Angelo & Son, Inc. v. RAPIDS BANK & TRUST CO.

671 So. 2d 1283, 1996 WL 164639
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 10, 1996
Docket95-992
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 671 So. 2d 1283 (Angelo & Son, Inc. v. RAPIDS BANK & TRUST CO.) 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
Angelo & Son, Inc. v. RAPIDS BANK & TRUST CO., 671 So. 2d 1283, 1996 WL 164639 (La. Ct. App. 1996).

Opinion

671 So.2d 1283 (1996)

ANGELO AND SON, INC., Angelo J. Piazza, Jr., Individually, and on Behalf of Angelo and Son, Inc., Plaintiffs-Appellees,
v.
RAPIDES BANK & TRUST COMPANY IN ALEXANDRIA, Defendant-Appellant.

No. 95-992.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Third Circuit.

April 10, 1996.

*1284 Christopher J. Roy Sr., for Angelo & Son, Inc., et al.

Robert G. Nida, for Rapides Bank & Trust Company.

Before: YELVERTON, WOODARD, and AMY, JJ.

YELVERTON, Judge.

This appeal comes from a breach of contract damage award in favor of Angelo and Patricia Piazza against Rapides Bank & Trust Company in Alexandria. The contract which the trial court found the bank breached was a compromise agreement. The damages the court awarded were the consequences of the breach of the compromise.

The Piazzas and the bank had been doing business for years. The bank floor-planned the Piazzas' car business, and held mortgages on real estate as security. The arrangement worked smoothly until discrepancies caused by bogus charges in the bank records were discovered in their floor-plan accounts. These discrepancies, it was ultimately learned, were caused by a scheme of embezzlement being operated by one of the bank's employees. The entanglement of the Piazzas' account in the embezzlement scheme created bookkeeping problems of some complexity, and raised a dispute between the Piazzas and the bank over what the floor-plan balance was. After this went on for some time, the Piazzas and the bank finally compromised and settled the dispute over what the floor plan balance was, and signed a written agreement. The bank thereafter violated this agreement, as found by the trial judge, and the prolonged consequences of that breach caused the damages and this lawsuit.

The trial court's award of damages was rendered subject to an offset in the amount still owed by the Piazzas to the bank on their floor-plan promissory notes. The bank appealed the award of damages and the Piazzas answered the appeal seeking more damages. Finding no manifest error in the trial court's resolution of these essentially factual disputes, and no abuse of discretion in the determination of damages, we affirm the judgment.

FACTS

We will explain the trial court's decision and our affirmation in greater detail. The Piazzas owned and operated a used car business know as Angelo and Son, Inc. For several years Rapides Bank provided floor-plan financing. Early in the financing relationship, the Piazzas would sign a separate note for each vehicle or group of vehicles that they bought for resale. Later, the bank began using a master note in the amount of $150,000 which was secured by a collateral mortgage on three tracts of land that the Piazzas owned. The bank billed the Piazzas monthly for interest that accrued under the master note. As the Piazzas would sell vehicles *1285 that had been floor-planned, they would pay Rapides Bank for each vehicle, and in return, the bank would deliver title to that vehicle. Once in a while, the Piazzas would sell a vehicle for an amount less than it had been floor-planned. These differences were put in a small side note which was also secured by the mortgage on the Piazzas' property.

The parties added an "indirect financing" arrangement. The Piazzas would take a loan application from a prospective customer, send the completed application to the bank and, if the application was approved by the bank, the loan documents would be used as additional security for the purchase of an automobile.

The business prospered until the fall of 1990. At that time Angelo, in Houston, Texas, to buy some cars from National Car Rental, called Patricia at home and told her to make arrangements with Rapides Bank to have money wire-transferred to National Car Rental. When Patricia called the bank, she was told they were over their credit line of $150,000. Patricia realized that there was a substantial discrepancy between her records and the bank records, but Angelo could not purchase the vehicles from National Car Rental.

Rapides Bank then found that one of its employees, Rick McLaren, was embezzling money. The bank discovered that McLaren had been making bogus charges to floor-plan accounts (there were others besides Angelo and Sons) and transferring the proceeds from these bogus loans into his account.

The Piazzas and the bank undertook to reconcile their records. Mike Newton, another bank employee, examined and compared the records to find out how much money McLaren had embezzled from the Piazzas' floor-plan account. It took a while, but a figure was finally arrived at, and on December 18, 1990, the Piazzas and Rapides Bank signed an "Agreement Concerning Correction of Floor-Plan Line of Credit." In this agreement, Rapides Bank credited the Piazzas' floor-plan account for the bogus charges that McLaren had made and also credited the account for interest that had been charged in connection with the bogus loans.

Along about this time the bank made the decision to institutionally discontinue floor-plan financing. In the process, it thought it found that $16,500 charged to another floor-plan customer, Casey-Dyer Nissan, should have been charged to the Piazzas' account. Rapides Bank then informed the Piazzas that they owed $16,500 more. The Piazzas insisted that they did not owe this additional $16,500. The Piazzas put on evidence that at this point they offered to pay what the records showed they owed, $82,637.22, provided Rapides Bank would release their collateral so that they could obtain floor-plan financing from another bank. The Piazzas contended that the bank refused. The bank denied that the Piazzas ever made such an offer.

Rapides Bank discontinued floor-plan financing to the Piazzas on May 20, 1991. At that time, the plaintiffs got a $100,000 line of credit with Security First National Bank to keep their business going. This line of credit with Security had to be secured by a certificate of deposit in the amount of $100,000. Thereafter, the Piazzas continued to pay off their debt to Rapides Bank as they sold cars under the old floor-plan.

The Piazzas, individually and on behalf of their business, filed this suit against both the bank and McLaren. In addition to damages, the suit sought an injunction to prevent foreclosure. Rapides Bank reconvened seeking payment on the notes secured by the collateral mortgage. McLaren, the bank employee accused of embezzlement, was never served, so the trial court severed the claims against him.

The case was tried. The trial judge, finding that the December 1990 agreement was a compromise foreclosing any demand by Rapides Bank for additional money, ruled for the plaintiffs. The trial judge also found that the conduct of Rapides Bank caused the plaintiffs to suffer damages.

In December the trial judge signed a judgment awarding the Piazzas $39,188.50 in damages and fixing damages at $1,264 a month until the release of the mortgage on their property. On the bank's reconventional *1286 demand, the trial court awarded $33,182.22 on the master note and $5,240 on a side note. Rapides Bank's request for attorney's fees for collection of the amounts due on the notes was denied. An injunction issued against foreclosures on the mortgaged property.

THE BANK'S APPEAL

The first error assigned by the bank has to do with which party had the burden of proof. It claims the trial court erred in making the bank prove that the $16,500 was owed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
671 So. 2d 1283, 1996 WL 164639, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/angelo-son-inc-v-rapids-bank-trust-co-lactapp-1996.