Webster City Production Credit Ass'n v. G. O. Implement, Inc.
This text of 310 N.W.2d 541 (Webster City Production Credit Ass'n v. G. O. Implement, Inc.) 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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Defendant, G. 0. Implement, Inc., appeals from a summary judgment for plaintiff in an action to enforce a security agreement. We affirm.
Plaintiff, Webster City Production Credit Association, had a perfected security interest in farm equipment and machinery possessed by Laws, Inc., a farming enterprise, and in the proceeds of such equipment and machinery to secure amounts owed it by Laws, Inc. On March 11, 1977, Laws, Inc., held a public auction in which the collateral was put up for sale. Before the auction commenced, Laws, Inc., with plaintiff’s permission, announced that the property was being sold free and clear of any liens. The terms of the auction were for “cash” and no property was to be removed from the premises until settlement was made by the purchaser. Plaintiff and Laws, Inc., had agreed that the sale proceeds would apply against Laws’ indebtedness to plaintiff. Defendant purchased eight items at the auction, bidding a total of $10,128 therefor. It issued its check in that amount, payable to Laws, Inc. As soon as defendant removed the collateral from the premises, it stopped payment on the check. Plaintiff subsequently commenced this action against defendant to recover the $10,128 bid at the sale. The trial court sustained plaintiff’s motion for summary judgment for that amount.
Defendant asserts on this appeal that summary judgment was improperly granted because (a) there were no “proceeds” to which plaintiff’s security interests attached, and (b) a factual issue is presented as to plaintiff’s waiver of its security interest. We reject both contentions.
Under the circumstances presented, plaintiff’s security interest attached to the cash proceeds represented by the check and it became entitled to collect this sum either from defendant’s bank or defendant. The term “proceeds” under the UCC includes whatever is received when collateral is sold, exchanged, collected, or otherwise disposed of. The term includes an account arising when a right to payment is earned under a contract right. It specifically includes checks. § 554.9306, The Code; 68 Am. Jur.2d Secured Transactions § 186 (1973), 1044-45. The act of stopping payment on the check should not be permitted to defeat this perfected security interest.
[543]*543There is no genuine issue of material fact sufficient to defeat summary judgment by reason of the claim by defendant that plaintiff waived its security interest in the proceeds. Such claim is apparently based on the contention that plaintiff agreed that defendant could have a setoff against the amount bid at the auction as a result of monies owed defendant by Laws, Inc.
In this regard, it is alleged in paragraph six of division X of defendant’s answer that the collateral in question was purchased at the auction in consideration of a credit on past indebtedness. It is also revealed, however, in paragraph one of said division X that the amount of indebtedness known at that time was only $2,472.11. The amount bid at the auction was $10,128.
In a request for admissions filed pursuant to Iowa R.Civ.P. 127, plaintiff asked defendant to admit that neither the defendant nor anyone acting on its behalf advised the auctioneer, the clerk of the auction, the plaintiff, or anyone on its behalf, that its purchases at the auction were not for cash, but rather for credit against sums allegedly owed to defendant by Laws, Inc. Defendant did admit that this was true. In addition, in its response to request for admission number six, defendant stated that when it issued the check at the auction, it intended to allow the check to be honored. To the extent that answers to requests for admissions under Iowa R.Civ.P. 128 relieve the requesting party from proving the facts which are admitted, it logically follows that such answers also preclude the answering party from establishing facts inconsistent with said admissions. In the affidavit of defendant’s president filed in resistance to plaintiff’s motion for summary judgment, it is stated:
That the Defendants were told prior to and on March 11, 1977, by the Laws, Inc. and the Plaintiffs Webster City Production Credit Association that the property would be sold free and clear of all liens and/or security interest. Furthermore, that the Defendants were deceived into believing by the express statement of the Laws, Inc. and the Plaintiff that the set-off owed to the Defendants would be allowed, (emphasis added)
Such statement is entirely inconsistent with the admission that defendant intended to honor the cheek at the time it was issued. Moreover, the content of this affidavit lacks the type of specific ultimate facts required by Iowa R.Civ.P. 237(e). See Schulte v. Mauer, 219 N.W.2d 496, 501 (Iowa 1974). The italicized language does not state that plaintiff told defendant a setoff would be allowed against the amount bid at the sale. Rather, it states that defendant was deceived into believing that such was the case by an express statement of plaintiff. The affidavit does not identify the contents of such express statement. To determine whether such express statement was sufficient for defendant to justifiably rely thereon, it is necessary to know what the statement was. The trial court interpreted the reference to an express statement to relate back to the earlier assertion in the affidavit that plaintiff had stated that the property would be sold free and clear of liens. If this is the express statement which is referred to, we cannot agree that defendant might reasonably infer therefrom that its setoff rights could be asserted against its cash bid at the auction. In any event, the claim of setoff is sufficiently inconsistent with the answers to requests for admissions to preclude any consideration of the affidavits.
The record reflects plaintiff released the liens it held on the collateral because it held a security interest in the cash proceeds to be received at the auction. The terms of the sale at auction provided for cash payment. To permit the defendant to take the collateral free of liens and also escape the obligation to pay the amount bid for the collateral at the sale would, on the present record, be an untenable result. The judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
AFFIRMED.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
310 N.W.2d 541, 32 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 990, 1981 Iowa App. LEXIS 486, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/webster-city-production-credit-assn-v-g-o-implement-inc-iowactapp-1981.