Kevin Pruisner v. Rodney Ballhagen

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedOctober 14, 2015
Docket14-1431
StatusPublished

This text of Kevin Pruisner v. Rodney Ballhagen (Kevin Pruisner v. Rodney Ballhagen) 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
Kevin Pruisner v. Rodney Ballhagen, (iowactapp 2015).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

No. 14-1431 Filed October 14, 2015

KEVIN PRUISNER, Plaintiff-Appellee,

vs.

RODNEY BALLHAGEN, Defendant-Appellant. ________________________________________________________________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Butler County, Colleen D. Weiland,

Judge.

A defendant appeals the court’s decision finding that he converted the

plaintiff’s hogs. AFFIRMED.

Gary R. Papenheim of Papenheim Law Office, Parkersburg, for appellant.

Andrew B. Howie and Michael P. Mallaney of Hudson, Mallaney, Shindler

& Anderson, P.C., West Des Moines, for appellee.

Heard by Doyle, P.J., Bower, J., and Eisenhauer S.J.*

*Senior judge assigned by order pursuant to Iowa Code section 602.9206 (2015). 2

EISENHAUER, Senior Judge.

Rodney Ballhagen appeals from the district court’s August 4, 2014 ruling

finding he converted hogs owned by Kevin Pruisner. Ballhagen claims Pruisner

failed to prove he owned the hogs Ballhagen sold to a packing company. He

also claims the court erred in admitting into evidence certain exhibits Ballhagen

claims contain inadmissible hearsay. Upon our review of the record, we

conclude substantial evidence supports the district court’s liability finding, and we

find no error in the court admitting the exhibits in question because they fall

within the business records hearsay exception.

I. Background Facts and Proceedings.

Starting in August 2005, Pruisner and Ballhagen entered into a contract1

for Pruisner to deliver to Ballhagen SEW 2 and feeder3 pigs on a routine basis.4

Under the terms of the contract, Pruisner paid for the feed, transportation, and

veterinary services and medication for the hogs, and Ballhagen provided daily

care until the hogs reached market weight. Pruisner paid Ballhagen a monthly

fee based on the total number of hog spaces available at Ballhagen’s facility, but

Pruisner retained ownership interest in the hogs. Ballhagen kept an inventory of

the hogs at the facility, and hogs not accounted for by the inventories and death

loss reports would be charged against Ballhagen’s next monthly payment. 5

1 In the beginning, the working arrangement was governed by an oral agreement. Later, it was memorialized by a written contact signed in April 2006. 2 SEW means “segregated early wean,” and at this stage, the pigs weigh between eight and fifteen pounds. 3 Feeder pigs are larger than SEW pigs, weighing between forty and eighty pounds. 4 The written contract called for approximately 2100 pigs to be delivered about every nine weeks, weighing approximately 11 pounds. 5 While this provision providing a penalty for missing hogs was in the contract, Pruisner never sought to enforce the penalty against Ballhagen. 3

Ballhagen was also restricted from keeping other hogs at the facilities unless

approved by Pruisner. When the hogs reached market weight, approximately six

months after being delivered to the facility as SEW pigs, Pruisner arranged to

have a truck transport the fattened hogs to market. Pruisner received a verbal

headcount and average weight report from the trucker. He later received a

written report and a check for the slaughtered hogs from the meatpacker.

The person in charge of providing the feed for the hogs, Steve Albers,

alerted Pruisner sometime in 2007 that the inventory counts were not matching

up and there may be some missing hogs. When asked about the discrepancy,

Ballhagen said the miscount was the result of hogs who were slow in gaining

weight being put in a “slush pen” when the rest of that group of hogs went to

market. Those hogs in the slush pen were held back until they achieved market

weight and then sent to market with the next load of hogs. There was no

inventory report kept of the hogs in the slush pen nor could anyone tell which

group the hogs in the slush pen came from as they were not otherwise marked.

Albers and Pruisner accepted this explanation and continued the contract until

2008.

Pruisner filed for bankruptcy in April 2008, and in the course of the

continuing investigation into the missing hogs, Pruisner contacted the hog buyer

at the Marble Rock station, Robert Wirtz. Wirtz told Pruisner that Ballhagen had

sold hogs to him over the past several years. The records from the Marble Rock

station indicated Ballhagen had sold 2864 hogs to Wirtz during the time

Ballhagen was caring for Pruisner’s hogs, between January 2006 and June 2008.

Based on the records he maintained, Pruisner could not account for 3068 of the 4

nearly 30,000 hogs that had passed through Ballhagen’s facility during that time

period.6

Ballhagen asserted the hogs he sold at Marble Rock during this time

period were hogs he owned and raised on his father’s farm, not hogs belonging

to Pruisner. During the bankruptcy proceedings, and criminal investigation,

Ballhagen was asked to provide records demonstrating his ownership interest in

the hogs sold at the Marble Rock station, such as documents indicating when

and where the hogs were purchased, the feed or veterinarian records for the

hogs, or his financial records indicating the income generated or lost on the hog

operation. While Ballhagen did provide copies of some checks he claimed were

for the purchase of hogs,7 no other records were provided.

Prusiner filed this lawsuit alleging Ballhagen converted over 3000 of his

hogs. The case proceeded to a bench trial in April 2013. After hearing from

fourteen witnesses and receiving into evidence thousands of pages of exhibits

over a six-day trial, the court concluded,

Ballhagen has provided no trustworthy evidence to support his proposition that he was independently raising hogs at the time. He had access to Pruisner’s hogs at Ballhagen’s facility, and there is no other reasonable explanation for where the hogs sold by Ballhagen came from. Pruisner’s documentation and expert’s analysis is consistent with the loss of a similar number of hogs. From this the court concludes that Ballhagen converted from Pruisner approximately 2800 hogs over the period of 2006-2008.

6 Prusiner contacted the local sheriff with this information, and theft charges were filed against Ballhagen. After an eight-day bench trial in August 2011, the court found Ballhagen not guilty, concluding the State failed to prove beyond a reasonable doubt Ballhagen misappropriated, converted, or stole any hogs belonging to Pruisner. 7 Two of these checks were later revealed to be for the purchase of go-karts and go-kart parts. 5

The court awarded Pruisner $290,000 for the hogs,8 $21,314 in interest, $50,000

in punitive damages, and court costs. Ballhagen appeals, challenging the

evidence supporting the court’s liability finding and also the court’s admission of

certain exhibits over his hearsay objections.

II. Scope and Standard of Review.

Our review of this law action is for the correction of errors at law. Iowa R.

App. P. 6.907. The court’s findings of fact carry the force of a special verdict and

are binding if supported by substantial evidence. Van Sloun v. Agans Bros. Inc.,

778 N.W.2d 174, 179 (Iowa 2010). “Evidence is substantial to support a . . .

verdict if reasonable minds would find it adequate to reach the same conclusion.”

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Kevin Pruisner v. Rodney Ballhagen, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kevin-pruisner-v-rodney-ballhagen-iowactapp-2015.