Midwest Feeders, Incorporated v. Bank of Franklin
Opinion
*510 Plaintiff-Appellant Midwest Feeders, Inc. ("Midwest") alleges that Defendant-Appellee The Bank of Franklin ("BOF") is liable under Mississippi statutory and common law for its participation in a scheme involving fraudulent checks. Midwest alleges that BOF customer Robert Rawls, an individual with whom Midwest had a financing arrangement, orchestrated a "fictitious payee" scheme. Midwest sued BOF for its alleged participation and negligence regarding this scheme. The district court ruled against Midwest on all of its claims; the court dismissed two claims at the motion to dismiss stage and granted summary judgment with regard to the remaining claims. The court also denied as moot Midwest's motion for discovery sanctions. Midwest appealed. We now AFFIRM.
I. BACKGROUND
A. Factual Background
Midwest is a Kansas-based cattle feedlot business that also "offers financing and credit to customers for procurement of livestock." BOF is a community bank in Mississippi.
1. The Midwest-Rawls Arrangement
Robert Rawls, individually and doing business as Robert Rawls Livestock and Rawls Trucking, LLC (collectively, "Rawls"), entered a contractual financing relationship with Midwest in 2006. Under the terms of the arrangement, Midwest "provided Rawls secured financing through access to Deposit Account No. **4167 at Alva State Bank & Trust of Alva, Oklahoma." Midwest funded the arrangement by depositing money into the Alva bank account. The arrangement obligated Rawls to use the deposited funds to purchase livestock; Midwest would possess a security interest in the livestock. To this end, Rawls received authorization to write checks drawn on the Alva account, which was labeled "Robert Rawls Livestock." When Rawls drew a check on the account, Midwest would deposit the corresponding amount to the account. After purchasing livestock, Rawls was responsible for reselling the livestock to livestock purchasers. Midwest required Rawls to "issue invoices to livestock purchasers and make arrangements for livestock purchasers to send their payments for the purchase price of the livestock to the Alva State Bank Account by delivery to a specified post office box in Alva, Oklahoma."
In other words, the parties established an arrangement where Rawls would purchase livestock, sell the cattle in inventory-thus creating an account receivable-and the proceeds would be paid directly to the Alva account. The proceeds-the deposits from the purchasers-would cover Rawls's outstanding accounts receivable. For its part in funding the arrangement, Midwest received compensation through fees and interest on outstanding funds.
2. BOF's Involvement
In 2008, BOF Executive Vice President Charles Magee solicited Rawls's business.
*511 The two had known each other for over thirty years. Despite the overture, Rawls declined.
In 2010, Rawls asked Magee whether BOF would refinance his Alva State Bank & Trust loans. After their initial phone call, the two met in person to discuss. The bank subsequently issued loans to Rawls in the fall of 2010. One loan involved a $750,000 line of credit, and the other was a $500,000 amortized loan. Both loans were secured by real property.
In September 2010, Rawls opened a checking account at BOF in the name of Robert Rawls Livestock. Upon opening his account, Rawls filled out a questionnaire describing the nature of his business. Rawls noted on the questionnaire that he did not accept third-party checks as payment for goods and services.
Soon after opening his account, Rawls's account regularly had uncollected funds. Magee was responsible for overseeing Rawls's bank accounts; he would also process his loans and approve wire transfers when necessary. On several occasions, Magee approved wire transfers of money from the account, even when the account had a six-figure negative balance. Magee believed that he had adequate business justification for approving these transfers: he would approve these transfers "if there was sufficient funds on the line of credit. If [he] didn't think there were sufficient funds on the line of credit, [he] would call [Rawls's] office" to inquire about any forthcoming deposits. Bank employees seeking to wire money from Rawls's overdrawn account would only need Magee's approval in order to wire funds.
Rawls became one of the top customers at BOF's Brookhaven, Mississippi, branch in terms of the dollar amount of his deposits. Rawls also helped recruit several customers to BOF. Midwest alleges that Rawls received "favorable treatment" during his time as a customer. As an example, Midwest points to a December 2011 loan extension vote before the bank's loan committee. BOF's Vice Chairman Edmund Prestridge voted against extending Rawl's loan because he worried about Rawls's uncollected funds. 1 Nonetheless, the loan committee-including Magee-permitted the extension.
Rawls and Magee also carried on a social relationship during this period. Magee would occasionally visit Rawls's livestock facility, drink beer with him, and watch football games with him. Magee also hunted on property owned by Rawls's family. On several occasions, the two traveled together and attended the same social gatherings. They also exchanged dozens of text messages over the course of Rawls's time as a BOF customer. The messages pertained to a variety of personal and professional matters.
3. Rawls's Fraud
Midwest also alleges that during his time as a customer, Rawls began using his Alva account and BOF account to commit fraud. Midwest alleges that Rawls raised red flags for "check kiting." 2 Rawls regularly moved money between banks; he deposited into his BOF account checks drawn on his Alva Account. Midwest alleges that several BOF officers and executives were *512 aware of this. Indeed, in October 2011, Magee became aware that "Robert Rawls was depositing certain checks payable to sellers into his checking account." Magee claims that Rawls, when confronted, explained that this was a "common practice" in the livestock industry. Magee accepted Rawls's explanation that "depositing checks issued to sellers of cattle into his business checking account" had a legitimate business purpose.
While a BOF customer, Rawls also "created fictitious cattle purchases and diverted money from the Alva account for his personal use." He "made out checks to fictitious payees drawn on the Alva account and endorsed them and stamped them as payable to his livestock company for deposit only. Rawls then deposited the checks into his checking account at Bank of Franklin, which turned them over to Alva for payment." Rawls created corresponding fictitious livestock purchase invoices, as well. Midwest alleges that Rawls issued nearly 900 fraudulent checks between October 2013 and March 2014.
On March 17, 2014, Midwest's President, Jeff Sternberger, spoke with Rawls over the phone. Rawls told Sternberger that he planned to shut down his business. The next day, Sternberger met Rawls at his livestock facility office. Rawls confessed to the scheme. Magee also showed up at Rawls's facility on March 18. He did not see Rawls, who had just left for a medical appointment, but he saw Sternberger; Sternberger told Magee about the fraudulent checks and invoices.
B. Procedural Background
On September 5, 2014, Midwest filed suit against BOF. Midwest, demanding a jury trial, alleged six claims against BOF:
(1) Conversion of Instruments (Miss. Code Ann. § 75-3-420 );
(2) Failure to Exercise Due Care (Miss. Code Ann. § 75-3-404 (d) );
(3) Common Law Conversion of Funds;
(4) Common Law Negligence;
(5) Common Law Negligent Hiring and Supervision; and
(6) Common Law Civil Conspiracy.
The district court dismissed the two conversion-based claims at the motion to dismiss stage. Subsequently, the court entered summary judgment against Midwest on all the remaining claims. On January 18, 2017, the district court entered final judgment, dismissing Midwest's claims with prejudice. Two days later, the district court informed counsel via e-mail that Midwest's pending motion for sanctions was moot. Midwest timely filed notice of appeal.
II. JURISDICTION
Midwest is a Kansas corporation, and BOF is a Mississippi corporation. Midwest alleges damages in excess of $30 million. Therefore, the district court properly exercised diversity jurisdiction under
III. STANDARD OF REVIEW
A. Substantive Law
Because we sit in diversity jurisdiction, we apply Mississippi's substantive law.
Krieser v. Hobbs
,
B. Summary Judgment
We review summary judgment de novo.
United States v. Lawrence
,
C. Motion to Dismiss
We review de novo the grant of a Rule 12(b)(6) motion.
Pub. Emps. Ret. Sys. of Miss., Puerto Rico Teachers Ret. Sys. v. Amedisys, Inc.
,
D. Discovery Sanctions
We review the imposition of discovery sanctions for abuse of discretion.
See
Tollett v. City of Kemah
,
IV. DISCUSSION
There are five issues on appeal: (1) Is Midwest among the class of persons to whom § 75-3-404(d) provides a cause of action, allowing it to bring a statutory negligence claim against BOF?; (2) Would the Mississippi Supreme Court find that a bank owes a duty of care to a non-customer, such that Midwest could bring a common law negligence claim against BOF?; (3) Is there a genuine dispute as to a material fact regarding BOF's participation in a civil conspiracy, such that summary judgment is inappropriate?; (4) Did Midwest state a plausible conversion claim under Mississippi Code § 75-3-420 ?; and (5) Did the district court abuse its discretion in dismissing as moot Midwest's motion for sanctions? We answer these questions in turn.
A. Midwest Lacks a Cause of Action under Mississippi Code § 75-3-404(d)
Section 75-3-404(d) reads:
With respect to an instrument to which subsection (a) or (b) applies, if a person paying the instrument or taking it for value or for collection fails to exercise ordinary care in paying or taking the instrument and that failure substantially contributes to loss resulting from payment of the instrument, the person bearing the loss may recover from the person failing to exercise ordinary care to the extent the failure to exercise ordinary care contributed to the loss.
Miss. Code. Ann. § 75-3-404(d) (emphasis added). According to Midwest, it can sue BOF for its alleged negligence in handling Rawls's fraudulent checks. Midwest focuses on the statute's plain language: the statute grants a cause of action to any "person bearing the loss" as a result of a *514 bank's negligence in handling a negotiable instrument. Thus, Midwest suggests that any person who bore a loss due to a bank's negligence in handling a negotiable instrument should be able to sue the bank under § 75-3-404(d).
Midwest is correct to focus on the plain language of the statute.
See
City of Tchula v. Miss. Pub. Serv. Comm'n
,
However, Midwest ignores the broader statutory context in which § 75-3-404(d) fits.
See
King v. Burwell
, --- U.S. ----,
The UCC's Official Comments further support this reading. We agree with BOF's reading of the comments, which "illustrate that the remedy available under section 75-3-404(d) is only available to a party to the instrument." Mississippi courts give "significant weight" to those comments.
See
Hancock Bank v. Ensenat
,
Midwest may very well be a "party bearing the loss" under the ordinary meaning of that phrase. However, we are *515 unwilling to apply the ordinary meaning of the phrase when, in context, § 75-3-404(d) only provides a cause of action to a party to the negotiable instrument. By placing § 75-3-404(d) in this context in the overall statutory scheme, it is clear that Mississippi's chapter governing negotiable instruments does not contemplate the extension of liability to any party who bore any loss as a result of a depository bank's negligence in regard to the handling of a negotiable instrument. Therefore, we AFFIRM the district court's summary judgment against Midwest with regard to its statutory negligence claim. 4
B. BOF Owes a Duty to Midwest
The next issue is whether Midwest can assert common law negligence claims against BOF, even though Midwest was never BOF's customer. Mississippi requires that the plaintiff establish "the traditional elements of negligence: duty or standard of care, breach of that duty or standard, proximate causation, and damages or injury."
Lyle v. Mladinich
,
No Mississippi case directly addresses whether a bank may owe a duty to a non-customer in circumstances resembling this case. Thus, the district court made an
Erie
guess as to whether the Mississippi Supreme Court would-as a matter of law-permit Midwest to bring negligence claims against BOF. The court analyzed relevant cases from the Mississippi Supreme Court, but it acknowledged that no case directly addressed the issue. The district court then assessed cases from intermediate Mississippi courts, in addition to surveying other jurisdictions. The district court ultimately granted summary judgment for BOF, finding that Midwest's negligence-based claims failed as a matter of law. The district court was "unpersuaded that the Mississippi Supreme Court would find that the Bank of Franklin owed any duty to Midwest Feeders, a non-customer whose name did not appear on any of the checks at issue, and with which the bank had no relationship." According to the district court, "a bank does not assume a duty to non-customers by merely engaging in questionable banking practices or failing to adequately train its employees." Thus, the district court found that "[a]bsent any duty owed by the Bank of Franklin ... Midwest's negligence based claims fail as a matter of law." The court also expressed concern that finding that BOF owed a duty to Midwest may expose BOF to "unlimited liability for unforeseeable frauds," which would impose dramatic investigatory burdens on banks to ensure the validity and legality of their customers' transactions.
See
Shreveport Prod. Credit Ass'n v. Bank of Commerce
,
* * *
No Mississippi Supreme Court decision directly addresses whether-and in what circumstances-a bank owes a duty of care to non-customers. Therefore, we must make an
Erie
guess as to whether the Mississippi Supreme Court would recognize
*516
such a duty.
Transcon. Gas Pipe Line Corp. v. Transp. Ins. Co.
,
The only decision by the Mississippi Supreme Court pertaining to this issue is
Citizens Nat'l Bank v. First Nat'l Bank
,
Citizens National
offers us only limited guidance. The Mississippi Supreme Court emphasized that the two parties were
competing banks
before deciding that no legal duty to inform the other bank about fraud may arise unless a "confidential or fiduciary relationship" existed.
Given the limited guidance from the Mississippi Supreme Court, we may look to the decisions of a state's intermediate courts.
See
Transcon. Gas Pipe Line Corp.
,
In
Holifield
, the Mississippi Court of Appeals addressed a situation where investors in a trust sued a depository bank for its alleged negligence in handling transactions by its customer, the trustee; the investors were not the bank's customers.
See
In
Delta
, the Mississippi Court of Appeals confronted a situation where a bank was sued by a non-customer for its negligent decision to allow a customer to open allegedly fraudulent bank accounts.
Thus, we are left to survey other jurisdictions to inform our
Erie
guess.
See
Rogers v. Hartford Life & Acc. Ins. Co.
,
We look first to
Eisenberg v. Wachovia Bank, N.A.
,
*518
In response, Midwest argues that while banks generally do not owe a duty of care to non-customers, there are specific circumstances in which such a duty may exist. Midwest cites our decision in
Chaney v. Dreyfus Serv. Corp.
,
New York courts have recognized that a bank may be held liable for its customer's misappropriation where (1) there is a fiduciary relationship between the customer and the non-customer, (2) the bank knows or ought to know of the fiduciary relationship, and (3) the bank has "actual knowledge or notice that a diversion is to occur or is ongoing."
The Eleventh Circuit in
Chang v. JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A.
,
[T]here is an exception to this rule: a bank may be liable to a noncustomer for its customer's misappropriation when a fiduciary relationship exists between the customer and the noncustomer, the bank knows or ought to know of the fiduciary relationship, and the bank has actual knowledge of its customer's misappropriation.
Even the cases BOF cites contemplate that a bank may owe a duty to a non-customer in certain circumstances. The Fourth Circuit's
Eisenberg
decision looked at the nature of the "relationship" (or the lack thereof) between the bank and non-customer.
See
Thus, caselaw supports the idea that while a bank generally owes no duty to a non-customer, the bank may owe such a duty to a non-customer where "a fiduciary relationship exists between the customer and the noncustomer, the bank knows or ought to know of the fiduciary relationship, and the bank has actual knowledge of its customer's misappropriation."
Chang
,
* * *
Despite the merits of this line of cases, we recognize that we cannot use our
Erie
guess to impose upon Mississippi a new regime of liability for its banks.
See
Keen v. Miller Envtl. Grp., Inc.
,
C. Midwest Failed to Allege the Existence of a Civil Conspiracy
Mississippi law provides that "[a] conspiracy is a combination of persons for the purpose of accomplishing an unlawful purpose or a lawful purpose unlawfully."
Levens v. Campbell
,
*520
"[I]nferences favorable to the plaintiff must be within the range of reasonable probability and it is the duty of the court to withdraw the case from the jury if the necessary inference is so tenuous that it rests merely upon speculation and conjecture."
Harris v. Miss. Valley State Univ.
,
The district court concluded that the evidence presented "offer[ed] no more than speculation and conjecture insufficient to create a genuine issue of material fact." The court noted that "to accept the conspiracy theory advanced by Midwest Feeders would require the fact-finder to pile inference upon inference, namely that Magee knew of Rawls'[s] fraudulent scheme, that he agreed to conspire with Rawls, and that he acted on behalf of the Bank of Franklin in furtherance of that agreement." The district court focused its analysis on the personal relationship between Rawls and Magee, finding that a personal relationship alone cannot establish the existence of a conspiracy.
See
Delta Chem.
,
Midwest argues that the district court failed to consider circumstantial evidence regarding the existence of an agreement between BOF and Rawls. Midwest alleges that the district court failed to give weight to "BOF eagerly pursuing Rawls'[s] business, overlooking Rawls'[s] high uncollected funds balance, approving wires from Rawls'[s] account when overdrawn by hundreds of thousands of dollars, and accepting numerous Fraud Checks from Rawls with no endorsement." Midwest argues that this course of performance- coupled with the "unprofessionally close relationship between Rawls and Magee"-suffices to permit a juror to infer the existence of a civil conspiracy.
BOF responds by arguing that that Midwest "did not demonstrate a genuine issue of material fact on its claim for civil conspiracy," despite "[e]xtensive discovery." BOF cites
Delta
for the proposition that even if one party receives "some favorable loans and other items of compensation due to their personal relationship with [the alleged co-conspirator] [does] not
ipso facto
create the existence of a conspiracy."
See
Delta Chem.
,
However, the
Delta
court also reversed a directed verdict regarding another alleged co-conspirator.
Yet, BOF argues that the overt acts in
Delta
, which justified reversing the directed verdict, are a far cry from the circumstantial evidence that Midwest produced in this case. The acts by the alleged co-conspirator bank employee in
Delta
included: (1) opening sham accounts for the co-conspirator; (2) acting as the only employee reviewing banking statements related to those accounts; and (3) retaining and using endorsement stamps for those sham accounts.
Delta
,
We conclude, following
Delta
, that the evidence presented fails to establish the plausible existence of a civil conspiracy. Although civil conspiracy can be-and often is-established through circumstantial evidence, the evidence of the close
*521
personal relationship between Rawls and Magee does not rise to the level necessary to establish that a civil conspiracy existed. Such an inference would "rest[ ] merely upon speculation and conjecture," and thus it is our duty to "withdraw the case from the jury."
Harris
,
D. Midwest Failed to Plausibly Allege a Conversion Claim under Mississippi Code § 75-3-420
Midwest alleged two conversion claims: one under Mississippi Code and another under Mississippi common law. At the motion to dismiss stage, the district court correctly determined that Mississippi code preempted Midwest's common law conversion claim.
See
Berhow v. The Peoples Bank
,
Section 75-3-420 establishes, in relevant part, that:
An instrument is also converted if it is taken by transfer, other than a negotiation, from a person not entitled to enforce the instrument or a bank makes or obtains payment with respect to the instrument for a person not entitled to enforce the instrument or receive payment. An action for conversion of an instrument may not be brought by (i) the issuer or acceptor of the instrument or (ii) a payee or indorsee who did not receive delivery of the instrument either directly or through delivery to an agent or a co-payee.
Miss. Code. Ann. § 75-3-420(a). Midwest reiterates its statutory conversion claim on appeal, and it asserts that it possessed a sufficient interest in the converted negotiable instruments to bring a conversion claim.
BOF argues that Midwest lacked any interest in the negotiable instrument; Midwest was not a person entitled to enforce the instrument, it had no rights in the instrument, and it was not an entity recognized on the instrument itself. Therefore, it lacked any property interest in the check that could be converted.
BOF relies on the Seventh Circuit's opinion in
American National Insurance Co. v. Citibank, N.A.
,
Midwest attempts to distinguish American National on the grounds that the plaintiff in that case lacked any direct interest in the instruments. Midwest alleges that in this case, it had a direct interest in the instruments because it had "deposited funds into the account upon which BOF drew the Fraud Checks." Thus, Midwest argues, it had a property interest in the checks-as opposed to merely an equitable interest.
However, as BOF and the district court recognized, Midwest's conception of conversion would place an undesirable burden on banks. As the Seventh Circuit found,
Instead of being able to look at the payee line and to verify that the person presenting the check was indeed entitled to do so, banks in [the plaintiff's] world would need to conduct a full-blown investigation every time to make sure that a party with an equitable interest in the check was not lurking in the background. Such a system would bring commercial transactions to a grinding halt.
Am. Nat'l
,
Midwest, citing Mississippi Code § 75-3-306, also argues that it maintained an interest in the negotiable instrument's proceeds. Section 75-3-306 states in relevant part that "[a] person taking an instrument, other than a person having rights of a holder in due course, is subject to a claim of a property or possessory right in the instrument or its proceeds."
We AFFIRM the district court's decision to dismiss the conversion claim. Midwest lacks a cognizable interest in the negotiable instruments for the purposes of § 75-3-420.
E. The District Court Did Not Abuse Its Discretion by Dismissing as Moot Midwest's Motion for Sanctions
Midwest asserts that the district court erred by never ruling on a motion for sanctions. Midwest filed the motion for sanctions-alleging that BOF acted improperly during the course of discovery-hours before the district court issued its ruling on the motion for summary judgment. Days after the ruling, counsel e-mailed the district court regarding the status of the motion for sanctions. The district court responded that: "In light of [its] Order and Final Judgment, Midwest's Motion for Sanctions is moot. No further response is needed."
Midwest asserts that dismissal was improper, and the court incorrectly applied the doctrine of mootness to the issue. In support of its position, Midwest cites an out-of-circuit case for the proposition that "the district court must address BOF's conduct to maintain compliance with the rules and public confidence in the judicial system."
See
Anchondo v. Anderson, Crenshaw & Assocs.,
No. CV 08-202 RB/WPL,
*523
We conclude that the district court did not abuse its discretion by denying the imposition of discovery sanctions.
See
Tollett
,
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM the judgment of the district court on all issues.
An internal BOF memorandum memorializes BOF's concerns about Rawls's substantial uncollected funds balance.
"[T]he practice of kiting checks ... [involves] drawing checks on such accounts in excess of the balances therein due, with such excessive withdrawals being covered by checks drawn on other accounts [ ] in excess of the balances therein."
Citizens Nat'l Bank v. First Nat'l Bank
,
BOF also asserts that a Pennsylvania state court, interpreting an identical statute, limited recovery to only those who are parties to the negotiable instrument.
See
Victory Clothing Co. v. Wachovia Bank, N.A.
, No. 1397,
BOF does not argue that § 75-3-404(d) pre-empts Midwest's attempt to pursue negligence claims based in the common law. BOF only argued that Mississippi law preempted Midwest's common law conversion claim-a claim that Midwest apparently conceded on appeal.
To the extent
Holifield
permits a claim to proceed on the basis of the bank's actual knowledge, as opposed to what the bank should have known, we read that principle to derive from the Mississippi law of
trusts
, not the general law of negligence. Mississippi negligence law makes clear that a party may owe a duty to one who is injured by a foreseeable intervening cause.
See
Southland Mgmt. Co. v. Brown ex rel. Brown
,
To the extent that the
Delta
court discussed a bank's duties of care and reasonableness, it did so in the context of a statutory conspiracy to defraud claim.
See
See, e.g.
,
SFS Check, LLC v. First Bank of Del.
,
Midwest also cites
In re: Liberty State Benefits of Del., Inc.
,
Reference
- Full Case Name
- MIDWEST FEEDERS, INCORPORATED, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. the BANK OF FRANKLIN, Defendant-Appellee.
- Cited By
- 94 cases
- Status
- Published