Fresh Start Farms v. The Andersons, Inc.

CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Kentucky
DecidedSeptember 26, 2023
Docket3:22-cv-00472
StatusUnknown

This text of Fresh Start Farms v. The Andersons, Inc. (Fresh Start Farms v. The Andersons, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fresh Start Farms v. The Andersons, Inc., (W.D. Ky. 2023).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT WESTERN DISTRICT OF KENTUCKY LOUISVILLE DIVISION

FRESH START FARMS PLAINTIFF

v. NO. 3:22-CV-472-BJB

THE ANDERSONS, INC. DEFENDANT

MEMORANDUM OPINION & ORDER Fresh Start Farms, a farm in Hodgenville, Kentucky, allegedly entered several contracts to sell grain and other crops to The Andersons, an Ohio-based agricultural company. Motion to Compel Arbitration (DN 6) at 2; Notice of Removal (DN 1) ¶ 12.1 The Andersons demanded the grain from Fresh Start in January of 2022, invoiced Fresh Start for more than $1,200,000 when it didn’t deliver, and finally followed up with an arbitration demand. Fresh Start responded by suing in state court, alleging the contracts (including the arbitration provisions) are invalid as the product of fraud, misrepresentation, and negligence. Complaint (DN 1-2) ¶¶ 85–107. After The Andersons removed the case, the parties filed dueling motions to compel and stay arbitration. Both motions join issue on one question: whether the parties validly entered into an agreement to arbitrate this contract dispute. The record shows they did—and that the arbitration agreement covers this dispute. So the Court grants the motion to compel arbitration and denies Fresh Start’s motion to stay arbitration. I. Allegations This dispute—like several related cases2—emerged from a soured relationship between The Andersons and a grain farm. According to Fresh Start, it began selling excess grain to The Andersons and its predecessor, through its agents in 2013.

1 The Sixth Circuit, in another dispute over “flex agreements” and arbitration, described The Andersons (at least its 1990s incarnation) as “a multi-division/location agri-business firm headquartered in Maumee, Ohio, in the business of originating, merchandising, conditioning, and storing grain and grain products, and other agri-businesses.” The Andersons, Inc. v. Horton Farms, Inc., 166 F.3d 308, 313 (6th Cir. 1998). 2 Similar cases and practically identical motions are pending before this Court. The same lawyers represent The Andersons and the farmer-plaintiffs in these cases, and the Court (with the parties’ agreement) held a combined hearing on June 12, 2023, that covered each case. See Case Nos. 1:22-cv-115, 1:22-cv-117, 1:22-cv-118, 3:22-cv-473, 3:22-cv-474. The plaintiffs, including Fresh Start, previously sued the agents who allegedly induced them to sign. Alford v. Brooks, 618 F. Supp. 3d 621 (E.D. Ky. 2022). Complaint ¶¶ 9–13 (describing contracts entered into and executed “[o]n several occasions since 2013”). In September 2020, Fresh Start and an agent for The Andersons agreed to a sale of 40,000 bushels of corn at $4.06 each. ¶¶ 14–15. Fresh Start alleges that agents for The Andersons (Cliff Arfman and Boyd Brooks) then entered several contracts on his behalf in 2021 without his knowledge or authorization; these contracts purportedly obligated him to sell crops to The Andersons at deferred prices. ¶¶ 51, 63. The parties’ disjointed contracting process probably shouldn’t serve as a model for law students learning how to clearly memorialize agreements. The documents they shared were all dated or shared electronically in a manner that didn’t necessarily track the parties’ relationship on the ground. Three such documents bear on the parties’ agreements and this Court’s resolution of the arbitration request: the Customer Flex Agreement, the Invoice Contracts, and the Additional Terms. First, on October 30, 2020, Fresh Start, through its agent Ryan Bivens, signed a “Customer Flex Agreement,” which The Andersons’ agent apparently said was to “clean up past grain transactions.” ¶¶ 18–19; Flex Agreement (DN 1-2) at 1–2. Before then, the parties had apparently not signed any contracts (or even documented their specific transactions). ¶¶ 13–21.3 But the Flex Agreement, by its terms, applied to “all contracts” without any temporal limitation. And it states that “[a]ll Contracts will be governed by the Standard Purchase Contract Terms on the reverse side of each Purchase Contract ... along with applicable Grain Trade Rules of the National Grain and Feed Association,” and provides that “any disputes or controversies arising out of contracts shall be arbitrated by the National Grain and Feed Association.” Flex Agreement at 1. Second, the record includes several “Invoice Contracts.” See DN 1-2 at 20–24; 29–34 (“Confirmation of DEFERRED PRICE Purchase”). They feature different dates from 2019 to 2021, but all those with signatures are dated February 4, 2021. Id. And each identifies different “Futures Months” in 2021 or 2022. Id. They contain the electronic signatures of Cliff Arfman on behalf of The Andersons and Ryan Bivens on behalf of Fresh Start; each additionally states that “failure to [sign and return] will be construed as an acceptance.”4 An agent for The Andersons (Aaron Lloyd)

3 The Complaint isn’t clear on the “past grain transactions” this refers to. It states that the parties entered and executed several grain contracts since 2013, ¶ 13, but that they had “not executed nor authorized any contracts with the Defendant other than the aforementioned 40,000 bushels of corn priced at $4.06 per bushel,” ¶ 21. 4 Some of the Invoice Contracts involved contain no signature for Fresh Start—at least not as they appear in the record. See DN 1-2 at 29–34. The others contain an electronic signature of Ryan Bivens for Fresh Start. Fresh Start’s Complaint alleges that these unsigned contracts are not enforceable, Complaint ¶ 72, but its response to the motion to compel doesn’t argue that arbitration is unavailable on this basis. Regardless of their allegedly emailed Fresh Start and asked it to sign this series of contracts, which he attached to that email message. Complaint ¶¶ 22–26; DN 1-2 at 20–24. Each is a single page, with “Page 1 of 2” or “Page 1 of 4” at the bottom. DN 1-2 at 20–24; 29– 34. Above each signature line, the contracts contained a sentence stating “Parties Accept Additional Terms Attached” in bolded letters. Id. Third, the email attaching these Invoice Contracts also included a single copy of a “Contract Terms and Conditions” sheet. See Complaint ¶ 33; Motion to Compel at 9–10. This sheet says “Page 2 of 2” at the bottom and contains a statement that “any disputes or controversies arising out of this Contract shall be arbitrated by the NGFA pursuant to its Arbitration Rules.” Contract Terms & Conditions (DN 1-2) at 27 ¶ 2; Complaint ¶ 33. Bivens, on behalf of Fresh Start, signed many though not all of the Invoice Contracts (apparently five of ten, see Motion to Compel at 9), though how he transmitted the signed contracts remains unclear. The single Terms and Conditions page didn’t contain a signature line and is itself unsigned. Complaint ¶ 33. In the months that followed, the contractual relationship deteriorated and (according to the Complaint) the grain market turned significantly. ¶¶ 17, 34–59. The deadlines set out in the invoices came and went, but Fresh Start didn’t deliver any crops to the company related to the disputed contracts. ¶¶ 60–62. In February 2022, The Andersons invoiced Fresh Start for $1,218,506.44 based on its failure to deliver on these crop-sale contracts. ¶ 62. In March, The Andersons initiated arbitration proceedings against Fresh Start before the NGFA based on the arbitration language in the Flex Agreement and Invoice Contracts. See Notice of Removal ¶¶ 1, 5; Arbitration Letter (DN 1-1) at 2–3. Then, in August, Fresh Start filed a lawsuit against The Andersons alleging that the contracts were the product of fraud and negligence and seeking a stay of the arbitration proceedings. Complaint ¶¶ 77–107. The Andersons removed that lawsuit to this Court and filed this motion to compel arbitration. Notice of Removal ¶ 1; Motion to Compel at 1–2.

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Bluebook (online)
Fresh Start Farms v. The Andersons, Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fresh-start-farms-v-the-andersons-inc-kywd-2023.