Lakeside Feeders, Inc. v. Producers Livestock Marketing Ass'n

666 F.3d 1099, 2012 WL 171381, 2012 U.S. App. LEXIS 1247
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 23, 2012
Docket11-1347
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 666 F.3d 1099 (Lakeside Feeders, Inc. v. Producers Livestock Marketing Ass'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lakeside Feeders, Inc. v. Producers Livestock Marketing Ass'n, 666 F.3d 1099, 2012 WL 171381, 2012 U.S. App. LEXIS 1247 (8th Cir. 2012).

Opinion

BEAM, Circuit Judge.

Lakeside Feeders appeals from the district court’s 1 grant of summary judgment in favor of Producers Livestock Credit Corporation and Producers Livestock Marketing Association (Producers) on Lakeside’s state-law claims for fraudulent misrepresentation, negligent misrepresentation and unjust enrichment. We affirm the court’s resolution of these state law matters in favor of Producers.

I. BACKGROUND

Relevant here, Producers provides livestock marketing services, hedging services, and lending services to producers of hogs in the central part of the United States. On or about December 2007, an Iowa veterinarian, Dr. Tracy Gayer, along with his wife, together doing business as Prairie Pork, Inc. (hereinafter Gayer), entered into an agreement with Producers identified as the “Hog Program.” Very generally, under this program, Producers advanced funds so that Gayer could acquire hogs and raise them from weaned pigs to market weight. Specifically, the Hog Program contemplated that Producers would advance seventy percent of the projected value of each market hog entering the program and use it to pay feed bills as long as Gayer maintained his thirty-percent equity requirement. The Program contract referred to Producers as “Owner” and Gayer as “Feeder.”

Lakeside feeds, grows, and ultimately delivers to market pigs purchased and owned by others. Gayer approached Lakeside in late 2007 about using its services for the pigs at issue. As relevant here, Lakeside provided the feed and care for the hogs at issue by way of a handshake agreement; there was no written contract memorializing any agreement between Lakeside and Gayer, or between Lakeside and Producers. Once the hogs reached market weight, Lakeside sold the hogs and collected and forwarded the proceeds to Producers. Lakeside looked to Producers for payment for its services because Producers, along with Gayer, received the Lakeside billing for the feed and management of the pigs delivered to Lakeside under the Hog Program. Producers paid these bills without incident, it seems, until around mid-2008. Producers continued to send payments to Lakeside throughout 2008, sometimes hundreds of thousands of dollars, but Lakeside’s outstanding bills mounted. The time frame at issue coincides with a substantial decline in the value of market hogs. To quote Lakeside, it was “one of the worst hog marketing periods in history with ethanol demand driving input costs sky high and hog sale prices precipitously dropping to an all time low.”

Around May 2008, Gayer failed to provide his share of funding to Producers under the terms of the agreement, violating the equity ratio mandated by the Hog Program. Accordingly, Producers communicated to Gayer that he needed to send money to Producers so that it could continue to pay feed bills and get its own contract with Gayer back into compliance with the seventy percent debt-on-the-finished-hog value. Meanwhile, Producers *1104 communicated with Lakeside regarding Lakeside’s mounting outstanding feed bills. Although Lakeside knew that Producers provided the financing for the hogs at issue, there is a fact dispute about whether Lakeside was aware of the seventy percent lending limit agreed upon by Producers in the Hog Program with Gayer, or other details of the deal. Producers claims it educated Lakeside about this term of the contract and Lakeside denies this knowledge. We, of course, must resolve this factual dispute in Lakeside’s favor and assume it was not aware of the specific financing relationship or other terms under the Hog Program.

The heart of Lakeside’s tort claims centers around alleged representations purportedly made by Producers to Lakeside that “when we get paid, you will get paid,” or as Lakeside repeatedly claims, “Producers represented it would pay Lakeside’s bills.” Presumably Lakeside took this to mean either that Producers would “pay Lakeside in full,” or possibly that Lakeside would be “paid first” because Lakeside’s primary complaint is that Producers unjustly paid itself off, including payment of Producers’ non-feed-cost fees under the Hog Program. In any event, many of Lakeside’s feed bills were left unpaid. However, even though Lakeside repeatedly argues that Producers represented to Lakeside that Lakeside “would be paid,” this merely reflects what Lakeside believed at the time and is not a verbatim recitation of Producers’ statements in the record. Based upon oral conversations with Producers, Lakeside’s president, James Noethe, testified that “[Producers] received all the money and said that as they received more money I would get my outstanding bills paid.” Noethe also stated, “I guess I trusted them that they would do that, and that’s why I kept sending them all the money [from the hog sales] with basically all the outstanding bills that I had there at the end of the feeding period.”

In addition to the oral representations, we look also to Producers’ written representations, which vary from Noethe’s testimony in small, but significant, ways. Faxes from Producers to Lakeside accompanying wire transfers made during the relevant time period contained a listing of “outstanding feedbills ... owed to Lakeside Feeders.” One such fax prefaces such a list with a statement that “[t]he following page shows the outstanding feedbills that Producers is aware of that Tracy Gayer owes.” Producers also repeatedly stated in the faxes that “[w]e are at our ... lending limits until we receive money from Tracy or sell more hogs,” “[w]e are expecting more money from Tracy so that we are able to pay more feedbills,” and that “Producers hopes to have all the outstanding feedbills paid very soon.” These same faxes delineate outstanding bills for “[Producers] Financed hogs” and “NON-[Produeers] Financed hogs.” Producers stated in faxes that it did not pay outstanding bills on Non-Producers financed hogs.

Lakeside claims it relied upon the communications from Producers wherein, according to Lakeside, Producers represented to Lakeside that Lakeside “would be” paid when one of two circumstances occurred: (1) when Producers received more money from Gayer, or (2) when Lakeside sold more hogs. Additionally, Lakeside claims that Producers was fully aware at some point in late August 2008 that even though Producers would be paid in full for monies advanced, Lakeside would not be fully reimbursed and that Producers never informed Lakeside of that circumstance despite Producers’ knowledge. Lakeside brought this diversity tort action against Producers in federal court seeking $922,841.45 in unpaid bills and claiming *1105 Producers’ actions induced Lakeside to forego taking protective measures such as filing a lien 2 to protect its interests.

The district court granted summary judgment in favor of Producers on each of Lakeside’s Iowa state-law tort claims. On Lakeside’s fraudulent misrepresentation claim, the court held that even assuming the statements at issue were material, Lakeside failed to produce any evidence that they were false when made, a necessary element of the claim. The court also held that Lakeside failed to establish that it justifiably relied upon Producers’ representations in its decision to continue extending credit.

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Bluebook (online)
666 F.3d 1099, 2012 WL 171381, 2012 U.S. App. LEXIS 1247, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lakeside-feeders-inc-v-producers-livestock-marketing-assn-ca8-2012.