Northwest Potato Sales, Inc. v. Beck

678 P.2d 1138, 208 Mont. 310, 37 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 1468, 1984 Mont. LEXIS 866
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 2, 1984
Docket83-107
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 678 P.2d 1138 (Northwest Potato Sales, Inc. v. Beck) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Northwest Potato Sales, Inc. v. Beck, 678 P.2d 1138, 208 Mont. 310, 37 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 1468, 1984 Mont. LEXIS 866 (Mo. 1984).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE SHEA

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

Plaintiff, Northwest Potato Sales, Inc., a family corporation owned by the Martin McCullough family, and dealing primarily in the buying and selling of potatoes, appeals an order of the Powell County District Court dismissing its claim against the defendant, Charles Beck, for damages claimed as a result of an alleged failure by Beck to honor a contract to sell seed potatoes to Northwest Potato Sales. The trial court held that the alleged agreement was barred by the statute of frauds because Beck, although he had received the written contract containing the necessary terms, had not signed it. Although McCullough raised estoppel as a bar to Beck’s reliance on the statute of frauds, and presented evidence on this issue, the trial court, in a memorandum opinion accompanying its findings and conclusions, but with no analysis of the evidence, and no attempt to apply the elements of estoppel to that evidence, held that the plaintiff failed to establish the requisite elements of estoppel. We reverse and hold that McCullough proved estoppel as a matter of law.

The trial presented essentially three issues. First, whether there was an agreement between McCullough and Beck. On this issue, the trial court failed to make any findings and conclusions, but in a separate memorandum opinion the trial court did conclude that the parties had not reached agreement. Second, whether Beck was entitled to rely on the statue of frauds as a defense because he had not signed the written contract. To decide this issue, the trial court first had to decide whether Beck was a “merchant” within the meaning of an exception to the statute of frauds as a defense. Third, whether Beck was estopped by his active *312 and passive conduct from reliance on the statute of frauds as a defense. The findings and conclusions did not mention the estoppel issue, but the court concluded in a separate memorandum opinion that the plaintiff failed to establish the requisite elements of estoppel. In reaching this conclusion, however, the trial court failed to analyze this evidence by application of the elements of estoppel.

It is within this trial context that the issues are raised on appeal. First, McCullough asks this Court to imply a trial court finding that an agreement did exist, because the trial court could not have decided the statute of frauds issue unless it first found an agreement to exist. Second, McCullough argues the trial court applied an improper legal standard in concluding that Beck was not a “merchant.” In reaching its conclusion the trial court stated: “Each of the farmer-growers and the one banker-rancher all agree that the farmer did not have the knowledge or skill in the market place as that of a buyer-broker.” McCullough argues this is an improper legal standard by which to judge the status of both parties. While he concedes he is a “merchant,” he argues that the test is not one of comparing the skills and knowledge of the parties, and that the parties need not have substantially similar skills before a conclusion is justified that both parties are “merchants” so that an exception to the statute of frauds is triggered. However, because we conclude that McCullough proved estoppel as a matter of law, we need not decide the implied findings issue and we need not remand the case to the trial court to make findings on the “merchant” issue based on a proper application of the law.

The third, and dispositive issue, is whether McCullough proved the elements of estoppel. Beck argued at trial and now in his appeal brief that estoppel does not apply to the UCC statute of frauds. McCullough presented evidence on the existence of the contract and on Beck’s active and passive conduct after he received the contract. This evidence was virtually uncontradicted and is sufficient to estop Beck *313 from successfully invoking the statute of frauds. The trial court did not properly reach the estoppel issue. The separate findings and conclusions are silent on the estoppel issue. And although an attempt was made in the accompanying memorandum to dispose of the estoppel issue, the trial court failed to analyze the estoppel evidence that McCullough had presented, and failed to apply the elements of estoppel to this evidence. We are left with the unsupported conclusion of the trial court that “[t]he plaintiff has failed to establish the requisite elements of estoppel.”

We set forth sufficient facts here to provide a general background picture and we then add more facts while applying the estoppel elements to the evidence.

On July 17, 1980, Martin McCullough, pursuant to a general custom with other Montana farmers and also pursuant to a custom established with Beck in three previous dealings, sent Beck a written contract confirming what McCullough believed was an oral telephone agreement for Beck to sell to McCullough 10,000 pounds of certified seed potatoes at $4.50 per cwt (cwt being the price per 100 pounds of potatoes). McCullough farms seed potatoes with his son in Broadwater County Montana, but his primary business is that of a licensed potato broker with some 20 years experience. McCullough operates his business, a family corporation consisting of himself, his wife, and a son, out of Kennewick, Washington. Charles Beck is a farmer-rancher in Powell County, who grows other crops and raises livestock, but who also had almost 15 years experience as a seed potato farmer. He was familiar with the marketing of seed potatoes, although he did not have the overall general experience of Martin McCullough. McCullough and Beck had been neighbors in times past, and McCullough had for several years leased 700 acres from Beck on which he grew seed potatoes. Their dealings had always been above board and each characterized the other as an honest person.

The written contract sent to Beck was in compliance with the UCC statute of frauds, and was sufficient to bind Me *314 Cullough. By the time McCullough had sent the contract to Beck, McCullough had already made commitments to Washington “table-stock” farmers to purchase 10,000 pounds of Beck potatoes for use in the following spring planting season. Beck testified that he was fully aware of McCullough’s practice in obtaining commitments from Washington “table-stock” farmers, and that he assumed McCullough had followed that practice in this instance.

Although Beck did not sign the contract (he testified at trial that he threw the contract away), he did nothing between July 17 and late November to tell McCullough they did not have an agreement. McCullough was not particularly worried about Beck not returning the signed contract because he testified that Beck was habitually slow in getting his paperwork done. During the period from July 17th to the end of November, McCullough acted in reliance on what he perceived to be Beck’s promise, and during this same period Beck actively and passively led McCullough to believe the contract would be honored.

The market price for seed potatoes rose steadily from July to November, and at the end of November, when the market price was approximately $9.00 per cwt (or twice that of the terms stated in the July 17th contract), Beck informed McCullough for the first time that they did not have a contract. He told McCullough that he had never agreed to the terms and that in any event he had not signed the contract.

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Bluebook (online)
678 P.2d 1138, 208 Mont. 310, 37 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 1468, 1984 Mont. LEXIS 866, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/northwest-potato-sales-inc-v-beck-mont-1984.