Oyens Feed & Supply, Inc. v. Primebank , 879 N.W.2d 853 ( 2016 )


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  •                IN THE SUPREME COURT OF IOWA
    No. 15–0806
    Filed May 27, 2016
    OYENS FEED & SUPPLY, INC.,
    Appellant,
    vs.
    PRIMEBANK,
    Appellee.
    Certified questions of law from the United States District Court for
    the Northern District of Iowa, Donald E. O’Brien, United States Senior
    District Court Judge.
    A federal district court certified two questions of law in a priority
    dispute between competing creditors of a bankrupt hog operation.
    CERTIFIED QUESTIONS ANSWERED.
    Joel D. Vos and James W. Redmond of Heidman Law Firm, L.L.P.,
    Sioux City, and A. Frank Baron of Baron, Sar, Goodwin, Gill & Lohr,
    Sioux City, for appellant.
    Scott C. Sandberg and John O’Brien of Snell & Wilmer, L.L.P.,
    Denver, Colorado, and Charles L. Smith and Nicole Hughes of Telpner,
    Peterson, Smith, Ruesch, Thomas & Simpson, L.L.P., Council Bluffs, for
    appellee.
    2
    Robert L. Hartwig, Johnston, for amicus curiae Iowa Bankers
    Association.
    3
    HECHT, Justice.
    Crooked Creek Corporation operated a farrow-to-finish hog facility
    where it bred gilts and sows and raised their litters for slaughter. See
    Ballard v. Amana Soc’y, Inc., 
    526 N.W.2d 558
    , 559 (Iowa 1995) (per
    curiam) (explaining the term “farrow-to-finish hog operation”); see also
    Iowa Code § 459.102(46) (2009) (defining “swine farrow-to-finish
    operation” for animal agriculture compliance purposes).          After the
    company filed for bankruptcy, the hogs were sold, but the sale did not
    generate enough money to pay off competing liens asserted by two of
    Crooked Creek’s creditors—Oyens Feed & Supply, Inc. and Primebank.
    Today we determine the creditors’ relative priority in the remaining sales
    proceeds by answering two questions of law a federal district court
    certified to us.
    I. Background Facts and Proceedings.
    This case is before us for a second time. See Oyens Feed & Supply,
    Inc. v. Primebank, 
    808 N.W.2d 186
    , 195 (Iowa 2011) (answering a
    previous certified question from the United States District Court for the
    Northern District of Iowa). Our previous decision sets forth the relevant
    facts:
    This dispute between Oyens Feed and Primebank
    arises through Crooked Creek Corporation’s chapter 12
    bankruptcy in the United States Bankruptcy Court for the
    Northern District of Iowa. Crooked Creek is a farrow-to-
    finish hog producer located in Plymouth County, Iowa. Both
    Primebank and Oyens Feed claim liens on the proceeds of
    the sale of Crooked Creek’s hogs. Primebank had a perfected
    article 9 security interest in the hogs to secure two
    promissory notes predating Oyens Feed’s . . . section
    570A.5(3) agricultural supply dealer lien in the hogs. The
    proceeds from the sale of the approximately 7500 hogs are
    insufficient to satisfy both parties’ liens.
    4
    
    Id. at 187.
    Although the proceeds from the sale are insufficient to satisfy
    both parties’ liens, $342,371.78 remains in escrow pending our
    resolution of the parties’ competing claims.
    Oyens Feed holds an agricultural supply dealer lien because it sold
    Crooked Creek feed “on credit . . . to fatten the hogs to market weight.”
    
    Id. Livestock feed
    is an agricultural supply, see Iowa Code § 570A.1(3),
    and “[a]n agricultural supply dealer who provides an agricultural supply
    to a farmer shall have an agricultural lien,” 
    id. § 570A.3.
    In our 2011
    decision, we concluded Oyens Feed was entitled to superpriority in at
    least some of the sales proceeds of Crooked Creek’s hogs even though it
    had not followed the statutory certified request procedure for notifying
    financial institutions of intent to provide a debtor with agricultural
    supplies on credit. Oyens 
    Feed, 808 N.W.2d at 194
    –95. Because our
    decision did not resolve the amount of proceeds in which Oyens Feed had
    superpriority, the parties returned to the bankruptcy court for a trial to
    establish the extent of each party’s entitlement.
    At trial, Oyens Feed claimed it was entitled to all of the escrowed
    funds because its agricultural supply dealer lien has superpriority over
    Primebank’s    earlier   perfected   security   interest.   See Iowa   Code
    § 570A.5(3). However, Primebank contended Oyens Feed is not entitled
    to the entire escrow amount.
    First, Primebank asserted Oyens Feed had not properly perfected a
    lien for the entire amount of feed sold because it had not filed a financing
    statement “within thirty-one days after” each date Crooked Creek
    purchased feed. 
    Id. § 570A.4(2);
    see 
    id. § 570A.5
    (granting priority to “an
    agricultural supply dealer lien that is perfected under section 570A.4”);
    In re Shulista, 
    451 B.R. 867
    , 874 (Bankr. N.D. Iowa 2011) (“[S]uper
    priority is allowed . . . only insofar as the supply dealer has perfected its
    5
    lien.”); James J. White & Robert S. Summers, Uniform Commercial Code
    § 21–8, at 738 (5th ed. 2000) [hereinafter White & Summers] (“[Article 9
    of the Uniform Commercial Code] grants potential super priority only to a
    ‘perfected agricultural lien.’ ”).   Oyens Feed filed only two financing
    statements, one on May 28 and the other on August 14, 2009.                Thus,
    Primebank contended Oyens Feed had only perfected its supply dealer
    lien for the thirty-one-day periods immediately preceding the filing of
    each of its financing statements, meaning it only had priority in, at most,
    the amount of funds equaling the price of feed sold between April 27 and
    May 28 and between July 14 and August 14.
    Second, Primebank noted that under the statute, Oyens Feed only
    has priority “to the extent of the difference between the acquisition price
    of the livestock and the fair market value of the livestock at the time the
    lien attaches or the sale price of the livestock, whichever is greater.”
    Iowa Code § 570A.5(3); see Oyens 
    Feed, 808 N.W.2d at 194
    . Although all
    of Crooked Creek’s pigs came from gilts and sows it raised from birth and
    bred, Primebank asserted the acquisition price of the animals could not
    be zero because the acquisition price must include costs of feed, labor,
    transportation,   facilities   depreciation,   utilities,   and   semen.     As
    Primebank put it, “the pigs do not magically appear.”
    The bankruptcy court concluded the plain meaning of section
    570A.4 creates a “discrete window of time,” beginning with the farmer’s
    purchase of feed and ending thirty-one days later, within which an
    agricultural supply dealer must file a financing statement to perfect its
    lien. 
    Shulista, 451 B.R. at 876
    ; accord In re Schley, 
    509 B.R. 901
    , 908
    (Bankr. N.D. Iowa 2014) (“[A]ny superpriority lien . . . would be limited
    under § 570A.4(2) to the 31 days before [the party asserting an
    agricultural supply dealer lien] filed a financing statement.”); cf. Caster v.
    6
    McClellan, 
    132 Iowa 502
    , 506–07, 
    109 N.W. 1020
    , 1021 (1906) (declining
    to “extend the force of the enactment beyond the field marked out by the
    language employed” because “[i]f . . . there should be an extension of the
    lien right, it is for the Legislature to make provision therefor in clear and
    unmistakable terms”).    “If additional feed is sold after the . . . 31-day
    period, another financing statement must be filed within 31 days of sale
    to perfect the lien on that transaction.” 
    Shulista, 451 B.R. at 877
    ; see
    also In re Big Sky Farms Inc., 
    512 B.R. 212
    , 219–20 (Bankr. N.D. Iowa
    2014) (concluding Shulista remains good law after our previous Oyens
    Feed decision). Accordingly, the bankruptcy court concluded Oyens Feed
    had only perfected its lien as to amounts for feed delivered in the thirty-
    one days preceding the filing of each of its financing statements.       See
    
    Schley, 509 B.R. at 908
    (setting a maximum recovery under analogous
    circumstances of the “total amount of feed supplied during the 31 days
    prior to the first and second filings”).     The court found Oyens Feed
    perfected its lien in $156,367.43 of the escrowed funds and the
    remainder of its lien was unsecured.
    In reaching its decision on the extent of Oyens Feed’s lien in the
    escrowed funds, the bankruptcy court reasoned the acquisition price of
    the hogs was zero because Crooked Creek raised hogs from birth rather
    than purchasing them.        The court concluded “the ‘purchase price’
    comprises the vast majority, if not all of, the ‘acquisition price’ for . . .
    purposes of Iowa Code § 570A.5(3).”        In adopting this formulation of
    “acquisition price,” the court rejected Primebank’s contention that
    acquisition price includes all expenses prorated per hog.      Further, the
    court concluded that while chapter 570A imposes some important
    limitations on feed suppliers’ priority—for example, a thirty-one-day filing
    period—the legislature could not have intended to make feed suppliers
    7
    engage in an elaborate accounting process to demonstrate the extent of
    their priority. Cf. Oyens 
    Feed, 808 N.W.2d at 194
    (declining to require
    feed suppliers to engage in an “impractical and cumbersome” certified
    request   process   because   “[t]he   legislature   presumably   sought   to
    encourage a fluid feed market without burdening cooperatives and
    farmers”).   The bankruptcy court awarded Oyens Feed $156,367.43 of
    the escrowed funds and awarded Primebank the remainder.
    Both parties appealed to the federal district court. See 28 U.S.C.
    § 158(a)(1) (2012) (vesting federal district courts with jurisdiction to hear
    appeals from final judgments and orders in cases and proceedings
    referred to bankruptcy judges). Oyens Feed appealed the determination
    that chapter 570A requires agricultural supply dealers to file a new
    financing statement to perfect a lien for additional feed sold after filing
    the first financing statement.    Primebank appealed the determination
    that the acquisition price for livestock born in Crooked Creek’s farrow-to-
    finish facility is zero. A federal magistrate recommended that the district
    court certify two questions of law to us.
    The United States District Court for the Northern District of Iowa
    adopted the magistrate’s recommendation and certified the following
    questions:
    1. Pursuant to Iowa Code section 570A.4(2), is an
    agricultural supply dealer required to file a new financing
    statement every thirty-one (31) days in order to maintain
    perfection of its agricultural supply dealer’s lien as to feed
    supplied within the preceding thirty-one (31) day period?
    2. Pursuant to Iowa Code section 570A.5(3), is the
    “acquisition price” zero when the livestock are born in the
    farmer’s facility?
    8
    II. The Parties’ Positions.
    A. Oyens Feed. Oyens Feed asserts the answer to question one is
    “no” and the answer to question two is “yes.”         It contends the word
    “within” in section 570A.4 is ambiguous and asserts we should resolve
    that ambiguity by holding once an agricultural supply dealer initially
    perfects its lien, the lien remains continuously perfected both as to the
    initial amount and as to any future amounts the feed supplier provides.
    Oyens Feed acknowledges the bankruptcy court reached a contrary
    conclusion in Shulista, but it asserts Shulista was wrongly decided.
    Oyens Feed’s quarrel with Shulista is multifaceted. First, it asserts
    Shulista ignores an express reference to prospective filing in the general
    provisions of chapter 554—Iowa’s version of the Uniform Commercial
    Code (UCC).     See Iowa Code § 554.9308(2) (“An agricultural lien is
    perfected when it becomes effective if the applicable requirements are
    satisfied before the agricultural lien becomes effective.”). Second, Oyens
    Feed contends requiring a feed supplier to file serial financing statements
    is impractical and cumbersome, and we rejected an impractical and
    cumbersome process in our prior decision in this case. See Oyens 
    Feed, 808 N.W.2d at 194
    .       But see Big Sky 
    Farms, 512 B.R. at 220
    –21
    (concluding the certified request process and the process of filing
    financing statements “are in fact very different” because a feed supplier
    filing a financing statement may act unilaterally).
    Oyens Feed further contends Shulista wrongly attributed material
    significance to a 2003 amendment that removed forward-looking
    language from chapter 570A.      See 
    Shulista, 451 B.R. at 877
    ; see also
    2003 Iowa Acts ch. 82, § 5. Before the 2003 amendment, chapter 570A
    provided a method through which an agricultural supply dealer could
    perfect a lien for the amount of “the agricultural [supply] which has been
    9
    or may be furnished.” Iowa Code § 570A.4(1)(b) (2001) (emphasis added).
    Oyens Feed points to the billbook explanation for the 2003 amendment,
    which states the amendment maintained agricultural liens’ priority
    status.     S.F. 379, 80th G.A., 1st Sess. explanation (Iowa 2003); see
    Oyens 
    Feed, 808 N.W.2d at 189
    (referring to this explanation in tracing
    the history of chapter 570A).         Asserting the bankruptcy court’s
    interpretation of current section 570A.4 diminishes the priority status of
    agricultural supply dealers’ liens by limiting the perfecting effect of a
    financing statement to a period of thirty-one days before filing, Oyens
    Feed contends the court misunderstood the legislative intent underlying
    the 2003 amendment.
    Finally, Oyens Feed relies upon a 1945 probate case for a
    definition of “within” that suggests the word only sets an end date, not a
    start date, for determining whether a financing statement was timely
    filed.    See Jensen v. Nelson, 
    236 Iowa 569
    , 572, 
    19 N.W.2d 596
    , 598
    (1945).
    B. Primebank. Primebank asserts the answer to question one is
    “yes” and the answer to question two is “no.” On the first question, it
    contends the plain meaning of the phrase “within thirty-one days after”
    sets both a start and end date for the perfection period, and thus, there
    is no ambiguity and no need to delve into legislative history, apply rules
    of statutory construction, or interpret the word “within.”
    On the second question, Primebank contends the bankruptcy
    court erroneously ignored or diminished the significance of acquisition
    price in the agricultural lien scheme. Primebank distinguishes between
    the “purchase price” of Crooked Creek’s hogs, which it concedes is zero
    under the circumstances presented here, and the “acquisition price,” the
    phrase in section 570A.5(3) (2009). In other words, Primebank asserts
    10
    the word acquisition must mean something different from the word
    purchase.
    III. Power to Answer Certified Questions.
    We may answer certified questions of law when a federal court or
    another state’s appellate court has before it a case in which questions of
    Iowa law may be determinative and the certifying court can find no
    controlling Iowa precedent.     Iowa Code § 684A.1.        As the bankruptcy
    court has noted, there is no controlling Iowa precedent on the questions
    presented in this case because we did not address the “within thirty-one-
    days” language of section 570A.4 in our prior Oyens Feed decision. Big
    Sky 
    Farms, 512 B.R. at 219
    –20. Additionally, as before, the questions
    certified to us are “purely legal issue[s] on the interpretation of . . . Iowa
    statute[s] that will resolve the lien priority dispute.”    Oyens 
    Feed, 808 N.W.2d at 188
    . “To resolve these issues, we are faced with the weighty
    task of determining the working relationship between . . . agricultural
    liens and Revised Article 9 of the UCC.” Stockman Bank of Mont. v. Mon-
    Kota, Inc., 
    180 P.3d 1125
    , 1133 (Mont. 2008). Both parties urge us to
    answer the questions. Accordingly, we elect to do so. See Oyens 
    Feed, 808 N.W.2d at 188
    .
    IV. Analysis.
    Oyens Feed holds an agricultural supply dealer lien—one of many
    types of agricultural liens that have caused “much confusion for those
    involved in agricultural financing.”      Wyatt P. Peterson, Note, Revised
    Article 9 and Agricultural Liens: An Iowa Perspective, 8 Drake J. Agric. L.
    437, 447 (2003) [hereinafter Peterson]; see also Keith G. Meyer, A Garden
    Variety of UCC Issues Dealing with Agriculture, 58 U. Kan. L. Rev. 1119,
    1120 (2010) (“Producers, lenders, lawyers, and courts continue to
    grapple with problems connected with agriculture credit.”).         Article 9
    11
    security interests and agricultural liens are distinct devices protecting
    those who extend credit in different contexts. See Stockman 
    Bank, 180 P.3d at 1134
    . “A farm lender who acquires a ‘security interest’ through a
    ‘security agreement’ . . . has a security interest, not an agricultural lien.”
    White & Summers § 21–8, at 737; accord In re Coastal Plains Pork, LLC,
    No. 09-08367-8-RDD, 
    2012 WL 6571102
    , at *9 n.15 (Bankr. E.D.N.C.
    Dec. 17, 2012) (applying Iowa Code chapter 570A and noting “the lien
    created is statutory, not consensual,” meaning “[n]o security agreement
    is required”); Stockman 
    Bank, 180 P.3d at 1134
    (“Critical to an accurate
    reading of the agricultural lien provisions within Revised Article 9 is an
    understanding that agricultural liens are not security interests.”); see also
    Iowa Code § 554.9102(1)(e) (defining “agricultural lien” as an interest
    “other than a security interest”).
    To answer the certified questions, we must interpret statutory
    provisions in Iowa Code chapter 570A.          Our principles of statutory
    construction are well established:
    When the plain language of a statute . . . is clear, we
    need not search for meaning beyond the statute’s express
    terms. We may presume the words contained within a
    statute have the meaning commonly attributed to them. We
    can resort to rules of statutory construction, however, when
    a statute’s meaning is ambiguous. “A statute is ambiguous
    if reasonable persons could disagree as to its meaning.”
    Exceptional Persons, Inc. v. Iowa Dep’t of Human Servs., ___ N.W.2d ___,
    ___ (Iowa 2016) (citations omitted) (quoting Remer v. Bd. of Med. Exam’rs,
    
    576 N.W.2d 598
    , 601 (Iowa 1998)).
    A. Question      One:    Perfecting    the    Feed    Supplier    Lien.
    “[P]erfection is the process a creditor uses to establish its priority in
    relation to other creditors of the debtor in the same collateral by giving
    notice of its interest.” Stockman 
    Bank, 180 P.3d at 1137
    .         Iowa Code
    12
    section 570A.4 sets forth the requirements for perfecting an agricultural
    supply dealer lien.   The relevant provisions of section 570A.4 are as
    follows:
    Except as provided in this section, a financing
    statement filed to perfect an agricultural supply dealer lien
    shall be governed by chapter 554, article 9, part 5, in the
    same manner as any other financing statement.
    1. The lien becomes effective at the time that the
    farmer purchases the agricultural supply.
    2. In order to perfect the lien, the agricultural supply
    dealer must file a financing statement in the office of the
    secretary of state as provided in section 554.9308 within
    thirty-one days after the date that the farmer purchases the
    agricultural supply. . . . Filing a financing statement as
    provided in this subsection satisfies all requirements for
    perfection of an agricultural lien as provided in chapter 554,
    article 9.
    Iowa Code § 570A.4.
    Ambiguity arises “when reasonable persons could disagree as to [a
    statute’s] meaning. Naumann v. Iowa Prop. Assessment Appeal Bd., 
    791 N.W.2d 258
    , 261 (Iowa 2010).      As we recognized in Jensen, the word
    “within” “is fairly susceptible of different meanings.” 
    Jensen, 236 Iowa at 572
    , 19 N.W.2d at 598. Accordingly, we conclude section 570A.4(2) is
    ambiguous and proceed to apply our rules of statutory construction to
    resolve the ambiguity.
    1. Relationship between chapter 554 and chapter 570A.          Oyens
    Feed contends section 570A.4’s express incorporation             of section
    554.9308 compels the conclusion that it needed to file only one financing
    statement to perfect its lien for all of Crooked Creek’s feed purchases—
    including those occurring after the first financing statement was filed on
    May 28, 2009. Section 554.9308(2) provides,
    An agricultural lien is perfected if it has become effective and
    all of the applicable requirements for perfection in section
    13
    554.9310 have been satisfied.    An agricultural lien is
    perfected when it becomes effective if the applicable
    requirements are satisfied before the agricultural lien
    becomes effective.
    Iowa Code § 554.9308(2). In turn, section 554.9310 simply states that,
    with some exceptions not applicable to agricultural liens, “a financing
    statement must be filed to perfect all security interests and agricultural
    liens.” 
    Id. § 554.9310(1);
    see White & Summers § 21–8, at 738 (“With
    respect to perfection, section 9–310 makes no concessions to the
    agricultural lien.”). Thus, because chapter 554 contemplates agricultural
    liens that are perfected immediately when they become effective, and
    chapter 570A refers to that portion of chapter 554, Oyens Feed contends
    a single financing statement perfects an agricultural supply dealer’s lien
    for the value of any feed sold after the dealer files a financing statement.
    We disagree.
    Chapter 554 contains general provisions that act as default
    settings. But the legislature can supersede the general provisions with
    more specific guidelines or different rules in statutes with narrower
    scope—as it has in chapter 570A. See Iowa Code §§ 570A.4–.5 (applying
    some article 9 provisions to agricultural supply dealer liens “[e]xcept as
    provided in this section”). Commentators have noted that references to
    agricultural liens within article 9 do not establish article 9 as the
    principal source of rules governing them. See Robert D’Agostino & Bruce
    Gordon Luna II, The U.C.C. and Perfection Issues Relating to Farm
    Products, 35 N. Ill. U. L. Rev. 169, 173 (2014) (“The governance and
    creation of agricultural liens . . . are still relegated to the related non-
    U.C.C. state statute that creates an agricultural lien.”); see also White &
    Summers § 21–8, at 738 (“[T]he agricultural lien has one foot in Article 9
    and one foot outside of it”). Instead, the reason for including agricultural
    14
    liens among those that are perfected by filing a financing statement “was
    to eliminate secret liens by requiring a public filing.” Keith G. Meyer, A
    Potpourri of Article 9 Issues, 8 Drake J. Agric. L. 323, 333 (2003); see also
    Peterson, 8 Drake J. Agric. L. at 441–42 (noting the reason for including
    agricultural liens within article 9 was to eliminate uncertainty in lenders’
    secured status).
    Thus, although chapter 570A incorporates some provisions of
    chapter 554, to the extent there is a conflict between them, chapter 570A
    prevails if it requires something more to perfect an agricultural supply
    dealer’s lien. See Iowa Code § 570A.4(2) (“Filing a financing statement as
    provided in this subsection satisfies all requirements for perfection of an
    agricultural lien as provided in chapter 554, article 9.” (Emphasis
    added.)); 
    Shulista, 451 B.R. at 880
    (giving chapter 570A’s terms “priority
    over the general UCC standards”); cf. Iowa Code § 554.9322(7) (“A
    perfected agricultural lien . . . has priority over a conflicting security
    interest in or agricultural lien on the same collateral if the statute
    creating the agricultural lien so provides.” (Emphasis added.)).
    The language of section 570A.4 conflicts with the language of
    section 554.9308(2). Although section 570A.4(2) refers to the “perfected
    when effective” language of section 554.9308(2), that reference is followed
    by the limiting phrase requiring a supply dealer to file a financing
    statement “within thirty-one days after the date that the farmer
    purchases the agricultural supply.”       
    Id. § 570A.4(2).
      We conclude the
    phrase “within thirty-one days after” creates a rule that is specific to
    agricultural supply dealer liens and that modifies the general agricultural
    lien rule.   In other words, the phrase makes the second sentence of
    section 554.9308(2) inapplicable to agricultural supply dealer liens.
    Compare 
    id., with id.
    § 554.9308(2). The context-specific rule defeats the
    15
    general rule when a conflict arises. 
    Id. § 4.7;
    Oyens 
    Feed, 808 N.W.2d at 194
    .
    2. Legislative history.   Having clarified the relationship between
    Code chapters, we now turn to examine Oyens Feed’s assertion that the
    billbook explanation for the 2003 amendments to chapter 570A supports
    its position in this case. See Iowa Code § 4.6(3), (7) (permitting courts to
    consider “legislative history” and a statute’s “preamble or statement of
    policy” in resolving ambiguity). We conclude Oyens Feed’s reliance on
    the explanation that states amendments to chapter 570A would
    “maintain” the prior law is misplaced.
    Removing potentially dispositive language from a statute through
    the amendment process is material even if the legislature does not
    expressly indicate that it is.     See Orr v. Lewis Cent. Sch. Dist., 
    298 N.W.2d 256
    , 260–61 (Iowa 1980) (concluding the legislature materially
    amended a statute despite no “indication that a substantive change in
    the law was intended” because it “removed the language which had been
    determinative” in a prior case). Here, the legislature clearly removed the
    phrase in the pre-2003 statute that authorized filings covering amounts
    for supplies that “may be furnished.” Compare Iowa Code § 570A.4(1)(b)
    (2001), with 
    id. § 570A.4(2)
    (2009).
    But even accepting as true Oyens Feed’s contention that the
    legislature intended the 2003 amendments merely to maintain the
    previous lien priority framework for agricultural supply dealers, the
    interpretation   of   section    570A.4     advanced   by   Oyens   Feed   is
    unpersuasive.    Indeed, the interpretation advanced would in our view
    substantially expand the priority afforded such dealers under the pre-
    2003 framework.       Under Oyens Feed’s interpretation of the statute as
    amended, an agricultural supply dealer’s lien is transformed into a
    16
    temporally unbounded and indefinite superpriority not only for a
    farmer’s purchases of supplies from the dealer within thirty-one days
    before the dealer files a financing statement, but also for purchases made
    any time thereafter.
    Before the 2003 amendment of chapter 570A, agricultural supply
    dealers were not required to file financing statements to establish their
    liens.    They were required instead to “file a verified lien statement” to
    perfect their liens.   Iowa Code § 570A.4(1) (2001).      All lien statements
    were required to include “[a]n itemized declaration of the . . . retail cost of
    the agricultural [supply] which has been or may be furnished” and note
    “[t]he last date through which the agricultural supply dealer . . . agreed
    to   furnish   agricultural”   supplies.    
    Id. § 570A.4(1)(b)–(c).
      Thus,
    agricultural supply dealers seeking superpriority over a previously
    perfected security interest, see 
    id. § 570A.5
    (3), before the 2003
    amendment were required to disclose both the value and the clear
    temporal limits of their liens.
    By contrast, a supply dealer filing a financing statement under
    current law need only disclose its own name, “the name of the debtor,”
    and a description of “the collateral covered by the financing statement.”
    
    Id. § 554.9502(1)
    (2009); see 
    id. § 570A.4
    (“[A] financing statement filed
    to perfect an agricultural supply dealer lien shall be governed by chapter
    554, article 9, part 5 . . . .”). Unlike the lien statements required before
    the 2003 amendment, financing statements required by current law do
    not disclose the amount of the claimed lien or the chronological period
    during which agricultural supplies were—or are in the future to be—sold.
    This significant change in the substance of the notice required of
    agricultural supply dealers is inconsistent with Oyens Feed’s assertion
    that the legislature intended the 2003 amendment merely to integrate
    17
    chapter 554 and pre-2003 chapter 570A without making substantive
    changes—unless      section    570A.4          as   amended     includes   a   filing
    requirement that maintains temporal and value limitations on supply
    dealers’ liens. Put another way, if we were to assume, as Oyens Feed
    urges, that the legislature intended the 2003 amendment would
    “maintain” the priority framework previously enjoyed by agricultural
    supply dealers, we conclude the assumption would augur in favor of
    Primebank’s interpretation of section 570A.4.            See Iowa Code § 4.6(4)
    (permitting courts resolving statutory ambiguity to consider “former
    statutory provisions, including laws upon the same or similar subjects”).
    “Chapter    570A    is   a    compromise        between    the   interests     of
    agricultural supply dealers and financial institutions.”               Thomas E.
    Salsbery & Gale E. Juhl, Chapter 570A Crop and Livestock Lien Law: A
    Panacea or Pandora’s Box, 34 Drake L. Rev. 361, 387 (1985) [hereinafter
    Salsbery & Juhl]; see also In re Crooked Creek Corp., 
    427 B.R. 500
    , 506
    (Bankr. N.D. Iowa 2010) (stating “the legislature tried to strike a balance
    among the various stakeholders,” protecting feed suppliers in some
    instances and financial institutions in others), overruled on other grounds
    by Oyens 
    Feed, 808 N.W.2d at 195
    ; Peterson, 8 Drake J. Agric. L. at 445
    (concluding the legislature intended to protect agricultural supply
    dealers but also enacted “more notice and filing requirements than had
    been previously required [for] agricultural liens”).             We conclude the
    bankruptcy    court’s    decision    in    Shulista    correctly    balances       this
    compromise. See 
    Shulista, 451 B.R. at 876
    . In the agricultural supply
    dealer’s lien context, any increased burden arising from a requirement
    that agricultural supply dealers file serial financing statements is “fairly
    . . . considered as a reasonable exchange for the super-priority status the
    filing helps to acquire.” 
    Id. at 881.
                                        18
    3. The word “within.” As we have noted, Oyens Feed asserts the
    word “within” in section 570A.4 supports its contention that an
    agricultural supply dealer’s lien can be perfected by filing a financing
    statement either before or after a farmer purchases an agricultural
    supply so long as the filing occurs within thirty-one days after the initial
    purchase for which the lien is claimed. Although we do not resolve this
    case solely with “plain language” analysis, we conclude the sometimes
    elastic meaning of the word “within” would stretch beyond the breaking
    point if applied as Oyens Feed suggests. See Farmers Coop. Elevator Co.
    v. Union State Bank, 
    409 N.W.2d 178
    , 181 (Iowa 1987) (rejecting a
    creditor’s argument that, “although creative, stretches the [statutory]
    language . . . beyond our interpretation guideposts”).
    In Jensen, we addressed a will’s charitable bequest of property to
    the county when the will specified the gift was to be made if the county
    built a new courthouse “within ten years after [the testator’s] death.”
    
    Jensen, 236 Iowa at 570
    , 19 N.W.2d at 597. The county in fact built a
    new courthouse, but it did so “between the making of the will and
    testator’s death.”   
    Id. at 571,
    19 N.W.2d at 597.       The testator’s heirs
    contended the charitable bequest failed because the county had built the
    courthouse too early. See 
    id. We acknowledged
    the meaning of the word “within” was the “vital
    question.” Id. at 
    572, 19 N.W.2d at 598
    . We explored several definitions:
    In fixing time, this word is fairly susceptible of different
    meanings. It may be taken to fix both the beginning and end
    of the period of time in which a specified act must be done.
    In this sense “within” means “during.”
    However, “within” frequently means “not beyond, not
    later than, any time before, before the expiration of.” In this
    sense “within” fixes the end but not the beginning of a period
    of time. This meaning is neither unusual nor strained and is
    well recognized in law.
    19
    
    Id. (citation omitted).
    We chose to apply the latter meaning in Jensen
    because courts favor charitable bequests and honoring the bequest
    plainly carried out the testator’s intent. See 
    id. at 571–72,
    19 N.W.2d at
    598.   Oyens Feed urges us to apply that meaning once again in this
    context.
    However, we recognized in Jensen that sometimes the word within
    “may be taken to fix both the beginning and end of the period of time.”
    Id. at 
    572, 19 N.W.2d at 598
    . Our decision in Johnson v. Brooks, 
    254 Iowa 278
    , 286–87, 
    117 N.W.2d 457
    , 461–62 (1962), illustrates one
    example. In Johnson, the plaintiff mailed the defendant a notification of
    filing before actually filing their petition. 
    Id. at 280,
    117 N.W.2d at 458–
    59. Yet the relevant statute required plaintiffs to send the notification
    “within ten days after” filing. 
    Id. at 281–82,
    117 N.W.2d at 459. The
    plaintiff served a second notification after filing the petition, but that
    notification was outside the prescribed limit of ten days. See 
    id. at 280–
    81, 117 N.W.2d at 458
    –59. The defendant raised a statute of limitations
    defense, contending the first notification was too early and the second
    was too late. 
    Id. at 281,
    117 N.W.2d at 459.
    We agreed. We found no basis for holding that a notification “is
    sufficient if it states that a copy of the original notice will be filed . . . . If
    such was the intention of the legislature, it could have and would have
    so provided.” 
    Id. at 284,
    117 N.W.2d at 461. Although the plaintiff cited
    Jensen, we explained Jensen was not controlling because setting both a
    beginning and end of the temporal window for the timely filing of original
    notices was vital to protecting other parties under the circumstances.
    See 
    id. at 286,
    117 N.W.2d at 462 (“[A]s used in this statute, filing of the
    copy of the original notice is made a condition to the validity of the notice
    to defendant.”). We concluded,
    20
    The statute clearly requires the [plaintiff] to notify the
    defendants that the copy of the original notice has already
    been filed . . . , and from the time of that filing [plaintiff] had
    only ten days to properly notify the defendants. Thus we
    have a significant commencement date as well as terminus
    date fixed by the words of the statute, which is the polestar
    for its true meaning in such matters.
    
    Id. at 286–87,
    117 N.W.2d at 462.          Our understanding of the word
    “within” in Johnson has persuasive force in this case as well.              We
    conclude a feed supplier’s financing statement gives notice that the
    supplier’s lien has—not will—become effective. Cf. Lydick v. Smith, 
    266 N.W.2d 208
    , 210 (Neb. 1978) (“[I]t is not . . . compliance with the statute
    to give notice of something which has not yet been done.”).
    Furthermore, a meaning of “within” that fixes both the beginning
    and end of a period for filing agricultural supply dealer lien financing
    statements seems most appropriate when the language of section 570A.4
    is contrasted with other statutory language in chapter 554 governing
    secured transactions in other contexts. Two provisions of chapter 554
    require action within a certain number of days after some event—but by
    necessity demarcate the event itself as a starting point. See Iowa Code
    § 554.9317(5) (giving priority to a purchase-money security interest
    perfected with a financing statement filed “before or within twenty days
    after the debtor receives delivery of the collateral”); 
    id. § 554.9507(3)(a)
    (providing a financing statement that becomes seriously misleading due
    to a debtor’s name change still perfects an interest “in collateral acquired
    by the debtor before, or within four months after, the change”).
    These provisions from chapter 554 stand in stark contrast to the
    phrase “within thirty-one days after the date that the farmer purchases
    the agricultural supply” in section 570A.4. In both section 554.9317(5)
    and section 554.9507(3), the legislature used both the word “before” and
    the phrase “within . . . after.” This suggests only post-event occurrences
    21
    take place within a certain amount of time after the event; if that were
    not the case, the word “before” would be superfluous. Put another way,
    these two provisions indicate the legislature knows how to include pre-
    event occurrences when it wants to do so, and the word “within” does not
    alone effect such an inclusion. As we explained almost ninety years ago,
    when we interpret statutory language, even “indulgence in the doctrine of
    generous construction cannot be permitted to . . . extend[] the meaning
    of words so far that it amounts to the addition of new ones.” Peterson
    Co. v. Freeburn, 
    204 Iowa 644
    , 646, 
    215 N.W. 746
    , 748 (1927). Because
    section 570A.4 does not say “before or within thirty-one days after the
    date that the farmer purchases the agricultural supply,” we reject Oyens
    Feed’s contention that a financing statement filed under the section can
    perfect an agricultural supply lien for purchases of agricultural supplies
    occurring after the financing statement is filed.
    4. Answer to question one. We answer “yes” to question one. We
    conclude an agricultural supply dealer’s financing statement cannot
    perfect a lien under section 570A.4 for quantities of feed sold on credit
    after the statement is filed.       Instead, the agricultural supply dealer’s
    financing statement only perfects a lien for the feed purchases occurring
    during the thirty-one days preceding the filing of the financing
    statement. 1 See Iowa Code § 570A.4(2). This interpretation of section
    570A.4(2) best accommodates the interrelationship between chapter 554
    and chapter 570A and the legislative compromise underlying the 2003
    amendments incorporating chapter 570A into article 9.
    1We  do not suggest every sale must generate a new financing statement. For
    example, a supply dealer who sells feed on credit every week—say, on May 1, 8, 15, 22,
    and 29—could perfect a lien as to all amounts sold in that month by filing a financing
    statement on the last day of the month.
    22
    B. Question Two: Acquisition Price. Section 570A.5(3) limits a
    feed supplier lien’s priority to “the difference between the acquisition
    price of the livestock and the fair market value of the livestock at the
    time the lien attaches or the sale price of the livestock, whichever is
    greater.” Iowa Code § 570A.5(3). Chapter 570A “provides no definition of
    the term acquisition price.” Coastal Plains Pork, 
    2012 WL 6571102
    , at *5
    (applying Iowa law).     Commentators writing soon after the original
    enactment of chapter 570A suggested section 570A.5(3) “may cause
    consternation in the financial institution community” because “it appears
    that where there is existing livestock with no acquisition price, the
    secured creditor will stand behind a verified lien to the full extent of the
    value of the feed consumed.” Salsbery & Juhl, 34 Drake L. Rev. at 377–
    78.
    We agree with the commentators that section 570A.5(3) allows an
    agricultural supply dealer with a perfected lien on a farrow-to-finish
    producer’s herd to assert superpriority to the full extent of the value of
    feed purchased because we conclude animals born and raised in the
    farmer’s farrow-to-finish operation have no “acquisition price” as that
    term is used in section 570A.5(3).
    Primebank contends the legislature’s use of the term “acquisition”
    rather than the “purchase” or “sale” price means acquisition price
    necessarily includes a farmer’s overhead costs and costs of production
    such as transportation, labor, and semen.          However, we conclude
    Primebank’s argument conflates acquisition price with acquisition cost.
    Cf. David Frisch, UCC Section 9-315: A Historical and Modern Perspective,
    
    70 Minn. L
    . Rev. 1, 55 (1985) (disputing that “cost was intended to mean
    acquisition price” because the UCC’s “drafters knew how to use the term
    price when they wished to do so”); William E. Hogan, Financing the
    23
    Acquisition of New Goods Under the Uniform Commercial Code, 3 B.C.
    Indus. & Com. L. Rev. 115, 153 n.151 (1962) (noting the UCC generally
    does not define “costs,” but “an argument that the term includes more
    than acquisition price . . . may be made from the fact that elsewhere the
    Code uses terms clearly indicating ‘price’ ”). Furthermore, we conclude
    Primebank’s formulation of “acquisition price” would require detailed and
    elaborate recordkeeping and accounting of every conceivable cost—
    including variable items like utility bills and facilities depreciation—
    incurred by a farmer in raising a constantly changing group of animals
    and would frustrate the legislature’s intent “to encourage a fluid feed
    market without burdening cooperatives and farmers.” Oyens 
    Feed, 808 N.W.2d at 194
    .
    Our resolution of this issue is also influenced by the notions that
    one can incur a cost unilaterally and that a price tends to involve two
    parties exchanging something. The Black’s Law Dictionary definition of
    “price” refers to a sales transaction and the amount of money that
    changes hands.    Price, Black’s Law Dictionary (10th ed. 2014).     The
    bankruptcy court here noted Crooked Creek’s pigs came into the farrow-
    to-finish operation without a purchase, sale, or exchange.
    The phrase “acquisition price” appears in one other chapter of the
    Iowa Code: chapter 6B, detailing the power of eminent domain. Section
    6B.59 provides that if an acquiring agency uses eminent domain power
    to acquire property and later sells that property “for more than the
    acquisition price paid to the landowner,” the agency must pay the
    landowner the difference between what it paid to acquire the land and
    what it received in the sale. Iowa Code § 6B.59. In the eminent domain
    context, the phrase “acquisition price” appears to refer only to the
    amount of money that exchanged hands, not that amount plus the
    24
    acquiring agency’s other costs incurred for labor, inspectors’ services,
    surveyor fees, appraiser charges, and the like.      We reach a similar
    conclusion with respect to the meaning of acquisition price in chapter
    570A.
    Our conclusion does not write acquisition price out of the statute
    or substitute the word “purchase” in place of “acquisition.”     One can
    imagine a hypothetical transaction that does have an acquisition price
    but no purchase price. In our hypothetical scenario, two farmers raise
    both cows and pigs, but each decides to focus prospectively on just one
    or the other. One farmer trades his or her pigs for the other farmer’s
    cows, and vice versa. Neither farmer has purchased the other’s animals
    because no currency exchanged hands, but each farmer has acquired
    new livestock.     The acquisition price paid by each farmer could be
    established by proving the market value of the respective farmer’s
    animals at the time of the trade.
    We answer “yes” to question two.      Livestock born in Crooked
    Creek’s farrow-to-finish operation had a zero acquisition price for
    purposes of Iowa Code section 570A.5(3).
    V. Conclusion.
    We answer both certified questions in the affirmative. We return
    this case to the federal district court for further proceedings consistent
    with this opinion.
    CERTIFIED QUESTIONS ANSWERED.