Commercial Security Bank v. Hodson

393 P.2d 482, 15 Utah 2d 388, 1964 Utah LEXIS 275
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedJune 24, 1964
DocketNo. 9821
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 393 P.2d 482 (Commercial Security Bank v. Hodson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commercial Security Bank v. Hodson, 393 P.2d 482, 15 Utah 2d 388, 1964 Utah LEXIS 275 (Utah 1964).

Opinions

WADE, Justice.

Plaintiff Commercial Security Bank of Ogden, respondent here, sued Jerry and M. L. Morgan and Vance and Wayne Hodson, appellants here, for $32,000 on a promissory note. The defendants counterclaimed for $200,000 damages for breach of a contract by the bank in cancelling an agreement to loan them $300,000 which the bank knew [389]*389they had already commenced to use to operate a “custom-kill” of cattle with McFarland, Inc., a Salt Lake City meat-packing plant, which was in financial difficulty. The H & M Cattle Company, owned by the Hodsons and Morgans and their wives, sued the bank for $200,000 damages, and the bank counterclaimed for $32,000 on the note. The two suits have identical issues and were consolidated for a jury trial.

At the trial the amount of the note not being in dispute, the appellants, the Morgans and Hodsons and the Cattle Company, produced their evidence of breach of contract and damages against the bank and rested. Thereupon the court took the case from the jury and entered a judgment for $32,000 with interest, attorney’s fees and costs. It then reduced the amount of the judgment by $1.00 as nominal damages on appellants’ counterclaim. No findings of fact nor conclusions of law were made, but the judge initialed a long minute entry of his views on the case.

The law authorizes a trial court to render such a judgment without submission to the jury only if the losing party fails to produce evidence which, when considered together with the inferences to be drawn therefrom in the light most favorable to the loser, fails to show a reasonable basis for a recovery.1 After careful consideration of the evidence, we conclude that the case must be reversed and remanded for a new trial for a submission of all of the evidence of both sides to the jury to determine whether respondent bank entered into a contract to loan $300,000, and whether it breached such contract, and whether the appellants have suffered damages and if so, determine the amount thereof. In the following survey of the evidence we point out in the light most favorable to the appellants the evidence from which we conclude that the jury could reasonably find that the bank entered into a contract to loan this money to appellants, which they later cancelled and refused to live up to and thereby violated, which resulted in substantial damages to appellants. Of course, since the bank chose not to produce any evidence, after the trial judge had stated his view that the evidence would not support a judgment against the bank, we have only appellants’ evidence before us.

The evidence shows that in November, 1960, Wayne and Vance Hodson owned their homes in Clinton, Davis County, Utah, with farm lands and a cattle feed lot and other property, the net value of which they claim exceeded $312,000. Jerry and M. L. Morgan owned their homes with farm land and a feed lot, and range lands and other property in Morgan County, Utah, the net value of which they claim exceeded $300,-000. The H & M Cattle Company, a cor[390]*390poration entirely owned by the Hodsons and Morgans and their wives, was purchasing under an escrow agreement the Bar F Ranch near ICelton, Box Elder County, Utah, with its Taylor grazing rights, farm and grazing land and other property of a claimed net value exceeding $198,000. This makes a total claimed net value of all the properties in excess of $810,000.

In the fall of 1960, McFarland, Inc., to overcome its financial difficulties, proposed to the appellants a “custom-kill” arrangement whereby the appellants would supply the cattle to be slaughtered at the McFarland, Inc. plant. Another firm was then using the "custom-kill” arrangement to supply the McFarland, Inc. company with lambs. Under the proposed “custom-kill” arrangement, the appellants would supply all of the cattle processed at McFarland, Inc., paying one-half cent per pound for the processing of such beef and give the hide and offal to McFarland, Inc. The processed beef would remain the property of appellants and be marketed to McFarland, Inc.’s established customers. This arrangement was expected to make an average profit per animal processed of $16.00, which they figured would be $11.15 more than if such animals were sold on the open market. However, for McFarland, Inc. to make a profit, a sufficient number of animals would have to be processed so that the one-half cent per pound plus the hide and offal, together with the earnings from the processing of lambs and hogs would be more than the operating expenses. So appellants would have to supply more cattle than merely enough to pay the operating expenses, and within limits, the more cattle processed the greater the profit would be realized by both parties.

To operate the “custom-kill” with McFarland, Inc., appellants asked the bank for a turnover or revolving loan of up to $300,-000. They proposed an arrangement whereby they could ttse up to that amount in supplying cattle for McFarland, Inc. to “custom-kill” in the most advantageous and convenient manner possible, without having to repay the notes or rewrite the security with each turnover. Appellants submitted to the bank financial statements of the assets and liabilities of the three businesses involved. They agreed to mortgage all of the assets of these three businesses. The bank vice-president Baker, representing the bank, stated that he could not see how they could lose. Shortly thereafter Baker in the presence of Hemmingway, the president of the bank, informed appellants that the loan had been approved by the bank finance committee. Thereupon appellants were given blank checks, and without the contemplated mortgages and notes being made or the security being investigated by the bank, they were allowed to draw in varying amounts a total of $37,000 in the course of the operation of the “custom-kill” project after signing a note in blank, which was lat[391]*391er filled out, which is the note sued on here. Appellants were further informed that the hank would prepare the necessary papers within 30 to 60 days.

Thereafter in January, 1961, Baker informed the appellants that something had gone wrong and the loan had been cancelled. He later visited with the appellants at the Hodson home in Clearfield, and in the presence of the Hodson and Morgan families assured them that their securities were ample, but that a bank customer had threatened to withdraw a $150,000 deposit unless the loan was cancelled. Baker requested the appellants not to tell anyone of the reason he had given for cancelling the loan, stating that if they did tell, he would deny making any such statement and call them liars.

When this loan was cancelled the evidence shows that appellants were actually operating the “custom-kill” arrangement at the McFarland plant, which seemed to be going well, and that they were at that time committed to such operation, and that they could not withdraw therefrom without substantial losses. The evidence indicates that the cancellation of the loan made it impossible for appellants to continue such operation to advantage unless they could obtain another similar turnover loan up to the amount the bank had agreed to loan of $300,000. The evidence indicates that appellants were unable to accomplish the making of a substitute loan and suffered heavy financial losses. The escrow agreement to purchase the Bar F Ranch was rescinded for failure to meet their payments, and they accumulated many outstanding obligations against the Hodson property in Clinton and the Morgan property in Morgan County. The McFarland, Inc. company became bankrupt.

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Bluebook (online)
393 P.2d 482, 15 Utah 2d 388, 1964 Utah LEXIS 275, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commercial-security-bank-v-hodson-utah-1964.