This appeal requires us to determine whether a creditor’s perfected security interest in crop proceeds continues under Iowa Code section 554.9306(2) (1999) when the proceeds were not received by the debtor. We reverse the decision of the district court and remand the case for further proceedings.
I. Background Facts and Proceedings.
First State Bank of Nora Springs financed the farming operation of Daniel
In 1998, First State notified Yezek it would no longer finance his crop production. Yezek subsequently informed First State he intended to sell his corn to the elevator in St. Ansgar. On February 5, 1999, First State gave written notice to Grain Millers, Inc. in St. Ansgar of its security interest in the crop pursuant to Iowa Code section 554.9307(4)(a).
On April 9, 1999, Yezek sold his crop to St. Ansgar Mills, Inc. St. Ansgar Mills is a separate elevator from Grain Millers, Inc., and was not notified of First State’s perfected security interest in Yezek’s crop. Yezek directed St. Ansgar Mills to pay the proceeds from the sale of the corn to William and Mike Clark, doing business as Johnson Chemicals. Johnson Chemicals was an unsecured creditor of Yezek and was apparently unaware of First State’s security interest in the crop proceeds. St. Ansgar Mills paid Johnson Chemicals $6,758.80.
After learning of the transfer, First State promptly notified Johnson Chemicals of its security interest in the proceeds. Johnson Chemicals refused to deliver payment to First State.
First State filed a conversion action against Johnson Chemicals. Both parties filed motions for summary judgment. First State acknowledged it failed to give St. Ansgar Mills notice of its security interest in the corn. However, it claimed this did not release its security interest in the proceeds. Conversely, Johnson Chemicals claimed that First State lost its security interest in the proceeds when St. Ansgar Mills purchased the crops without notice of the First State security interest. Alternatively, Johnson Chemicals claimed any security interest held by First State failed to attach to the proceeds because the proceeds were never actually received by Yezek.
The district court granted Johnson Chemical’s motion for summary judgment and dismissed First State’s petition. The district court held First State lost its security interest in the collateral when St. Ans-gar Mills purchased the crop pursuant to section 554.9307(4)(a). Additionally, the court concluded First State’s security interest did not follow the crop proceeds because the proceeds from the sale were never in Yezek’s possession.
First State appeals. It acknowledges that the failure to adhere to the notice requirements of section 554.9307(4)(a) effectively extinguished its security interest in the collateral as to St. Ansgar Mills. However, it claims its security interest in the proceeds from the sale continued pursuant to section 554.9306(2).
II. Standard of Review.
Our review is for errors at law.
St. Ansgar Mills, Inc. v. Streit,
III. Proceeds.
Our uniform commercial code establishes the rights of a secured party to the proceeds from the disposition of collateral. Iowa Code section 554.9306(2) provides:
Except where this Article otherwise provides, a security interest continues in collateral notwithstanding sale, exchange or other disposition thereof unless the disposition 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.
Thus, this section describes the general rule for secured parties, subject to exceptions identified in other sections of the Code. See Iowa Code § 554.9307 (protections for buyers of goods). Generally, a security interest not only continues in collateral following its sale or disposition, but it also continues in any identifiable proceeds. Id. § 554.9306(2). This section is identical to Uniform Commercial Code (U.C.C.) section 9-306(2). See Unif. Commercial Code § 9-306(2), 3A U.L.A. 162 (1992).
Section 554.9306(1) broadly defines “proceeds” to include “whatever is received upon the sale, exchange, or other disposition of collateral or proceeds.” However, there is a split in authority whether subsection (2) requires the debtor to receive the proceeds before the security interest will continue in the proceeds. As one court has recognized:
[U.C.C. § 9-306(2), ... ] is capable of being read to say that proceeds, which include collections, must be received by the debtor, or that the proceeds need not be received by the debtor but the security interest will in any event continue in identifiable proceeds regardless of who receives them and it will also continue in collections received by the debt- or.
Eastern Idaho Prod. Credit Ass’n v. Idaho Gem, Inc.,
Those courts that have determined that a security interest continues in proceeds from the sale of the collateral only if the debtor receives the proceeds construe the phrase “received by the debtor” in U.C.C. section 9-306(2) to modify the phrase “identifiable proceeds” as well as the term “collections.”
See First Interstate Bank v. Arizona Agrochemical Co.,
We recognize compelling arguments exist on both sides of the issue. On one hand, the Official Comment to U.C.C. section 9-306 indicates the section “states a secured party’s right to the proceeds
received by a debtor
on disposition of the collateral.... ” Unif. Commercial Code § 9-306, 3A U.L.A. 165 cmt. 1 (emphasis added);
see Centerre Bank, N.A.,
We also must consider the statute in its entirety.
State v. DeCamp,
The argument for limiting a security interest in proceeds to only those received by the debtor would be stronger if the legislature had only used the term “proceeds” in section 554.9306(2) without reference to “any identifiable proceeds.” However, by modifying proceeds to restrict the security interest to “identifiable proceeds,” a purpose arises for including the clause “including collections received by a debt- or.” This purpose was to include collections received by the debtor within the concept of identifiable proceeds.
We think this interpretation gives meaning to all the words in the statute and best accomplishes the goal of the statute to trace proceeds subject to a security interest.
See Waits v. United Fire & Cas. Co.,
Finally, we observe that even those courts that limit the security interest in proceeds only when they are received by the debtor extend the section to also include persons “standing in the shoes of the debtor.” See Eastern Idaho Prod. Credit Ass’n, 842 P.2d at 287. We think this judicial extension by these courts illustrates a weakness in their interpretation of U.C.C. section 9-306(2), and is actually subsumed in our interpretation of the section as written by the legislature.
We conclude section 554.9306(2) does not require the proceeds to be directly received by the debtor.
See Prod. Credit Ass’n,
IV. Conclusion.
The district court granted the motion for summary judgment by Johnson Chemicals on the basis that First State lost its security interest in the collateral when Yezek sold the crop to St. Ansgar Mills, and the security interest did not continue in the proceeds because the proceeds were not received by Yezek. Although First State may have lost its security interest in the collateral under section 554.9307(4)(a), it did not lose its security interest in the proceeds under section 554.9306(2). Thus, we reverse the decision of the district court and remand the case for consideration of the motion for summary judgment filed by First State.
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
Notes
. We note that our legislature has adopted, for the most part, the new version of Article 9 of the U.C.C., and section 554.9306 is now section 554.9315. See 2000 Iowa Acts ch. 1149, § 35 (codified at Iowa Code § 554.9315 (2001)). This act became effective on July 1, 2001. 2000 Iowa Acts ch. 1149, § 187. Under the new version, a security interest continues in collateral after disposal and "attaches to any identifiable proceeds of collateral.” Iowa Code § 554.9315(l)(a), (b) (2001). Moreover, the term "proceeds” is not defined by reference to who receives the proceeds. Id. § 554.9102(bl)(l)-(5). This new definition resolves the ambiguities in the former section and contains no requirement that the proceeds be received by the debtor. Unif. Commercial Code § 9-102, 3 (Part I) U.L.A. 52-53 cmt. 13(d) (2000) (revised Article 9). It is only necessary for the proceeds to be traceable to the original collateral. Id. Thus, the issue we decide today will only impact those cases, like the present case, which arise under the preamendment version of the statute.
. It is significant that the Uniform Commissioners' 1953 version of section 9-306 limited the rights of a secured party to "proceeds received by the debtor.”
See Centerre Bank, N.A.,
