McCarthy v. State

158 N.W.2d 708, 280 Minn. 226, 1968 Minn. LEXIS 1092
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedMay 3, 1968
Docket40911
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 158 N.W.2d 708 (McCarthy v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McCarthy v. State, 158 N.W.2d 708, 280 Minn. 226, 1968 Minn. LEXIS 1092 (Mich. 1968).

Opinion

Knutson, Chief Justice.

The Iron Range Resources and Rehabilitation Commission (hereinafter called IRRC) was created by the legislature some years ago for the purpose of attempting to rehabilitate the northeastern part of Minnesota by encouraging new industry, reviving the industry that had lagged or been phased out, and encouraging the use of depleted or unused natural resources. It consists of three senators appointed by the chairman of the Committee on Committees, three representatives appointed by the speaker of the house, and the acting or present commissioner of conservation, who is automatically an ex officio member.

A commissioner of IRRC is appointed and acts in an administrative capacity. He makes recommendations to IRRC and the commission then has the duty of either approving or rejecting the proposals. It acts in an advisory capacity and its action is not necessarily final, but the commissioner cannot approve projects without submitting them to the commission. A. M. DeYoannes was appointed commissioner of IRRC in February 1961.

Plaintiff, Robert J. McCarthy, is a farmer residing about 16 miles north of Hibbing. Prior to 1961 he was growing and marketing potatoes, selling most of his crop to retail stores in bulk quantities. In 1960 his total acreage was 38 acres.

Due to a change in marketing which resulted from a demand for potatoes that were washed and packaged, McCarthy approached De-Yoannes in the spring of 1961 with a proposal to construct a warehouse *228 on McCarthy’s farm which would be equipped to store and handle some 50,000 bushels of potatoes. DeYoannes was interested in the proposal and, while some of the evidence is in dispute as to what happened from that time on, it does sustain the court’s findings that the proposal was submitted to the commission and that McCarthy was given assurances that a warehouse would be built in time to handle the 1961 crop of potatoes. He was encouraged to expand his production and did plant and harvest 65 acres of potatoes. When fall came no warehouse had been constructed. McCarthy was at a loss about what to do with his increased production. He put some of the potatoes in the St. Louis County fair grounds, hoping to move them to his farm when the warehouse was completed. November arrived, construction of a warehouse had not yet commenced, and the potatoes were beginning to freeze, necessitating their removal to a heated storage place. McCarthy testified that DeYoannes advised him to move the potatoes and indicated the state would pay him the costs of storing them in a place where they would not freeze. He did move them, and attempted unsuccessfully to market them locally. He finally sold the potatoes to a wholesale brokerage in Chicago.

In 1962 much the same course of events was repeated. McCarthy testified that DeYoannes assured him that this time the warehouse definitely would be completed in time for his harvest and advised him to plant the same acreage as in the previous year, which he did. On April 13, 1962, shortly before the crop had been planted, DeYoannes, acting for the commission, and McCarthy reduced their agreement to a written contract which provided that the state would finance construction of a warehouse, the location of which was now to be in Hibbing. Upon completion, the warehouse was to be rented to McCarthy for 20 years at a total rental of $75,000 and he was to have an option to purchase the property for the amount of the lowest bid received in competitive bidding, subject to some reserved rights on the part of the state.

During the summer of 1962 McCarthy persuaded the commission that his farm would be a more favorable site for the warehouse than Hibbing, so the site was changed accordingly. A designer chosen by McCarthy worked with the state architect in preparing plans for the warehouse. *229 When fall arrived, there was still no warehouse. As a matter of fact, it was never built. McCarthy again had a crop of potatoes on hand, and DeYoannes advised him to try to sell the crop to the state. McCarthy then entered a bid with the State Purchasing Department, but in view of the fact that he had to include in his bid the cost of hiring a common carrier to transport his potatoes, he was not low bidder. He then bid the potatoes in at cost at his warehouse and received a contract as low bidder, but due to inadequacy of transportation facilities he had difficulty in making delivery.

There are other facts, but those related above are the essentials of what is required to understand the only issue presented here. McCarthy took the matter up with IRRC in an effort to recoup the losses caused by the failure of the commission to construct the warehouse. He was informed that he could receive no relief from IRRC. He then took the matter up with the State Claims Commission and that commission recommended to the legislature that the state’s sovereign immunity from suit be waived so that a court action could be brought by McCarthy. The legislature responded by passing L. 1965, c. 495, which, so far as material here, reads:

“Section 1. Subdivision 1. The state of Minnesota hereby waives immunity from suit for damages for injury to person or property or death by the claimants hereinafter named and in an amount not exceeding that hereinafter enumerated. Any such suit shall be commenced within six months from the effective date of this act. In any 'such suit the state may interpose any legal or equitable defenses. The state of Minnesota shall be named as a defendant in any such suit and shall be served by the service of a summons and complaint upon the attorney general.” (Italics supplied.)

Thereafter follow five separate claims of individuals based upon various grounds alleged to warrant recovery. Subd. 3 reads:

“Robert J. McCarthy
Star Route 2, Box 70
Hibbing, Minnesota.
“For damages suffered by claimant when Iron Range Resources and *230 Rehabilitation Commission failed to comply with its assurances to build potato warehouse. [$] 11,687.00”
(Italics supplied.)

The matter was submitted to the trial court and it found in favor of McCarthy in the sum of $9,303. Part of the claim originally submitted was disallowed. The state has appealed from an order denying its motion for a new trial.

Essentially it is the claim of the state that while the legislature waived the state’s sovereign immunity from suit under L. 1965, c. 495, it did not admit liability, and that under § 1, subd. 1, of the act the state could therefore interpose any legal or equitable defenses it had to the claim. It is apparently the state’s position that since the assurances given were not fraudulent and did not give rise to a contract, and since assurances are not actionable in the absence of fraud or breach of contract, McCarthy is not entitled to recovery even though he relied to his detriment on the assurances given. The trial court rejected this argument, saying that the legislature, by enacting L. 1965, c. 495, § 1, subd. 3, intended to create a new cause of action for McCarthy.

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Bluebook (online)
158 N.W.2d 708, 280 Minn. 226, 1968 Minn. LEXIS 1092, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccarthy-v-state-minn-1968.