Farm Credit Services of Mid America, ACA v. Rudy, Inc.

680 N.E.2d 637, 113 Ohio App. 3d 93, 1996 Ohio App. LEXIS 3163
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 26, 1996
DocketNo. 95-CA-54.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 680 N.E.2d 637 (Farm Credit Services of Mid America, ACA v. Rudy, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Farm Credit Services of Mid America, ACA v. Rudy, Inc., 680 N.E.2d 637, 113 Ohio App. 3d 93, 1996 Ohio App. LEXIS 3163 (Ohio Ct. App. 1996).

Opinion

Brogan, Presiding Judge.

Rudy, Inc. appeals from the judgment of the Miami County Common Pleas Court which granted judgment in the amount of $21,810.74 plus interest to Farm Credit Services of Mid-America, ACA (“FCS”).

Appellee FCS is a federally chartered entity created pursuant to the Farm Credit Act, Section 2001, Title 12, U.S.Code. It makes short-, intermediate-, and long-term loans to farmers. Short-term loans include operating loans which are usually disbursed in the spring, and paid back in the fall when crops are harvested. FCS is locally owned by farmers who are its borrowers. Section 2094, Title 12, U.S.Code. FCS is a member of the Farm Credit System (“System”), and an instrumentality of the federal government. The Farm Credit Administration oversees the System and has adopted, through the Department of Agriculture, certain governing regulations.

FCS maintains various active loan offices around the state of Ohio, including one at Troy, Ohio. One of the Troy customers was Darryl A. Helstern. Helstern was an operating-loan customer of the Troy office for farming years 1990 and 1991 (that is, he borrowed the money in the spring of those years, and paid it back in the fall). To secure its position, FCS obtained security agreements and financing statements on all Helstern crops, growing or to be grown, including but not limited to all corn, wheat and soybeans, and any proceeds therefrom. Pursuant to the 1985 Farm Bill (popularly known as the Food Security Act of 1985 or FSA, Section 1631, Title 7, U.S.Code) and the subject matter herein, FCS obtained a list of potential purchasers of grain from Helstern. FCS then notified all potential purchasers on the list of its security interest, which included appellant Rudy, Inc. (“Rudy”), and demanded joint checks when and if grain was sold to them by Helstern.

In farming years 1990 and 1991, Helstern sold FCS-secured grain to Rudy. Rudy provided joint checks as required, and the FCS loans were paid in full for those years.

On November 22, 1991, FCS again loaned Helstern operating funds in the amount of $21,810.74 for 1992 crop input costs, which were to be repaid on or before January 1,1992, as evidenced by a promissory note. What made this later *95 loan different from the previous Helstern loans was that it occurred in November 1991 rather than in January or February 1992. The reason the date was accelerated was to allow Helstern to take advantage of preseason discounts on seed, fertilizer, etc. for his 1992 crop.

As provided by FSA, a list of potential buyers and a notice of lien were prepared for this loan. In the column “crop year,” FCS indicated “1991-1992.” It is this notice, and more specifically the crop year designation “1991-1992,” that is the sole issue in this case. FCS suggests that that designation includes crops harvested both in 1991 and 1992 while Rudy’s position is that it includes only 1991.

Attached to the notice was the security agreement and financing statement covering all corn, wheat and soybeans, and proceeds therefrom, which was filed with Miami County, and with the state of Ohio. It is not contested that Rudy received a copy of the notice and attached security agreement and financing statement on or about November 29,1991.

Helstern failed to pay the note when due. As of February 23, 1994, the amount due was $24,670.35, with a per diem of $6,057.95.

The notice of security interest served upon and received by Rudy contained the following language: “Buyer shall make the secured party a named payee with the check made payable to the order of debtor and the secured party, which check is ultimately honored by the drawee.”

It is acknowledged that Helstern sold to Rudy all of his 1992 harvested grain, including com and beans, commencing on October 13, 1992, when harvest commenced, and ending, apparently, on November 30, 1992, totaling $27,773.62. However, payments were made directly to Helstern, without FCS’s name on the check(s), even though Helstern realized that FCS had an appropriate security interest in the grain.

Helstern did not pay these funds to FCS, and a cognovit judgment on the note was obtained against him on April 8, 1993. Helstern was discharged from this obligation pursuant to Chapter 7 of the Bankruptcy Code in Dayton, Ohio. He is now deceased. FCS made demand on Rudy for payment of proceeds from sale, but Rudy refused to make the payments.

In April 1995, FCS filed a complaint against Rudy in the Miami County Common Pleas Court seeking a judgment of $27,773.62 plus interest. Rudy answered and denied liability because it contended that it had not been properly notified of FCS’s security interest pursuant to the requirements of the Food Security Act of 1985, Section 1631, Title 7, U.S.Code.

On August 22,1995, the trial court granted FCS’s summary judgment motion. The trial court found that the plaintiff was in substantial compliance with the *96 notice requirements of Section 1631, Title 7, U.S.Code, in providing the notice of its security interest on Helstem’s crop on November 29, 1991. From that judgment, Rudy has perfected this appeal.

The appellant presented evidence that prior to 1991 the usual practice of FCS and other agricultural lenders in Ohio was to use a single-year designation in its ■notices of security interest in crops. Consistent with this practice, Rudy received a security-interest notice in early May 1990 regarding Helstern’s bean and corn crop which contained a single-year “crop year” designation of 1990.

Pursuant to this notice Rudy honored the security interest and made Helstern and FCS copayees when in the fall of 1990 Helstern sold his crop to Rudy.

In 1991 FCS adopted a new policy which in some instances required the crop year designation in its security interest notices to include two or more different calendar years. That policy provided:

“ Tear’ means:
“A. For a crop grown in soil, list the calendar year in which it is harvested or to be harvested. To be safe, list both the current year or the year it will be harvested, if different. If the customer has crops in storage from prior years upon which the Association has a lien, the Notices should include all of that specific farm product up to and including the current crop or the crop to be planted next.”

It is undisputed that FCS did not notify Rudy or other buyers/elevators with which it dealt of this policy change.

In February 1991, Rudy received its first calendar year 1991 FCS Notice of Security Interest regarding Helstern’s corn and beans, and this time the notice contained a dual-year crop year designation as follows: “Crop year 1991-1992.” In the fall of 1991, Rudy, with the understanding, consistent with industry practice, that the crop year designation applied to Helstern’s 1991 corn and beans, even if they were harvested or sold during the 1992 calendar year, again made its checks to Helstern for his 1991 corn and bean crop payable to Helstern and FCS as it had done in 1990.

Later during calendar year 1991 (on November 29, 1991) Rudy received a second

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Bluebook (online)
680 N.E.2d 637, 113 Ohio App. 3d 93, 1996 Ohio App. LEXIS 3163, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/farm-credit-services-of-mid-america-aca-v-rudy-inc-ohioctapp-1996.