Quality Plus Feeds, Inc. v. Compeer Financial, FLCA

CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJanuary 13, 2023
Docket21-0774
StatusPublished

This text of Quality Plus Feeds, Inc. v. Compeer Financial, FLCA (Quality Plus Feeds, Inc. v. Compeer Financial, FLCA) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court 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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Quality Plus Feeds, Inc. v. Compeer Financial, FLCA, (iowa 2023).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF IOWA

No. 21–0774

Submitted November 17, 2022—Filed January 13, 2023

QUALITY PLUS FEEDS, INC.,

Appellee,

vs.

COMPEER FINANCIAL, FLCA,

Appellant.

On review from the Iowa Court of Appeals.

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Monroe County, Daniel P. Wilson,

Senior Judge.

An agricultural supply dealer seeks further review of a court of appeals

decision affirming in part and reversing in part a district court’s grant of

summary judgment in a lien priority dispute. DECISION OF COURT OF

APPEALS VACATED; DISTRICT COURT JUDGMENT AFFIRMED IN PART,

REVERSED IN PART, AND REMANDED.

Mansfield, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which all participating

justices joined. May, J., took no part in the consideration or decision of the case.

Dustan J. Cross (argued) and Rick J. Halbur of Gislason & Hunter LLP,

New Ulm, Minnesota, for appellant. 2

Thomas D. Story (argued), Alexander M. Johnson, and Jennifer E.

Lindberg of Brown, Winick, Graves, Gross, and Baskerville, P.L.C., Des Moines,

for appellee. 3

MANSFIELD, Justice.

I. Introduction.

Since the farm crisis of the 1980s, Iowa law has allowed agricultural

suppliers to claim a lien on livestock consuming their products and has granted

this lien priority over previously perfected liens in some circumstances. See Iowa

Code § 570A.5(3) (2020). Here, a supplier furnished feed to two dairy farms that

were related but separate legal entities; the supplier did not receive payment for

the feed. About a year later, the farms closed down, and all the remaining cows

and milk were sold. Relying on the agricultural supplier’s lien statute, the

supplier brought a foreclosure action to recover the amount of its unpaid bills

from the sale proceeds. The district court granted the supplier’s summary

judgment motion, rejecting the arguments of a financial institution which had a

much larger unpaid loan balance and a previously perfected blanket lien as to

both farms. The court of appeals reversed that grant of summary judgment and

remanded.

On further review, we affirm the district court for the most part. We find

that the supplier was entitled to summary judgment enforcing its lien on the

proceeds from one of the two farms. As to the other farm, there is one issue of

fact. Under the statute, the supplier is entitled to enforce a superpriority lien

only to “the extent of the difference between the acquisition price of the livestock

and the fair market value of the livestock at the time the lien attaches or the sale

price of the livestock, whichever is greater.” Id. On this summary judgment

record, we cannot say whether the cattle sale and milk sale proceeds from the 4

livestock that consumed the supplier’s feed, minus the acquisition price of those

livestock, exceeded the amount of the supplier’s unpaid bill from that farm. We

do not read Iowa Code chapter 570A as incorporating a special standard of proof

one way or another. To foreclose its lien as a superpriority, the supplier need

only offer proof enabling a fact finder to conclude that the underlying statutory

requirements have been met. The proof here does not allow that determination

to be made as a matter of law as to one of the farms.

We further agree with the district court that the supplier was entitled to

summary judgment on the financial institution’s affirmative defenses, and we

hold that the financial institution is entitled to summary judgment as to the milk

sale proceeds generated by a third dairy farm. Accordingly, we affirm the district

court in part, reverse it in part, and remand for further proceedings consistent

with this opinion.

II. Background Facts and Proceedings.

Our case is a priority dispute between two creditors, Compeer Financial,

FLCA (Compeer), and Quality Plus Feeds, Inc. (Quality Plus). The debtors are

Etcher Family Farms, LLC (EFF), Etcher Farms, Inc. (EFI), and Elmwood

Farms, LLC. We refer to them collectively as the “Etcher Entities” or “Etcher.”

The Etcher Entities operated dairy farms in Henry County (EFF), Monroe County

(EFI), and the State of Illinois (Elmwood) until early 2019.

A. Compeer’s and Quality Plus’s Dealings With the Etcher Entities.

Compeer is a federal land credit association in the business of financing

agricultural operations. From late 2014 through early 2019, Compeer extended 5

credit to the Etcher Entities. The loans from Compeer were secured by both real

property and personal property, including a blanket security interest in all of the

Etcher Entities’ livestock and milk and proceeds therefrom. Compeer perfected

its personal property security interests between December 11, 2014, and

March 4, 2016, by filing UCC financing statements with the Iowa Secretary of

State.

By late 2016, the Etcher Entities were struggling financially. The situation

deteriorated to the point that in October 2017, Compeer accelerated the entire

Etcher Entities’ debt. By then, the total sum owed exceeded $16 million. To

continue to operate, Etcher purchased feed on credit. Quality Plus sold feed on

credit to EFF and EFI, including mixes designated “calf starter,” “big heifer,” and

“dry cow.” Quality Plus filed financing statements with the Iowa Secretary of

State commencing on October 5, 2017, and continuing thereafter. Iowa Code

§ 570A.4. The financing statements identified the collateral in relevant part as

“all cows now owned by debtor,” “all milk produced from said cows,” and

“proceeds and/or product thereof.” Quality Plus provided feed to EFF for which

it wasn’t paid from September 25, 2017, through March 29, 2018, and it

provided feed to EFI for which it wasn’t paid from July 28, 2017, to March 30,

2018.

On March 19, 2018, each of the Etcher Entities filed for Chapter 11

bankruptcy protection in the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Southern

District of Iowa. The cases were consolidated. Etcher was unsuccessful in 6

reorganizing its debts, and Compeer filed a motion to dismiss the consolidated

bankruptcy case. The bankruptcy was dismissed on or about January 10, 2019.

Meanwhile, Etcher continued to sell milk to their sole customer, Dairy

Farmers of America (DFA). DFA issued checks totaling $317,308.51 from April

to May 2019 for milk produced by cows at EFF, EFI, and Elmwood. The checks

were joint checks naming Compeer and Quality Plus as additional payees.

Compeer and Quality Plus were already disputing their relative priorities as to

the milk proceeds. Currently, the $317,308.51 in proceeds are being held in trust

pending resolution of this case. Of these proceeds, $149,683.32 came from the

sale of EFF milk, $54,071.88 came from the sale of EFI milk, and $113,553.31

came from the sale of Elmwood milk.

Ultimately, Etcher was forced to close, and all of their remaining cattle

were sold. EFF’s 1,223 remaining cattle sold for a total of $714,764.55; EFI’s

1,055 remaining cattle sold for a total of $313,139.54. Although EFI was a

breeding facility with calves, heifers, and bulls, at least $83,185.80 of the EFI

dispersal sale proceeds came from sales of cows.

B. The Etcher Cattle Herds Over Time. Quality Plus submitted an

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