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Kramer v. CHS, Inc., Case No.: 1-17-cv-270
ORDER DENYING MOTION TO DISMISS
Before the court is a Motion to Dismiss filed by Defendant CHS, Inc., d/b/a Northern Plains Cooperative ("CHS"). (Doc. No. 3). CHS brings this motion pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(b)(6), arguing the complaint in this matter fails to state a claim upon which relief can be granted. Plaintiff Mitch Kramer opposes the motion. (Doc. No. 10).
The following is a summary of the allegations contained in Kramer's complaint that he filed in state court. (Doc. No. 1-2). As discussed later, the court must accept all factual allegations as true for purposes of CHS's motion to dismiss.
Kramer is a farmer in south-central North Dakota, where CHS provides agricultural products and services. Kramer alleges that, on January 29, 2016, he asked CHS for a line of credit for $250,000 pursuant to CHS's Premier Grower Program, which provides loans to farmers to purchase agricultural supplies from CHS.1 (Doc. No. 4-2). According to Kramer this was consistent withparties' relationship in past years when CHS had similarly extended credit to Kramer.
According to Kramer, when he went to CHS to obtain the line of credit, he signed "documentation" for the extension of the line of credit consistent with what had been done in the past and was given verbal assurances that his contract was approved and the documentation he signed was sufficient to establish an agreement on the part of CHS to extend the line of credit.
While Kramer did not attach to his complaint, a copy of the "documentation," he did: (1) identify CHS's credit program by name, i.e., the Premier Grower Program; (2) recite the amount of credit he claims he was approved for, and (3) state that the agreement was essentially the same as in prior years. Also, while Kramer did not identify by name the person who he alleged approved the "documentation," he did refer to the person by his position, i.e., the credit manager who had provided him the documentation, and also referred to the person as the credit manager who had been terminated by CHS.
According to Kramer, CHS allowed him to use approximately $120,000 of credit to finance his farming operations through approximately the second week of May, 2016. Then, in early June, 2016, Kramer alleges that he sought to purchase further supplies, and, at that time, CHS informed Kramer it would no longer finance his farming operations and that the credit manager who had approved his line of credit had been terminated.
Kramer alleges he was not able to secure any other operating loan for the remainder of the growing season. As a result of not being able to finance necessary chemicals, applications, fertilizer,and other supplies, Kramer alleges he had drastically reduced crop yields in 2016 and suffered damages in the amount of $605,781.00.
The only claim for relief that Kramer sets forth in his complaint is one for breach of contract, express or implied. He has not so far pled tort or fraud as a standalone claim for relief.
CHS contends in its motion to dismiss that Kramer's complaint fails to state a claim upon which relief can be granted because it fails to allege there was a written agreement that was signed by CHS that would be enforceable against it. In making this argument, CHS points to North Dakota's statute of frauds which, in relevant part, requires that, for agreements promising to extend credit in the aggregate amount of$25,000 or greater, the agreement must be in writing and signed by the party to be charged. CHS then submits with its motion a two-page document bearing Kramer's signature at the bottom of the first page. This two-page document is entitled "PREMIER GROWER PROGRAM" - the same program name referenced in Kramer's complaint. CHS contends that this two-page document must have been the "documentation" alluded to in the complaint, that it is merely a "credit application," and that it does not suffice to satisfy North Dakota's statute of fraud because it was not executed by CHS.
While it may be that the two-page document submitted by CHS is the credit application, on its face it appears to also do double duty as the contact for the extension of credit upon acceptance by CHS in that it contains all of the terms that one would expect in such an agreement, including the amount of credit to be extended, the interest rate, terms of repayment, etc. Further, it includes specific language of contract, including, for example, the words on the first page: "You further acknowledge that you have read, understand, and accept the terms of this agreement, included onpage two of the application."
In fact, the two-page document includes even more. There is embedded within its language the terms of a personal guaranty of payment that is granted by each of the applicants upon their signature In short, the only thing missing to complete the agreement is a place for CHS to sign - if CHS had intended acceptance to be by signature as opposed to some other manner of acceptance, which is not at all clear.
Notably, there is at the top of page 1 a box in small type as follows:
| For Office Use Only |
| Patron # __________ |
| Credit Limit __________ |
| Approval __________ |
The copy provided by CHS does not have anything filled in within this box.
The standard for whether to grant a motion to dismiss under Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(b)(6) for failure to state a claim is well-established. The complaint must state enough to "give the defendant fair notice of what the . . . claim is and the grounds upon which it rests." Bell Atlantic Corp. v. Twombly, 550 U.S. 544, 555 (2007) ("Twombly"). It also must state facts sufficient to satisfy the "plausibility standard" for stating a cognizable claim as established in Twombly and further amplified by the Supreme Court in Ashcroft v. Iqbal, 556 U.S. 662, 678-84 (2009) ("Iqbal"). In making these evaluations, the court must accept all factual allegations set forth in the complaint as true. Twombly, 550 U.S. 544, 556 n.3 (2007).
While, for reasons discussed later, the court concludes the Iqbal/Twombly pleading standard has been satisfied in this case, the court would give Kramer an opportunity to tender an amended complaint to try meet it if there was any doubt. This is because his complaint was filed in state court and removed here by CHS. To this court's knowledge, the North Dakota Supreme Court has not embraced the Iqbal/Twombly standard, and it would be unfair to subject the complaint to an arguably higher pleading standard without affording an opportunity to amend. See, e.g., Limberg v. Sanford Medical Center Fargo, 2016 ND 140, ¶ 7, 881 N.W.2d 658 () (italics added and internal quotations and citing authority omitted).
The court concludes that the complaint alleges sufficient facts to make out a plausible claim for breach of contract, express or implied, but, even if it did not, CHS by providing the exhibit has cured any deficiency. As for CHS's contention that there is nothing before the court which indicates that North Dakota's statute of frauds codified at N.D.C.C. § 9-06-04 was complied with, Kramer has pled enough to establish the existence of a contract and CHS's recognition of it in terms of advancing credit. While CHS contends that it advanced the credit not because there was a binding agreement to advance credit up to $250,000 but for other reasons, we are not at the proof stage yet and the court must construe the allegations of the complaint in Kramer's favor.
And, while CHS has tendered the two-page document, this court has no way of knowing at this point (and probably neither does Kramer) that there is not another version of this two-pagedocument somewhere within CHS that might have been initialed or otherwise signed off on, which, if so, would likely satisfy the "subscription" requirement of § 9-06-04. Kramer should be allowed the opportunity for discovery, including the opportunity of seeking any other versions of the two-page document that may be in the possession of CHS or its related entities along with any other documents that may be associated with the two-page document that might contain any signature, mark, or other writing that arguably might constitute a "subscription" and that, if there is no such document in existence in this case, obtain CHS's statement under oath to that effect.2
In addition, even if there is no other document that satisfies § 9-06-04 , assuming it to be applicable, there may be exceptions or defenses to CHS's assertion of the statute. For example, Kramer in his briefing in opposition to the motion cites to North Dakota's statutory "fraud exception," which provides:
When a contract which is required by law to be in writing is prevented from being put into writing by the fraud of a party thereto, any other party who by such fraud is led to believe that it is in writing and acts upon such belief to that party's prejudice may enforce it against the fraudulent party.
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