25th Street Group Apartments 1, LLC v. Bremer Bank, National Association

CourtDistrict Court, D. North Dakota
DecidedJuly 14, 2022
Docket3:20-cv-00167
StatusUnknown

This text of 25th Street Group Apartments 1, LLC v. Bremer Bank, National Association (25th Street Group Apartments 1, LLC v. Bremer Bank, National Association) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. North Dakota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
25th Street Group Apartments 1, LLC v. Bremer Bank, National Association, (D.N.D. 2022).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF NORTH DAKOTA EASTERN DIVISION

25th Street Group Apartments #1, LLC,

Plaintiff, MEMORANUDM AND ORDER

vs. Case No. 3:20-cv-167

Bremer Bank, National Association,

Defendant.

Before the Court are two motions. The first is a motion for partial summary judgment filed by Plaintiff 25th Street Group Apartments #1, LLC, (“25th Street”) on September 2, 2021. Doc. No. 33. On September 23, 2021, Defendant Bremer Bank, National Association, (“Bremer”) filed a response in opposition to the motion. Doc. No. 42. 25th Street filed its reply. Doc. No. 51. The second motion is Bremer’s motion for summary judgment, filed on September 3, 2021. Doc. No. 38. 25th Street filed a response in opposition on September 24, 2021. Doc. No. 43. Bremer filed its reply. Doc. No. 54. For the reasons below, the Court denies 25th Street’s motion for partial summary judgment (Doc. No. 33) and grants in part and denies in part Bremer’s motion for summary judgment (Doc. No. 38). I. BACKGROUND The case before the Court centers on the termination of an interest-rate swap agreement between 25th Street and Bremer and the resulting commercial dispute over the terms of that agreement. In basic terms, the parties to an interest-rate swap agreement essentially “swap” interest rates, or more specifically, swap payments that are based on interest rates. Doc. No. 48-1, p. 20. In some cases, an interest-rate swap is used in conjunction with a loan agreement. Here, 25th Street entered into a loan agreement with Bremer. The loan agreement had a variable interest rate, which was higher risk than a fixed interest rate. To mitigate that risk, 25th Street and Bremer entered into an interest-rate swap agreement. This interest-rate swap agreement essentially transformed 25th Street’s interest rate from a variable rate to a synthetic fixed rate. 25th Street eventually terminated the swap and, as a result, incurred a fee. With this general background in mind, a brief introduction of the parties is necessary.

25th Street is a North Dakota limited liability company and has its principal office in Fargo, North Dakota.1 Doc. No. 1-3, ¶ 2. Richard Jordahl and Brent Olson are members of 25th Street. Doc. No. 67, p. 5. Jordahl is also the President of 25th Street. Doc. No. 42-3, p. 7. Jordahl has more than 10 million dollars in investments, which include, among other things, investing in farmland and buying and developing land with apartment buildings or rental properties. Doc. No. 67, pp. 6, 9. Additionally, Jordahl is involved in “a number of different entities,” including at least a dozen limited liability companies, and about half of the entities Jordahl is involved in include Olson. Id., p. 6. Olson, a certified public accountant with an active license, serves as the secretary/treasurer of 25th Street. Doc. No. 48, pp. 17-20. Olson has been a part of more than 60

business entities and has more than 10 million dollars in investments. Doc. No. 40-3, p. 6, 44. Bremer is a banking corporation and has its principal office and place of business in Saint Paul, Minnesota, with branch offices in Fargo, North Dakota. Doc. No. 1-3, ¶ 3. Vassil Zanev is a Bremer employee and currently the director of capital markets, and he has, throughout his time with Bremer, worked on swap agreements. Doc. No. 48-1, pp.17-18. Jennifer Carlier is another Bremer employee, who works with Zanev in the capital markets department and is currently the

1 As alleged, 25th Street is the “survivor of a merger between 25th Street Group Apartments #1, LLC and 25th Street Group Apartments #2, LLC.” Doc. No. 1-3, ¶ 2. 25th Street also alleges, and Bremer does not dispute, that while 25th Street’s “cause of action arose before the merger was complete,” 25th Street is qualified to bring claims as a successor-in-interest. For ease of reference, the Court will simply refer to the Plaintiff as 25th Street. vice president capital markets associate. Doc. No. 48-2, p. 20. Jessica Broers is a business banker for Bremer and works on commercial loan requests. Doc. No. 24-1, p. 19. According to Broers, if a client is interested in a swap, she pulls in Zanev and Carlier and serves as a connection between the client and the “swap department.” Doc. No. 28, p. 22. Broers also works on client relationships. Doc. No. 24-1, p. 19.

A. 25th Street finances with Bremer Broers has worked with both Jordahl and Olson on different financing transactions in the past. Doc. No. 28, pp. 23-24; Doc. No. 48, p. 27. In early 2017, Jordahl and Broers were working on separate financing unrelated to this case. See Doc. No. 48, p. 27. At the same time, 25th Street was seeking permanent financing to replace an existing construction loan. Doc. No. 42-3, p. 5. At some point, Jordahl and Broers discussed financing for 25th Street.2 Doc. No. 48, p. 27. Broers represented that Bremer had “a fixed-rate product on a ten-year fixed,” according to Olson. Id. Olson explained that this “seemed to be a good deal” so 25th Street “explored a fixed-rate loan with Bremer.” Id.

25th Street ultimately decided to pursue financing with Bremer. When asked why, Jordahl explained, “[Olson] and I discussed it, so it was kind of a mutual thing. But [Olson] does a lot of this stuff. [Olson’s] a real smart guy, kind of educated . . . he’s the CPA guy[.]” Doc. No. 67, p. 7.

2 According to Olson, Broers “solicited” 25th Street’s business. Doc. No. 48, p. 27. Broers, on the other hand, testified that she did not remember who brought up the possibility of using a swap agreement first. Doc. No. 28, p. 38. As part of this financing, 25th Street and Bremer entered into a loan agreement and a swap agreement on June 26, 2017.3 Doc. Nos. 65-1, 65-2. The Loan Agreement The loan agreement consists of several documents—the loan, the note,4 and collateral documents5 (together, the “Loan Agreement”). See Doc. No. 65-1, p. 88. Under the Loan

Agreement, Bremer agreed to make a single advance to 25th Street of $12,800,000. Id., p. 84. The interest rate under the Loan Agreement was a variable rate based on the ICE London Interbank Offered Rate (“LIBOR”) plus 2.10%.6 Id., p. 103. 25th Street, however, wanted a fixed interest rate. See Doc. No. 48, p. 32. To reach that end, 25th Street and Bremer created a synthetic fixed rate by entering into a swap agreement. In entering into the swap agreement, Bremer wanted to ensure “the loan is structured exactly as the swap is,” according to Zanev. Doc. No. 48-1, p. 31. Part of this process included having Bremer’s “swap counsel do a review as well and make sure that everything related to the swap is included appropriately in the [Loan Agreement].” Id. Indeed, the Loan Agreement

expressly contemplates the parties entering into a swap agreement. For example, under the Loan Agreement, a condition precedent to an initial monetary advance is “an independent ISDA swap

3 According to James Lovely, a private consultant, 25th Street “in general viewed the swap and loan as an economic package” even though the loan agreement and swap agreement are “separate contracts.” Doc. No. 42-2, pp. 20, 22. The loan agreement and swap agreement were both negotiated in North Dakota. Doc. No. 43, p. 14.

4 The “note” is a promissory note payable to Bremer, containing the terms relating to the repayment, interest rate and other matters. Doc. No. 65-1, p. 84.

5 The loan defines the “collateral documents” as “the Mortgage, Assignment and any other loan and collateral documents referred to in Section 3.1.” Id., p. 83. In this case, the collateral for the Loan Agreement is located in North Dakota. Doc. No. 43, p. 14.

6 The LIBOR is the “interest rate high-credit quality banks charge one another for short-term financing.” Doc. No. 42-3, p. 10. agreement executed by [25th Street], in form and substance satisfactory to [Bremer].” Doc. No.

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25th Street Group Apartments 1, LLC v. Bremer Bank, National Association, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/25th-street-group-apartments-1-llc-v-bremer-bank-national-association-ndd-2022.