A group of Minnesota farmers, including Gay Jenson Farms Co., sold grain to Warren Grain & Seed Co. (Warren), a country grain elevator. Warren financed its operations through Cargill, Inc., which provided open-account financing to cover grain purchases and operating expenses. Over several years preceding Warren's insolvency, Cargill's involvement extended well beyond routine lending: Cargill maintained close, daily oversight of Warren's business; required frequent financial reports; made constant recommendations concerning operations; set limits on expenditures; could veto significant decisions (such as capital improvements and major borrowings); conducted audits; and required Warren to implement Cargill's directives. Cargill also enjoyed a right of first refusal on Warren's grain and financed virtually all of Warren's purchases, thereby tying Warren's output and cash flow to Cargill. When Warren became insolvent and failed to pay the farmers for grain purchased, the farmers sued Cargill, arguing that Cargill's pervasive control made Warren Cargill's agent, rendering Cargill liable as principal on Warren's grain contracts. A jury found an agency relationship and imposed liability on Cargill. Cargill appealed.
Whether a creditor who exercises extensive control over a debtor's business becomes a principal, thereby incurring liability on the debtor's contracts with third parties.
Under Restatement (Second) of Agency §§ 1 and 14 O, an agency relationship arises when one party manifests assent that another act on its behalf and subject to its control, and the other consents so to act. A creditor who assumes control of the debtor's business may become a principal, liable for the debtor's (agent's) acts within the scope of the agency. Mere creditor oversight to protect a security interest is insufficient; principal status turns on the extent and nature of operational control.
Yes. Cargill's pervasive control over Warren's operations created an agency relationship, making Cargill a principal liable on Warren's contracts to purchase grain from the farmers.
The court emphasized that agency depends on actual control, not labels. Cargill's day-to-day involvement in Warren's business—constant recommendations and directives, financial domination through open-account financing of virtually all purchases, veto power over significant decisions, mandatory reporting and audits, and a right of first refusal that channeled Warren's grain to Cargill—demonstrated that Warren operated on Cargill's behalf and subject to its control. This went beyond routine lender protections and amounted to de facto management. The court rejected Cargill's contention that it was merely a vigilant creditor; the cumulative effect of the controls showed a general agency. The court also clarified that liability rested on actual authority, not apparent authority. Even though the farmers did not rely on manifestations from Cargill, Warren had actual authority—implied from Cargill's conduct and directives—to purchase grain in the ordinary course to meet Cargill's needs and keep the operation running. Because Warren acted within the scope of that authority, Cargill, as principal, was liable for Warren's unpaid contracts. The jury's agency finding was supported by substantial evidence, and the trial court's judgment was affirmed.
Gay Jenson Farms is a leading case on creditor-control liability in agency law. It warns lenders that operational micromanagement—daily directives, veto power over routine decisions, and financial domination—can convert a debtor into an agent and impose principal liability. For students, the case concretizes Restatement § 14 O and demonstrates how actual authority can ground third-party recovery even without apparent authority or third-party reliance. Practically, it guides creditors to structure oversight to protect security interests without assuming day-to-day control.
Gay Jenson Farms delivers a clear message: the legal consequences of agency follow control, not labels. When a creditor moves from monitoring to managing, the law may deem the borrower its agent, exposing the creditor to principal liability for the borrower's contracts.