Woods Farmers Cooperative Elevator Company v. Z-Mega Farms Limited Partnership I, Z & W Ag Enterprises, Inc., Also Known as Z & W Ag, Inc. Zehringer Land Company David Zehringer, Defendants-Third Party Pete Werner Personalized Marketing Services Doug Lanctot, Zehringer Farms, Defendant-Third Party v. Dallas Glasow Brad Gust Al Halvorson Tom Hansen Rodger Olson Dave Strand, Third Party

95 F.3d 693, 1996 U.S. App. LEXIS 23880
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedSeptember 11, 1996
Docket94-3884
StatusPublished

This text of 95 F.3d 693 (Woods Farmers Cooperative Elevator Company v. Z-Mega Farms Limited Partnership I, Z & W Ag Enterprises, Inc., Also Known as Z & W Ag, Inc. Zehringer Land Company David Zehringer, Defendants-Third Party Pete Werner Personalized Marketing Services Doug Lanctot, Zehringer Farms, Defendant-Third Party v. Dallas Glasow Brad Gust Al Halvorson Tom Hansen Rodger Olson Dave Strand, Third Party) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Woods Farmers Cooperative Elevator Company v. Z-Mega Farms Limited Partnership I, Z & W Ag Enterprises, Inc., Also Known as Z & W Ag, Inc. Zehringer Land Company David Zehringer, Defendants-Third Party Pete Werner Personalized Marketing Services Doug Lanctot, Zehringer Farms, Defendant-Third Party v. Dallas Glasow Brad Gust Al Halvorson Tom Hansen Rodger Olson Dave Strand, Third Party, 95 F.3d 693, 1996 U.S. App. LEXIS 23880 (3d Cir. 1996).

Opinion

95 F.3d 693

WOODS FARMERS COOPERATIVE ELEVATOR COMPANY, Appellee,
v.
Z-MEGA FARMS LIMITED PARTNERSHIP I, Appellant,
Z & W Ag Enterprises, Inc., also known as Z & W Ag, Inc.;
Zehringer Land Company; David Zehringer,
Defendants-Third Party Plaintiffs,
Pete Werner; Personalized Marketing Services; Doug
Lanctot, Defendants.
ZEHRINGER FARMS, Defendant-Third Party Plaintiff,
v.
Dallas GLASOW; Brad Gust; Al Halvorson; Tom Hansen;
Rodger Olson; Dave Strand, Third Party Defendants.

No. 94-3884.

United States Court of Appeals,
Eighth Circuit.

Submitted May 13, 1996.
Decided Sept. 11, 1996.

Patrick Hennessy, argued, Minneapolis, for appellant.

Mervin Nordeng, argued, Fargo, ND, for appellee.

Before RICHARD S. ARNOLD, Chief Judge, MAGILL, and MURPHY, Circuit Judges.

MAGILL, Circuit Judge.

Woods Farmers Cooperative Elevator Company (the Coop), through its bankruptcy trustee, sued Z-Mega Farms Limited Partnership I (Z-Mega) in a diversity action. The Coop claimed that Z-Mega, and its codefendants, misappropriated Coop funds through a series of fraudulent transactions and breached contracts. The district court1 found in favor of the Coop and awarded it $686,382.44 in damages from Z-Mega.

The issue in this appeal is the district court's denial of Z-Mega's counterclaim for $212,800.25. In the course of the complex financial interactions between the Coop and Z-Mega, there were two sham transactions in which Z-Mega paid a total $212,800.25 to the Coop as counterparts to earlier sales that had not actually occurred. Z-Mega asserts that the Coop is liable based on three legal theories: conversion, deceit, and agency. We disagree and affirm the district court.

I.

This case arises from the less-than-honest financial dealings of Pete Werner, 40% owner of Z-Mega, and Doug Lanctot, an employee of the Coop. The facts of this case are complex and we limit our description to those relevant to this appeal.

The Coop was a rural farmers' cooperative association conducting business as a grain elevator. A board of directors oversaw affairs of the Coop, and Doug Lanctot, who was not on the board, served as manager charged with running the Coop's daily operations.

Acting on behalf of the Coop, Lanctot entered into an informal arrangement to provide financing to Personalized Marketing Services, Inc. (PMS), a grain marketing advisory company. Pete Werner was the majority shareholder and managing agent of PMS. Under the financing arrangement, the Coop provided PMS with short term, unsecured financing for the purchase and sale of Purchase in Kind (PIK) Certificates. Mem. Op. at 7 n. 5. Werner set up a bank account, the PMS PIK Certificate Trust Account, into which he deposited funds from the Coop. PMS drew funds from the account to purchase PIK certificates and deposited the proceeds from the sale of these certificates into this account. PMS then wired to the Coop the repayment of the loan and a financing fee. Initially, this arrangement proved to be very profitable for both the Coop and PMS.

Although the PIK financing arrangement worked well in the beginning, the Coop soon began to have difficulty getting its money back. In August 1987, Werner began to use the Coop's financing funds for purposes other than the purchase of PIK certificates. Werner used Coop funds to finance commodities speculation, personal needs, and, through a check kiting scheme, to pay debts owed to the Coop.

More significant to this appeal, Werner also used Coop funds to finance the operations of other enterprises with which he was associated, most notably Z-Mega. Z-Mega was a limited partnership formed for the purpose of owning and operating a farm on land located in Clay and Becker Counties, Minnesota. Its general partner was Z & W Ag Enterprises (Z & W Ag), a Minnesota corporation in which Werner held a 40% stake and David Zehringer held a 60% stake. Through his ownership of Z & W Ag, Werner had general responsibility for Z-Mega management. He also assumed the specific responsibility of overseeing the financial affairs of the company.2

Werner provided Z & W Ag with $471,000 of Coop funds to make land purchases and obtain letters of credit necessary to establish Z-Mega Farms Limited Partnership I.3 In addition to the indirect funding Werner provided to Z-Mega through Z & W Ag, he also funneled $205,000 of the Coop's money directly into Z-Mega accounts. Mem. Op. at 17. David Zehringer also received the Coop's funds as a result of Werner's largess. Zehringer Farms, a farming partnership between David Zehringer and his father, Jack Zehringer, received $210,000 from Werner. Mem. Op. at 8. At the end of August 1988, there was a shortfall of approximately $327,000 in the PMS PIK Certificate Trust Account. Mem. Op. at 12.4

Through a series of three sham transactions fabricated by Lanctot and Werner, the Coop was reimbursed for all of the funds it had advanced to the PMS PIK Certificate Trust Account.5 By fabricating these transactions, Lanctot and Werner contrived to conceal the $327,000 worth of advances made through PMS.

First, Lanctot and Werner created a fictitious credit sale of PIK certificates worth $108,500.25. Lanctot created a sales ticket stating that the Coop sold Z-Mega $108,500.25 in PIK certificates on credit instead of paying cash. Therefore, the Coop's ledgers showed an accounts receivable debt owed by Z-Mega in the amount of $108,500.25 on September 19, 1988. PMS and Z-Mega books were also modified to recognize this credit transaction. On September 27, 1988, the Coop received a check from Z-Mega drafted in the amount of $108,560.25 and signed by Pete Werner. Lanctot then applied these funds to the PIK loan balance, thereby reducing the PIK advance balance from $ -327,000 to $ -218,439.75.

The second transaction Lanctot and Werner (for Z-Mega) created to conceal the PIK advance also involved a fictitious sale of PIK certificates. This time Lanctot created a sales ticket stating that the Coop sold Zehringer Farms $117,200 in PIK certificates and that Zehringer Farms charged this purchase instead of paying cash. Lanctot then modified the Coop's ledgers to show a reduction in the PIK advance account and a new accounts receivable debt owed by Zehringer Farms in the amount of $117,200 dated September 19, 1988. PMS's and David Zehringer's accounts were also modified to recognize this transaction. On December 28, 1988, Zehringer Farms issued a check to the Coop for $119,544 ($117,200 plus interest). This fictitious sale further reduced the PIK advance balance from $ -218,439.75 to $ -101,239.75.

Finally, to set off the remaining debt, Lanctot created a fictitious credit sale of $104,240 in PIK certificates from the Coop to Z-Mega. Lanctot then modified the Coop's ledger to show a $104,240 reduction in the PIK advance account and a corresponding accounts receivable debt owed by Z-Mega.

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95 F.3d 693, 1996 U.S. App. LEXIS 23880, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/woods-farmers-cooperative-elevator-company-v-z-mega-farms-limited-ca3-1996.