WILKEY, Circuit Judge:
The United States brought suit under the jurisdictional grant of 28 U.S.C. § 1345 alleging conversion of 578 bales of cotton in which it held a security interest. Named as defendants were Walter A. Hext, Sr. (Hext), the grower of the cotton, the W. A. Hext & Sons Gin Co., Inc. (the Gin Co.), a corporation wholly owned by Hext which ginned and marketed the cotton, Harlingen Compress Co. (Harlingen), a warehouse company which stored the cotton, and Marshall & Marshall (Marshall), a cotton brokerage firm through whom the cotton was marketed. A default judgment was entered against Hext and the Gin Co., both of whom were insolvent. After trial to the court, the District Judge, based on stipulated facts,
depositions, and oral testimony, found Harlingen and Marshall liable to the United States and entered judgment against them in the amount of $15,650.-13, plus interest, from which Harlingen and Marshall appeal. For reasons hereinafter stated we reverse the judgment of the trial court.
I.
The Facts
The
Farmers Home Administration (FHA) is an agency of the United States Department of Agriculture which, among other things, engages in the financing of farming operations as authorized by the Bankhead-Jones Farm Tenant Act.
In 1961-62 the FHA loaned Walter A. Hext, a cotton farmer, a total of $38,720.00 to finance his farming operations for 1962. In order to provide security for the loan, Hext granted a chattel mortgage on his forthcoming cotton crop to the FHA. The mortgage was duly recorded.
Hext, as the FHA knew when it made the loan, in addition to being a cotton farmer, was also in the cotton ginning business as the sole owner of the W. A. Hext and Sons Gin Co., Inc. The FHA was aware when it financed Hext’s cotton crop that, after harvesting, the cotton would be ginned and marketed by Hext through his own ginning company. The Gin Co., in addition to processing the cotton grown by Hext, also ginned and marketed cotton produced by a number of other farmers in the area.
After ginning, the Gin Co. transported the cotton to the Harlingen Compress Co., where the cotton was compressed and stored. Harlingen issued negotiable warehouse receipts covering each bale of cotton received. These negotiable receipts were retained by the Gin Co.
In order to market the cotton the Gin Co. contracted with Marshall & Marshall, known in the cotton trade as a “spot broker” or “selling agent.” At the Gin Co.’s direction Harlingen sent Marshall samples cut from each bale of cotton warehoused. Marshall displayed these samples, received offers to purchase from buyers who inspected the samples, and transmitted the offers to the Gin Co. The Gin Co. then told Marshall that the offers were either accepted or rejected, and Marshall communicated this information to the buyers. If an offer were accepted, Marshall prepared an invoice and draft and sent them to the Gin Co. The Gin Co. then forwarded the invoice, draft, and the warehouse receipts covering the cotton sold through banking channels to the buyer. When the draft was honored by the buyer the purchase price was credited to the Gin Co.’s account at its bank. In due course the buyers presented Harlingen with the warehouse receipts and shipping instructions, with which Harlingen complied. Neither Harlingen nor Marshall had any actual knowledge of the FHA’s security interest.
As the Gin Co. received payment for the cotton from the buyers, it in turn paid the various farmers who had produced it
. In the case of the 578 bales of cotton grown by Hext himself, however, the money received for the cotton remained in the Gin Co. account. At the end of the season Hext was unable to make full payment on the loan, defaulting in the amount of $18,139.07.
With both Hext and the Gin Co. insolvent, the Government brought suit against Marshall, alleging that its actions as “selling agent” amounted to an exercise of dominion over the cotton in a manner inconsistent with the Government’s security interest, thus constituting a conversion of the cotton. Marshall in turn filed a complaint naming Harlingen as a third-party defendant, and claiming a right of indemnity on any liability imposed. The ground for the cross-claim was that Harlingen had allegedly violated a 1913 Texas statute (Article 5571, Texas Revised Civil Statutes 1925) when it issued negotiable warehouse receipts covering the cotton without noting the existence of a lien thereon. The United States then amended its complaint to name Harlingen as a defendant, asserting liability both on the basis that Harlingen’s actions amounted to a conversion of the cotton and on the claimed violation of Art. 5571. The trial court, without expressly deciding whether federal or Texas law applied to the transaction,
rendered judgment for the United States against Harlingen and Marshall jointly on the conversion claim, and for Marshall against Harlingen on the cross-claim.
On this appeal both Marshall and Harlingen urge that the trial court erred in holding that the Government had not consented to the sale of the cotton, that the facts and circumstances demonstrated such consent, thus barring conversion liability.
Marshall also claims that the acts performed by it as “selling agent” did not amount to the exercise of sufficient dominion over the cotton to constitute a basis for conversion liability. Harlingen additionally asserts that application of Art. 5571 as a basis for its liability over to Marshall was erroneous and that that statute had been repealed by implication by the subsequent enactment of the Texas Uniform Warehouse Receipts Act. Because of the approach we take in the analysis set forth below, we find it unnecessary to pass on these issues.
II.
Choice of Law
Six Circuit Courts of Appeals have decided the issue of whether federal or state law controls in suits brought by the United States to enforce its rights under FHA farm mortgages. The Third, Sixth, Ninth, and Tenth Circuits have held that the rights and liabilities of the parties to such suits must be determined with reference to federal law.
The re
maining two courts, the Eighth and the Fourth Circuits, have held that state law controls.
In United States v. Me-Cleskey Mills,
this court declined to decide the issue because it was presented in the context of a case where both state and federal law dictated the same result.
The merits of the choice of law question have been fully ventilated in the six Courts of Appeals decisions noted
swpra.
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WILKEY, Circuit Judge:
The United States brought suit under the jurisdictional grant of 28 U.S.C. § 1345 alleging conversion of 578 bales of cotton in which it held a security interest. Named as defendants were Walter A. Hext, Sr. (Hext), the grower of the cotton, the W. A. Hext & Sons Gin Co., Inc. (the Gin Co.), a corporation wholly owned by Hext which ginned and marketed the cotton, Harlingen Compress Co. (Harlingen), a warehouse company which stored the cotton, and Marshall & Marshall (Marshall), a cotton brokerage firm through whom the cotton was marketed. A default judgment was entered against Hext and the Gin Co., both of whom were insolvent. After trial to the court, the District Judge, based on stipulated facts,
depositions, and oral testimony, found Harlingen and Marshall liable to the United States and entered judgment against them in the amount of $15,650.-13, plus interest, from which Harlingen and Marshall appeal. For reasons hereinafter stated we reverse the judgment of the trial court.
I.
The Facts
The
Farmers Home Administration (FHA) is an agency of the United States Department of Agriculture which, among other things, engages in the financing of farming operations as authorized by the Bankhead-Jones Farm Tenant Act.
In 1961-62 the FHA loaned Walter A. Hext, a cotton farmer, a total of $38,720.00 to finance his farming operations for 1962. In order to provide security for the loan, Hext granted a chattel mortgage on his forthcoming cotton crop to the FHA. The mortgage was duly recorded.
Hext, as the FHA knew when it made the loan, in addition to being a cotton farmer, was also in the cotton ginning business as the sole owner of the W. A. Hext and Sons Gin Co., Inc. The FHA was aware when it financed Hext’s cotton crop that, after harvesting, the cotton would be ginned and marketed by Hext through his own ginning company. The Gin Co., in addition to processing the cotton grown by Hext, also ginned and marketed cotton produced by a number of other farmers in the area.
After ginning, the Gin Co. transported the cotton to the Harlingen Compress Co., where the cotton was compressed and stored. Harlingen issued negotiable warehouse receipts covering each bale of cotton received. These negotiable receipts were retained by the Gin Co.
In order to market the cotton the Gin Co. contracted with Marshall & Marshall, known in the cotton trade as a “spot broker” or “selling agent.” At the Gin Co.’s direction Harlingen sent Marshall samples cut from each bale of cotton warehoused. Marshall displayed these samples, received offers to purchase from buyers who inspected the samples, and transmitted the offers to the Gin Co. The Gin Co. then told Marshall that the offers were either accepted or rejected, and Marshall communicated this information to the buyers. If an offer were accepted, Marshall prepared an invoice and draft and sent them to the Gin Co. The Gin Co. then forwarded the invoice, draft, and the warehouse receipts covering the cotton sold through banking channels to the buyer. When the draft was honored by the buyer the purchase price was credited to the Gin Co.’s account at its bank. In due course the buyers presented Harlingen with the warehouse receipts and shipping instructions, with which Harlingen complied. Neither Harlingen nor Marshall had any actual knowledge of the FHA’s security interest.
As the Gin Co. received payment for the cotton from the buyers, it in turn paid the various farmers who had produced it
. In the case of the 578 bales of cotton grown by Hext himself, however, the money received for the cotton remained in the Gin Co. account. At the end of the season Hext was unable to make full payment on the loan, defaulting in the amount of $18,139.07.
With both Hext and the Gin Co. insolvent, the Government brought suit against Marshall, alleging that its actions as “selling agent” amounted to an exercise of dominion over the cotton in a manner inconsistent with the Government’s security interest, thus constituting a conversion of the cotton. Marshall in turn filed a complaint naming Harlingen as a third-party defendant, and claiming a right of indemnity on any liability imposed. The ground for the cross-claim was that Harlingen had allegedly violated a 1913 Texas statute (Article 5571, Texas Revised Civil Statutes 1925) when it issued negotiable warehouse receipts covering the cotton without noting the existence of a lien thereon. The United States then amended its complaint to name Harlingen as a defendant, asserting liability both on the basis that Harlingen’s actions amounted to a conversion of the cotton and on the claimed violation of Art. 5571. The trial court, without expressly deciding whether federal or Texas law applied to the transaction,
rendered judgment for the United States against Harlingen and Marshall jointly on the conversion claim, and for Marshall against Harlingen on the cross-claim.
On this appeal both Marshall and Harlingen urge that the trial court erred in holding that the Government had not consented to the sale of the cotton, that the facts and circumstances demonstrated such consent, thus barring conversion liability.
Marshall also claims that the acts performed by it as “selling agent” did not amount to the exercise of sufficient dominion over the cotton to constitute a basis for conversion liability. Harlingen additionally asserts that application of Art. 5571 as a basis for its liability over to Marshall was erroneous and that that statute had been repealed by implication by the subsequent enactment of the Texas Uniform Warehouse Receipts Act. Because of the approach we take in the analysis set forth below, we find it unnecessary to pass on these issues.
II.
Choice of Law
Six Circuit Courts of Appeals have decided the issue of whether federal or state law controls in suits brought by the United States to enforce its rights under FHA farm mortgages. The Third, Sixth, Ninth, and Tenth Circuits have held that the rights and liabilities of the parties to such suits must be determined with reference to federal law.
The re
maining two courts, the Eighth and the Fourth Circuits, have held that state law controls.
In United States v. Me-Cleskey Mills,
this court declined to decide the issue because it was presented in the context of a case where both state and federal law dictated the same result.
The merits of the choice of law question have been fully ventilated in the six Courts of Appeals decisions noted
swpra.
It suffices to state here that the principal reason supporting the application of federal law is the need for a uniform rule of decision to govern the rights of the United States in the administration of a large-scale program, of nation-wide scope such as the FHA farm loan program, rather than subjecting “federal rights and duties to the exceptional uncertainty and heterogeneity” which might result “if disparate laws of individual states were applied to substantially identical loan transactions.”
*
While maintaining that appellants here, as in
McCleskey Mills, supra,
are liable under both state and federal law, the Government strongly urges us now to decide whether state or federal law provides the proper rule of decision. In the first place, the Government represents that, because the choice of law question has not been settled in this Circuit, litigation of claims of improper disposition of property covered by FHA security agreements, typically involving relatively small amounts, has persisted, with the Government asserting liability under a uniform federal rule, and the defendants resisting on the basis of a claimed exoneration under state law. Whereas in those circuits where the choice of law issue has been resolved, we are told that lower court litigation has virtually ceased. Secondly, it is urged that while the law of some states of this Circuit coincides with the federal rule, in others the state law is contrary to the federal rule.
After careful consideration, we have determined that a uniform federal interpretation is required. This case itself provides an illustration of the vagaries to which the FHA loan program might be subjected if state law were to control. The District Court found that the FHA’s perfected security interest, recorded at the Cameron County courthouse, was a sufficient basis for the imposition of conversion liability on both Marshall and Harlingen, even though both of these parties were without actual knowledge of the Government’s lien. The trial court further held that Harlingen’s failure to note the existence of the Government’s lien on the warehouse receipts issued by it, as the court held was then required by Article 5571 of the Texas Revised Civil Statutes,
rendered Harlingen liable for the Government’s loss.
Apparently in response to this decision, the Texas Legislature in 1969 amended Article 5571 to provide as follows:
Cotton under lien.
No person, firm or corporation which subsequently buys, sells, or deals in any way with negotiable warehouse receipts issued by any public warehousemen to evidence cotton stored in a public warehouse or which subsequently buys, sells, or deals in any way with such cotton, shall be liable for conversion of said cotton because of the existence of any lien or encumbrance on said cotton in the absence of actual knowledge of such lien or encumbrance at the time of the claimed conversion.
This new statute is essentially contrary both to the general common law of conversion and to the principles governing security interests and documents of title under the Uniform Commercial Code. It is evident that the rights of the United States arising from the operation of the FHA loan program cannot realistically be subjected to the possibility that the governing law may be changed whenever the United States is successful in litigation in order to prevent such success in subsequent similar cases.
We therefore hold that the rights and liabilities of the parties to suits arising from FHA loan transactions must, under the rationale of the
Clearfield Trust
doctrine,
be determined with reference to federal law, to be fashioned by the federal courts according to general principles of commercial law.
III.
Determining the Applicable Federal Rule
Having decided that federal law must apply to the litigation at bar, we nevertheless see no reason nor necessity for fashioning a specialized, esoteric body of federal law, confined in terms to suits by the United States seeking to impose conversion liability on persons who deal with property mortgaged under the FHA loan program. An FHA loan is nothing more nor less than a secured transaction, with the United States as the secured party holding a security interest in property of the debtor in order to insure repayment of the loan. Although
Clearfield Trust
indicated that the federal Law Merchant, “developed for about a century under the regime of Swift v. Tyson” was “a convenient source of reference for fashioning federal rules applicable to these federal questions,”
it is evident that the prin
cipal fount of general commercial law governing secured transactions is now Article 9 of the Uniform Commercial Code.
We perceive no reason why the rights of the United States arising out of secured transactions pursuant to the FHA loan program should be any different than those of other financers of farming operations under the Uniform Commercial Code. We have therefore determined that in fashioning the federal law that is applicable to suits arising from the FHA loan program we shall be guided by the principles set forth in Article 9 and other relevant portions of the Uniform Commercial Code.
Such a course meets the principal reason advanced for requiring a federal rule of decision in these cases, that of uniformity,
while at the same time assuring that an individual state’s modifications of the Code’s scheme cannot be employed to defeat federal rights.
Taking this step is not inconsistent with the prior decisions applying federal law to suits arising from the FHA program
since, in our judgment, in every case in which federal law has been so applied (see note 6,
supra),
the same result would have been reached under the Code.
The Code has now been adopted in every state save Louisiana. By evaluating the issues involved in suits concerning FHA secured transactions in light of Article 9, the federal courts will have a coherent, unified body of law with which to deal and can benefit from the general body of precedent developed by the state courts under the Code. This is not to say, of course, that the interpretation of the Code made by any particular state court will be controlling nor that any modification of the Code enacted by a particular state legislature need be followed. Such interpretations and modifications may be followed only if the federal courts deem them reflective of the weight of authority, consistent with the operation to the FHA program, or desirable as precedent.
On this basis it is our judgment that the Code itself and the general body of precedent developed by the Code states provide the most logical source material supplying the content of federal common law to govern suits arising from FHA secured transactions.
In this fashion the federal law governing FHA loans and the state law of secured transactions will coalesce to reinforce each other.
IY.
The Code as Applied to the Instant Case
Having determined to look to the Uniform Commercial Code as a source for fashioning federal law applicable to the rights of the parties in this case, we now proceed to examine the facts and circumstances surrounding the transactions here involved in light of the Code’s provisions.
The record establishes that the custom and practice in the cotton trade in Texas
is for the individual cotton farmer to sell his cotton to a gin.
The
gin in turn gins the cotton, arranges for storage pending sale, markets the cotton by placing samples with a selling agent, and sells the cotton to buyers who make offers to the gin after examining the samples. Warehousemen, selling agents and buyers all deal with the gin and not with the individual farmer, and indeed frequently do not even know the identity of the individual farmer who originally raised the cotton.
In the usual transaction the gin that deals with a farmer who has mortgaged his cotton to the FHA protects itself and satisfies the loan by issuing its checks in payment for the cotton jointly to the farmer and the FHA
As the trial judge astutely noted, the problem in the instant case arose because of the fact that Hext, the farmer to whom the FHA provided financing, also operated his own gin company, and rather than transferring payment received by the Gin Co. for the 578 bales of cotton raised by him individually to the Government at the time the cotton .was sold, he simply waited until the end of the season and at that time paid the Government the amount then remaining in the Gin Co. account.
As related previously, the FHA knew when it loaned money to Hext that Hext operated a gin, and intended to gin his own cotton therein and market it just as he did the cotton received from other farmers,
i. e.,
through the Gin Co.
Section 9-306(2) of the Uniform Commercial Code provides:
Except where this Article otherwise provides a security interest continues in collateral notwithstanding sale, exchange or other disposition thereof by the debtor unless his action was authorized by the secured party in the security agreement or otherwise, and also continues in any identifiable proceeds including collections received by the debtor.
The trial judge held as a matter of law that the Government’s actions vis-a-vis Hext did not amount to consent to sale of the mortgaged cotton in the manner here accomplished. Appellants urge that this determination was error.
However,
assuming
arguendo
that the holding of no consent was correct, it is apparent that in terms of Section 9-306(2) the sale was not “authorized” by the secured party so as to terminate the security interest in the cotton. Thus, unless some other section of Article 9 “otherwise provides,” the Government’s security interest continued after the cotton was sold by the Gin Co.
Section 9-307(1) provides:
A buyer in ordinary course of business (subsection (9) of Section 1-201) other than a person buying farm products from, a person engaged in farming operations takes free of a security interest created by his seller even though the security interest is perfected and even though the buyer knows of its existence.
Section 1-201(9) defines buyer in the ordinary course of business as follows:
Buyer in ordinary course of business means a person who in good faith and without knowledge that the sale to him is in violation of the ownership rights or security interest of a third party in the goods buys in ordinary course from a person in the business of selling goods of that kind but does not include a pawnbroker * * *.
Under the Section 1-201 definition, it is clear that the Gin Co. was in the business of selling cotton and that the buyers of the cotton in question here were buyers in the ordinary course of business. Nor is there any doubt that ordinarily ginned cotton is in the category of “farm products” referred to by Section 9-307(1).
However, in order for the FHA’s security interest to continue in the cotton by virtue of the exception from Section 9-307(1) pertaining to buyers of farm products, the farm products must be bought “from a person engaged in farming operations.”
In our view, the record establishes that the buyers of the cotton here involved bought from the Gin Co., and not from Hext himself. They did not therefore purchase from a person engaged in farming operations within the meaning of Section 9-307(1).
It is true that Hext himself as the grower of the cotton was engaged in farming operations, was at the same time the sole owner of the Gin Co., and for other
purposes might thus be regarded as the alter ego of the Gin Co. From the point of view of the buyers, however, in light of the general trade practice of buyers in dealing with the gins as the owners of the cotton being marketed, we do not think that the buyers here can be regarded as buying from a person engaged in farming operations when they purchased cotton from the W. A. Hext and Sons Gin Co., Inc.
Similarly, Marshall and Harlingen, although not buyers, dealt in the ordinary course of their businesses with gin companies and not with individual farmers. To the extent that they were dealing with Hext personally here, they were dealing with him qua gin owner, and not qua farmer. Nevertheless, as will be seen, their liability for conversion depends upon whether or not the actual buyers of the cotton took subject to the security interest under Section 9-306 (2) or free of the security interest under 9-307(1).
Even though a cotton buyer purchases in the ordinary course of business from a gin, which is in the business of selling cotton (and not engaged in farming operations), the buyer would not ordinarily take free of a security interest in the cotton created by a farmer who had sold the cotton to the gin. Section 9-307(2) requires that in order for the buyer to purchase unencumbered by such a prior lien, the security interest in question must have been
“created by Ms seller.”
Thus, the fact that mortgaged cotton is sold by a farmer-debtor to a gin and then by the gin in the ordinary course of business to a buyer, does not, in the normal transaction, extinguish the security interest.
But in the instant case Hext, the farmer who created the security interest, was the sole owner of the Gin Co. which sold the cotton to the buyer,
and tMs state of affairs was known to the secured party at the time the security interest was created.
We think this situation is directly analogous to one where a secured party takes a security interest in goods purchased by the debtor as consumer goods or equipment,
knowing the debt- or to be in the business of selling goods of that kind, and the debtor then puts the goods in his inventory and sells them to a buyer in ordinary course. Professor Gilmore has suggested that in such a situation the buyer should take free of the security interest under the provisions of Section 9-307(1).
We agree. In the instant case, the FHA took a security interest in goods (the 578 bales of cotton) as farm products, knowing that the debtor had the capability of transferring them into the category of inventory and selling them in the ordinary course of his gin business. The buyers of the cotton thus took free of the security interest and could not themselves be sued by the Government for conversion.
This conclusion in turn
determines the issue of whether Marshall and Harlingen who dealt with the cotton as intermediaries between the Gin Co. and the buyers can be liable for conversion.
Section 233(1) of the Restatement (Second) of Torts, cited to us by the Government as authority to be followed in determining the federal rule of eon-version applicable to this case, provides :
* * * one who as agent or servant of a third person disposes of a chattel
to one not entitled to its immediate possession
in consummation of a transaction negotiated by the agent or servant, is subject to liability for a conversion to another who, as against
his principal or master, is entitled to the immediate possession of the chattel. (Emphasis supplied.)
Accepting this as an authoritative statement of the law (and none of the other authorities cited by the parties are to the contrary),
it is at once apparent that Harlingen and Marshall, to the extent they acted, in good faith and without actual knowledge of the Government’s interest, as agents of the Gin Co. by facilitating the sale of the cotton to the buyers, cannot be liable as converters since the cotton was not transferred “to one not entitled to its immediate possesion.” Rather, since the buyers took free of the Government’s security interest under Section 9-307(1) of the Code, they were entitled to immediate possession, and' the acts of Harlingen and Marshall in facilitating the transfer to them were thus not tortious. The Government thus has no valid claim against appellants Harlingen and Marshall. The judgment of the District Court must therefore be
Reversed.