Northwest Equipment Sales Co. v. Western Packers, Inc.

623 F.2d 92, 29 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 1078
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedJuly 10, 1980
DocketNo. 78-1043
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 623 F.2d 92 (Northwest Equipment Sales Co. v. Western Packers, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Northwest Equipment Sales Co. v. Western Packers, Inc., 623 F.2d 92, 29 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 1078 (9th Cir. 1980).

Opinion

FARRIS, Circuit Judge:

Western Packers, Inc. is appealing from the Idaho federal district court’s decision that appellee Northwest Equipment Sales Co. has a security interest in certain fixtures which is prior to the interest that Western acquired by purchasing the fixtures at a foreclosure sale. Under Idaho law, the foreclosure sale discharged Northwest Equipment’s security interest. We, therefore, reverse and remand for the district court to enter an order directing Northwest to refund the judgment paid by Western Packers.

FACTS

Northwest Equipment sold to Orchards, Inc. various items of fruit packing machinery, retaining a security interest to secure the purchase price. Orchards, Inc. affixed the machinery to real property which it purchased the day after affixation. Cold-house, Inc. succeeded to Orchard’s interest in both the real property and the fruit packing machinery. Coldhouse mortgaged the real property with its fixtures to First Security Bank of Idaho and to Gem County Development Company.

The Bank and Gem assigned their mortgages to the Small Business Administration (SBA). Coldhouse defaulted and the SBA foreclosed, selling both the real property and the fruit packing machinery to Western Packers. Northwest Equipment brought an action against both Western Packers and the SBA in an Idaho state court, alleging the priority of its purchase money security interest in the machinery. The SBA had the action removed to federal district court.

PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

The appeal presents us for the second time with the conflict between the interests of Northwest Equipment and Western Packers in the fruit packing machinery purchased by Western at an SBA private foreclosure sale. Northwest Equipment initially sued both Western Packers and the SBA contending that each had purchased the machinery with knowledge of Northwest’s existing security interest. Thus, Northwest maintained, Western Packers and the SBA were not entitled to protection under Idaho [94]*94Code § 28-9-313(4) (1967)1 as subsequent purchasers without knowledge.

The district court rejected Northwest’s contention. It held that the SBA’s interest had priority over Northwest’s because the SBA had purchased the entire interest of the original mortgagees, First Security Bank and Gem County Development, who themselves had taken mortgages on the machinery without knowledge of Northwest’s interest. The district court held further that Western Packers’ interest was prior to Northwest’s since Western had purchased the entirety of the SBA’s superior mortgage interest.

Northwest Equipment appealed from the district court’s judgment quieting title in Western Packers. We vacated the district court’s finding that the original mortgagee, Gem County Development, had taken its interest in the machinery without knowledge of Northwest’s purchase money security interest. Northwest Equipment Sales Co. v. Western Packers Inc., 543 F.2d 65, 67 (9th Cir. 1976). We remanded for further proceedings to determine whether Western Packers and the SBA had themselves taken without knowledge and were thus independently entitled to the protection of section 28-9-313(4) regardless of the priority of their predecessors’ interests.

The district court, on remand, found that the SBA had taken the mortgage interests of Gem and the Bank without knowledge of Northwest’s interest but that Western Packers had knowledge when it purchased at the SBA’s foreclosure sale. The district court concluded, therefore, that the SBA took the property clear of Northwest’s interest but that Western Packers, not being entitled to protection as a purchaser without knowledge under section 28-9-313(4), took the property from the SBA subject to Northwest’s interest.2

DISCUSSION

Northwest does not dispute the district court’s finding that the SBA lacked knowledge of Northwest’s security interest when it took the assignment of the mortgages from Gem and the Bank. Nor does Northwest contest the district court’s conclusion, based on that finding, that the SBA took the machinery clear of the purchase money security interest under section 28-9-313(4). Both parties agree that the crucial question is whether Western Packers’ knowledge at the time of its purchase from the SBA precluded it from taking the machinery clear of Northwest’s interest.

Northwest Equipment argues that we resolved this question in the previous appeal. We disagree. The basis of our prior remand was our inability to accept the district court’s finding that there was “no evidence’’ in the record that Gem took its mortgage interest in the machinery without knowledge. 543 F.2d at 67. We stated further, in dictum, that “we would not make the assumption of law that the predecessors’ lack of knowledge fulfills the statutory requirement [of section 28-9-313(4)] for the S.B.A. and Western.” Id.3

In light of the new facts which the district court found pursuant to our remand, we conclude that the priority of Western Packers’ interest is not governed by section 28-9-314(4). The SBA held a security interest in the fruit packing machinery both under the Uniform Commercial Code and under its real estate deed of trust which covered the real property and fixtures. The SBA’s interest based on its deed of trust is prior, under section 28-9-314(4), to Northwest’s Article Nine security interest. The SBA’s Article Nine interest [95]*95in the machinery, being unperfected because of an improper filing, was not prior to Northwest’s.

Accordingly, Western Packers argues, the SBA’s sale was the foreclosure of a real estate mortgage governed by Idaho real estate law. Under Idaho Code § 45-1508, a foreclosure sale under a deed of trust “shall foreclose and terminate all interest in the property covered by the trust deed of all persons to whom notice is given under subsection (2) of section 45-1505 . . . .” The SBA gave notice to Northwest Equipment of the sale of both the fruit packing machinery and the real estate. Northwest does not challenge the validity of this notice or of any other aspect of the foreclosure sale procedure. Thus, if Western Packers is correct in maintaining that Idaho’s real estate mortgage foreclosure law governs, the SBA’s sale terminated Northwest’s interest. Idaho Code § 28-9-312(1) (1967) provides that section 28-9-313 governs the priorities between security interests in fixtures and interests in real estate. If Northwest’s interest has been terminated, then section 28-9-313 is inapplicable.

The result is the same even if the SBA’s sale was governed by Idaho’s commercial code, as Northwest Equipment asserts. Section 28-9-504(4) provides that, in a private foreclosure sale:

When collateral is disposed of by a secured party after default, the disposition transfers to a purchaser for value all of the debtor’s rights therein, discharges the security interest under which it is made and any security interest or lien subordinate thereto. The purchaser takes free of all such rights and interests even though the secured party fails to comply with the requirements of this Part or of any judicial proceedings

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623 F.2d 92, 29 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 1078, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/northwest-equipment-sales-co-v-western-packers-inc-ca9-1980.