Mammoth Cave Production Credit Ass'n v. Oldham

569 S.W.2d 833, 25 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 603, 1977 Tenn. App. LEXIS 331
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedAugust 26, 1977
StatusPublished
Cited by81 cases

This text of 569 S.W.2d 833 (Mammoth Cave Production Credit Ass'n v. Oldham) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mammoth Cave Production Credit Ass'n v. Oldham, 569 S.W.2d 833, 25 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 603, 1977 Tenn. App. LEXIS 331 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1977).

Opinion

OPINION

DROWOTA, Judge.

This case raises several questions about the validity of and prerequisites to a suit for conversion by the holder of a security interest in crops under Article 9 of the Uniform Commercial Code against a factor and commission merchant, which sold the collateral for the debtor and turned over the proceeds to him.

Plaintiff, Mammoth Cave Production Credit Association, a corporation in the business of agricultural financing in Kentucky, filed suit in Smith County Chancery Court on July 30, 1975, against L. H. Old-ham and Walter Taylor, partners in a tobacco warehouse business known as Smith County Tobacco Warehouse Co. The complaint alleged that, because defendants had sold through their warehouse certain tobacco in which plaintiff claimed a security interest and had paid the proceeds to plaintiff’s debtor, defendants were liable to plaintiff for conversion in the amount of $2,289.00, the value of the debtor’s tobacco. A very brief hearing was held before the Chancellor, who on September 16, 1976, filed a memorandum opinion in which he found defendants liable to plaintiff for $2,289.00. This conclusion was implemented by a decree to the same effect on October 1, 1976. Defendants have appealed from this decree, disclaiming liability and challenging the validity of plaintiff’s security interest, inter alia.

The proof in the ease is brief, consisting of a page and a half of stipulations, seven pages of testimony from defendant Oldham, and documentary exhibits. From these, it appears that the debtors, Glen Carter and wife, executed a promissory note for $22,-000.00 to plaintiff on March 8, 1973. On March 26,1974, the same parties executed a document entitled “Financing Statement and Security Agreement,” which was introduced into evidence. This agreement contains the names, addresses, and signatures of the parties, and purports to give plaintiff a security interest in certain crops, farm equipment, and livestock of the Carters. The description of the crops covered by the agreement reads in part as follows:

All tobacco crops, Including but not limited to all of 2800 pounds on Gene B. Sewell farm, all of 1826 pounds on Curtis Anderson, all of 830 pounds on Robert Shaw, ½ of 5200 pounds on Dewey Allen

The agreement also sets out several covenants and provides that upon breach of any one of them, all indebtedness secured by the agreement will become due and payable “at the option of the Lender.” One of these covenants provides that the debtor “will not further encumber, conceal, remove, sell or otherwise dispose of [the collateral] without the written consent of the Lender . . .” In spite of this provision restricting sale, the agreement also contains a further item in which a security interest is claimed in the proceeds of the collateral previously described in it. It was stipulated that a copy of this document was filed for record in the office of the County Court Clerk in Cumberland County, Kentucky, the county in which the tobacco in dispute here was grown, and that it was not filed in Tennessee, where defendants’ warehouse is located.

The tobacco in question here was grown by the debtor, Carter, on the farm of Dewey B. Allen. It is stipulated that Allen, who evidently had half the farm’s tobacco for himself while Carter had the other half, put the tobacco on the floor of defendants’ warehouse to be sold on January 2, 1975. The tobacco was sold on January 6 at which time, on Allen’s order, defendants paid $2,288.29 to Carter and $2,289.00 to Allen by two separate checks.

. Also part of the record is a certified letter from plaintiff, addressed to Smith *836 County Tobacco Warehouse and dated November 5, 1974. This letter specified the “crops rented” by Carter in essentially the same manner as the security agreement, and its list included “½ of 5200 pds. on Dewey Allen, Rt. 1, Burkesville, Ky.” Although plaintiff alleges in its complaint that this letter was accompanied by a copy of the security agreement, this is not established by the proof. The letter does, however, give the agreement’s file number in the Cumberland County Court Clerk’s office and state the principal owed plaintiff by Carter as $16,511.93. It is stipulated that defendants received this letter on November 19, 1974.

The brief testimony of defendant Oldham established that defendants’ warehouse had made the sale as factor and commission merchant, that is, the warehouse did not buy any tobacco from Carter or Allen but merely sold it for them. Oldham admitted receiving the letter from plaintiff, but maintained that he had had no actual knowledge of the security interest. He said it was customary to receive notice of such interests by letter and to keep a list of debtors’ names to check the sales against, but pointed out that Carter’s name appeared nowhere in the bill for this tobacco or in defendants’ other records.

Relying upon the foregoing, the Chancellor found defendants liable to plaintiff for conversion in the amount of $2,289.00. In his memorandum opinion, while he noted that the description of collateral in the security agreement was “very meager” and that “it is possible that under the terms of the Commercial Code of the State of Kentucky, that it could be invalid,” he did not decide the issue of the security interest’s validity. Instead, the Chancellor focused on the issue of actual notice and found that defendants had such notice of the security agreement. He evidently believed that this finding made it unnecessary to consider either the validity or the perfection of the security interest under the Uniform Commercial Code, on the theory that the only purpose of doing so would be to establish defendants’ constructive notice via the filing provisions of the Code and that this was unnecessary in view of their having had actual notice. The Chancellor, then, found that defendants had actual notice of plaintiff’s security interest and held them liable for conversion.

“A conversion, in the sense of the law of trover, is the appropriation of the thing to the party’s own use and benefit, by the exercise of dominion over it, in defiance of plaintiff’s right.” Barger v. Webb, 216 Tenn. 275, 391 S.W.2á 664, 665 (1965); see W. Prosser, Law of Torts 79-97 (4th ed. 1971). To be liable, the defendant need only have an intent to exercise dominion and control over the property that is in fact inconsistent with the plaintiff’s rights, and do so; good faith is generally immaterial. Prosser, supra, at 83. There is some relaxation of this rule, however, in cases absolving of liability for conversion agents who themselves acted in good faith, without actual notice of the interference with the plaintiff’s rights. See J. T. Fargason Co. v. Ball, 128 Tenn. 137,159 S.W. 221 (1913); Frizzell v. Rundle, 88 Tenn. 396, 12 S.W. 918 (1890); Prosser, supra, at 85-86, 88-89. We note, however, that this more lenient principle could not apply in the case at bar because defendants did have actual notice of plaintiff’s security interest.

Under the Code, it is clear that a secured party cannot sue for conversion of collateral as a result of its disposition by the debtor unless that disposition is unauthorized, for a disposition authorized by the secured party results in the loss of the security interest in the collateral and retention of a security interest only in identifiable proceeds. T.C.A.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
569 S.W.2d 833, 25 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 603, 1977 Tenn. App. LEXIS 331, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mammoth-cave-production-credit-assn-v-oldham-tennctapp-1977.