Schmaltz v. Nissen

431 N.W.2d 657, 7 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. 2d (West) 1061, 1988 S.D. LEXIS 160, 1988 WL 119192
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 9, 1988
Docket15841 to 15845
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 431 N.W.2d 657 (Schmaltz v. Nissen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schmaltz v. Nissen, 431 N.W.2d 657, 7 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. 2d (West) 1061, 1988 S.D. LEXIS 160, 1988 WL 119192 (S.D. 1988).

Opinions

TUCKER, Circuit Judge.

ACTION

This is an appeal from two separate actions which were consolidated for trial to the court. The trial court entered judgment in favor of Frank Nible (Nible) and against Farmers Feed & Seed (Farmers Feed) and Crown Quality Seed Company, Inc., (Crown) in the amount of $46,540 for breach of express and implied warranties involving the sale of seed. The trial court entered judgment in favor of Gary Schmaltz (Schmaltz) and against Abner T. Nissen (Nissen) and Crown in the amount of $43,820 for breach of express and implied warranties involving the sale of seed. Crown, Farmers Feed and Nissen (collectively, sellers) appeal from these judgments.1 We affirm, in part, and reverse, in part.

FACTS

Crown is engaged in the commercial processing and marketing of Big Red # 1 sorghum seed (Big Red # 1). In early 1981, Crown sold a quantity of Big Red # 1 to Farmers Feed, who in turn sold some of' the bags to Nissen.

The “terms and conditions of sale and warranty” label on all the bags provided:

Crown Quality Seed Company has processed, stored, cured, packaged, sampled and tested these seeds in accordance with approved procedures and warrants that samples of these seed were tested on the dates shown on the label and that the description on the label conforms to these samples. Crown Quality Seed Co., Inc., makes no other express warranty [659]*659and THERE ARE NO IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS in connection with the sale of these seed. The liability of Crown Seed Co., Inc., to the buyer and user is expressly limited to the cost of purchasing these seed. In no case shall Crown Quality Seed Co., Inc., be liable for consequential, incidental or special damages, such as but not limited to, loss of crops or increased costs of cultivation and production.

These terms also appear at the bottom of Crown’s invoice to Farmers Feed. An information label on the bag stated: “This quality seed is protected by Heptachlor insecticide treatment to help ensure stronger stands, superior quality and increased yields.”

On May 21, 1981, Schmaltz purchased 80 fifty pound bags of Big Red # 1, lot 138, from Nissen. Schmaltz planted the Big Red # 1 seed along with two bags of Sweetchow sorghum seed left over from a previous year. Both brands of seed were planted in the same field, in the same manner, and with the same soil conditions, temperature and moisture. Schmaltz planted the seed in an acceptable and proper manner. Schmaltz later purchased an additional 41 bags of Big Red # 1 from Nissen. In all, Schmaltz planted 464 acres with the Big Red # 1 seed and Sweetchow sorghum sudan grass seed that he had left over from the year before.

At some time in June 1981, Schmaltz contacted Nissen complaining that when compared to the Sweetchow seed, the Big Red # 1 seed was failing to emerge. In mid-June, Schmaltz again went to Nissen and complained about the emergence of the Big Red # 1 seed. Nissen suggested that the soil temperature was too low at the time of planting. Schmaltz then purchased an additional 80 bags of Big Red # 1 on June 17, 1981. He returned on June 25, 1981, and purchased another 50 bags. All of the seed was replanted and again failed to emerge.

Nible purchased 200 bags of Big Red # 1, lot 152, from Farmers Feed on May 20, 1981. Nible explained to Farmers Feed his need for a hybrid sorghum sudan grass seed suitable for growing livestock forage feed. Farmers Feed recommended that Ni-ble purchase Big Red # 1.

Nible planted 538 acres of Big Red # 1 seed on his farmland in Harding County. There was adequate sub-surface moisture and the soil temperature was appropriate. In early June 1981, Nible noticed that the sorghum he planted was failing to properly emerge. During the same planting period, Nible planted 40 acres for a neighbor using Sugargraze sorghum seed left over from the previous year. The 40 acres of Sugar-graze was in similar soil and terrain to Nible’s 538 acres, and was within two miles of Nible’s planting. While the Sugargraze crop emerged into a healthy stand, little of the Big Red # 1. emerged from the ground. Nible had planted both the Big Red # 1 and the Sugargraze at the same time, with the same drill, using the same depth and pounds per acre of seed. The moisture, ground temperature and rain received was the same for the Sugargraze and the Big Red # 1.

Between June 10, 1981, and June 11, 1981, Nible checked with other sorghum growers in the area and found that they were also having problems with Big Red # 1 emerging into a healthy stand. Nible then advised Farmers Feed of the problem with Big Red # 1. On June 23, 1981, Nible replanted his Big Red # 1 fields with Sweetchow. The Sweetchow emerged and developed into a good stand, but later dried out because the replant used up the subsurface moisture when the ground was necessarily reworked for the second planting.

At Nible’s request, the Harding County Extension Agent viewed Nible’s fields and found a poor emergence of Big Red # 1. The agent then started a test strip on Ni-ble’s land. The agent supervised the planting of various varieties of sorghum sudan grass which included Big Red # 1 from the lots purchased by Nible and Schmaltz. All varieties were planted in the same manner: side by side in individual rows. In all, six different varieties were tested. The test strip produced the following average results:

[660]*660VARIETY AVERAGE PLANTS PER 12 FOOT STRIP

1. Joe Fagg Seedman Sweetchop 36.25

2. Toffee Seed Company Sugargraze 23.75

3. Crown Quality Big Red # 1, Lot 138 16.26

4. Hamsmeier & Sons Big Red, Lot 79813 13.75

5. Hamsmeier & Sons Big Red, Lot 80816 12

6. Crown Quality Seed Big Red # 1, Lot 152 10

Although not a scientific experiment, the results reveal that Big Red # 1 failed to properly emerge when compared to other brands.

The National Weather Service keeps records at the Redig Reporting Station in Harding County. The Redig Reporting station is approximately two to five miles from Nible’s fields. Its records show that the moisture conditions for the planting and growth season in 1981 were average or above the historical averages. Other farmers in the immediate area who planted Big Red # 1 sorghum sudan seed under similar weather conditions and soil conditions testified about its failure to emerge and yield a harvestable crop. Farmers -50 to 60 miles south, however, were satisfied with their 1981 sorghum.

The trial court found that the Big Red # 1 sorghum seed purchased by Nible and Schmaltz was an inferior quality seed. The trial court held the warranty disclaimer and the limitation of damages unconscionable and awarded damages to Nible and Schmaltz on the theories of breach of express warranty, breach of implied warranty of fitness for a particular purpose and breach of an implied warranty of merchantability.

ISSUE ONE

Does the Federal Seed Act and/or the South Dakota Seed Act preempt a warranty claim under the Uniform Commercial Code?

Nissen asserts that this case is controlled by the Federal Seed Act (7 U.S.C. § 1551 et seq.

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Bluebook (online)
431 N.W.2d 657, 7 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. 2d (West) 1061, 1988 S.D. LEXIS 160, 1988 WL 119192, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schmaltz-v-nissen-sd-1988.