Wenatchee Production Credit Ass'n v. Pacific Fruit & Produce Co.

92 P.2d 883, 199 Wash. 651
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 27, 1939
DocketNo. 27237. Department One.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 92 P.2d 883 (Wenatchee Production Credit Ass'n v. Pacific Fruit & Produce Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wenatchee Production Credit Ass'n v. Pacific Fruit & Produce Co., 92 P.2d 883, 199 Wash. 651 (Wash. 1939).

Opinion

Robinson, J.

This action was brought to foreclose three mortgages, but the real contest is not between *653 the mortgagee and mortgagor, but between the mortgagee and a third party.

The facts are somewhat complicated. The plaintiff, Wenatchee Production Credit Association (hereinafter called the association), is an entity created under the farm credit act of 1933, U. S. C. A., Title 12, § 1131 et seq., for the purpose of financing the agricultural operations of its members by means of loans secured by crop mortgages. George D. Brown & Son (hereinafter referred to as Brown) owned orchard properties, and the association financed their operation in 1935. The ultimate result of that financing, after the 1935 crop had been sold and accounted for, was that Brown owed the association $13,018.71. Before that amount had been determined, the matter of financing the 1936 operations became current.

The Pacific Fruit & Produce Company (hereinafter referred to as Pacific Fruit) is a corporation engaged in the business of marketing fruit and agricultural products as commission merchant and factor, and, as such, had acted as Brown’s marketing agent for a number of years. In April, 1936, it held $52,500 of bonds secured by a trust mortgage on one of Brown’s orchards, a deed to Brown’s warehouse and cold storage equipment, and all of Brown’s capital stock, to secure Brown’s indebtedness of $125,000. This indebtedness as shown by contract between the parties of March 6, 1936, was payable in installments beginning January 1, 1937, and ending June 30, 1942. Under that contract, Pacific Fruit had the right to market Brown’s crops so long as any part of the indebtedness remained unpaid.

In making its arrangements to finance Brown’s 1936 operations, the plaintiff association induced, and procured, Pacific Fruit to execute the following agreement on a form which it (the association) prepared. The instrument is called a “standby agreement.”

*654 “April 6, 1936

“To Wenatchee Production Credit Association, Wenatchee, Washington.

“It is our understanding that you have made crop production loans to Geo. D. Brown & Son and the Central Washington Investment Company, and are contemplating making additional loans to Geo. D. Brown & Son to produce the 1936 crop. To secure such loans, we understand that they will be required to give a first mortgage -on all of their crops, personal property, machinery and equipment, located or raised on the two ranches in Chelan County, known as the Geo. D. Brown and Central Washington Investment Company ranches, in an amount not to exceed Fifty Thousand Dollars ($50,000.00).

“In order to assist Geo. D. Brown & Son to obtain the 1936 crop loan, we agree that any lien which we have now or may obtain during the life of your mortgage against their personal property, machinery, equipment and crops, located or grown on the above mentioned ranches, will be considered junior and inferior to that lien which you have now or may take on such property to secure your entire loans, above mentioned.

“We further agree that we will not disturb them in the possession of either their real or personal property for a period not to exceed one year from this date.

“Pacific Fruit & Produce Company, Inc.

By J. A. Meade

(Affix Seal) Vice-President.”

On April 8, 1936, the association took a mortgage on Brown’s 1936 crop and the machinery used to produce it, to secure (1) the unpaid balance of $26,347.53 on the 1935 loan (later reduced from the 1935 crop sale to $13,018.71), and (2) the sum of $41,000, or so much thereof as might be advanced in 1936. This is the first of the three mortgages sought to be foreclosed in this action.

On December 22, 1936, the respondent, having advanced the amount stipulated in the April mortgage, *655 took a supplemental crop mortgage on the 1936 crop to secure additional loans of not to exceed nine thousand dollars. This mortgage also included the production machinery. This was the second of the two crop and chattel mortgages sought to be foreclosed in this action, and, under these two mortgages, $49,964.74 was advanced. This sum, plus the $13,018.71, carried over from 1935, represents the maximum indebtedness covered by the two mortgages.

As additional security for the indebtedness carried over from 1935, the association had taken a mortgage from Brown on August 15, 1936, on ten acres of land, not a part of the orchard property with respect to which the crop mortgages were given. This is the third of the mortgages sought to be foreclosed.

The Wenatchee Valley Production Credit Association, an organization of the same kind as the plaintiff, and with nearly the same name, had acquired a subsequent and junior mortgage upon portions of the mortgaged property. The individual defendants were guarantors or indorsers upon the various obligations which the mortgages secured.

Upon the maturity of Brown’s 1936 crop, the Pacific Fruit & Produce Company took charge of it, marketed it, and collected the proceeds, amounting to $74,738.27. It deducted all selling charges, commissions, and expenses, amounting to $11,955.30, leaving a net balance of $62,782.97. It remitted to the association, to apply on its mortgages, or otherwise applied for its benefit, $49,122.42, and refused to surrender the balance of $13,660.55, claiming the right to apply that sum to Brown’s indebtedness to it, for reasons which will hereinafter appear.

The association, on the theory that its mortgage lien on the crop followed and attached to the proceeds thereof, made the Pacific Fruit a party to this action, *656 alleging that its refusal to surrender the proceeds constituted a conversion of the sum withheld. It appears, from language in the opinion in German-American State Bank v. Seattle Grain Co., 89 Wash. 376, 154 Pac. 443, that it could properly so proceed; and, as we understand the matter, the appellant does not contend otherwise.

The Pacific Fruit contended that (1) Brown was insolvent in 1936, and that it was its principal creditor; (2) that, by contract with Brown, it had a lien on the crop which Brown might produce; (3) that, independent of that, under the ordinary rules of common law, it had a factor’s lien on the crop, after it got possession of it; (4) that the standby agreement, hereinbefore quoted, constituted a contract in which the association agreed, in effect, (a) that it would not create a mortgage lien against the crop for more than fifty thousand dollars, and (b) that whatever lien it would create on the 1936 crop, over and above security for the 1935 carry-over, would be for moneys advanced to produce that crop.

Reasoning from these premises, Pacific Fruit argued, and now contends, that, upon turning over to the association fifty thousand dollars of the proceeds of the 1936 crop, it had the right to retain the balance. It also contended that the advances secured by the December mortgage were not advanced to produce the 1936 crop, but were supplied after the crop had been produced and harvested.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Kinnebrew v. CM Trucking & Construction, Inc.
6 P.3d 1235 (Court of Appeals of Washington, 2000)
Pierce County v. O'Neill
890 P.2d 504 (Court of Appeals of Washington, 1995)
Paullus v. Fowler
367 P.2d 130 (Washington Supreme Court, 1961)
Crofton v. Bargreen
332 P.2d 1081 (Washington Supreme Court, 1958)
Wise v. Farden
332 P.2d 454 (Washington Supreme Court, 1958)
Newsom v. Miller
258 P.2d 812 (Washington Supreme Court, 1953)
Cedar v. W. E. Roche Fruit Co.
134 P.2d 437 (Washington Supreme Court, 1943)
East Central Fruit Growers Production Credit Ass'n v. Zuritsky
30 A.2d 133 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1943)
Bank of California v. American Fruit Growers, Inc.
41 F. Supp. 967 (E.D. Washington, 1941)
Byrne v. Bellingham Consolidated School District No. 301
108 P.2d 791 (Washington Supreme Court, 1941)
Bank of California v. American Fruit Growers, Inc.
103 P.2d 27 (Washington Supreme Court, 1940)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
92 P.2d 883, 199 Wash. 651, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wenatchee-production-credit-assn-v-pacific-fruit-produce-co-wash-1939.