Lead Opinion
Dissent by Judge Ikuta
Appellant produce growers (“Growers”)
Although
The central dispute in this case developed after Tanimura’s business failed, and Growers did not receive full payment from
AgriCap moved for summary judgment arguing that, under Boulder Fruit Express & Heger Organic Farm Sales v. Transportation Factoring, Inc.,
The district court described the cited eases as a circuit split and granted summary judgment in favor of AgriCap relying on Boulder Fruit. The district court reasoned that the Ninth Circuit in Boulder Fruit expressly addressed the commercial reasonableness of a factoring agreement but implicitly rejected a separate, transfer-of-risk test. The district court further reasoned that the factoring agreement in Boulder Fruit transferred even less risk than did the Factoring Agreement here— in Boulder Fruit, the factoring agent enjoyed unrestricted discretion to' force the distributor to repurchase accounts. The district court concluded that, even if Boulder Fruit could accommodate the transfer-of-risk test, the facts of Boulder Fruit controlled and precluded relief for Growers. The district court finally concluded
On appeal, Growers argued to the three-judge panel that we are not bound by Boulder Fruit because Boulder Fruit did not discuss the transfer-of-risk test, leaving open the question of whether that test should apply in the Ninth Circuit. AgriCap countered by contrast with its argument that Boulder Fruit settled the issue because the PACA-trust beneficiaries in Boulder Fruit asked the Court to apply the transfer-of-risk test; the parties in that case briefed the issue; the issue was squarely before the Court; and yet, the Court did not apply the test.
The three-judge panel agreed with the district court’s conclusion that Boulder Fruit controlled the outcome in this case. S & H Packing & Sales Co., Inc. v. Tanimura Distrib., Inc.,
I
We have jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291. Boulder Fruit,
II
Although the parties ask us to answer many particularized questions on appeal, we resolve only one issue: whether, in the context of determining the assets included in a PACA trust, a court needs to conduct a threshold true sale inquiry before it determines whether a transaction transferring PACA trust assets was a commercially reasonable sale. For the reasons stated below, we join the Second, Fourth and Fifth Circuits in adopting a threshold true sale test to determine whether assets transferred in transactions that are labeled “sales” remain assets of a PACA trust. We hold that a court must conduct a two-step inquiry when determining whether the questioned transaction is a sale or creates a security interest, i.e., a loan. First, a court must apply a threshold true sale test of which the transfer-of-risk is a key, but not the sole, factor. If a court concludes that there was a true sale, it must then determine if the transaction was commer-dally
Ill
We elaborate on the principles just summarized, with reference to pertinent authorities and reasoning.
A
“Congress enacted PACA in 1930 to prevent unfair business practices and promote financial responsibility in the fresh fruit and produce industry.” Boulder Fruit,
Perishable agricultural commodities received by a commission merchant, dealer, or broker in all transactions, and all inventories of food or other products derived from perishable agricultural commodities, and any receivables or proceeds from the sale of such commodities or products, shall be held by such commission merchant, dealer, or broker in trust for the benefit of all unpaid suppliers or sellers of such commodities or agents involved in the transaction, until full payment of the sums owing in connection with such transactions has been received by such unpaid suppliers, sellers, or agents.
7 U.S.C. § 499e(c)(2). “This provision imposes a ‘nonsegregated floating trust’ on the commodities and their derivatives, and permits the commingling of trust assets without defeating the trust.” Endico Potatoes,
The House Report explaining the 1984 PACA amendments states:
[Purchasers/Distributors of perishable agricultural commodities] in the normal course of their business transactions, operate on bank loans secured by the inventories, proceeds or assigned reeeiv-ables from sales of perishable agricultural commodities, giving the lender a secured position in the case of insolvency. Under present law, sellers of fresh fruits and vegetables are unsecured creditors and receive little protection in any suit for recovery of damages where a buyer has failed to make payment as required by contract.
H.R. Rep. No. 98-543 at *3 (1984), as reprinted in 1984 U.S.C.C.A.N. 405, 407. The Second Circuit, citing, this report, explained:
According to Congress, due to the need to sell perishable commodities quickly, sellers of perishable commodities are often placed in the position of being unsecured creditors of companies whose creditworthiness the seller is unable to verify. Due to a large number of defaults by the purchasers, and the sellers’ status as unsecured creditors, the sellers recover, if at all, only after banks andother lenders who have obtained securi.ty interests in the defaulting purchaser’s inventories, proceeds, and receivables.
Endico Potatoes,
Perhaps most importantly, Congress intended to shield agricultural growers from risk in enacting PACA “to protect the public interest.” 7 U.S.C. § 499e(c)(1). PACA’s purpose is not to give a one-sided boon to growers, but instead, to benefit all parties and society by ensuring that growers are protected; lenders know them risk; and agricultural commerce is encouraged to benefit society.
B
We apply general trust principles to questions involving PACA trusts, unless those principles directly conflict with PACA. Boulder Fruit,
A breach of trust occurs when there is “a violation by the trustee of any duty which as trustee he owes to the beneficiary.” Boulder Fruit,
C
Against this industry and legal background, a PACA trustee’s true sale of accounts receivable for a commercially reasonable discount from the accounts’ face value is not a dissipation of trust assets and, therefore, is not a breach of the PACA trustee’s duties. Nickey Gregory,
The Second, Fourth, and Fifth Circuits have held that any purported security interest for a lender in PACA-trust assets is inferior to the trust beneficiaries’ claims and rights. See, e.g., Nickey Gregory,
IV
The treatment of true sales and security interests under PACA and trust law is reasonably clear. But what is at issue here, and is not perfectly clear, is the proper analysis to apply when the true nature of the transaction is ambiguous — i.e., when it resembles a sale in some respects and yet looks like a secured transaction in others. Growers and the Second, Fourth, and Fifth Circuits would apply a threshold transfer-of-risk test to determine if a transaction is a true sale or is more accurately viewed as a secured lending relationship. AgriCap, relying on Boulder Fruit, argues vigorously that the court need only ask if the transaction was commercially reasonable.
A
Boulder Fruit held that factoring agreements do not per se breach the PACA
The Boulder Fruit panel, in reaching its conclusion, said that the factoring agreement “actually enhanced the trust.” Id. at 1272. Boulder Fruit considered not only the initial up-front payment from the factoring agent to the distributor but also the actual sums paid to the distributor by the factoring agent while performing the factoring agreement.
In sharp contrast, the Second, Fourth, and Fifth Circuits found it necessary to examine the rights and risks transferred between the parties to a factoring agreement. Thе courts in these cases examined the text and legislative history of PACA and the regulations promulgated under PACA to conclude that Congress intended to promote the interests of produce growers above the interests of secured lenders. See, e.g., Nickey Gregory,
The Endico Potatoes court resolved a case wherein Merberg, a dealer in perishable agricultural commodities received financing from CIT, and CIT held security interests in all Merberg’s assets including accounts receivable.
A question may be raised whether the Second Circuit no longer espouses the view that the substance of an agreement must be analyzed when determining the rights of the parties. In E. Armata, Inc. v. Korea Commercial Bank of New York,
A subsequent Second Circuit opinion, A&J Produce Corp. v. Bronx Overall Economic Development Corp, held that a lender who had a lien on trust assets held that lien “subject to the rights of the trust beneficiaries” i.e., the growers,
In Reaves, the Fifth Circuit considered a case where Reaves, a produce seller, sold produce to Sunbelt Fruit & Vegetable Company, a wholesaler, and Sunbelt ceased operations owing Reaves almost $200,000 in unpaid invoices.
In Nickey Gregory, the Fourth Circuit addressed a case where Robison Farms, a distributor of produce, bought produce from growers on short-term credit, and distributed the produce to restaurants and school systems on credit creating accounts receivable.
The Fourth Circuit distinguished Boulder Fruit concluding that in Boulder Fruit there was a “true factoring relationship, in which the receivables were actually sold to the factor.” Id. at 604. The Fourth Circuit found that Boulder Fruit did not question
The weight of authority and reasoning in the Second, Fourth and Fifth Circuit cases suggest that “transfer of risk” and “true sale” considerations should be assessed before considering commercial reasonableness when considering the propriety of a transfer of trust assets. We conclude that adoption of the transfer-of-risk test or true sale test is the logical outcome of a reading of PACA, PACA’s legislative history, and consideration of PACA’s purpose.
B
Given the remedy that Congress created to alleviate the perceived problem of conflict in rights of agricultural growers and secured lenders — creation of the trust elevating commodities sellers’ interests over lenders’ interests — Congress’s clear concern with the relative interests of secured lenders and commodities sellers, and the general contours of trust law — in particular, a trustee’s ability to sell or convert trust assets — courts must focus on the true substance of PACA-related transactions and not on artificial indicators or labels. It runs counter to PACA and its history to allow the simple use of the words “sale,” “purchase,” or “factoring agreement” to be central for purposes of assessing the relative rights of lenders and produce growers.
AgriCap at oral argument assеrted that the AgriCap transaction benefitted Growers as AgriCap paid Tanimura more than the 80% discount on the accounts receivable and never used the recourse provision. The Second, Fourth, and Fifth Circuits conclude, however, that a transfer of the primary or direct risk of non-payment on the accounts is the hallmark of a true sale. Nickey Gregory,
In assessing whether a true sale occurred, the Fourth Circuit adopted the transfer-of-risk test developed by the Second Circuit in Endico Potatoes. Nickey Gregory,
Where the lender' has purchased the accounts receivable, the borrower’s debt is extinguished and the lender’s riskwith regard to the performance of the accounts is direct, that is, the lender and not the borrower bears the risk of nonperformance by the account debtor. If the lender holds only a security interest, however, the lender’s risk is derivative or secondary, that is, the borrower remains liable for the debt and bears the risk of non-payment by the account debtor, while the lender only bears the risk that the account debtor’s non-payment will leave the borrower unable to satisfy the loan.
Id. (emphasis in original).
We conclude that this transfer-of-risk test should be applied to avoid reliance on labels in factoring agreements that would defeat the purposes of PACA. As Judge Melloy reasoned in his separate concurrence in the three-judge panel’s decision: “A factoring agent who accepts risk of non-payment on the transferred accounts is the owner of the accounts, for better or worse ... [internal citation omitted]. That risk will be reflected in the price. A factoring agent who functionally serves only as a lender and collection Arm, however, accepts accounts for collection but enjoys the right to force the distributor to repurchase non-performing accounts. Such a factoring agent faces much less risk — risk measured only by the limitations on the repurchase provisions and by the distributor’s solvency and ability to perform under the agreement.” S & H Packing & Sales Co.,
AgriCap nevertheless argues that adoption of the transfer-of-risk test would lead to absurd results in which a factoring agent remains liable to growers even though the factoring agent’s payments to a distributor were sufficient, in theory, for the distributor to pay growers. AgriCap is wrong to describe such a scenario as absurd. It is instead the result of a congressional policy choice. There is an analogy in the relationship between general contractors, subcontractors, and property owners in the context of mechanics’ liens. It is well established that a property owner who makes final payment to a general contractor without first securing a release of subcontractors’ mechanics’ liens holds the property subject to those liens with exposure to the subcontractors’ claims despite substantial payments to the general contractor. See, e.g., Jackson v. Flohr,
The propriety of comparing the PACA situation to mechanics’ liens finds support in an examination of the regulations promulgated under PACA. Again, the reasoning in Judge Melloy’s concurrence is helpful: “These regulations do not ask whether a factoring arrangement in fact resulted in a transfer of funds sufficient to pay growers throughout the course of performance under a factoring agreement. Rather, the regulations ask whether such an arrangement could impair trust assets. See 7 C.F.R. § 46.46(a)(2). Just as a property owner must conduct due diligence to avoid liability to a subcontractor before making final payment to a general contractor, a factoring agent with knowledge of PACA must act with diligence. It does not matter that a factoring agent paid a distributor sufficient funds to pay growers any more than it matters that a property owner paid a general contractor sufficient funds to pay subcontractors. In light of these statutory and common law protections, it cannot properly be the case that a distributor and factoring agent may defeat trust beneficiaries’ rights merely by invoking the labels ‘sale’ or ‘factoring agreеment.’” S & H Packing & Sales Co.,
Further, there would seem to be no doubt that a legislature has the power to define and limit liens. See Mercy Hosp. & Med. Ctr. v. Farmers Ins. Grp. of Companies,
Similarly here, Congress has made a clear policy choice giving PACA creditors priority over secured creditors. We must keep PACA’s purpose in mind when reviewing transactions that may in substance limit that congressional policy.
C
The dissent is not incorrect in asserting that the distinction between a sale and a secured lending agreement does not ordinarily make a difference under general trust principles, so long as the transaction at issue is commercially reasonable. But we respectfully and forcefully disagree that this is true in the context of a PACA trust. See Boulder Fruit,
PACA was enacted to protect trust beneficiaries, who were often in the position of unsecured creditors, from receiving little or nothing when a distributor went bankrupt. See 7 U.S.C. § 499e(c)(l). The dissent is not completely blind to the policy motivation behind PACA of protecting growers over lenders, but we think the dissent gives too little weight to the protective purpose of PACA. The dissent strives to add protection for the benefit of lenders, but loses sight of the PACA statutory language establishing the PACA trust, and disregards the purpose of PACA to protect agricultural growers.
To accomplish its protective purpose, PACA subordinates all secured creditor rights to the rights of the unpaid growers and charges the PACA trustee to preserve the rights of trust beneficiaries by making sure that PACA trust assets — the accounts receivable — are not dissipated. See id. at § 499e(c)(2); 7 C.F.R. 46.46(d)(1) (“[Trustees] are required to maintain trust assets in a manner that such assets are freely available to satisfy outstanding obligations to sellers of perishable agricultural commodities. Any act or omission which is inconsistent with this responsibility, including dissipation of trust assets, is unlawful and in violation of section 2 of the Act.”). When there is a sale of assets — as rеlevant here, accounts receivable — there is a conversion of the assets from one form, accounts receivable, to another, cash. See Boulder Fruit,
When there is a secured lending agree-mdnt or loan, however, the accounts receivable remain trust assets and are only collateral to the lender. See Nickey Gregory,
Here, whether the transaction at issue was a sale or a loan makes a difference because a sale removes the accounts receivable from the PACA trust while the enforcement of a loan in this case would have breached the PACA trust because AgriCap received its full payment while GW Palmer remained unpaid. Therefore, the district court must determine whether the transaction was in substance a sale or a loan
y
Congress intended PACA to prevent secured lenders from defeating the rights of PACA-trust beneficiaries. The growers in this Circuit will have effectively lost that protection if lenders gain protection by labeling what are in substance security agreements as if they were factoring agreements. The Congressional focus upon the relative rights of these two groups, growers and lenders, is evident. For this reason, before a court assesses the commercial reasonableness of a factoring agreement, it should first examine the substance of a factoring agreement to ensure that a true sale of the accounts receivable has occurred. Absent a true sale, the labels surrounding a factoring agreement should be of little or no consequence. The substance of the transaction controls. If the substance of a transaction reveals a secured lending arrangement rather than a true sale, the accounts receivable remain trust assets. In that case, unpaid trust beneficiaries will hold an interest in accounts receivable and their proceeds superior to all unsecured and secured creditors such that the trust beneficiaries should prevail.
The dominant consideration here is that the Congress of the United States in its language in the PACA statute and in the policy considerations underlying PACA has made a clear choice that the rights of agricultural growers are to be given priority over the rights of secured lenders through the vehicle of the PACA trust. If Tanimura made a true sale of its receivables to AgriCap, acting as a factor, and if it was for fair value and a commercially reasonable amount, then the PACA trust was not offeiided. But on the other hand, if the challenged transаction was not a true sale but rather a secured lending arrangement, then the plaintiff Growers have a claim that must be resolved in further proceedings. What makes this case difficult is that the challenged transaction has some features both of a sale and of a loan. On remand the district court may use all the tools at its disposal, consistent with what we have said in this opinion, including the taking of testimony and making findings of fact, to determine whether the agreement was in substance a true sale or in substance a lending agreement, and thereafter to proceed in a way consistent with this opinion,
We hold that before considering the commercial reasonableness of a transaction, a court must first apply a threshold true sale test for which the transfer-of-risk is a primary factor.
We vacate the judgment of the district court and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
VACATED and REMANDED.
Each party shall bear them own costs.
Notes
. Growers are tomato suppliers whose various lawsuits against Tanimura Distributing, Inc. were consolidated into one case before the district court.
. Factoring is “the commercial practice of converting receivables into cash by selling them at a discount.” Boulder Fruit Express & Heger Organic Farm Sales v. Transp. Factoring, Inc.,
. Tanimura owed Growers more than $800,000 when Tanimura ceased operation.
. See Nickey Gregory Co. v. Agricap, LLC,
. See, e.g., Reaves Brokerage,
.The Second Circuit described the transfer-of-risk test as follows:
Where the lender has purchased the accounts receivable, the borrower’s debt is extinguished and the lender’s risk with regard to the performance of the accounts is direct, that is, the lender and not the borrower bears the risk of non-performance by the account debtor. If the lender holds only a security interest, however, the lender’s risk is derivative or secondary, that is, the borrower remains liable for the debt and bears the risk of non-payment by the account debtor, while the lender only bears the risk that the account debtor’s non-payment will leave the borrower unable to satisfy the loan.
Endico Potatoes,
. This opinion is in substantial agreement with arguments made in Judge Melloy's concurrence and draws heavily therefrom.
. The Ninth Circuit stated:
Farmer sells oranges on credit to Broker. Broker turns around and sells the oranges on credit to Supermarket, generating an account receivable from Supermarket. Broker then obtains a loan from Bank and grants Bank a security interest in the account receivable to secure the loan. Broker goes bankrupt. Under PACA, Broker is required to hold the receivable in trust for Farmer until Farmer was paid in full; use of the receivable as collateral was a breach of the trust. Therefore, Farmer’s rights in the Supermarket receivable are superior to Bank’s. In fact, as a trust asset, the Supermarket receivable is not even part of the bankruptcy estate.
Boulder Fruit,
. The 20% discount at issue in Boulder Fruit represented a discount from the accounts’ face value as paid in an initial payment from the factoring agent to the PACA trustee. It did not represent the final amount paid nor did it represent a floor or a ceiling on what the factoring agreement in Boulder Fruit could have required the factoring agent to pay.
. Specifically, the court there said in part: "We agree with the Ninth Circuit in Boulder Fruit, that it is not a breach of trust for a PACA dealer to use PACA funds to enter into 'commercially reasonable’ transactions with parties not protected by PACA, particularly where such transactions facilitate a PACA dealer’s fulfillment of his obligations to PACA beneficiaries.” Id. at 133.
. The dissent seeks to give financial institutions the edge in this case over agricultural growers. But the analysis of the dissent is fundamentally flawed because it elevates the interests of financial institutions, the factoring organization AgriCap, over the interests of agricultural growers who PACA aimed to protect. As examples:
• First, the dissent says that ''[t]he majority posits thát the growers have a priority lien on their produce, which allows the trust to accept the benefit of a loan agreement but disregard the obligation to repay it." Dissent at 37. But nowhere do we suggest that trusts are free to disregard their obligations to lenders. A trustee cannot, however, enforce an obligation to a lender above its statutory obligation to trust beneficiaries to not dissipate trust assets.
• Second, the dissent suggests that if “the trustee still owed AgriCap money on the loan, then AgriCap would be entitled to foreclose its security interest on the accounts receivable according to the terms of the loan agreement.” Dissent at 53 n.15. This argument exceeds what even the Appellee AgriCap understands PACA to allow. AgriCap’s counsel admitted during oral argument, that if it was a true lending agreement, any interest that it had in the accounts receivable as a creditor would be subordinate to the growers. Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals, Oral Argument 14-56069 G.W. Palmer v. AgriCap Financial Corp., Youtube 27:07-28:47 (Sept. 20, 2017), https://www. youtube.com/watch?v=iikaXV7nkaw. Only an argument in desperation would ignore this concession.
• Third, the dissent contends that we have not considered the implications of our decision today. Dissent at 60-61 n.21. That is incorrect. We have stated what we believe to be the proper test for the district court to employ in the first instance, realizing the limits of our ability to review issues like damages when there is no рrior development of the record on appeal on those and related issues. Our court should not participate in the dissent's interested speculation and conjecture on issues not before us.
• Fourth, the dissent offers no judicial authority supporting its view that under PACA a commercially reasonable lending agreement can displace the trust beneficiary rights of the agricultural growers. Further, while challenging the strength of the various circuit precedents that we contend are aligned with our decision, the dissent unmistakably concedes that its position would squarely conflict with the decision of the Fourth Circuit in Nickey Gregory. Dissent at 54-55. The dissent makes this concession arguing more or less that it thinks Nickey Gregory is “critically flawed.” Dissent at 52. However, given the language and purposes of PACA, we see no reason why we should engineer a conflict with the Fourth Circuit’s decision in Nickey Gregory. See Kelton Arms Condo. Owners Ass’n, Inc. v. Homestead Ins. Co.,346 F.3d 1190 , 1192 (9th Cir. 2003) (''[W]e decline to1 create a circuit split unless there is a compelling reason to do so” particularly when “rules are best applied uniformly.”); CTIA-The Wireless Ass’n v. City of Berkeley, California,873 F.3d 774 , 776 (9th Cir. 2017).
. We note that the calculation of damages, if applicable, is left to the district court to review in the first instance after determining the substance of the accounts receivable transactions.
. There remain other questions about when the transactions are reviewed and whether to apply the test asset-by-asset or taken together. We leave to the district court’s discretion to determine the appropriate procedure for conducting this analysis as the district court is in a better position to do so after briefing from the parties on these issues.
Dissenting Opinion
with whom HURWITZ and FRIEDLAND, Circuit Judges, join, dissenting:
Congress enacted the Perishable Agricultural Commodities Act (PACA) trust, 7
The appeal before us today poses a related scenario: If a PACA trustee borrows money from a lender (using the trust assets as collateral) in order to pay the growers, but the money runs out before all the growers are paid, does the lender have an obligation to make the unpaid growers whole? The majority says yes: if the trustee fails to reimburse the growers, the lender is on the hook. The majority posits that the growers have a priority lien on their produce, which allows the trust to accept the benefit of a loan agreement but disregard the obligation to repay it. Because this surprising conclusion is unm-oored from both the text of PACA and settled principles of trust law, I dissent.
I
Congress initially enacted PACA, 7 U.S.C. §§ 499a-499t, in 1930 to protect growers who marketed and sold their produce through intermediaries. PACA did not originally make growers beneficiaries of a trust. Rather, it required all intermediary distributors — commission merchants, dealers, and brokers — to operate under licenses issued by the Secretary of Agriculture. 7 U.S.C. §§ 499c, 499d (1930). PACA also prohibited these distributors from engaging in a number of unfair business practices, such as failing to make prompt and full payment to growers. Id. §§ 499b, 499e.
Over time, it became evident that PACA gave growers insufficient protection when distributors went bankrupt. H.R. Rep. No. 98-543, at 3 (1983), as reprinted in 1984 U.S.C.C.A.N. 405, 407. As the House Committee explained in its report on the proposed 1984 Amendments, sales of perishable goods “must be made quickly or they are not made at all.” Id. As a result, produce growers are usually compelled to sell their goods on credit, even though it is “often difficult to make credit checks, conditional sales agreements, and tak[e] other traditional safeguards.” Id.
This led to especially harsh consequences when distributors went bankrupt. Distributors typically operate “on bank loans secured by the inventories, proceeds or assigned receivables from sales of perishable agricultural commodities.” Id. Before Congress intervened, a distributor could give the lender a security interest in all its assets, including the produce it had purchased from growers on credit and accounts receivable it received from the sale of the produce to retailers. If the distributor went bankrupt, the lender would have a secured claim in everything the distributor owned. In contrast, the growers would be “unsecured creditors and receive little protection in any suit for recovery of damages where a buyer has failed to make payment as required by the contract.” Id. The unsecured growers would often receive only cents on the dollar on the distributor’s unsecured IOUs. See A Bill to Amend the Perishable Agricultural Commodities Act, 1930: Hearing on S. 2052 Before the Subcomm. on Agric. Prod,, Mktg. & Stabilization of Prices of the S. Comm, on Agrie., Nutrition & Forestry, 98th Cong. 14 (1983) (statement of Keith
In light of this concern, Congress added a trust mechanism to PACA in 1984. H.R. Rep. No. 98-543, at 4. The 1984 Amendments’ operative trust provision, 7 U.S.C. § 499e(c)(2), requires a distributor to hold “perishable agricultural commodities, and any receivables or proceeds from the sale of such commodities or products ... in trust for the benefit of all unpaid suppliers or sellers” until the distributor makes full payment to its growers.
A
We “apply general trust principles to questions involving the PACA trust, unless those principles directly conflict with PACA.” Boulder Fruit Express & Heger Organic Farm Sales v. Transp. Factoring, Inc.,
Two key principles of trust law are crucial to understanding the trust mechanism in PACA. First, by making the distributor a trustee and the growers’ produce and the proceeds trust assets, Congress transformed how these assets are treated in bankruptcy. A PACA trustee-distributor wears two hats in a bankruptcy proceeding. All of the debtor’s own assets are subject to the claims of its creditors. But the trust assets do not belong to the debt- or; the distributor as trustee holds only a nonbeneficial, bare legal title to such assets. Restatement (Third) of Trusts § 42 (Am. Law Inst. 2003). Therefore, the trust
Second, by making the distributor a trustee of the PACA trust, Congress authorized the distributor to manage the produce and any resulting assets for the growers’ benefit, subject to the standards that govern trustees.
There is an important exception to this rule. If (1) the trustee breaches its fiduciary duties when selling a trust asset or granting a security interest in a trust asset, and (2) the third party is on notice of this breach, the third party does not take the asset or security interest free of the trust. Restatement (Second) of Trusts § 288. Rather, the third party takes the asset in “a constructive trust for the beneficiary of the trust,” id. § 288 cmt. a., and may be compelled to restore the asset or
Nothing in PACA alters these basic trust principles. A PACA trustee, like any other trustee, has authority to sell trust assets or borrow money secured by an interest in trust property. See Preamble to Regulations Under the Perishable Agricultural Commodities Act, 49 Fed. Reg. 45,-735, 45,738 (Nov. 20, 1984) (codified at 7 C.F.R. pt. 46) (stating that “the regulations do not prohibit a buyer or receiver from granting a secured interest in trust assets”); see also Nickey Gregory,
B
The facts in this case must be understood in light of these principles. Tanimura Distributing, Inc. (TDI) was in the business of distributing produce. TDI bought produce on credit from numerous growers, including the plaintiffs in this action (collectively, “Palmer”). TDI then resold this produce to retail outlets, usually on credit. Under a Factoring Agreement, TDI gave Agricap Financial Corp. an interest in the retailers’ IOUs (i.e., TDI’s accounts receivable)
These relationships are easier to understand by using a hypothetical example. Let’s say Palmer sells four bushels of tomatoes to TDI for $100 on credit. Per PACA, TDI holds the bushels in trust. See 7 U.S.C, § 499e(c)(2). TDI (as trustee) then sells the four bushels to Safeway for $200, and takes back an IOU, which is an asset of .the trust. Under the Factoring Agreement, TDI assigns the $200 Safeway IOU to AgriCap as the “absolute owner.” In exchange, AgriCap promptly pays TDI 80 percent of the face value of the $200 account receivable, $160. This $160 becomes an asset of the trust, held by TDI for the benefit of Palmer and other growers who sell to TDI on credit. After Agri-Cap collects the $200 from Safeway, it pays TDI the remaining 20 percent of the face value of the account receivable, less a 3 percent finance fee.
The Factoring Agreement provided AgriCap some protections in exchange for taking the risk that the receivables would not be collectible. Among other things, AgriCap could require TDI to repurchase accounts receivable in certain circumstances, primarily if TDI had made an error in calculating the amount of produce sold to Safeway, and the Agreement required TDI to take back accounts receivable that were uncollectible after 90 days. However, AgriCap assumed the risk of loss in the event that Safeway became insolvent.
In sum, TDI received an 80 percent advance on the value of its accounts receivable and would receive up to 97 percent of their face value. Because PACA creates a nonsegregated floating trust, TDI was statutorily authorized to use the money it received from AgriCap to pay all the growers, including Palmer, and with the 80 percent advance on each account receivable, was able to do so with increased speed.
Although the Factoring Agreement states that TDI sold the accounts receivable to AgriCap, it is possible, as the majority suggests, to characterize the transaction as a loan. Maj. Op. at 801-02. If the arrangement is viewed as a loan, TDI, acting as a trustee, has borrowed $160 from AgriCap for the benefit of all the growers (the beneficiaries), and assigned the $200 Safeway account receivable to AgriCap as security for the loan. A lender taking only a security interest in an account receivable would typically not have any ability to collect the account receivable (unless the borrower defaulted). But the Factoring Agreement provides that once the $200 account receivable is assigned to AgriCap, it is the sole entity authorized to collect it. Therefore, to maintain the re-characterization of this transaction as a loan, we must view TDI as authorizing AgriCap to act as its collection agency, in addition to AgriCap’s role as secured lender. See Nickey Gregory,
This relationship — however characterized — broke down in August 2008, when TDI failed to pay Palmer amounts owed for its produce. After Palmer sued TDI, the distributor filed for Chapter 7 bankruptcy protection. In re Tanimura Distrib., Inc., No. 2:08-bk-22644-TD (Bankr. C.D. Cal. Aug. 13, 2008), ECF No. 1.
When it declared bankruptcy, TDI owed Palmer roughly $845,000.
After TDI’s bankruptcy filing, Palmer added AgriCap to its complaint in this case, alleging that TDI’s accounts receivable were PACA trust assets and AgriCap should return them to Palmer. In its motion for summary judgment, Palmer argued that TDI breached its fiduciary duty by granting AgriCap a security interest in accounts receivable from the sale of Palmer’s produce and by transferring those accounts receivable to AgriCap. Further, Palmer claimed, AgriCap knеw TDI was in breach of trust and is therefore liable to Palmer for the value of the accounts receivable that TDI transferred to AgriCap. In effect, Palmer’s summary judgment motion claims that because TDI did not pay Palmer the $160 it initially borrowed from AgriCap, AgriCap has to make, good on TDI’s obligation.
II
Under trust law, AgriCap’s potential liability primarily turns on whether the TDI breached its fiduciary duty. As explained above, if TDI breached its fiduciary duty to Palmer and the growers by entering into the Factoring Agreement or by performing its obligations under the Factoring Agreement, and AgriCap was on notice of the breach, AgriCap would hold any security interest in the trust assets or any proceeds derived from those assets, in a constructive trust for the benefit of the growers.
Because a PACA trustee can give a lender a security interest in trust assets, TDI did not breach its fiduciary duty to the growers merely by entering into the Factoring Agreement. The parties do not argue that the Factoring Agreement is commercially unreasonable; indeed, there would be no basis for doing so. In our example, TDI as trustee would get $194, or 97 percent of the $200 account receivable. This far exceeds the 80 percent return that we have approved in the sale of assets. See Boulder Fruit,
In short, TDI did not breach its fiduciary duties as trustee when it entered into an agreement under which it received an 80 percent advance on each account receivable in exchange for repaying the advance plus a fee of 3 percent. Nor did TDI breach its fiduciary duties by complying with the terms of this agreement, which required TDI to repay the money borrowed from AgriCap. Therefore, AgriCap holds its interest in the accounts receivable and loan payments free of the trust. See Restatement (Second) of Trusts § 283. Under principles applicable to all trusts, including PACA trusts, AgriCap has no liability to Palmer or any other grower.
Ill
The majority agrees that basic trust principles apply to PACA trusts. Maj. Op. at 803. It also agrees that trust assets are excluded from the distributor’s bankruptcy estate if the distributor goes bankrupt. Maj. Op. at 803. It agrees that if a trustee “transfers trust property to a third person ... [without] committing] a breach of trust, the third person holds the interest so transferred or created free of the trust, and is under no liability to the beneficiary.” Maj. Op. at 803 (quoting Restatement (Second) of Trusts § 283). Finally, the majority agrees that a trustee can give a lender a security interest in PACA trust assets without violating PACA. Maj. Op. at 811-12.
So how does the majority nonetheless reach the striking conclusion that if the Factoring Agreement is deemed to be a loan transaction, then AgriCap, which paid TDI $194 for a $200 trust asset, is liable to Palmer for the same $200?
In reaching its conclusion that a trustee would breach its fiduciary duty by repaying the loan from trust assets “while the trust beneficiaries have not been fully compensated,” Maj. Op. at 811, the majority relies on Nickey Gregory Co. v. AgriCap, LLC, which analyzed a similar agreement between AgriCap and a PACA trustee. See
The majority adopts this reasoning. While conceding that this result has no basis in trust principles, Maj. Op, at 811, the majority contends that this result is required by PACA, and quotes the regulation stating that PACA trustees “are required to maintain trust assets in a manner that such assets are freely available to satisfy outstanding obligations to sellers of perishable agricultural commodities,” and this precludes a trustee from repaying a loan to the trust. Maj. Op. at 811-12 (quoting 7 C.F.R. § 46.46(d)(1)).
The majority’s analysis, like that in Nickey Gregory, is critically flawed. First, the majority misunderstands the nature of trust assets. In the case of a loan, the trustee maintains two assets available for the growers: the $194 that the trustee received from the lender ($160 as an advance, $34 post-collection), and the accounts receivable subject to the lender’s $160 lien. The trustee’s repayment of the $160 to the lender does not dissipate the trust’s assets, because the trust is not entitled to that $160 under the terms of the loan agreement. The typical produce sales arrangement seems more questionable under the majority’s reasoning, because TDI relinquished the produce (an asset of the estate that is no longer freely available to the growers) to Safeway, and received only a promise to pay in return.
Second, the majority misunderstands the nature of a trustee’s obligation in a loan agreement. Just like any trustee who takes out a loan for the benefit of the beneficiaries and uses trust assets as collateral, the PACA trustee must repay the loan according to the terms of the loan agreement, and the secured lender’s lien on those trust assets remains enforceable if the loan is not repaid.
Indeed, the majority’s theory of breach — that the trustee cannot repay a loan to the trust until all beneficiaries have been paid — would likely preclude a trustee from borrowing money secured by trust assets. Because PACA is a nonsegregated floating trust, 7 C.F.R. § 46.46(b), each grower has a claim on the trust assets, whether they were acquired before or after the grower sold its produce to the trustee. See In re Kornblum & Co., Inc.,
Perhaps realizing that there is no statutory basis for holding that a PACA trustee cannot repay a lender pursuant to the terms of the loan agreement, the majority posits that if a PACA trustee borrows
This framework, howеver, is divorced from the language of PACA and basic principles of trust law. Congress could well have provided that when a distributor purchases a grower’s produce on credit, the grower would be deemed, by operation of law, to have a lien on that produce (and its proceeds) that has priority over the liens of all other creditors. But, there is nothing to this effect in PACA. Rather, Congress elected to rely on a trust mechanism, and to protect growers by making the distributor a trustee holding their proceeds in trust. See 7 U.S.C. § 499e(c)(2). A beneficiary of a trust does not have any lien on trust assets, let alone a priority lien.
Although the majority purports to follow the lead of three other circuits, only the Fourth Circuit has adopted the theory that a trustee’s loan repayments in the ordinary course of business are a breach of trust. In Reaves Brokerage Co. v. Sunbelt Fruit & Vegetable Co.,
Moreover, the Second Circuit has recognized, consistent with Boulder Fruit, “that it is not a breach of trust for a PACA dealer to use PACA funds to enter into ‘commercially reasonable’ transactions with parties not рrotected by PACA, particularly where such transactions facilitate a PACA dealer’s fulfillment of his obligations to PACA beneficiaries.” E. Armata, Inc. v. Korea Commercial Bank of N.Y.,
At bottom, the majority’s concern appears to be that trust principles are insufficiently protective of growers here. But the majority offers no principled distinction for why a trustee can sell produce for cash, sell an account receivable for cash, but not borrоw cash secured by the produce or account receivable, even though the trustee gets substantially the same amount of cash for the benefit of the growers in each transaction. More fundamentally, the majority’s discussion of PACA’s purpose seems to conflate lenders-to-the-distributor with lenders-to-the-trustee. Lenders to the distributor cannot reach PACA assets in bankruptcy because TDI holds those assets in trust for the growers. See Sunkist Growers,
Once we discard the majority’s theory of breach, its discussion of the test for a “true sale” becomes irrelevant. Maj. Op. at 808-09. In the trust context, the key question is not whether the trustee is engaged in a sale or loan, but whether the trustee breached its fiduciary duty in entering into the loan agreement (and complying with it according to its terms). The answer to that question turns primarily on the commercial reasonableness of the individual transaction and its terms.
IV
By enacting PACA, Congress provided significant protection to growers by ensuring that a distributor who buys their produce on credit owes the growers a fiduciary duty to manage the trust assets (the
The majority’s approach is inconsistent with PACA, and that should be enough to reject it. “[W]e will not presume with [appellants] that any result consistent with their account of the statute’s overarching goal must be the law but will presume more modestly instead ‘that [the] legislature says ... what it means and means ... what it says.’ ” Henson v. Santander Consumer USA Inc., — U.S. -,
But the majority's approach also makes no sense as a practical matter. Under the majority’s decision, a transaction in which the trustee made a commercially reasonable sale of a $200 account receivable to AgriCap and received $150 in return would not constitute a dissipation of trust assets, and AgriCap could keep the $200 it collected on the account receivable from the retailer. But a transaction in which the trustee received a $200 loan from AgriCap (secured by a security interest in the same $200 account receivable) and agreed to pay back the loan when it collected the $200 from the retailer, would constitute a dissipation of assets if the trustee paid back the loan.
Moreover, the majority’s approach will hurt PACA beneficiaries in the long run. If lenders face the prospect that any repayments they receive will be a breach of trust and subject to disgorgement, they will either refuse to engage in factoring transactions or impose more severe terms to account for the heightened risk.
I respectfully dissent.
. The 1984 Amendments also created a procedure for enforcing trust rights. Section 499e(c)(3) provided that a beneficiary must preserve its right to benefits by issuing written notice to the trustee within 30 days after the trustee’s failure to make payment. 7 U.S.C. § 499e(c)(3). Section 499e(c)(4) allowed a beneficiary to alternatively preserve its rights through standardized language on billing or invoice statements. Section 499e(c)(5) vested jurisdiction in federal district courts to hear "(i) actions by trust beneficiaries to enforce payment from the trust, and (ii) actions by the Secretary to prevent and restrain dissipation of the trust.” The plaintiffs in this case included the standardized language on their invoices to Tanimura Distributing, Inc. (TDI).
. The current trend is to rely on both the Second and Third Restatements of Trusts. See, e.g., United States v. Jicarilla Apache Nation,
. Because the PACA trust is a “nonsegregated ‘floating’ trust,” it permits "[cjommingling of trust assets.” 7 C.F.R. § 46.46(b); H.R. Rep. No. 98-543, at 4. Commingling relieves trustees of the burden "to specifically identify all of the trust assets through each step” of administering the trust. H.R. Rep. No. 98-543, at 5.
. Restatement (Second) of Trusts § 283 states:
If the trustee transfеrs trust property to a third person or creates a legal or equitable interest in the subject matter of the trust in a third person, and the trustee in making the transfer or in creating the interest does not commit a breach of trust, the third .person holds the interest so transferred or created free of the trust, and is under no liability to the beneficiary.
.Although the Second Restatement uses the term "bona fide purchaser,” the term also applies when the trustee "creates a legal interest” in trust property, § 284(1), such as by giving “a legal mortgage or pledge or legal lien upon the trust property,” id. § 284 cmt. g. In other words, a lender’s security interest may be protected by the bona fide purchaser defense, even if the trustee breached its fiduciary duty by granting the interest.
.Equity recognizes some exceptions to this rule. A third party that has conferred a benefit on the trust estate may be entitled to reimbursement from trust assets. See, e.g., Restatement (Second) of Trusts § 291 cmt. o ("If the trustee in breach of trust transfers trust property to a person who takes with notice of the breach of trust and who pays value for the trust property, and the beneficiary compels him to restore the property to the trust or to account for its value or for the proceeds, the transferee is entitled to credit for the amount which he paid for the trust property to the extent to which the trust estate has the benefit thereof.”); id. § 269 ("A person who has conferred a benefit on the trust estate and cannot obtain satisfaction of his claim out of the trustee’s individual property can by a proceeding in equity reach trust property and apply it to the satisfaction of his claim to the extent to which the trust estate has been benefited, unless under the circumstances it is inequitable to allow him such remedy.”); see also Thomas v. Provident Life & Tr. Co.,
. The breaching trustee is also liable to the beneficiaries. "[I]f the trustee wrongfully uses trust money in his own business, or if he lends trust money to himself, the beneficiary can impose a constructive trust or equitable lien upon the proceeds if he can trace them.” Restatement (Second) of Trusts § 202 cmt. e.
. Dissipation is defined as "any act or failure to act which could result in the diversion of. trust assets or which could prejudice or impair the ability of unpaid suppliers, sellers, or agents to recover money owed in connection with produce transactions.” 7 C.F.R. § 46.46(a)(2).
. Under the terms of the Agreement, Agri-Cap's fees were only 1,5 percent, meaning that TDI would get 98,5 percent of the face value of each account receivable. In practice, AgriCap asserts that it paid TDI on average 97 percent of the receivable's value, and Palmer does not contend otherwise. Earlier in this litigation, AgriCap stated that it paid 98.2 percent on average. The district court did not make a finding on the actual amount paid, but estimated that it was "likely in the 90% range,”
. In its initial complaint, Palmer sought to recover approximately $882,000 in unpaid debts from produce sales, but now seeks only .$845,000.
. TDI’s bankruptcy estate has now been fully distributed. See Chapter 7 Trustee’s Final Account, In re Tanimura Distrib., Inc., No. 2:08-bk-22644-TD, (Bankr. C.D. Cal. Aug. 7, 2014), ECF No. 262.
. As indicated below, infra at p. 822-23, because PACA is a nonsegregated floating trust, such a term would likely prevent TDI from every repaying a lender.
. If described as a loan, this means that after TDI borrowed $194 and subsequently repaid the $194 loan (plus fees) to AgriCap, AgriCap must return the $194 plus fees to TDI, with no prospect of ever getting its loan repaid.
. More precisely, the majority states that a trustee breaches its fiduciary duties “whenever the lender recovers its fee or percentage from the accounts receivable while the trust beneficiaries have not been fully compensated.” Maj. Op. at 811. It is not clear whether the majority deems the breach to be limited to a trustee’s payment of interest to a lender, or deems the trustee’s repayment of principal to the lender to also be a breach of trust. Nor does the majority make clear whether a lender must return only the interest it received on the loan or must also return the repayment of principal. Nevertheless, the majority’s adoption of this analysis indicates that the majority assumes the lender must return both interest and principal to the trustee. See Nickey Gregory,
. At oral argument, AgriCap's counsel stated that the trust estate no longer contains any uncollected accounts receivable subject to a " security interest, and so such accounts receivable are not at issue in this appeal. U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit Court, Oral Argument 14-56059 G.W. Palmer & Co. v. Agri-Cap Fin. Corp., Youtube 28:30-28:50 (Sept. 20, 2017), https://www.youtube.com/watch? v=iikaXV7nkaw.
But were the issue before us, basic principles of trust law establish that AgriCap would have the same rights with respect to those accounts receivables as it would to the proceeds. If TDI, as trustee, did not breach its fiduciary duties when it borrowed money from AgriCap (or AgriCap did not have knowledge of the breach), and the trustee still owed AgriCap money on the loan, then Agri-Cap would be entitled to foreclose its security interest on the accounts receivable according to the terms of the loan agreement. See Restatement (Second) of Trusts §§ 283-84, 288 (explaining that a third-party lender holds its security interest in trust property free of the trust unless the grant of the interest was a breach of the trustee's fiduciary duty, the lender had notice, and the lender did not give value).
While AgriCap’s counsel stated in response to questioning that a lender’s interest in the accounts receivable would be subordinate to the growers' interests as beneficiaries, Maj. Op. at 812 n.ll, we do not construe statutes based on passing statements at oral argument. Roberts v. Galen of Va., Inc.,
.Although the Department of Agriculture stated in the preamble to its regulations that a lender that takes a secured interest in a PACA trust asset takes "a secured interest [that] is secondary and specifically voidable in order to satisfy debts to unpaid suppliers, sellers, or agents in perishable agricultural commodity transactions,” Preamble to Regulations Under the Perishable Agricultural Commodities Act,
. As explained above, the bona fide purchaser defense applies equally to a lender’s security interest in trust assets or the purchase of trust assets. See supra p. 816 n.5; Restatement (Second) of Trusts § 284 & cmt. g.
. The majority also cites A & J Produce Corp. v. Bronx Overall Economic Development Corp., which relied on Reaves and Endico Potatoes for the proposition that a lender is not a bona fide purchaser for value, but likewise failed to identify any breach by the trustee.
. The parties dispute the аmounts AgriCap loaned to TDI and the amounts that TDI repaid AgriCap.
, As explained above, supra p. 822-23, the distributor-trustees constantly generate new outstanding obligations to growers in the ordinary course of business, meaning that in practical terms, any repayment could be a breach under the majority’s theory.
. "[I]n desperation,” the majority attempts to distract attention from the necessary implications of its own logic by pointing to policy issues, passing statements in oral argument, and its reliance on the Fourth Circuit’s similar errors. Maj. Op. at 812 n.11, Instead of reasoning and analysis, the majority offers only conclusory statements. For instance, the majority states "nowhere do we suggest that trusts are free to disregard their obligations to lenders.” But this is contrary to the majority’s own reasoning, that "whenever a loan is made, a PACA trustee must be careful to ensure all trust beneficiaries are paid before the lender collects.” Maj. Op. at 811. Said otherwise, a trustee cannot repay the lender according to the terms of the loan. Or at all— as explained above, supra p. 822-23, given the nature of a floating, nonsegregated trust, some trust beneficiaries will be unpaid at any given time.
Similarly, the majority argues we should not consider the consequences of its theory of breach, because it remands to the district court for a determination of damages. Maj. Op. at 812 n.11. But it requires no "interested speculation and conjecture” to conclude that, .if the Factoring Agreement is deemed to be a loan, AgriCap would have to return all loan payments it received, up to the value of TDI’s debts to Palmer. See Nickey Gregory,
