First Dakota National Bank v. Gregg

2021 S.D. 53
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 2021
Docket29340, 29354
StatusPublished

This text of 2021 S.D. 53 (First Dakota National Bank v. Gregg) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
First Dakota National Bank v. Gregg, 2021 S.D. 53 (S.D. 2021).

Opinion

#29340, #29354-a-PJD 2021 S.D. 53

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF SOUTH DAKOTA

**** FIRST DAKOTA NATIONAL BANK, Plaintiff and Appellant,

v.

ARTHUR L. GREGG and JERILYN L. GREGG, Defendants and Appellees.

****

APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE FIRST JUDICIAL CIRCUIT MCCOOK COUNTY, SOUTH DAKOTA

THE HONORABLE CHRIS GILES Judge

SHEILA S. WOODWARD STEVEN K. HUFF NICHOLAS G. MOSER of Marlow, Woodward & Huff, Prof. LLC Yankton, South Dakota Attorneys for plaintiff and appellant.

VINCE M. ROCHE of Davenport, Evans, Hurwitz & Smith, LLP Sioux Falls, South Dakota Attorneys for defendants and appellees.

**** CONSIDERED ON BRIEFS JANUARY 11, 2021 OPINION FILED 09/15/21 #29340, #29354

DEVANEY, Justice

[¶1.] Arthur and Jerilyn Gregg entered into an oral agreement with their

son-in-law, Tyler McGregor, whereby Tyler would feed the Greggs’ cattle to finish in

return for payment based on the weight gained by the cattle while in Tyler’s care.

Tyler did not inform his lender, First Dakota National Bank (First Dakota), that the

Gregg cattle were in his possession. Instead, Tyler represented to the bank that the

cattle were his. When Tyler’s fraudulent conduct was uncovered, a dispute arose

over whether First Dakota’s security interest in Tyler’s collateral attached to the

Greggs’ cattle. After a court trial, the circuit court determined that the Greggs were

not estopped from asserting that Tyler had no rights in their cattle, and therefore,

First Dakota did not have a security interest in the Greggs’ cattle. We affirm.

Factual and Procedural Background

[¶2.] Tyler and Rebecca McGregor operated a cattle feedlot in McCook

County, South Dakota, and First Dakota has been their lender since approximately

2006. This case concerns the years 2015 and 2016. At that time, Jeremy Grady was

the bank officer primarily responsible for the McGregors’ financial relationship with

First Dakota. He testified that First Dakota utilized a type of financing for the

McGregors called “floor-plan financing” for the purchase of cattle. Under this type

of lending program, First Dakota would loan the McGregors money annually on a

line of credit evidenced by a single promissory note as opposed to separate notes for

each group of cattle purchased by the McGregors. When Tyler wanted to purchase

a group of cattle, he would inform First Dakota and First Dakota would advance

Tyler money from the line of credit. Grady further testified that to renew their loan

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each year, the McGregors were required to provide loan presentations to the bank

in which the McGregors represented the collateral they owned and the financial

outlook of their business.

[¶3.] Grady also testified about the McGregors’ cattle operation. He

explained that Tyler had in prior years engaged in a business of custom feeding

cattle for third parties, but according to Grady, Tyler decided to cease his custom

feeding operation beginning in 2015 so he could buy, feed, and sell his own cattle.

Grady testified that Tyler purchased his first group of cattle in 2014. In the fall of

2015, Tyler sought to purchase a group of cattle designated as Group 21. Tyler told

Grady that the Group 21 cattle would be black feeder cattle. First Dakota financed

the purchase of Group 21 prior to seeing the cattle and honored nine checks written

by Tyler over three months with the notation “Group 21” on the memo line of each

check.

[¶4.] Unbeknownst to First Dakota, Tyler did not completely cease custom

feeding for third parties. In November 2015, he agreed to feed 289 head of cattle

owned by his in-laws, Arthur and Jerilyn Gregg, who were getting older and were

looking to slow down their cattle operation. 1 They raised exclusively Simmental

cattle, a distinctive breed identifiable by its larger frame, larger ears, and uniquely

shaped head. The Gregg cattle were branded with the Greggs’ exclusive brand and

had orange ear tags. According to the Greggs, they entered into an oral agreement

1. Although Tyler did not inform First Dakota that he agreed to custom feed the Greggs’ cattle in November 2015, First Dakota was aware that Tyler had an arrangement with the Greggs in the spring and summer of 2015 in which the Greggs brought cattle to the McGregor feedlot for custom calving.

-2- #29340, #29354

whereby Tyler would feed the cattle to finish, and in return, the Greggs would pay

him $0.70 per pound of weight gained during their time at the McGregor feedlot.

Prior to delivering the cattle to Tyler, the Greggs informed their lender, Dakota

Prairie Bank, of their plan to place their cattle with a third party for feeding, and on

November 28, 2015, the Greggs transported their cattle to the McGregor feedlot.

Dakota Prairie never advised the Greggs to file a livestock caretaker UCC financing

statement with the Secretary of State. See SDCL 57A-9-505 (statute related to the

filing of financing statements by bailors, consignors, lessors, etc.).

[¶5.] In December 2015, First Dakota conducted an inspection of the

McGregors’ cattle operation. During the inspection, Tyler did not inform First

Dakota that he was custom feeding the Gregg cattle or that some of the cattle

present in his feedlot belonged to the Greggs. Rather, he misled First Dakota into

believing he and his wife owned the cattle and specifically included the Gregg cattle

in Group 21 on his monthly inventory reports to the bank. As a result of Tyler’s

fraudulent conduct, First Dakota counted the Gregg cattle in its December 2015

inspection.

[¶6.] In February 2016, the McGregors submitted their annual loan

documentation and requested additional financing to restructure their existing debt

and to fund the purchase of additional land. At the time, First Dakota believed the

McGregors owned approximately 1,800 head of cattle. All the requests under the

operating loan were cross-collateralized; thus, the previously purchased Group 21

cattle continued to be listed as collateral on the 2016 operating loan. Prior to

approving the McGregors’ 2016 financing request, First Dakota performed a UCC

-3- #29340, #29354

search on January 19, 2016, and found that no other party had filed a caretaking or

other UCC filing against the McGregors’ cattle. Ultimately, First Dakota decided to

renew the McGregors’ operating loan, and on February 19, 2016, it advanced the

McGregors $954,453 in new money.

[¶7.] On April 7, 2016, Grady performed an inspection of the McGregor

property and noticed that the number of cattle in one pen appeared inadequate. He

then performed a spot count of the cattle in this pen, which ended up approximately

140 head short. Grady ordered a pen-by-pen count to be conducted the next day;

however, prior to Grady’s return on April 8, Tyler called him and admitted he did

not own as many cattle as he had represented. Tyler later explained to Grady that

he had dispersed Group 21 cattle in multiple pens in order to make other groups

appear larger for First Dakota’s inspections, and that he had falsified reports to the

bank.

[¶8.] On April 8, Grady and a fellow First Dakota credit officer, Wayne

Williamson, returned to the McGregor property to conduct a further inspection.

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2021 S.D. 53, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-dakota-national-bank-v-gregg-sd-2021.