Schley v. Peoples Bank (In re Schley)

565 B.R. 655
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Iowa
DecidedJanuary 13, 2017
DocketBankruptcy No. 10-03252; Adversary No. 10-09255
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 565 B.R. 655 (Schley v. Peoples Bank (In re Schley)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schley v. Peoples Bank (In re Schley), 565 B.R. 655 (Iowa 2017).

Opinion

RULING ON CROSS-MOTIONS FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT

THAD J. COLLINS, CHIEF BANKRUPTCY JUDGE

These cross-motions for summary judgment came before the Court for a telephonic hearing. Nicole Hughes appeared for Peoples Bank (“the Bank”). Matthew Berger appeared for Watonwan Farm Service (‘Watonwan”). The Court heard arguments and gave the parties 14 days to file a statement of stipulated facts. The parties did so. This is a core proceeding under 28 U.S.C. § 167(b)(2)(E).

STATEMENT OF THE CASE

The Bank holds a perfected security interest in Debtors’ livestock proceeds. Wa-tonwan holds a superpriority agricultural supply dealer lien in the same proceeds. The proceeds at issue resulted from the Debtor’s sale of about half of the pigs for which Watonwan supplied feed. The proceeds are insufficient to satisfy both creditors’ liens. The parties dispute who is entitled to the proceeds. Watonwan argues that it has a superpriority lien for the price of all the feed it supplied. The Bank argues that Watonwan’s superpriority lien is limited to the cost of the feed that was consumed by the pigs that were sold and generated the proceeds at issue. After reviewing Iowa’s agricultural supply dealer lien statute, the Court agrees with Waton-wan: the lien is for the full amount of the feed supplied and attached in full to the animals that consumed the feed.

BACKGROUND AND STATEMENT OF FACTS

The facts are not in dispute. The parties filed two joint statements of uncontested facts. Those documents are the basis for this statement of facts.

Gary and Julie Schley (“Debtors”) ran a feeder-to-finish pig farming operation. This operation had two sites: Lone Rock, which could hold about 3,000 pigs, and Titonka, which could hold about 2,400 pigs. All of the relevant facts in this case took place at the Lone Rock site.

The Bank has a perfected security interest in Debtor’s livestock and proceeds. Debtors executed four notes to the Bank between July 2008 and March 2009 total-ling $1,360,000. The Bank has a security interest in Debtors’ livestock and proceeds securing this claim. The Bank perfected these security interests by filing a financing statement with the Iowa Secretary of State. These financial arrangements started in October 2008 and were completed in March 2009.

In late 2009, Debtors bought 3,061 pigs and housed them all at Lone Rock. These pigs consumed feed that Watonwan supplied and remained at Lone Rock until the [658]*658last pig was sold. From February 9 to March 11, 2010, Watonwan supplied Debtors with $43,314.54 in feed. On March 11, 2010, Watonwan filed a financing statement that properly established its agricultural supply dealer lien. In May 2010, Debtors sold 1,571 of the 3,061 pigs; The amount of proceeds from that sale is not relevant here, but the number of pigs sold is.

In June 2010, Debtors sold the remaining 1,490 pigs for $209,412.94. Both the Bank and Watonwan claim a perfected security interest in these proceeds.

Debtors filed this adversary on December 17, 2010 to determine lien priority between the Bank and Watonwan in the proceeds from the June 2010 sale. The Bank and Watonwan both moved for summary judgment. The parties agreed on the disposition of all but $22,094.06 of those sale proceeds. In particular, they agreed that Watonwan had superpriority (because of its perfected agricultural supply dealer lien) in at least $21,224.14. Accordingly, all but $22,094.06 of the funds have been paid out — including $21,224.14 to Watonwan. They dispute which of them has priority on the remaining $22,094.06.

Watonwan argues that its superpriority agricultural supply dealer lien is for the full amount of its claim for feed sold to Debtor between February 9, 2010 and March 11, 2010. The Bank argues, because the proceeds at issue came from 49% of the pigs that consumed the feed, that Wa-tonwan’s lien is limited to 49% of the proceeds — the $21,224.14 that has already been paid out. The Bank concludes that it is entitled to the remaining $22,094.06. The parties stipulate that each pig consumed an equal amount of feed. The Bank holds the disputed $22,094.06 in escrow pending resolution of this dispute.

DISCUSSION

The Bank and Watonwan both moved for summary judgment. Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 56 applies in adversary proceedings. Fed. R. Bankr. P. 7056. Under Rule 56, “[t]he court shall grant summary judgment if the movant shows that there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Fed. R. Civ. P, 56(a). Here, the parties agree on the facts. They simply disagree about how the law applies to those facts. Summary judgment is appropriate.

The parties agree that the Bank has a perfected security interest in the proceeds and that Watonwan has a superpriority agricultural supply dealer lien that was ahead of the Bank on at least $21,224.14 of the proceeds. The parties disagree, however, about the total amount of Watonwan’s superpriority lien. The Bank believes it was limited to $21,224.14 and is now satisfied. Watonwan believes it extended to the full $43,314.54 in feed that it supplied from February 9 to March 11,2010 and that it is entitled to the remaining $22,094.06.

This disagreement centers on how to interpret and apply Iowa Code section 570A.3, which is the statutory basis for Watonwan’s lien:

An agricultural supply dealer who provides an agricultural supply to a farmer shall have an agricultural lien as provided in section 554.9102. The agricultural supply dealer is a secured party and the farmer is a debtor for purposes of chapter 554, article 9. The amount of the lien shall be the amount owed to the agricultural supply dealer for the retail cost of the agricultural supply, including labor provided. The lien applies to all of the following:
1. Crops ...
2. Livestock consuming the feed. However, the lien does not apply to that [659]*659portion of the livestock of a farmer who has paid all amounts due from the farmer for the retail cost, including labor, of the feed.

Iowa Code § 570A.3. The parties agree that Debtors are “farmers”; that Waton-wan is an “agricultural supply dealer”; and that the feed that Watonwan supplied is an “agricultural supply;” all as defined in Iowa Code section 570A.1. The parties really only disagree about how to interpret the phrase “[[livestock consuming the feed.”

The Bank argues that the phrase “[[livestock consuming the feed” limits Waton-wan’s lien to the cost of the feed that was consumed by the pigs that generated the proceeds at issue. In other words, the Bank argues that Watonwan has a lien pro rata on each animal for the amount of feed that that animal consumed. The Bank emphasizes that Watonwan’s $43,314.54 claim is for feed that all 3,061 pigs consumed from February 9 to March 11, 2010, but that only 1,490 of those pigs generated the proceeds at issue.

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Bluebook (online)
565 B.R. 655, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schley-v-peoples-bank-in-re-schley-ianb-2017.