbranded. Cattle are generally traced either by

4. means of brands, or, if they are unbranded, by means of ear tags (numbers tattooed in the ear). In addition, Chaves testified there was no feed on the lots and the cows were in a bad state, appearing as “a bunch of skinny cows.” Chaves testified: “[Hodges] didn’t have any feed. He couldn’t feed – no longer could feed the cows.” Chaves added: “And the cows were so diseased[,] and the bacteria count was so high[,] that National Farmers Organization stopped taking [Hodges’s] milk.” Chaves explained that this was the reason Chaves did not get any more assignment payments. At the same time, Chaves became aware that Hodges was selling off and liquidating the cattle.

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Bluebook (online)
Chaves v. Modesto Livestock Com. Co. CA5, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chaves-v-modesto-livestock-com-co-ca5-calctapp-2021.