Farmers Grain, Livestock & Cooperative Mercantile Ass'n v. Commodity Credit Corp.

145 F. Supp. 788, 1956 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2676
CourtDistrict Court, D. Kansas
DecidedNovember 2, 1956
DocketNo. KC-297
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 145 F. Supp. 788 (Farmers Grain, Livestock & Cooperative Mercantile Ass'n v. Commodity Credit Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Farmers Grain, Livestock & Cooperative Mercantile Ass'n v. Commodity Credit Corp., 145 F. Supp. 788, 1956 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2676 (D. Kan. 1956).

Opinion

MELLOTT, Chief Judge.

By appropriate pleadings, plaintiff, a corporation engaged in operating a public licensed grain warehouse and elevator at Niles, Kansas, sought judgment against the Commodity Credit Corporation for $37,202.62, The issues raised in the pleadings are hereinafter summarized in a memorandum findings of fact and conclusions of law previously entered herein. The memorandum, in-[790]*790eluding a brief discussion of some of the issues of law, is now set out:

* * The amount of $19,128.74 is sought in count one under an alleged ‘contract implied in law.’ The essence of the charge contained in this count is that some of the wheat, stored commingled in plaintiff’s warehouse, had been damaged by flood; that when defendant, responsive to notice from plaintiff, removed good wheat, for which it held warehouse receipts, it thereby secured a more favorable position than it was entitled to; and that it should be ‘required to account to the remaining depositors, or their transferees,’ and to plaintiff ‘acting as trustee,’ for the excess received. In count two it is alleged that, subsequent to the flood, defendant, by its conduct, delayed, and failed promptly to effectuate removal of wheat owned by producers and stored under the government price support program, until the wheat had substantially deteriorated; that plaintiff had been ‘compelled * * * to buy in the loan status grain from the producer, in order to salvage as much of the value of said grain as possible;’ and that plaintiff had thereby sustained a loss of $18,-073.88.
“This court has jurisdiction under Title 15 U.S.C.A. § 714b. The case was tried without a jury and the parties have filed suggested findings of fact, conclusions of law and briefs. While the evidence has not been transcribed, the court’s recollection of it, refreshed by the suggested findings and exhibits, impels it to make the following:
“Findings of Fact
“1. Plaintiff is a corporation duly organized and existing under the laws of the State of Kansas. At all times here material it was engaged in operating a public licensed grain warehouse and ela-vator at Niles, Kansas, under the Kansas Warehouse Law (Ch. 34 Gen.Stat. of Kans.1949). Defendant is a body corporate and an agency of the United States, duly created and existing pursuant to authority granted under the ‘Commodity Credit Corporation Charter Act,’ approved by Congress, June 30, 1948, as amended. (15 U.S.C.A. § 714 et seq.)
“2. The warehouse and elevator consist of eight cylindrical metal tanks (numbered 19 through 24; see Ex. 1), having capacities for the storage of grain ranging from 14,500 bushels to approximately 28,500 bushels (average, approximately 22,000 bushels), each with a hopper or downspout through which grain passes by gravity onto a conveyor belt in an underground tunnel leading to the headhouse. A superstructure for the movement of grain extends across the tops of the tanks. One similar tank (No. 18) adjoins the headhouse on the other side of it and two smaller ones are located in the headhouse. In addition to these tanks there are 15 circular metal bins, each with a capacity of approximately 2,500 bushels, into and from which grain can be moved by portable augers or ‘bazookas.’ The total capacity of all the tanks is approximately 250,000 bushels.
“3. Commodity Credit Corporation (hereinafter Commodity) and Production and Marketing Administration (hereinafter P. M. A.) were, at all times material here, closely interrelated organizations of the United States Government and jointly charged with the responsibility of carrying out the price support and loan program under the Agricultural Adjustment Act of 1938 and amendments. P. M. A. initially approved all loans on grain stored in government approved elevators, prepared notes secured by warehouse receipts from producers and forwarded copies or originals of all such documents to Commodity, which, at that time, would either advance actual funds for loans or guarantee loans by approved banks.
“4. The Government price support program, during the periods material here, was carried out substantially as follows:
“a. The producer deposited his grain in a warehouse and obtained a warehouse receipt indicating its quantity and grade.
“b. The producer then took the warehouse receipt to the P. M. A. office of the county in which the wheat was produced, [791]*791obtained approval of his eligibility for a price support loan, and executed a loan agreement and note payable to a bank of his choice. The approved note and loan agreement, together with the warehouse receipt, was then delivered to the bank and the amount of the price support loan was disbursed by the bank to the producer.
“e. The original of the note and loan agreement and the warehouse receipt were retained by the payee bank. One copy of the note and loan agreement was transmitted to Commodity’s office in Kansas City, Missouri; one copy was sent to the P. M. A. county office; and one copy was retained by the producer.
“d. The payee banks had the right, under the Lending Agency Agreements, to accept payment of such loans and return the warehouse receipts to the producers. They also had the. right to tender the notes to Commodity for purchase at any time, and Commodity had the right to require the payee banks to tender the notes to it for purchase. In case the notes were purchased from banks by ■Commodity, the original notes and loan .agreements and attached warehouse receipts were delivered to Commodity and placed in its vault. They were indexed ■only by county and loan number.
“e. The maturity date of the loans was usually April 30 following the wheat harvest. Those for the 1951 wheat crop involved in this proceeding matured April 30,1952.
“f. Under the terms of the note and loan agreements the holders of the producers’ notes were required, in the absence of fraud, to look solely to the pledged grain for satisfaction of the notes. However, under the applicable regulations issued by the Secretary of the Department of Agriculture and published in the Federal Register, the producers had the privilege, at any time, of obtaining ■the release of the grain, pledged as collateral security for such notes and loan .agreements, by paying to the holders the principal amounts of the loans plus ■ charges and accrued interest. The producers .were thereby assured of receiving at least the loan rate for their wheat inasmuch as if the- price of wheat went down, they could liquidate the loans by surrendering the wheat. On the other hand, if the price of wheat went up, they could receive the benefit of the price increase by paying off the loans in cash and redeeming their wheat, in which event they would then be in a position to sell it to whomsoever they desired.
“5. On or about July 1, 1950, plaintiff and Commodity entered into a ‘Uniform Grain Storage Agreement,' specifying the terms and conditions under which plaintiff would store grain for Commodity and also providing that, insofar as the relations between them were concerned, such contract would be applicable to grain deposited in plaintiff’s warehouse by producers and pledged as collateral, either to Commodity or to local banks, as security for loans under Government price support programs.

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

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
145 F. Supp. 788, 1956 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2676, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/farmers-grain-livestock-cooperative-mercantile-assn-v-commodity-credit-ksd-1956.