In late 1988, Steven Dahl, a North Dakota farmer, delivered approximately 5,700 hundredweight of navy beans to a public storage warehouse in Cooperstown, North Dakota. The parties entered into a storage .agreement that allowed Dahl to store beans at the warehouse, which was owned by ConAgra. Under the terms of the agreement, Dahl could store his beans at the warehouse until they were sold to ConAgra, or he could request redelivery of the beans.
North Dakota law required ConAgra to post its purchasing price “on the board” at any time when it was buying beans. When Dahl delivered his beans to the warehouse, ConAgra was “off the board”, meaning that it was not then purchasing beans. ConAgra did not purchase the beans that Dahl delivered. Although North Dakota law prohibited doing so, ConAgra subsequently purchased beans from other growers while it was supposedly “off the board” and while it had Dahl’s beans in its warehouse.
Dahl learned of ConAgra’s “off-the-board” purchases and filed suit in a North Dakota court alleging constructive fraud and a private cause of action under Section 60-02-20 of the North Dakota Century Code. ConA-gra removed the ease to United States District Court, invoking the court’s original diversity jurisdiction. See 28 U.S.C. § 1332. Both ConAgra and Dahl moved for summary judgment. The district court granted ConA-gra summary judgment on both issues and denied Dahl’s motion. Dahl appeals, maintaining that summary judgment was incorrectly granted on both theories of liability.
I.
Dahl alleges that ConAgra committed constructive fraud by buying grain from other farmers when it was “off the board.” “Constructive fraud is any breach of duty which gains an advantage to the person at fault by misleading another to his or her prejudice.”
Bourgois v. Montana-Dakota Utilities Co.,
The district court concluded that Dahl did not offer any evidence to suggest that his agreement with ConAgra was not made at arm’s length. We will not disturb a trial court’s findings of fact unless they are clearly erroneous.
See Baggett v. Programs Re
*621
sources, Inc.,
A party alleging constructive fraud must also show that the fraud caused him or her actual damages.
See Olson v. Fraase,
II.
The relevant part of Section 60-02-20 states that “no public warehouseman shall discriminate in the selling, receiving, and handling of grain.” N.D.Cent.Code § 60-02-20 (1985). The statute also imposes a duty on a warehouseman to post in a conspicuous place grain prices that it will pay. Dahl argues that this statute implies a private right of action to one injured by a failure to abide by its mandate, but no North Dakota court has ruled on this issue. In a diversity case, of course, “[w]here neither the legislature nor the highest court in a state has addressed an issue, [we] must determine what the highest state court would probably hold were it called upon to decide the issue.”
Hazen v. Pasley,
Although Section 60-02-20 does not expressly provide for a private right of action, Dahl contends that the statute implies one because its purpose is to protect farmers, and allowing a private right of action would further that purpose. Chapter 60-02 does not state this asserted purpose, though we concede that the North Dakota legislature may have been motivated, at least in part, to protect those storing grain at these facilities. Even though ConAgra’s violation of Section 60-02-20 may have harmed Dahl, and even though he may be a member of the group the legislature sought to protect, Dahl does not, without more, have a private right of action.
We next ask whether allowing a private right of action would intrude on the state’s regulatory authority. The North Dakota Public Service Commission has the duty and power to investigate all complaints of fraud and injustice, unfair practices, and unfair discrimination under Chapter 60-02 of the North Dakota Code. N.D.Cent.Code § 60-02-03 (1985). Sections 60-02-03 and 60-02-12 empower the Commission to regulate the grain industry and to impose penalties for *622 any violation of Chapter 60-02. We conclude that the implication of a private right of action from Section 60-02-20, where the legislature has provided a comprehensive regulatory scheme and has not explicitly provided such an action, would be an intrusion on the commission’s regulatory authority.
Finally, we consider any indication of legislative intent to provide a private right of action under Section 60-02-20. As noted, the North Dakota Supreme Court has observed that legislative failure expressly to provide a private remedy, while not dispositive, ordinarily indicates intent that one not be available.
R.B.J.,
This analysis leads us to conclude that Dahl has no private right of action under Section 60-02-20 of the North Dakota Code.
III.
For the reasons stated, we affirm the judgment of the district court.
