A well-rooted choice of law analysis

April 15, 2019

Fishback Nursery v. PNC Bank involved a lien dispute between two branches of creditors of a failed farm – the bank, and two nurseries who sold millions of dollars of trees and shrubs to the farm. That dispute turned on a choice-of-law analysis, as to which the Fifth Circuit observed:

  • It was fruitless for the nurseries to rely on choice-of-law provisions in contracts between them and the farm, as this dispute was between the nurseries and the bank, who was not involved in those contracts;
  • Similarly, the nurseries barked up the wrong tree by relying upon a Restatement provision about contract disputes: “This case—as we have taken pains to emphasize—involves not a contractual dispute but rather a dispute over competing lien priorities in a bankrupt company’s assets. Analysis of choice-of-law in lien priority disputes begins, not with section 188, but with the ‘most significant relationship’ test in section 6.”
  • And, that analysis is straightforward where Article 9 of Texas’s UCC has a specific provision about these disputes (that priority is determined by the law of the state where the agricultural products are located).

Finding that the district court’s analysis was well-rooted in these observations, the Court affirmed. No. 18-10090 (April 10, 2019).

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