Dumont v. Keota Farmers Cooperative

447 N.W.2d 402, 1989 Iowa App. LEXIS 279, 1989 WL 127394
CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedAugust 23, 1989
Docket87-1548
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 447 N.W.2d 402 (Dumont v. Keota Farmers Cooperative) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dumont v. Keota Farmers Cooperative, 447 N.W.2d 402, 1989 Iowa App. LEXIS 279, 1989 WL 127394 (iowactapp 1989).

Opinions

HABHAB, Judge.

The plaintiff, David Dumont, appeals a reduction of the verdict rendered by the trial court by the percentage of fault allocated to Monsanto Chemical Company (Monsanto), and also the district court’s granting of a directed verdict to defendant Keota Farmers Cooperative (Co-op) as to certain consequential damages claimed by the plaintiff. We affirm in part and reverse in part.

Dumont brought suit against Co-op for damages arising out of Co-op’s application of herbicides to Dumont’s 1984 corn crop. Monsanto, which manufactured one of the herbicides used by Co-op, was initially named as a defendant, but was prior to trial dismissed without prejudice by Du-mont.

In the spring of 1984, as was the case in the three prior years, Dumont engaged Coop to apply herbicides to his fields as part of his no-till farming program. Co-op sprayed Dumont’s fields on May 24, 1984. On May 25th, Dumont noticed that his corn plants were brown and wilted. Because his crop was noticeably damaged, Dumont replanted. The replanting resulted in a reduction in crop yield. Dumont estimated that his damages for replanting expenses and the reduced crop yield to be $17,000.

Digressing for a moment, in 1983, Du-mont had lost approximately $50,000 on his crops because of a drought. His debt at the Wellman Savings Bank (Bank) in November of 1983 was $86,095. By December of 1984, his debt with the Bank had increased to $109,500. During the same time period, Dumont’s total liabilities swelled from $263,095 to $318,547.

In late December of 1984, the Bank informed Dumont that unless he could reduce his debt load by $25,000, the Bank would not refinance his loans for the upcoming year. When Dumont was unable to obtain the needed funds, the Bank foreclosed and liquidated virtually all his machinery and livestock. Dumont was able to retain his 80-acre farm as well as some machinery which was being financed by a different creditor.

Dumont then brought suit against Co-op and Monsanto alleging in substance that their negligence was the cause of his 1984 crop losses. He later amended his petition and sought damages for loss of crops, cost of replanting, cost of chemicals, emotional distress, loss of income, loss of livestock, loss of machinery, medical bills, loss of farming operation, and foreclosure by the local bank. Dumont, for reasons not entirely clear from the record, voluntarily [404]*404dismissed all claims against Monsanto without prejudice.

The ease proceeded to jury trial. At the close of plaintiffs case, Co-op moved for a directed verdict. The trial court reserved ruling on that motion. When Co-op renewed its motion at the close of trial, the trial court sustained the motion as to Du-mont’s consequential damage claims for loss of livestock, loss of machinery, loss of farming operation, and foreclosure by the local bank. The jury returned a special verdict in which it awarded damages of $17,522.21 and apportioned fault between Dumont, Co-op, and Monsanto as follows:

Dumont 0%
Co-op 60%
Monsanto 40%

The judgment entry, prepared by Co-op’s counsel, provided for a reduction in the amount of the verdict equal to the percentage of fault allocated to Monsanto, i.e. 40%. Consequently, the judgment entry was for $10,513.32, rather than the entire amount of the verdict.

I.

The first issue we must address concerns whether the verdict should have been reduced by the percentage of fault allocated to Monsanto. As noted above, the jury, by special verdict, was asked to allocate fault as to Monsanto. But Monsanto was no longer a party for it had been dismissed without prejudice before trial began. Nonetheless, it is argued that section 668.2 permits the result reached by the trial court. We disagree.

Chapter 668 of our Code provides for the apportionment of damages among parties. As to who or what constitutes a “party,” section 668.2 provides:

As used in this chapter, unless otherwise required, “party” means any of the following:
1. A claimant.
2. A person named as defendant.
3. A person who has been released pursuant to section 668.7.
4. A third-party defendant.

It is apparent that Monsanto is neither a “defendant” nor is it “a third-party defendant.” Co-op, however, argues that it is a person “released pursuant to section 668.7.” For reasons hereafter explained, we disagree.

Although Monsanto was a defendant at the time the petition was filed, it is the status of the parties at the time of submission to the jury that is determinative. This in effect was the result reached in Payne Plumbing v. Bob McKiness Excavating, 382 N.W.2d 156, 159 (Iowa 1986), where our supreme court held that it was proper not to permit the jury to consider the negligence of defendants who had been severed from the case. The court there stated, “Having been dismissed from the suit, they were no longer ‘parties’ under the statute.” Id.

Nor do we think, insofar as resolving the question before us is concerned, that it matters that the dismissal without prejudice was at the hands of the plaintiff as is the circumstance in this case, while in Payne the dismissal was ordered by the court at the close of the evidence. The court in Baldwin v. City of Waterloo, 372 N.W.2d 486 (Iowa 1985), in adopting a “restrictive scope” of the definition of parties, determined that “unidentified parties” were not parties within the meaning of section 668.2, thus their negligence (fault) could not be compared in assessing liability. Id. at 492-93.

In Reese v. Werts Corp., 379 N.W.2d 1, 6 (Iowa 1985), the court held that in determining the apportionment of fault among the parties and “released parties” only parties “whose fault toward the claimant is at issue” should be included. Fault of parties who are neither parties to the action nor released parties or whose fault toward the claimant has not been placed in issue cannot be considered. Thus in Reese, when a third-party defendant is in the case only on an indemnity claim not involving comparative fault, that third party’s fault toward the plaintiff is not in issue and its fault is not to be compared.

When we turn to the Uniform Comparative Fault Act, we note that it provides for the apportionment of damages among par[405]*405ties. Baldwin, 372 N.W.2d at 493. Our court in Baldwin cited the following comments by the commissioners:

[Limitation to the parties to the action means ignoring other persons who may have been at fault with regard to the particular injury but who have not been joined as parties. This is a deliberate decision. It cannot be told with certainty whether that person was actually at fault or what fault should be attributed to him, or whether he will ever be sued, or whether the statute of limitations will run on him, etc. An attempt to settle these matters in a suit to which he is not a party would not be binding on him.

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447 N.W.2d 402, 1989 Iowa App. LEXIS 279, 1989 WL 127394, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dumont-v-keota-farmers-cooperative-iowactapp-1989.