Dale Dockendorf, D/B/A Corsica Livestock Sales Company v. Dakota County State Bank, a Nebraska Corporation F. J. Palmersheim Lester B. Moore, William E. Verschoor, Jr. And Joanne P. Verschoor, Doing Business as Northern Cattle Company, William E. Verschoor, Jr. And Joanne P. Verschoor, Doing Business as Northern Cattle Company v. Dakota County State Bank, a Nebraska Corporation, Dale Dockendorf, D/B/A Corsica Livestock Sales Company v. Dakota County State Bank, a Nebraska Corporation F. J. Palmersheim Lester B. Moore William E. Verschoor, Jr. And Joanne P. Verschoor, Doing Business as Northern Cattle Company, William E. Verschoor, Jr. And Joanne P. Verschoor, Doing Business as Northern Cattle Company v. Dakota County State Bank, a Nebraska Corporation, Dale Dockendorf, D/B/A Corsica Livestock Sales Company v. Dakota County State Bank, a Nebraska Corporation F. J. Palmersheim, Lester B. Moore, William E. Verschoor, Jr. And Joanne P. Verschoor, Doing Business as Northern Cattle Company, William E. Verschoor, Jr. And Joanne P. Verschoor, Doing Business as Northern Cattle Company v. Dakota County State Bank, a Nebraska Corporation

673 F.2d 961
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 25, 1981
Docket80-1205
StatusPublished

This text of 673 F.2d 961 (Dale Dockendorf, D/B/A Corsica Livestock Sales Company v. Dakota County State Bank, a Nebraska Corporation F. J. Palmersheim Lester B. Moore, William E. Verschoor, Jr. And Joanne P. Verschoor, Doing Business as Northern Cattle Company, William E. Verschoor, Jr. And Joanne P. Verschoor, Doing Business as Northern Cattle Company v. Dakota County State Bank, a Nebraska Corporation, Dale Dockendorf, D/B/A Corsica Livestock Sales Company v. Dakota County State Bank, a Nebraska Corporation F. J. Palmersheim Lester B. Moore William E. Verschoor, Jr. And Joanne P. Verschoor, Doing Business as Northern Cattle Company, William E. Verschoor, Jr. And Joanne P. Verschoor, Doing Business as Northern Cattle Company v. Dakota County State Bank, a Nebraska Corporation, Dale Dockendorf, D/B/A Corsica Livestock Sales Company v. Dakota County State Bank, a Nebraska Corporation F. J. Palmersheim, Lester B. Moore, William E. Verschoor, Jr. And Joanne P. Verschoor, Doing Business as Northern Cattle Company, William E. Verschoor, Jr. And Joanne P. Verschoor, Doing Business as Northern Cattle Company v. Dakota County State Bank, a Nebraska Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dale Dockendorf, D/B/A Corsica Livestock Sales Company v. Dakota County State Bank, a Nebraska Corporation F. J. Palmersheim Lester B. Moore, William E. Verschoor, Jr. And Joanne P. Verschoor, Doing Business as Northern Cattle Company, William E. Verschoor, Jr. And Joanne P. Verschoor, Doing Business as Northern Cattle Company v. Dakota County State Bank, a Nebraska Corporation, Dale Dockendorf, D/B/A Corsica Livestock Sales Company v. Dakota County State Bank, a Nebraska Corporation F. J. Palmersheim Lester B. Moore William E. Verschoor, Jr. And Joanne P. Verschoor, Doing Business as Northern Cattle Company, William E. Verschoor, Jr. And Joanne P. Verschoor, Doing Business as Northern Cattle Company v. Dakota County State Bank, a Nebraska Corporation, Dale Dockendorf, D/B/A Corsica Livestock Sales Company v. Dakota County State Bank, a Nebraska Corporation F. J. Palmersheim, Lester B. Moore, William E. Verschoor, Jr. And Joanne P. Verschoor, Doing Business as Northern Cattle Company, William E. Verschoor, Jr. And Joanne P. Verschoor, Doing Business as Northern Cattle Company v. Dakota County State Bank, a Nebraska Corporation, 673 F.2d 961 (8th Cir. 1981).

Opinion

673 F.2d 961

Dale DOCKENDORF, d/b/a Corsica Livestock Sales Company, Appellee,
v.
DAKOTA COUNTY STATE BANK, a Nebraska Corporation; F. J.
Palmersheim; Lester B. Moore, Appellants,
William E. Verschoor, Jr. and Joanne P. Verschoor, doing
business as Northern Cattle Company, Appellees.
William E. VERSCHOOR, Jr. and Joanne P. Verschoor, doing
business as Northern Cattle Company, Appellees,
v.
DAKOTA COUNTY STATE BANK, a Nebraska Corporation, Appellant.
Dale DOCKENDORF, d/b/a Corsica Livestock Sales Company, Appellant,
v.
DAKOTA COUNTY STATE BANK, a Nebraska Corporation; F. J.
Palmersheim; Lester B. Moore; William E.
Verschoor, Jr. and Joanne P. Verschoor,
doing business as Northern
Cattle Company, Appellees.
William E. VERSCHOOR, Jr. and Joanne P. Verschoor, doing
business as Northern Cattle Company, Appellees,
v.
DAKOTA COUNTY STATE BANK, a Nebraska Corporation, Appellee.
Dale DOCKENDORF, d/b/a Corsica Livestock Sales Company,
v.
DAKOTA COUNTY STATE BANK, a Nebraska Corporation; F. J.
Palmersheim, Appellees,
Lester B. Moore, William E. Verschoor, Jr. and Joanne P.
Verschoor, doing business as Northern Cattle
Company, Appellants.
William E. VERSCHOOR, Jr. and Joanne P. Verschoor, doing
business as Northern Cattle Company, Appellants,
v.
DAKOTA COUNTY STATE BANK, a Nebraska Corporation, Appellee.

Nos. 80-1205, 80-1324, 80-1325.

United States Court of Appeals,
Eighth Circuit.

Submitted Dec. 11, 1980.
Decided Feb. 25, 1981.

Robert H. Berkshire, Omaha, Neb., for appellant Dakota County State bank.

Charles O. Forrest, Omaha, Neb., for appellee Dockendorf.

J. Patrick Ryan, Sioux City, Iowa, for appellee Verschoor.

Before BRIGHT and STEPHENSON, Circuit Judges, and LARSON, Senior District Judge.*

BRIGHT, Circuit Judge.

In this diversity action, plaintiff Dale Dockendorf, d/b/a Corsica Livestock Sales Company (Dockendorf), and cross-plaintiffs William E. Verschoor, Jr., and his wife, Joanne P. Verschoor, d/b/a Northern Cattle Company (Verschoors), sued the Dakota County State Bank (Bank) for damages arising from the Bank's allegedly wrongful setoff of the Verschoors' bank account and allegedly wrongful dishonor of a $26,908.71 check issued to Dockendorf by the Verschoors. Dockendorf sought recovery from the Bank for the amount of the dishonored check and the Verschoors sought damages for injury to their reputation and for the loss of their cattle business. A jury returned verdicts for the plaintiffs, awarding Dockendorf $26,908.71 and the Verschoors $175,000.

The Bank now appeals (No. 80-1205), asserting that it was entitled to a directed verdict as a matter of law and that the district court1 erred in denying its posttrial motion for a judgment notwithstanding the verdict or a new trial. The Bank alternatively contests the damage award to the Verschoors as excessive and as duplicative of the award to Dockendorf. Dockendorf and the Verschoors cross-appeal (Nos. 80-1324 and 80-1325) from an order of the district court staying the plaintiffs' execution against the Bank's assets conditioned on the Bank posting a supersedeas bond in an amount sufficient to pay the judgments.

We affirm the judgments, except as to the damages of $175,000 awarded the Verschoors. On that issue, we vacate the order denying a new trial and remand to the district court for consideration of whether that award in part duplicated the award to Dockendorf by including the amount of the dishonored check. We reject the cross-appeals.

I. Background.

In 1972, the Verschoors opened two joint checking accounts with the Dakota County State Bank of South Sioux City, Nebraska-a personal or household account and a business account. The business account, with which this lawsuit is concerned, was carried under the name of Northern Cattle Company. This business engaged primarily in the buying, selling, and feeding of cattle. The Verschoors subsequently established a line of operating credit with the Bank for their cattle operations.

On several occasions, the Verschoors failed to make timely payments on their loans with the Bank. In some cases, the Bank renewed their loans, thus authorizing an extension of their payment schedule.2 On two occasions in late 1975 and early 1976, the Bank exercised setoffs against the Northern Cattle Company account to recover delinquent loan payments.3

In April and May of 1976, the Bank authorized two loans to the Verschoors-a loan renewal on April 20 in the amount of $53,126.02 and a loan for the payment of taxes in the amount of $7,306 on May 24. By September 9, 1976, however, the Verschoors had paid only $13,331.82 on the April and May notes, although they owed payments of $53,193.60. On September 20, 1976, William Verschoor came to the Bank and discussed possible consolidation and renewal of the April and May notes with F. J. Palmersheim, the Bank's agricultural loan officer. Palmersheim and William Verschoor then travelled to the Verschoors' farm where Palmersheim inventoried the cattle constituting a part of the Bank's security.4 At this time William Verschoor advised Palmersheim that some of the cattle on the farm did not belong to the Verschoors. On returning to the Bank, William Verschoor and Palmersheim, acting for the Bank, executed a new note and security agreement in the principal sum of $47,945.93, dated September 20, 1976, which consolidated the April and May notes and called for a first payment of $9,854.50 on October 20, 1976. The April note was subsequently stamped "Paid by Renewal." At trial Palmersheim and Lester B. Moore, the Bank's executive vice president, testified, however, that the loan renewal required Moore's approval and that on September 21, 1976, Moore rejected the renewal and decided to exercise a setoff against the Verschoors' Northern Cattle Company account. The Bank made the setoff on September 27, 1976.

Prior to this renewal transaction, in early September, William Verschoor received a telephone call from Arnold Lang, requesting the Verschoors to purchase approximately 325 cattle on Lang's behalf. On September 16, 1976, the Verschoors bought approximately 175 cattle for Lang from Corsica Livestock Sales Company of Corsica, South Dakota, a cattle business operated by Dale Dockendorf.5 The cattle arrived at the Verschoors' farm on September 17 or 18.

On September 20, the Verschoors shipped the Dockendorf cattle to Lang in O'Brien County, Iowa. Contemporaneously, Joanne Verschoor drew a $74,714.55 sight draft on Lang's account in the Primghar Savings Bank in Primghar, Iowa, and that evening she deposited the draft for collection in the Northern Cattle Company account at the Dakota Bank. On the same date, Joanne Verschoor issued and mailed two checks to Dockendorf on the Northern Cattle Company account in the amounts of $13,989.36 and $24,908.71. The latter check was $2,000 short of the price noted on Corsica Livestock's purchase invoice.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Ladenburger v. Platte Valley Bank of North Bend
141 N.W.2d 766 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1966)
Glass v. Nebraska State Bank
122 N.W.2d 882 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1963)
Globe Savings Bank v. National Bank of Commerce
89 N.W. 1030 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1902)
Allen Dudley & Co. v. First National Bank
240 N.W. 522 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1932)
Diehl v. Johnson
243 N.W. 901 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1932)
State ex rel. Sorensen v. Bank of Otoe
251 N.W. 111 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1933)
State ex rel. Sorensen v. Farmers & Merchants Bank
252 N.W. 316 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1934)
Dulin v. Circle F Industries, Inc.
558 F.2d 456 (Eighth Circuit, 1977)
Dockendorf v. Dakota County State Bank
673 F.2d 961 (Eighth Circuit, 1981)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
673 F.2d 961, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dale-dockendorf-dba-corsica-livestock-sales-company-v-dakota-county-ca8-1981.