Jim Jamison d/b/a J&S AG Services v. Darrell J. Coddington and Wendy Coddington

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedAugust 15, 2018
Docket17-1674
StatusPublished

This text of Jim Jamison d/b/a J&S AG Services v. Darrell J. Coddington and Wendy Coddington (Jim Jamison d/b/a J&S AG Services v. Darrell J. Coddington and Wendy Coddington) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jim Jamison d/b/a J&S AG Services v. Darrell J. Coddington and Wendy Coddington, (iowactapp 2018).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

No. 17-1674 Filed August 15, 2018

JIM JAMISON d/b/a J&S AG SERVICES, Plaintiff-Appellant,

vs.

DARRELL J. CODDINGTON and WENDY CODDINGTON, Defendants-Appellees. ________________________________________________________________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Wayne County, Dustria A. Relph,

Judge.

Plaintiff-appellant appeals the district court’s grant of summary judgment in

favor of the defendants-appellees. AFFIRMED.

David L. Leitner of Leitner Law Office, West Des Moines, for appellant.

Verle W. Norris, Corydon, for appellees.

Considered by Vogel, P.J., Doyle, J., and Blane, S.J.*

*Senior judge assigned by order pursuant to Iowa Code section 602.9206 (2018). 2

BLANE, Senior Judge.

Plaintiff Jim Jamison d/b/a J & S Ag Services (Jamison) appeals from the

district court’s grant of defendants Darrell and Wendy Coddington’s motion for

summary judgment.1 After our review of the record in this case, we find the district

court properly found no dispute of material fact, correctly applied the law, and did

not err in granting the Coddingtons’ motion for summary judgment.

I. Factual and procedural background.

In April 2016, Jamison filed a petition against Coddington alleging that in

2014 Coddington entered into an oral contract with him for the purchase of

soybean seed and for Jamison to custom spray a chemical application to the crop,

including purchase of the applied chemicals, but that Coddington then failed to

pay. Coddington filed an answer denying Jamison’s claims, asserting affirmative

defenses as well as a counterclaim for abuse of process.2 Jamison and

Coddington were deposed and written discovery exchanged. On February 20,

2017, the trial court granted Jamison’s motion to amend the petition to add Darrell’s

spouse, Wendy, as an additional defendant, alleging she was an equal owner of

the farming operation and also liable to Jamison. Wendy filed her answer denying

Jamison’s claims.

On August 7, the Coddingtons filed their motion for summary judgment with

an attached statement of undisputed facts supported by the depositions and

Coddington’s affidavit. Jamison filed a resistance with an attached statement of

1 “Coddington” refers to Darrell Coddington only. “Coddingtons” refers to both Darrell Coddington and Wendy Coddington. 2 After the trial court’s ruling granting defendants’ motion for summary judgment, Coddington dismissed his counterclaim. 3

facts alleged to be in dispute, relying solely on his and Coddington’s depositions.

He did not submit an affidavit with his resistance.

Following a hearing on September 5, based upon the depositions and

Coddington’s affidavit, the trial court found the following undisputed facts: Jamison

is in the business of selling seed to farmers as well as selling chemicals and

applying them to farmland. In the spring of 2014, Coddington entered into an

agreement with John Trihus (Trihus) for Trihus to custom farm that growing season

certain land owned by Coddington near Lineville, Iowa. Trihus was to provide all

crop inputs and all labor and equipment to plant and tend the soybean crop.

Trihus then discussed with Jamison the need for soybean seed, advising

Jamison he was planting 1200 acres. Jamison ordered 1300 units of soybean

seed. Trihus and Coddington at various times picked up a total of 800 units of

soybean seed from Jamison’s storage facility during the planting season, at $60

per unit, for a total cost of $48,000.00. Trihus also arranged for Jamison to spray

the soybean crop Trihus was custom farming on Coddington’s land. The 2014

soybean crop was harvested that fall. In October, Coddington settled up with

Trihus for the cost of the crop inputs Trihus had arranged to purchase from

Jamison.

Neither of the Coddingtons signed any written agreement, invoice, or other

document to support what Jamison claims was their purchase of crop inputs from

him. Jamison did not provide the Coddingtons any receipts, delivery tickets, or

invoices. He did not discuss with either of the Coddingtons the purchase of seed,

the cost of $60 per bag of seed, or the act of chemically spraying the farmland. In

January 2015, Jamison telephoned Coddington to demand payment for the 4

soybean seed, chemicals, and application. Wendy Coddington was neither an

operator of the land custom farmed by Trihus in 2014, nor did she have any

interaction with Jamison, Trihus, or any other person regarding crop inputs and

custom farming in 2014.

The trial court then proceeded to address the two fact issues that were

disputed. The first was whether, during a discussion on July 15, 2014, Coddington

told Jamison to send him an invoice for crop inputs. The court determined, “Even

though this allegation is in dispute, the court finds whether or not Jamison and

Coddington had this conversation is not a material fact because the Statute of

Frauds applies to this matter and Jamison has produced no writing to support the

existence of a contract between the parties.” The court found that the seed and

chemicals were “goods” covered by Iowa Code section 554.2105(1) (2016)—part

of Iowa’s Uniform Commercial Code (UCC)—and because the claimed contract

exceeded $500, the statute of frauds in section 554.2201(1) required it to be in

writing.

The court then addressed Jamison’s argument that the statute of frauds

requirement of a written contract did not apply because Coddington received and

accepted the seed and chemicals. See Iowa Code § 554.2201(3)(c). The court,

citing Iowa Code section 554.2606, determined that such acceptance had to be by

the “buyer,” as defined in Iowa Code § 554.2103(1)(a). The court found:

In this case, there is no evidence in the record to support a finding that Coddington was the buyer of Jamison’s goods. Coddington did not have any discussion with Jamison regarding the purchase of the crop inputs, and there is no evidence of mutual assent or agreement between the parties. Further, Jamison clearly acknowledged in his deposition that Trihus purchased the soybean seeds and arranged for the soybean crop to be sprayed. 5

The court concluded that whether Coddington told Jamison to send him an invoice

for the cost of crop inputs was not an issue of material fact because it was irrelevant

and insufficient to prove the existence of an enforceable contract under the statute

of frauds.

The court next addressed the second contested factual issue—whether a

partnership or agency agreement existed between Trihus and Coddington so that

Trihus’s agreements with Jamison contractually bound Coddington. The trial court

decided that “besides Jamison’s allegation, there is simply no evidence to support

a finding that a partnership or other agency relationship ever existed between

Coddington and Trihus.”

The trial court granted the Coddingtons’ motion for summary judgment and

dismissed Jamison’s amended petition. Jamison then filed a motion for

reconsideration and new trial, which he supported with his affidavit raising

additional facts.3 The Coddingtons resisted, and the court denied Jamison’s

motion. Jamison timely filed a notice of appeal.

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Jim Jamison d/b/a J&S AG Services v. Darrell J. Coddington and Wendy Coddington, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jim-jamison-dba-js-ag-services-v-darrell-j-coddington-and-wendy-iowactapp-2018.