Phillip L. Lubbers, Trustee of the Phillip L. Lubbers Living Trust v. Mdm Pork, Inc., an Iowa Corporation, Galen Mars, Lyle Mars, and Rodney Deboer

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedFebruary 24, 2016
Docket15-0675
StatusPublished

This text of Phillip L. Lubbers, Trustee of the Phillip L. Lubbers Living Trust v. Mdm Pork, Inc., an Iowa Corporation, Galen Mars, Lyle Mars, and Rodney Deboer (Phillip L. Lubbers, Trustee of the Phillip L. Lubbers Living Trust v. Mdm Pork, Inc., an Iowa Corporation, Galen Mars, Lyle Mars, and Rodney Deboer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Phillip L. Lubbers, Trustee of the Phillip L. Lubbers Living Trust v. Mdm Pork, Inc., an Iowa Corporation, Galen Mars, Lyle Mars, and Rodney Deboer, (iowactapp 2016).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

No. 15-0675 Filed February 24, 2016

PHILLIP L. LUBBERS, TRUSTEE OF THE PHILLIP L. LUBBERS LIVING TRUST, Plaintiff-Appellant,

vs.

MDM PORK, INC., AN IOWA CORPORATION, GALEN MARS, LYLE MARS, and RODNEY DEBOER, Defendants-Appellees. ________________________________________________________________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Sioux County, Jeffrey L. Poulson,

Judge.

The Phillip L. Lubbers Living Trust appeals the district court’s grant of

summary judgment to MDM Pork, Inc. REVERSED AND REMANDED.

William K. Klinker of Smith, Grigg, Shea & Klinker, P.C., Primghar, for

appellant.

Jeff W. Wright and Joel D. Vos of Heidman Law Firm, L.L.P., Sioux City,

for appellees.

Considered by Vogel, P.J., and Vaitheswaran and Bower, JJ. 2

BOWER, Judge.

The Phillip L. Lubbers Living Trust (Trust) appeals the district court’s grant

of summary judgment to MDM Pork, Inc (MDM). The Trust claims the district

court erred in determining the parol evidence rule prohibited the introduction of

an oral contract concerning the disposal of manure, in ruling the written contract

does not contain an enforceable agreement concerning the manure, and in ruling

insufficient facts existed to establish fraudulent misrepresentation.

I. BACKGROUND FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

Ray Lubbers was the owner of eighty acres of farm ground located in

Sioux County, Iowa. MDM was a corporation owned by Galen Mars, Lyle Mars,

and Rodney De Boer, and was in the business of raising hogs. In 2007, MDM

decided to build a hog confinement facility in Sioux County. Mars contacted Paul

Lubbers, Ray Lubbers’s son, about purchasing some land to use for the facility.

Paul acted on behalf of Ray during the negotiation and sale.

The parties executed a Real Estate Purchase Agreement, prepared by

Mars, on July 13, 2007. The agreement provided, in relevant part:

A. Seller is the owner of the following legally described property situated in: approx. 1/2 acres in the N/E corner of the North 1/2 of the S/E 1/4 of Section 11 in HOLLAND Twp., DT-95-N, R-44-W, Sioux County, Ia. Subject only to easements, restrictions and covenants of record (collectively referred to as the “Property”); B. Buyer desires to purchase from Seller and Seller desires to sell to Buyer the Property; C. Buyer and Seller desire to enter into a manure spreading easement over the agreed upon easement (separate agreement between Seller and Buyer); and D. Buyer and Seller desire to set forth the obligations, restrictions, limitations, and conditions upon which the Property will be conveyed by Seller to Buyer. 3

.... 1. Sale of Property. Seller agrees to sell and convey to Buyer, and Buyer agrees to purchase from Seller, for the Purchase Price set forth below and on the terms and conditions set forth in this Agreement, the Property. For purposes of this Agreement, Property shall be deemed to mean, on a collective basis: (a) the parcel of land described above (the “Land”), together with all rights, easements and interests appurtenant thereto; (b) all improvements located on the Land, if any. 2. Purchase Price. Seller, in consideration of the mutual covenants and agreements contained herein, agrees to sell to Buyer and Buyer, in consideration of the mutual covenants and agreements contained herein, agrees to purchase the Property from Seller and provide the necessary manure easement for the sum of 6000 per acre excluding any right-of-way as confirmed by the survey (the “Purchase Price”). The Purchase Price shall be paid by Buyer to Seller, in good and immediately available funds by wire transfer or cashier’s check, at the time of Closing. .... 22. Entire Agreement. This Agreement contains the entire agreement between the parties regarding the Property and supersedes all prior agreements, whether written or oral, between the parties regarding the same subject. This Agreement may only be modified by subsequent written agreement signed by the party to be charged.

The real estate closing occurred in August 2007. MDM paid $15,000

($6000 per acre) and received a warranty deed for the 2.5 acre parcel; the deed

was recorded that same month. MDM then constructed a hog confinement

facility, which was completed in early 2008. Ray rented the remainder of the

eighty acres, adjoining the hog confinement, to his son Paul. After Ray’s death,

this property was conveyed to Ray’s children and ultimately placed in the Phillip

L. Lubbers living trust.

From 2008 through 2011, pursuant to an oral agreement between Paul

and MDM, Paul received the manure produced by the hog confinement at no

cost. 4

In 2012, the members of MDM decided to dissolve the corporation and sell

its assets including the land and hog confinement facility. MDM first offered the

property to Paul, who declined. MDM then sold the property to Randy Winterfeld.

The real estate contract between MDM and Winterfeld contained an addendum

stating: “Buyer [Winterfeld] understands for the remainder of 2012 Paul Lubbers

is entitled to the manure in the hog facility located on the property and buyer

agrees to provide Paul Lubbers reasonable access to retrieve the manure.”

Winterfeld allowed Paul to remove the manure in 2012 without payment. In

2013, Winterfeld no longer allowed Paul to pump manure from the facility without

payment.

The Trust filed the present suit in November 2013 claiming MDM

breached the Real Estate Purchase Agreement, MDM breached its oral contract

to provide an easement for manure access, and MDM made a fraudulent

representation. MDM filed a motion for summary judgment asking the district

court to dismiss the Trust’s petition. The district court entered an order granting

summary judgment on the written real estate agreement and fraudulent

misrepresentation claims. On March 19, 2015, the court overruled MDM’s

motion on the oral contract claim. The court reasoned:

Here, Plaintiff has alleged facts that would be sufficient to allow a factfinder to find that the parties partly performed an easement to which they had orally agreed. It is undisputed that MDM supplied manure to Plaintiff between 2008 and 2012. . . . From this, a factfinder could conclude that Defendant had granted Plaintiff an easement to obtain manure from the hog confinement on Defendants’ property (i.e., Plaintiff would have the dominant estate and Defendants would have the servient estate). The factfinder could also conclude that “the vendee [i.e., Plaintiff], with the actual or implied consent of the vendor [i.e., Defendants], has 5

taken and held possession of the premises under and by virtue of the contract . . . .” Iowa Code § 622.33.5 [(2013)]. Plaintiff’s easement thus falls within the part performance exception to the statute of frauds; section 622.32 will not bar evidence of such an oral agreement. Additionally, a factfinder could conclude that such an easement was to last for the life of the hog confinement facility. Plaintiff sold roughly 2.5 acres of Sioux County farm land to the Defendants for the price of $6,000 an acre. A factfinder could conclude that this is a low price for Sioux County farm land, implying that Defendants would be giving Plaintiffs some additional consideration for the deal, in the form of a manure easement.

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Phillip L. Lubbers, Trustee of the Phillip L. Lubbers Living Trust v. Mdm Pork, Inc., an Iowa Corporation, Galen Mars, Lyle Mars, and Rodney Deboer, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/phillip-l-lubbers-trustee-of-the-phillip-l-lubbers-living-trust-v-mdm-iowactapp-2016.