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Nature of Suit Code: 380
Nature of Suit: Other Personal Property Damage
Cause of Action: 

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NOT RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION

File Name: 10a0434n.06

Case No. 08-1831

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS

FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT

SCARFF BROTHERS, INC., a Maryland

Corporation,

Plaintiff- Counter Defendant

Appellee,

v.

BISCHER FARMS, INC., a Michigan

Corporation,

Defendant- Counter Plaintiff

Appellant,

MELVIN J. BISCHER, an individual, et al.,

Defendants-Appellants.

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ON APPEAL FROM THE

UNITED STATES DISTRICT

COURT FOR THE EASTERN

DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN

BEFORE: BATCHELDER, Chief Judge; SILER and MOORE, Circuit Judges.

ALICE M. BATCHELDER, Chief Judge. In this contract dispute, Defendants-Appellants

Bischer Farms, Inc., et al. (“Defendants”) appeal the district court’s award of contractual damages

to Plaintiff-Appellee Scarff Brothers, Inc. (“ScarffBrothers”). Forthe reasons that follow, we affirm

in part and vacate and remand in part.

I.

The facts of this case were ably set out by the district court in its opinion, Scarff Brothers,

Inc. v. Bischer Farms, Inc., 546 F. Supp. 2d 473, 477–84 (E.D. Mich. 2008). Because neither party

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contests the district court’s findings of fact for the purpose of this appeal, only a short summary of

the main elements is included.

A. Parties

Scarff Brothers is owned by two brothers, Lance and Howard Scarff, and is in the business

of buying and selling cattle at market. Scarff Brothers places its cattle in feedlots across the country

where the cattle are fed and cared for until they are ready for slaughter and sale at market. Bischer

Farms, Inc. was one such feedlot. Bischer Farms, Inc. is owned by Melvin Bischer, Janet Bischer,

Bradley Geiger and Pauline Geiger in equal shares. These individuals also own several other

enterprises, including a concrete business, a field tile business, and a trucking company. Duane

Geiger managed the feedlot at Bischer Farms, Inc. and worked with Scarff Brothers to issue monthly

bills for the cattle’s care.

B. The Contract

The parties began doing business in August 2002 after orally agreeing to terms, and in 2003

attempted to put the terms of their agreement into writing. Because the parties could not produce

an agreed-upon version of the writing at trial, however, the district court found the terms of their

contract from their course of dealing. These terms are as follows. Bischer Farms, Inc. agreed to feed

and care for Scarff Brothers’ cattle at an agreed maximum cost of gain per pound, insurance per

head, and veterinary costs. Scarff Brothers tracked its cattle in lots with detailed handling and cost

data attached, which Bischer Farms, Inc. used to bill Scarff Brothers for monthly costs by lot,

discounted for any dead cattle, based on Duane Geiger’s information. “Finished,” or marketable,

cattle were selected out of particular lots forslaughter and sale. When the last head in a lot was sold

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Bischer Farms, Inc. issued a “close out” invoice for the lot. This invoice accounted for all the cattle

delivered to Bischer Farms, Inc. as either having died or been sold, and charged Scarff Brothers for

any remaining costs.

During the course of their business relationship Scarff Brothers delivered sixty lots to Bischer

Farms, Inc., the first forty of which were closed out in this manner. There were 7,194 cattle in those

forty lots. Twenty-two cattle were reported to have died and 7,172 head were marketed. Lots fortyone to sixty included 2,840 head, with the last shipment to Bischer Farms, Inc. on January 27, 2004.

C. Missing Cattle

At some point in late 2003, Defendants discovered that they could not account for all the

Scarff Brothers’ cattle that had been delivered to their lot. They initially suspected theft and fired

Duane Geiger on January 30, 2004. On February 4th or 5th, Defendants informed Scarff Brothers

that at least 100 head were missing. On February 11, 2004, Scarff Brothers came to inspect its cattle

and Defendants told them that Duane Geiger had stolen the missing heads of cattle. A hand

inspection done by both parties revealed 491 head unaccounted for. On February 12, 2004,

Defendants reported the theft to the local sheriff. Soon after Scarff Brothers removed its cattle to

other feed lots.

D. The Proceedings Below

Scarff Brothers sued in federal district court for breach of contract as well as various tortrelated claims. Defendants counterclaimed for breach of contract. After years of contentious

litigation the case proceeded to a bench trial lasting 24 half-days. After the conclusion of proofs the

district court issued its opinion. It held that Bischer Farms, Inc. had breached its contract with Scarff

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The district court originally found Defendants liable for $610,530.27 but reduced the award in an order 1

amending the judgment to account for the cost of caring for the cattle until their final removal from the feedlot.

4

Brothers; that Bischer Farms Partnership was a successor to Bischer Farms, Inc. and therefore the

partnership and each partner were liable for the breach; and that all the related Bischer Farms entities

and individuals were liable as alter egos. The district court dismissed Scarff Brothers’ other claims

as well as Defendants’ counterclaim for breach of contract. The court found Defendants liable for

$473,433.36 in damages. This timely appeal followed. 1

II

Defendants make several arguments on appeal. First, they argue the district court erred by

finding liability for breach of contract when Defendants stood in the position of agisters and

therefore could only be liable for negligent losses. Next, Defendants contend that the district court

erred in finding Bischer Farms Partnership liable as a successor to Bischer Farms, Inc. Finally, they

argue that the district court erred in finding the various Bischer entities and individuals liable as alter

egos for Bischer Farms, Inc.

A. Jurisdiction and Standard of Review

This action was properly brought in the district court under its diversity jurisdiction, 28

U.S.C. § 1332. This Court has jurisdiction over the appeal under 28 U.S.C. § 1291 following a final

judgment by the district court. When sitting in diversity, a federal district court applies the

substantive law of the state in which it sits and federal procedural law. Gasperini v. Ctr. for

Humanities, Inc., 518 U.S. 415, 427 (1996). On direct appeal after a bench trial we review the

findings of fact for clear error and conclusions of law de novo. Dillon v. Cobra Power Corp., 560

F.3d 591, 599 (6th Cir. 2009).

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While it is likely that Defendants did not raise this issue before the district court below, for the purposes of 2

this appeal this Court will assume without deciding that they did.

5

B. Breach of Contract

The district court found that Bischer Farms, Inc. breached its contract with Scarff Brothers.

Bischer Farms, Inc. took contractual responsibility for the cattle delivered to them to feed, maintain,

and finish the cattle to market. Scarff Brothers delivered 491 head of cattle to Bischer Farms, Inc.

that subsequently went missing. Defendants attempted to explain the cattle’s disappearance by

offering cattle ear-tags disinterred from a composter to prove, contrary to their own limited records,

that some or all of the cattle had actually died on the feedlot. The district court found Defendants

incredible and flatly rejected this theory. It found that the unaccounted-for disappearance of cattle

constituted a breach of contract. The court also ruled in the alternative that, even if it had accepted

Defendants’ extremely unlikely version of events, Bischer Farms, Inc. would have breached the

contract by misrepresenting feed charges on at least 189 cattle.

Defendants argue on appeal that they cannot be held liable for the missing cattle because the

duty of care required of them was governed by agistment law, not the contract. An agistment is “a 2

contract whereby a person, called an agister, has control of animals and retains possession of land.

. . . [It] is a species of bailment.” In re Zwagerman, 115 B.R. 540, 547 (Bankr. W.D. Mich. 1990)

(internal quotations and citations omitted). Defendants claim that, for an agister, “[t]here is no

liability without fault, contrary to the district court’s reasoning, even though the nature and scope

of the obligations owed by the parties to each other are defined by contract.” The argument proceeds

from the assumption that the contract does not govern the duty of care owed by the Defendants to

Scarff Brothers and, therefore, a common law solution must be found. Accordingly, Defendants

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insist that they cannot be held liable for the “lost” cattle unless they are found to have been at fault

in the cattle’s disappearance. Because the district court did not determine what happened to the

cattle, Defendants claim that no finding of fault was made, and urge this Court to reverse or at least

remand the district court’s finding of breach.

Defendants’ efforts, however, are unavailing. In Johnston v. Miller, 40 N.W.2d 770 (Mich.

1950), the Supreme Court of Michigan rejected a similar argument in a suit between the owner of

a flock of sheep and the agister the owner paid to feed, house, and multiply the flock. The parties

had entered into two complementary contracts using the language of a bailment, but requiring the

agister to provide the owner with twice the number of sheep at the end of the contract. Id. at 770–71.

In the end, the sheep did not reproduce as the agister had hoped, there were insufficient livestock to

meet the obligations of the two contracts, and the agister refused to supply extra sheep to make up

the difference. Id. No claim was made that the agister acted negligently in caring for the sheep. Id.

at 770. The agister argued that he was a bailee of the sheep and therefore, in the absence of

negligence, had only to return the sheep that remained from the original flock. Id. at 773. The trial

court agreed, but the Supreme Court of Michigan reversed, citing 6 Am. Jur. 310 for the proposition

that:

The fact that a bailee has exercised the degree of care imposed on him by law is

immaterial where the issue concerns some additional obligation to which he has

subjected himself by his contract, for no degree of care or vigilance, short of

complete performance, will relieve him of such an obligation.

Id. at 774. The court held that the agister was free to assume any obligations not forbidden by law,

and “[u]nder the contract [the agister] assumed a specific obligation from which he could not be

discharged except by performance.” Id. See also Universal Underwriters Ins. Co. v. Kneeland, 599

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We note that, contrary to the view expressed in the dissent, the fact that Scarff Brothers was unable to 3

prove that Defendants ultimately benefitted from the cattle is immaterial to this question, because that was an

element specific to the statutory conversion claim. Just because Scarff Brothers could not prove that Defendants did

not sell or keep the cattle for themselves does not change the fact that Bischer Farms, Inc. had the duty to care for the

cattle, “lost” them, and did not provide any credible evidence as to what happened to them.

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N.W.2d 519, 526 (Mich. Ct. App. 1999) (“We further observe that in a bailment situation, in the

absence of a contractual duty to the contrary, a bailee is not an insurer of the property.” (emphasis

added)).

Applying this principle to the case at hand, we conclude that any hypothetical agister status

would not relieve Bischer Farms, Inc. of its contractual obligations to Scarff Brothers. Bischer

Farms, Inc. and Scarff Brothers made a contract defined by their course of dealing under which

Bischer Farms, Inc. freely assumed the obligation to “feed, maintain, and finish to market Scarff

Brothers’ cattle.” Scarff Bros., 546 F. Supp. 2d at 487. The duty of care assigned by the common

law of agistment is “immaterial” where the contract sets out the obligations of the parties. The

district court found that Bischer Farms, Inc. breached its duty when 491 head of cattle “disappeared

while in the Bischers’ care.” Id. Any existing evidence to establish what happened to the cattle

would be almost entirely — if not entirely — within Defendants’ control. If Defendants had

produced reliable evidence that some or all of those 491 cattle had, in fact, died, then an analysis of

the contract’s division of death-loss liability would be required. Here, however, Defendants’

attempted proof was an ever-evolving set of explanations that the district court wholly rejected, and

that rejection was not clearly erroneous. By failing to account for 491 head of cattle, Bischer Farms,

Inc. breached the contract. We therefore affirm the district court’s findings of a breach of contract

and the damages award against Bischer Farms, Inc.3

C. Successor Liability

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We note the district court’s repeated difficulties with Defendants’ “nonresponsive and selective discovery” 4

which “required the parties to develop their case as new data materialized.” Scarff Bros., 546 F. Supp. 2d at 476. 

This continued into trial, as Defendants sought to introduce newly discovered evidence four years into litigation and

after weeks of trial. The combination of this discovery practice and Defendants’ highly evasive witnesses made

Scarff Brothers’ task of establishing proofs, particularly on potential asset transfers, very difficult. We further note

that the district court, on remand, may determine that this objectionable conduct warrants a ruling that Defendants

withheld evidence from the court, in which event, the district court could go on to consider whether any negative

inferences arise from Defendants’ failure to produce evidence on this issue. See, e.g., Fed. R. Civ. P. 37(b); John B.

v. Goetz, 531 F.3d 448, 460 (6th Cir. 2008) (“The district court maintains authority to impose sanctions for

discovery violations under the federal rules and pursuant to its inherent powers.”).

8

“The traditional rule of successor liability examines the nature of the transaction between

predecessor and successor corporations.” Foster v. Cone-Blanchard Mach. Co., 597 N.W.2d 506,

509 (Mich. 1999) (discussing general principles before addressing a products liability situation).

Ordinarily, the succession is accomplished in one of two ways: merger or asset transfer. If the

successor entity merges with the predecessor by acquiring its stock, the successor generally assumes

the predecessor’s liabilities. If, however, the predecessor “sells its assets to [the successor], the

purchaser is not responsible for the debts and liabilities of the selling corporation.” Antiphon, Inc.

v. LEP Transport, Inc., 454 N.W.2d 222, 224 (Mich. Ct. App. 1990). In a contract situation,

successor liability can be found after an asset transfer, however, if one of four exceptions exists:

(1) when two or more corporations consolidate and form a new corporation, making

no provision for the payment of the obligations of the old; (2) when by agreement,

express or implied, a purchasing corporation promises to pay the debts of the selling

corporation; (3) when the new corporation is a mere continuance of the old; (4) when

the sale is fraudulent, and the property of the old corporation, liable for its debts, can

be followed into the hands of the purchaser.

Id. at 224–25.

This case, however, does not fit neatly into either the merger or asset transfer rubric, partly

because of Defendants’ refusal to cooperate in discovery. This is an unusual circumstance in which

4

the predecessor, Bischer Farms, Inc., stopped doing business and was replaced by a new entity,

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Bischer Farms Partnership, with the same underlying owners, decision makers, employees, and

business pursuits, but the two entities did not execute a merger or an “official” transfer of assets.

Rather, the defendants merely effectuated a change in structure in order to take advantage of federal

agricultural benefits available to partnerships. Bischer Farms, Inc. only exists pending the outcome

of this litigation, and Bischer Farms Partnership has continued to do all the business the corporation

used to do. Using the term loosely, the Bischers and Geigers undeniably intended that Bischer Farms

Partnership would be the “successor” to Bischer Farms, Inc.

In Antiphon, the plaintiff, an importer and producer of sound-deadening materials, appealed

a judgment of no cause of action for the defendant, a customs broker. 454 N.W.2d at 223. The

defendant had claimed that the plaintiff owed shipping charges to the defendant for shipments made

to Seamco, Inc., a corporation from which the plaintiff had purchased a manufacturing plant

following a complex series of subsidiary spin-offs and mergers. Id. Plaintiff paid the money under

protest, then filed suit to recover it. On appeal, the Michigan Court of Appeals noted how rarely

these cases arise in Michigan, and analyzed the case under the general rule and the exceptions noted

above. Id. at 224–25. The court affirmed the trial court’s holding of liability under the second

exception. The court relied on evidence that the plaintiff paid the defendant for several invoices

addressed to the subsidiary corporations involved in the sale, the defendant “dealt with the same

personnel, the orders were placed in the same manner, the business operations were conducted in the

same manner, and neither Seamco nor any of its subsequent incarnations ever informed [the

defendant] of the change in ownership of the . . . plant.” Id. at 226. As the court framed the issue,

“Seamco and [the plaintiff] engaged in activities that could reasonably lead [the defendant] to believe

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that the two companies were either related or that [the plaintiff] had assumed responsibility for the

liabilities incurred by Seamco.” Id. at 224.

Relying on Antiphon, the district court here found Bischer Farms Partnership a successor to

Bischer Farms, Inc., and therefore responsible for Bischer Farms, Inc.’s contract liability. Noting

the second and third exceptions to the general rule, the court held that the dealings between the

partnership and the corporation were sufficiently close that Scarff Brothers reasonably could have

believed that the partnership was a successor to the corporation. As the successor corporation in

Antiphon had done, the partnership here did the same business as the corporation, and had the same

employees, address, phone numbers, and decision makers. The court also found evidence that the

partnership assumed obligations for the corporation, cared for the same cattle (including Scarff

Brothers’ cattle before they were taken from the farm), may have received money for some of the

corporation’s cattle, and may have deposited checks written to the corporation in the partnership’s

account. Furthermore, just as in Antiphon, the partnership never informed Scarff Brothers of a

change in ownership. Relying on this evidence, the district court found Bischer Farms Partnership

liable for the debts and liabilities of Bischer Farms, Inc., and held each of the partners — Melvin J.

Bischer, L.L.C., Janet S. Bischer, L.L.C., and Pauline J. Geiger-Bischer, L.L.C. — liable under

Michigan partnership law as well.

After careful review, we find we must vacate this portion of the district court’s order and

remand for further consideration of this issue. While we find no error in the district court’s analysis

under the two applicable exceptions from Antiphon, it is not clear from the district court’s opinion

whether or not any transfer of assets took place between Bischer Farms, Inc. and Bischer Farms

Partnership. The district court found that the partnership may have deposited checks written to

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We do not address the argument in the concurring and dissenting opinion that in order to find successor 5

liability, the district court must also find that Scarff Brothers cannot recover in full from Bischer Farms, Inc. because

it is not necessary to deciding the issue before us. We therefore express no opinion on whether or not that statement

is correct as a matter of Michigan law.

11

Bischer Farms, Inc. and may have received money for the corporation’s cattle, but did not

conclusively hold that any particular assets, be they cash, property, or goodwill, were transferred

from the corporation to the partnership. Scarff Brothers’ difficulties in obtaining from the Bischer

entities the evidence necessary to demonstrate any asset transfer are clear from this record, and we

recognize that this evidence is entirely in the hands of the Bischers. But because the Antiphon

exceptions are exceptions to the general rule governing successor liability where there has been an

asset transfer, without such a transfer, the Antiphon exceptions have no bearing. The test for

successor liability in Antiphon requires more than mere possibilities that such a transfer occurred.5

D. Alter Ego Liability

Michigan generally “treats a corporation as an entirely separate entity from its shareholders.”

Soloman v. W. Hills Dev. Co., 312 N.W.2d 428, 431 (Mich. Ct. App. 1981). Under “notions of

equity,” however, courts will disregard the corporate form “when it is invoked to subvert the ends

of justice.” Id. “Where a corporation is so organized and so controlled as to make it a mere

instrumentality or an agent of another corporation, its separate existence” will be ignored. Shirley

v. Drackett Prods. Co., 182 N.W.2d 726, 728 (Mich. Ct. App. 1971). Also, courts may disregard

the corporate form when “[t]he community of interest between corporation and shareholders may

be so great that, to meet the purposes of justice, they should be considered as one and the same.”

Soloman, 312 N.W.2d at 431. Michigan requires a showing of “fraud, illegality, or injustice,” and

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that injustice “must in some manner relate to a misuse of the corporate form short of fraud or

illegality.” Id. at 432.

In this circuit, we look to a number of factors to determine whether to disregard the corporate

form, including: “(1) the absence of normal corporate formalities; (2) commingling of personal and

corporate funds; (3) siphoning of corporate funds by a dominant stockholder; and (4) the fact that

the corporation is merely a facade for the personal operations of the dominant stockholder.” United

States v. Walton, 909 F.2d 915, 928 (6th Cir. 1990) (internal citations omitted). No single factor is

dispositive as “each case is sui generis and must be decided in accordance with its own underlying

facts.” Id.

The district court below cited the Shirley and Walton factors, but did not specify which of

the criteria it relied upon in holding the corporation (Janet S. Bischer Farms, Inc., Bischer Tiling,

Inc., Bischer Ready-Mix, Inc.), limited liability company (Melvin J. Bischer, LLC, Janet S. Bischer,

LLC, Pauline J. Bischer-Geiger, LLC), and individual (Melvin Bischer, Janet Bischer, Bradley

Geiger, and Pauline Geiger) defendants liable as alter egos for Bischer Farms, Inc.’s breach of

contract. Scarff Bros., 546 F. Supp. 2d at 494, 496. The district court instead relied on the

“extensive and ongoing relationship” among the Defendants that demonstrated the “economic

reality” that these entities were in fact a “single comprehensive business enterprise.” Id. at 495–96.

The district court noted that the individuals did not differentiate themselves from the business

entities in their own minds, used corporate funds to pay personal expenses, made frequent

intercompany loans not at arms length, and shared employees, equipment, and cash. Id. at 496.

Finally, the court held that to find “any single entity, whether drained of resources to sustain another

family entity or enriched at the expense of another entity, is solely responsible to Scarff Brothers

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would not accord” with the economic reality of the enterprise. Id. Instead, “the liabilityof one entity

is the liability of all.” Id.

While the district court’s analysis may satisfy the Shirley and Walton tests, the court did not

make a finding of fraud, illegality, or injustice from the use of the corporate form as Soloman

requires. Michigan requires such a finding to ensure that “an equal injustice or inequity” does not

befall individuals who could otherwise be found liable as alter egos without making improper use

of the corporate form. Soloman, 312 N.W.2d at 432.

III.

Accordingly, we affirm the judgment of the district court as to Bischer Farms, Inc.’s breach

of contract. We vacate the district court’s finding of successor liability and remand for further

proceedings consistent with this opinion. In doing so we note that the district court is, of course, free

on remand to determine whether successor liability exists under either Antiphon or an alternate

theory, including one based on more general principles of successor liability consistent with

Michigan law, affording the respect due to state law by a federal court sitting in diversity. Finally,

we vacate the finding of alter ego liability, and remand to the district court for a determination of

whether any or all of the Bischer Farms entities or individuals engaged in such fraud, illegality, or

injustice from the use of the corporate form as would support a finding of alter ego liability under

Michigan law.

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08-1831, Scarff Bros., Inc. v. Bischer Farms, Inc.

I disagree with the majority’s characterization of Bischer Farms, Inc.’s position as arguing that it “cannot 6

be held liable for the missing cattle because the duty of care required of [it] was governed by agistment law, not the

contract.” Maj. Op. at 5. Bischer Farms, Inc. acknowledges that “the nature and scope of the obligations owed by

14

KAREN NELSON MOORE, Circuit Judge, concurring in part and dissenting in part.

The majority ably lays out the three questions in this case: (1) whether the district court erred in

holding Bischer Farms, Inc. liable to Scarff Brothers, Inc. (“Scarff Bros.”) for breach of contract; (2)

whether the district court erred in holding Bischer Farms Partnership successively liable to the

corporation; and (3) whether the district court erred in holding Bischer Farms, Inc.’s three related

businesses, the four LLCs, and the four individual defendants liable as alter egos of the corporation.

I agree with the majority that the district court could not apply successor liability without finding that

the corporation had transferred assets to the partnership and that it could not pierce the corporate veil

without a finding of fraud. Because I believe that the district court’s factual findings do not support

the precise breach of contract described in the district court’s opinion, however, I respectfully

dissent. I also write separately with regard to successor liability because I believe that the district

court must make an additional finding before holding the partnership liable: it must conclude that

the corporation is judgment-proof.

I. Breach of Contract

Scarff Bros. claims that the disappearance of 491 head of cattle constituted a breach of

contract by Bischer Farms, Inc. Resolving this claim involves two questions: what promises with

regard to the cattle did Bischer Farms, Inc. make in its contract with Scarff Bros., and what happened

to the cattle. Bischer Farms, Inc. argues that it agreed to exercise due care in finishing the cattle to

market, that most of the cattle died, and that it cannot be liable for those deaths absent a finding of

fault on its part.

6

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the parties to each other are defined by contract,” Appellants’ Br. at 12, but it contends that the contract incorporated

the duty of care generally applicable in contracts for agistment. Bischer Farms, Inc. argues, in effect, that where

cattle loss was concerned, it agreed to be liable only to the extent that it was at fault. Of course, as the majority

correctly points out, agisters by contract can take on duties greater than those imposed at common law. The

dispositive issue in this case, then, is what duty did Bischer Farms, Inc. agree to take on under the implied contract?

Had the district court found that none of the missing cattle had died and that they instead had been stolen, 7

Bischer Farms, Inc. would have no argument on appeal. Whether Bischer Farms, Inc. agreed to be liable for any and

all deaths or only those that it caused would be immaterial if there were no deaths. But here the district court made

no such finding. It is true that the district court rejected Bischer Farms, Inc.’s contention that 345 cattle died and that

Scarff Bros. knew of the deaths. Scarff Bros., 546 F. Supp. 2d at 483–84. But the district court also stated that

“[w]hether Bischer Farms maintained the 491 head of cattle or otherwise benefitted from them . . . was not

demonstrated by Scarff Brothers’ proof,” indicating that the court believed the cattle had not simply all been

converted. Id. at 484. Furthermore, the district court wrote that it did not “accept the Bischers’ ever-evolving theory

that the missing cattle were necessarily all in the composter decomposing,” id. at 487 (emphasis added), suggesting

that it believed that some of the 491 had died.

15

The district court found that Bischer Farms, Inc. agreed “to feed, maintain, and finish to

market” Scarff Bros.’s cattle and that Bischer Farms, Inc. breached the agreement when 491 cattle

disappeared because it failed to provide the contracted service for those 491. Scarff Bros., Inc. v.

Bischer Farms, Inc., 546 F. Supp. 2d 473, 487 (E.D. Mich. 2008). The district court did not decide

what actually became of the missing cattle—whether they died, were stolen by Duane Geiger, were

converted and sold by Bischer Farms, Inc., orsimply broke away to freedom on their own—because

it did not have to. Its finding as to the terms of the implied contract mooted that question. In holding

Bischer Farms, Inc. in breach based on the unaccounted-for disappearance of the cattle and in

assessing the entire value of the 491 head as damages, the district court found that Bischer Farms,

Inc. had agreed to feed and finish to market the cattle no matter what. On this theory, even if some

of the cattle died on the feedlot through no fault of Bischer Farms, Inc.—a possibility that,

notwithstanding the majority’s suggestion to the contrary, the district judge did not rule

out —Bischer Farms, Inc. would be liable for their value. 7

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The evidence reviewed by the district court, however, does not support such an agreement.

In describing the parties’ course of dealing, the district court reviewed their practice only as to the

maximum cost of gain per pound, insurance, and veterinary care; delivery of the cattle to the lot;

selection of which cattle were ready for sale; and arrangement for transportation to the

slaughterhouse. Id. at 479-81. The district court noted that the parties kept track of dead cattle, but

it made no finding of under what circumstances Bischer Farms, Inc. had to compensate Scarff Bros.

for those dead cattle. The court observed that Bischer Farms, Inc. “secured” insurance for the cattle,

id. at 487, but this fact alone does not support a finding of 100% liability for death loss because there

is no evidence as to the terms of that insurance.

Four facts suggest that the parties did not intend Bischer Farms, Inc. to be fully liable when

the loss resulted from death. First, the district court noted that, in the monthly bills issued to Scarff

Bros., Bischer Farms, Inc. would reduce the balance by costs not incurred for cattle that had died.

Id. at 480-81. The district court did not state that Bischer Farms, Inc. would reduce the costs by the

actual value of the cattle, such that it was insuring Scarff Bros. for the loss. Second, the district court

found that Scarff Bros. collected data about cattle death loss “so that it could seek financial credits

from the seller of cattle that had died, if warranted.” Id. at 482 (emphasis added). This statement

indicates that Scarff Bros. had not simply shifted 100% of the risk of death loss to Bischer Farms,

Inc. and that Scarff Bros. anticipated that it might have received unhealthy cattle in the first place.

Third, the parties shared the cost of veterinary care, again indicating that Bischer Farms, Inc. had not

assumed complete liability for the well-being of the cattle. Fourth, the district court noted that, in

or around March 2003, the parties worked to memorialize their agreement in a written contract.

Though they never finalized the document, the parties appeared to agree on a draft provision stating

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The majority writes that “[i]f Defendants had produced reliable evidence that some or all of those 491 8

cattle had, in fact, died, then an analysis of the contract’s division of death-loss liability would be required.” Maj.

Op. at 7. The majority agrees, then, that Bischer Farms, Inc. did not promise to finish all cattle to market regardless

of the circumstances. Because the district court treated Bischer Farms, Inc. as having made precisely this one-sided

commitment (and therefore made no finding of what happened to the cattle), we must reverse.

Scarff Bros. contends that by failing to raise the issue at the district court, the defendants waived their 9

argument that bailment law applies because the contract was one of agistment. It is true that the defendants did not

frame the case this way below, and defense counsel actually wrote in his final filing before judgment, “[h]ere there is

a Contract in place and there is no bailment.” Mem. at Conclusion of Trial at 14 (R.E. #157). However, in the same

brief, defense counsel described as a “fiction” the claim that “491 head are the absolute and total responsibility of

Bischers, regardless of what happened to them.” Id. at 11-12. Thus, the district court should have been alerted to

the need to determine, based on the default rule for agistments and any other evidence, what level of risk Bischer

Farms, Inc. agreed to take on.

17

the following under the heading “death loss”: “OWNER bears all risk of loss or damage to the cattle

except for loss or damage caused by FEEDER’S breach of this agreement, or negligence or other

fault of FEEDER. OWNER accepts all economic loss resulting from death of the CATTLE.” Id.

at 486 n.8. The provision also called for Bischer Farms, Inc. to compensate Scarff Bros. for death

loss exceeding 3% and up to 5% of the total head. Id. The district court described this as an

example of the parties’ mutual agreement, but it did not clarify whether the provision reflected their

prior course of dealing.

Thus, the facts do not support the district court’s view that Bischer Farms, Inc. had agreed

to compensate Scarff Bros. for any and all cattle not finished to market, including those that died.

Exactly what Bischer Farms, Inc. had agreed to do with regard to death loss, then, has not been

determined.8

The defendants ask that we hold as a matter of law that Bischer Farms, Inc. had agreed to be

liable only to the extent that it did not exercise due care. Their logic is that the facts show that the

parties had entered into a contract for agistment, a type of bailment, and that under state law, an

agistment contract imposes on the bailee a duty of reasonable care. For this proposition, they cite 9

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a Tenth Circuit case applying New Mexico law, a Vermont Supreme Court case, and the American

Jurisprudence legal encyclopedia. See Prod. Credit Ass’n of S. N.M. v. Alamo Ranch Co., 989 F.2d

413, 419 (10th Cir. 1993) (holding that party that had agreed orally to feed, care for, and attempt to

sell 900 head of cattle was an agister and thus had a common-law duty to exercise ordinary care,

absent a special agreement); Butterfly v. Marcell, 365 A.2d 252, 253 (Vt. 1976) (holding that party

to whom ponywas entrusted under an oral contract of agistment was not liable for pony’s death after

pony was struck by an automobile because no facts supported a finding of negligence or want of

ordinary care); 4 Am. Jur. 2d Animals § 57 (stating that under a contract of agistment, “[a]n agister

is bound to take reasonable or ordinary care of the animals committed to his or her charge, but in the

absence of a special contract, he or she is not an insurer of their safety”). This appears to be the

default duty that the Michigan Supreme Court would apply, as well. See Costello v. Ten Eyck, 49

N.W. 152, 153 (Mich. 1891) (holding that defendant who took horses for pasture, “[h]aving taken

the horse into his possession, though under a void contract, . . . yet owed a duty to the plaintiff to

exercise some degree of care over it”); 94 A.L.R.2d 319 (citing cases establishing that this is the

general rule among the states).

It would be inappropriate, however, for us to determine as a matter of law what the parties

agreed to with respect to death loss. That is a factual question that depends on the course of conduct

between the parties, an issue for the district court. The case should thus be remanded for the district

court to determine the liability rule agreed to by the parties for cattle deaths, how many cattle died,

and what part of the death loss Bischer Farms, Inc. must cover based on the agreed-on liability rule.

Finally, I note that Scarff Bros. argues that the facts brought out at trial support three discrete

breaches by Bischer Farms, Inc.: “(i) failing to account for 491 head of Scarff Bros.’ cattle, (ii)

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failing to report cattle that allegedly died to Scarff Bros., and (iii) charging Scarff Bros. [for] feeding

cattle that were known by Bischer Farms to be missing.” Appellee’s Br. at 11. I agree that the facts

support each of these alleged breaches. But this does not resolve the case because these proffered

breaches do not support the damages calculated by the district court. They warrant compensation

for such things as the opportunity cost of not replacing the dead cattle with new ones that could have

been finished to market and the cost of feed that should not have been charged. Scarff Bros. can

recover for the actual value of the cattle only if Bischer Farms, Inc. agreed to bear the loss of that

cattle or if the loss was its fault.

For these reasons, I dissent from the majority’s affirmance of the district court’s breach-ofcontract determination.

II. Successor Liability

The majority remands because “it is not clear from the district court’s opinion whether or not

any transfer of assets took place between Bischer Farms, Inc. and Bischer Farms Partnership.” Maj.

Op. at 10. I agree and add that an additional finding is necessary before successor liability will

apply: there must be some reason that Scarff Bros. cannot recover in full from Bischer Farms, Inc.

In Antiphon, Inc. v. LEP Transport, Inc., 454 N.W.2d 222 (Mich. Ct. App. 1990), the court

addressed “whether the doctrine of estoppel may be harmonized with any of the exceptions to the

general rule against successor liability.” Id. at 225. One ofthose exceptions is “when by agreement,

express or implied, a purchasing corporation promises to pay the debts of the selling corporation”;

another is “when the new corporation is a mere continuance of the old.” Id. at 224–25. The

elements of estoppel, meanwhile are: “(1) a party by representations, admissions or silence induces

another party to believe facts; (2) the other party detrimentally relies and acts on this belief; and (3)

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the other party will be prejudiced if the first party is allowed to deny the existence of the facts.” Id.

at 225. The Antiphon court concluded that the implied-assumption exception and estoppel could

indeed be reconciled:

We believe that the rationale underlying an application of the doctrine of

estoppel and the implied agreement to assume liability exception are the same—that

rationale being that a party may not, by its conduct or silence, assume a position that

if maintained would result in an injustice to another. Accordingly, we conclude that

when the trial court found that Antiphon was estopped from denying successor

liability it, in actuality, was deciding that Antiphon’s conduct gave rise to an implied

acceptance of liability and that LEP was reasonable in relying on this implied

acceptance to its detriment.

Id. (emphases added). Combining the exceptions and estoppel doctrine, the Antiphon court thus held

that a party can recover when it reasonably relies to its detriment on an apparent acceptance of

liability. Id. In Antiphon, LEP reasonably relied to its detriment on the apparent transfer of liability

from Seamco to Antiphon when LEP forewent certain remedies against Seamco and Seamco

ultimately dissolved. The district court in the instant case did not say the same about Scarff Bros.

Bischer Farms, Inc. is an extant and operational corporation. Scarff Bros. was able to bring suit

against Bischer Farms, Inc. And there is no indication that the corporation is judgment-proof. See

Traverse City Auto Mall v. Wolverine Auto Supply, Inc., Nos. 226824, 227554, 2002 WL 1797252,

at *2 (Mich. Ct. App. Aug. 2, 2002) (unpublished opinion) (reading Antiphon as “stating that a court

of equity should imply an assumption of liability by a successor corporation if the facts show that

the predecessor is uncollectible . . .”). On remand, if the district court finds that a transfer of assets

took place, it should not find Bischer Farms Partnership successively liable unless it also finds that

Scarff Bros. will be prejudiced if it is limited to recovering against Bischer Farms, Inc.

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