American Bank & Trust Co. v. Anderson

377 So. 2d 441, 1979 La. App. LEXIS 3151
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 30, 1979
DocketNo. 13968
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 377 So. 2d 441 (American Bank & Trust Co. v. Anderson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
American Bank & Trust Co. v. Anderson, 377 So. 2d 441, 1979 La. App. LEXIS 3151 (La. Ct. App. 1979).

Opinion

HALL, Judge.

Betty L. Anderson, the original defendant in this suit brought against her by American Bank and Trust Company in Monroe, instituted the present proceeding seeking to set aside a compromise and settlement entered into between her and the other parties to the suit, and the judgment of dismissal rendered in accordance with the compromise agreement. The district court rejected her demands. We reverse in part and set aside the compromise and judgment of dismissal as to the claims by Mrs. Anderson against Kerry Anderson.

Background Facts

Mrs. Anderson and Kerry Anderson were married in June 1976 after entering into a marriage contract stipulating against community property. In December 1976 Mrs. Anderson signed a continuing guaranty agreement guaranteeing any indebtedness of Kerry to the bank up to $50,000. On May 2, 1977 she obtained a loan from the American Bank, of which she was a substantial depositor, for $10,740 and signed a [DXXIII]*DXXIIInote for that amount. She deposited the proceeds of the loan in Kerry Anderson’s business account. Kerry Anderson used $2,600 to purchase a boat and invested $8,000 of the proceeds in a business venture known as Purveyors, Inc. A share certificate for 100 shares of Purveyors, Inc. stock was issued to Kerry, together with a demand note of the corporation for $10,000, representing the $8,000 paid to the corporation and $2,000 for services rendered by Kerry. Stock certificates and similar notes were issued to the other four shareholders. Kerry pledged his stock certificate and note to the bank as collateral for Mrs. Anderson’s $10,740 note.

In December 1977 the $10,740 note came due and when Mrs. Anderson failed to pay it, the bank applied a savings account held by Mrs. Anderson in payment of the note. The bank continued to hold the stock certificate and Purveyors’ note as collateral for others loans to Kerry under a general collateral pledge agreement executed by him.

In January 1978 the bank filed suit for $10,000 against Mrs. Anderson on her continuing guaranty agreement, based on an unpaid and past due note for that amount signed by Kerry Anderson in May 1977. The bank did not name Kerry as a party defendant. Neither did it name as a defendant Kent Anderson, Kerry’s brother who was president of the bank, and who had also signed a continuing guaranty agreement guaranteeing Kerry’s indebtedness to the bank for a much larger amount.

Mrs. Anderson answered denying that the continuing guaranty agreement covered this note. She reconvened against the bank to recover the more than $10,000 applied from her savings account to the first $10,-740 note. She also filed a third party demand against Kent Anderson seeking contribution from him as co-guarantor or surety. She also made a third party demand against Kerry Anderson for indemnity for any amount she had paid and might be required to pay the bank. Kent, in turn, filed a reconventional demand against Mrs. Anderson for contribution as a co-guarantor or surety on this and other debts of Kerry which Kent alleged he had paid under his continuing guaranty agreement.

All parties were represented by counsel. However, with the agreement of all concerned, negotiations for settlement were carried on between Anthony Bruscato, counsel for Mrs. Anderson; Kent Anderson; Lynn Tubb, a bank executive who is also a lawyer; and Ralph Abraham, another executive of the bank. An agreement was reached whereby all claims would be settled with Mrs. Anderson to pay the bank $3,000 and with the Purveyors stock certificate to be transferred to Mrs. Anderson. Neither Mrs. Anderson nor her attorney knew of the existence of the $10,000 note from Purveyors to Kerry held in pledge by the bank. Neither Kerry nor the bank officials disclosed the existence of the note to Mrs. Anderson’s attorney.

On July 21, 1978, a Friday, Lynn Tubb delivered three instruments prepared by him to Mrs. Anderson’s attorney at his office. One was a document to be signed by Mrs. Anderson releasing Kerry in consideration of the transfer by him to her of the shares of stock. One instrument was a release to be signed by the bank and Mrs. Anderson releasing their claims against each other, and reciting the $3,000 payment by Mrs. Anderson to the bank. The third instrument was a mutual release to be signed by Mrs. Anderson and Kent Anderson. The first two instruments were signed by Mrs. Anderson who was present in her attorney’s office. The third instrument was not used, and another instrument was prepared by Mrs. Anderson’s attorney by which all four parties, Mrs. Anderson, Kerry Anderson, Kent Anderson and the bank, released each other from all claims involved in the lawsuit. The instrument recited the $3,000 to be paid by Mrs. Anderson to the bank but did not mention the stock certificate. Mrs. Anderson and Kerry Anderson, who was also present in the attorney’s office, signed this instrument. The instruments, signed by Mrs. Anderson and Kerry, together with Mrs. Anderson’s $3,000 check, were delivered to the bank’s executive-attorney, who was to obtain the signatures of [DXXIV]*DXXIVthe appropriate bank official and Kent Anderson on Monday, Kent being out of town and unavailable on that Friday.

The next day, Saturday, Kerry Anderson, acting in concert with another shareholder of Purveyors and with telephone consent of other shareholders, wrote checks to each of the shareholders, including himself, on the corporation bank account for the amount in the account totaling about $11,000. Kerry’s check was for $2,200. On Monday morning, July 24, before the agreements were signed for the bank and by Kent, and without the knowledge of Kent or the bank officers, Kerry went to a teller’s cage in the bank and paid the $2,200 to the bank on the note which was the subject of this suit.

During the day Monday, the instruments were signed by Kent and a bank officer. The instruments, with the stock certificate and a stock assignment form signed by Kerry, were delivered to Mrs. Anderson’s attorney on Monday afternoon. A judgment of dismissal with prejudice was signed Wednesday, July 26.

Several days later Mrs. Anderson learned of the disbursement of corporate funds to Kerry and the other shareholders, of the payment by Kerry to the bank, and of the existence of the Purveyor note to Kerry held in pledge by the bank. After her demand on the bank for payment of the $2,200 to her was refused, she filed this suit alleging fraud, mistake and error of fact. The essence of her claim is that all concerned knew that it was her intent to acquire Kerry’s interest in Purveyor and to recoup some of her losses from the corporation’s funds. It is her position that the failure of the parties to disclose the existence of the $10,000 note from Purveyors to Kerry, which would effectively preclude her hope of recovery of any money as a shareholder of Purveyors, led her into a mistake of fact as to what she was getting in the settlement, and that she would not have entered into the agreement unless she was to receive all of Kerry’s interest in Purveyors and any subsequent distribution of corporate funds attributable to his interest. In the trial court, and on appeal, Mrs. Anderson sought, alternatively, to (1) require the bank to pay her the $2,200; (2) set the entire compromise aside and return her $3,000 to her; or (3) set the compromise aside as between her and Kerry.

The trial court found that although it was Mrs. Anderson’s intention to recoup part of her loss through a distribution of the corporate funds, neither she nor her attorney ever communicated this fact to the others.

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Bluebook (online)
377 So. 2d 441, 1979 La. App. LEXIS 3151, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-bank-trust-co-v-anderson-lactapp-1979.