Farmers State Bank v. Imperial Cattle Co.

708 P.2d 223, 218 Mont. 89, 1985 Mont. LEXIS 891
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 18, 1985
Docket85-032
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 708 P.2d 223 (Farmers State Bank v. Imperial Cattle Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Farmers State Bank v. Imperial Cattle Co., 708 P.2d 223, 218 Mont. 89, 1985 Mont. LEXIS 891 (Mo. 1985).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE GULBRANDSON

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

Imperial Cattle Company (ICC), Kenneth N. Lillethun and Norman I. Rock, appellants, appeal a judgment of the Fourth Judicial District, Lake County, entered in favor of James Edmiston, respondent, on August 8, 1984. The District Court concluded that appellants failed to establish their claims of constructive fraud, breach of fiduciary duty and conversion against respondent. We affirm.

Respondent and Lillethun first had contact with each other in 1972 in connection with the sale of silage by respondent to Lillethun. Late that year or early in 1973 they started to discuss organizing a large-scale dairy operation. During the course of these conversations, *91 Lillethun brought Rock into the discussions. Lillethun and Rock both were experienced in the dairy business. Respondent, while he knew little about the dairy business,- was an experienced businessman and banker, and owned a ranch and feed lot near Columbia Falls, Montana.

Respondent formed ICC in 1967 but did not conduct any business relevant to this action through the corporation until late February or early March, 1973. At that time, he, Lillethun and Rock contributed assets to the corporation in an attempt to construct a dairy operation on his ranch. Respondent contributed $50,000 in cash. Lillethun and Rock contributed their milk bases valued at about $48,000 and $65,000, respectively. Milk base is the amount of grade one milk, expressed as pounds per day, an individual is permitted to sell and is essential to a profitable dairy ranch. Lillethun and Rock agreed to manage the dairy operation and were to receive a salary until the business began to generate a profit. Lillethun and respondent were to seek the financing required to set up the operation at the ranch. All parties agreed that if the project could not be put together by September 15, 1973, they would abandon it and each would have their contributions returned to them.

In March 1973, Lillethun acquired cattle for ICC through a leasing arrangement with the Dolson Company, a company that had bought many of his cattle. Rock sold many of his cattle to Dolson Company and then leased back the same cattle for ICC. A third person, Searles, also sold his cattle to Dolson Company and ICC leased the same herd. The cattle operation ran at three locations after ICC leased the cattle, Lillethun’s dairy in Lake County, Rock’s dairy in Ravalli County, and Searles’ dairy, which was being leased in Ravalli County. Lillethun, Rock and Searles received rent from ICC for the use of the dairies.

Also in March 1973, Lillethun and respondent refinanced some machinery through Western Farm Bureau Insurance. They represented the machinery as belonging to ICC and took out a loan for $64,500 in the company’s name. Respondent personally guaranteed the loan. The parties used $28,955.55 of the loan proceeds to repay PCA to avoid a foreclosure on respondent’s machinery. They used $13,567.62 to pay off an encumbrance on Lillethun’s machinery. $9,000 went to Lillethun personally. The remainder stayed in the corporation. Both Lillethun and respondent signed an appraisal stating the total cash value of the equipment was $101,350. Respondent’s equipment was worth about $67,850 and Lillethun’s was *92 worth about $33,500. During the summer and fall of 1973 certain items of equipment were traded in and replaced with other items which were financed through Western Farm Bureau Insurance. The equipment, except for Lillethun’s items, was located on respondent’s land.

Lillethun and respondent first contacted several banks and lenders in western Montana in an effort to arrange financing and equipment for the dairy. Later, they made numerous trips out of state to New York, Chicago, Seattle and other places to find financial backing for the dairy. All such contacts, made from March to mid August 1973, proved fruitless. Respondent paid for most of the expenses for this travel out of his own pocket.

Around August 1973, respondent concluded that financing for the project was unlikely and that the search should be abandoned. Consequently he turned all ICC records over to Lillethun and Rock. In addition, since checks written on the company account at Conrad National Bank were being returned “NSF,” the bank wanted the account closed. Respondent then withdrew the remaining funds, including the payment for silage mentioned above. All further banking took place at Farmer’s State Bank of Victor.

After taking over the books, Lillethun and Rock made all the decisions for ICC. They began borrowing money from Farmer’s State Bank to meet operating expenses. On March 1, 1974, Lillethun and Rock, in their capacity as vice-presidents for ICC, executed a security agreement and note with that bank for about $35,800 and used the money to pay off earlier loans. The equipment that had been refinanced through Western Farm Bureau Insurance was used to secure the loan. Lillethun and Rock also personally guaranteed the note. The security agreement had a provision stating that the sale of the collateral constituted default.

On March 4, 1974, respondent sold all the equipment on the ranch, along with the ranch, to Harry and Helen Johnson. He paid Western Farm Bureau Insurance the balance of their note. None of the remaining proceeds were transferred to ICC or Farmer’s State Bank. Farmer’s State Bank brought an action against ICC, Lillethun, Rock and Johnsons to collect on its note, and asserted a claim against the respondent and his wife for conversion of property. The Bank moved for and was granted summary judgment against all the defendants. On an appeal to this Court by respondent, we held that respondent allowed the Bank to rely on his representations that the equipment belonged to ICC and was estopped from denying he had *93 converted the property. Farmer’s State Bank of Victor v. Johnson (1980), 188 Mont. 55, 610 P.2d 1172. Although the judgment was against all the defendants, respondent eventually paid the note and interest exceeding $62,000 in total.

Lillethun claimed that respondent stopped payment on a check for $27,500 which represented a five percent commission due him on the cattle brought into ICC through the sale-lease back arrangement with Dolson Company. The check’s date, November 1, 1973, and the amount were typewritten, while Lillethun’s name and respondent’s signature were handwritten. Respondent’s checkbook register showed the check issued to Lillethun on July 16, 1973 but did not indicate an amount. Lillethun did not present the checks for payment until late February 1974 when he knew a large sum of money was in respondent’s account. Respondent claimed he signed the check in blank to cover some travel expenses for Lillethun and that Lillethun wrongfully inserted the amount. He also claimed that a commission was initially discussed but the parties never agreed on it. The District Court found that a five percent commission was consistent with the nature of the parties’s agreement but that it was an ICC obligation rather than respondent’s personal debt.

The dairy operation failed in the fall of 1974. The cattle were turned over to the Dolson Company.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
708 P.2d 223, 218 Mont. 89, 1985 Mont. LEXIS 891, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/farmers-state-bank-v-imperial-cattle-co-mont-1985.