Aguilar v. Valley Federal Savings Bank (In re Aguilar)

95 B.R. 208, 1989 Bankr. LEXIS 15, 1989 WL 1464
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. New Mexico
DecidedJanuary 10, 1989
DocketBankruptcy No. 11-88-00446 R A; Adv. No. 88-0106
StatusPublished

This text of 95 B.R. 208 (Aguilar v. Valley Federal Savings Bank (In re Aguilar)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. New Mexico primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Aguilar v. Valley Federal Savings Bank (In re Aguilar), 95 B.R. 208, 1989 Bankr. LEXIS 15, 1989 WL 1464 (N.M. 1989).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

STEWART ROSE, Chief Judge.

BACKGROUND

This lawsuit was originally filed in State Court on July 7, 1987. The plaintiffs, Tony and Roxann Aguilar, filed their Chapter 11 petition on February 25, 1988. The suit was removed to the Bankruptcy Court on April 28, 1988 by defendant Valley Federal Savings Bank. Defendant Fred Sanders, a former officer of Valley, has filed his own Chapter 7 petition.

Before the Court today is a motion for summary judgment filed by Valley. The controversy arises from the sale and financing of a restaurant and liquor license in Artesia, New Mexico in the spring and summer of 1986. The Aguilars allege misrepresentation, conversion, defamation, interference with business relations, infliction of emotion distress, breach of fiduciary duty and illegal repossession. Valley denies the allegations and raises as an affirmative defense that the claims were compulsory counterclaims in prior state court litigation. The parties chose not to file briefs supporting their relative positions, but instead asked the Court to rely on extensive oral argument, deposition testimony, affidavits and documents. Having considered the arguments and evidence submitted, the Court holds that Valley is entitled to summary judgment on Counts I and III. Valley is entitled to partial summary judgment on Counts II, IV, V and VI.

FACTS

The facts as ultimately found by the Court follow. Additional findings are stated in the discussion of each part of the complaint.

Tony Aguilar is a former banker and until recently operated several businesses in Roswell and Artesia, New Mexico. He is married to Roxann Aguilar. W.A.M. Investments, Ltd. is a New Mexico limited partnership. Tony is the general partner. Bav-Ma, Inc. is a New Mexico Corporation owned or controlled by Tony. In April and May of 1986, W.A.M. contracted to pur-' chase a building, furniture, fixtures and a liquor license in order to operate a restaurant. Valley owned all of the purchased assets except the building. Valley also financed part of the purchase. Complications arose over transfer of the liquor license and the new restaurant never operated at a profit. Tony, his entities and his [210]*210businesses suffered continuing financial setbacks.

Sometime in late 1986 and early 1987, two State Court lawsuits were filed. In CV86-435, W.A.M. and Aguilar sued Valley and others. The complaint alleged breach of contract to deliver the liquor license, sought rescission of the guaranties and promissory note, alleged negligence and breach of warranty of title and sought rescission of the contracts for sale of the fixtures and building. In CV87-27F, Albuquerque Federal Savings and Loan, first mortgagee, sought foreclosure against Tony, W.A.M. and Valley. Tony filed a crossclaim against Valley seeking to have all of the transactions declared as one and rescinded because of the failure of Valley to transfer the liquor license. Valley filed a crossclaim seeking judgment on its note from W.A.M.

A complete set of pleadings from the State Court was not put into evidence, but it appears from those that were provided that the cases were consolidated and cross motions for summary judgment were filed.

The State Court ruled that among the parties, the liquor license is vested in W.A.M., subject to Valley’s lien; claimant Taylor has no interest in the license; the State Court litigation is no impediment to the transfer of the license by the State; W.A.M. must cooperate in the transfer of the license and has no claim against Valley until it fails in a good faith attempt to effect a transfer; Valley has breached no duty to W.A.M.; W.A.M. has abandoned all other claims in its complaint and the W.A.M. complaint is dismissed. The bankruptcy and current lawsuit followed.

DISCUSSION

A. Count I — Misrepresentation

Count I, in part, alleges negligent or intentional misrepresentation on the part of Valley by its failure to make an additional $90,000 loan to Tony, or his partners in W.A.M. The money was to be in addition to the $155,000 borrowed by W.A.M. for the furniture, fixtures and liquor license. The new loan would cover operating expenses of the new restaurant. No inquiry into the existence of a fact dispute need be made. Even if all facts are as the plaintiffs claim, the defendant is nevertheless entitled to judgment. Any cause of action involving a representation to make a loan was a compulsory counterclaim in the prior litigation. Such a claim is barred by Fed.R. Civ.P. 13, and should have been brought in CV87-27F against Valley’s crossclaim. Paragraph 5 of Count I, made applicable to all six counts, states that the bank, “in connection with the sale of a liquor license” said it would loan additional money. Since this complaint is “in connection with the sale of a liquor license”, it arises from the same transaction or occurrence as the two State Court lawsuits.

On pages 242 through 260 of Tony’s deposition, the bank’s counsel asks Tony to state the facts supporting Count I. Tony alleges the promise to loan an additional $90,000 and discusses the terms and what assets he might pledge as security. On page 255, Tony ties the transactions together. He states that the bank officer said to close the $155,000 loan first, and then the bank would loan the $90,000 after the liquor license was transferred. The loan for the furniture, fixtures and license and the promised future loan are all part of the same transaction. Fed.R.Civ.P. 13(a) mandates that this type of claim be litigated with all other claims. The identical New Mexico rule, SCRA 1986, Civ.P.R. 1-013(A) is discussed in a similar context in Slide-A-Ride v. Citizens Bank of Las Cruces, 105 N.M. 433, 733 P.2d 1316 (1987). In New Mexico courts, “a transaction or occurrence is the same if a ‘logical relationship’ exists between the opposing parties claims. A logical relationship will be found if both the claim and counterclaim have a common origin and a common subject matter.” 105 N.M. at 436, 733 P.2d at 1318. The reasoning of the New Mexico Supreme Court is persuasive and will be applied. The Aguilars’ claims for a representation to loan money were compulsory counterclaims in the State Court. They cannot be raised here.

That much of Count I alleging a misrepresentation to loan money is dismissed and [211]*211summary judgment is granted for the defendant bank.

The remainder of Count I alleges misrepresentation, to others, by the bank, of the Aguilars’ financial condition. In essence, a defamation is alleged, and the count is dismissed and summary judgment shall enter for the bank. The Court’s reasoning is discussed in connection with the ruling on Count III.

B. Count II — Conversion

Based on the uncontroverted affidavit of William Harrison, an officer of Valley, and the supporting bank documents, the Court makes the following additional findings:

Savings account No. 10234003 was held jointly by Tony and Roxann. On July 30, 1986, $50,000 was deposited into the account. On July 31, $4,800 was withdrawn by a check made payable to Roxann. Also on July 31, $23,000 was transferred, by the bank, to the account of Bav-Ma, Inc.

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Related

Slide-A-Ride of Las Cruces, Inc. v. Citizens Bank
733 P.2d 1316 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1987)
Melson v. Bank of New Mexico
332 P.2d 472 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1958)
Fidelity National Bank v. Lobo Hijo Corp.
594 P.2d 1193 (New Mexico Court of Appeals, 1979)

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Bluebook (online)
95 B.R. 208, 1989 Bankr. LEXIS 15, 1989 WL 1464, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/aguilar-v-valley-federal-savings-bank-in-re-aguilar-nmb-1989.