Banco Popular, North America v. Cynthia Kanning

638 F. App'x 328
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 29, 2016
Docket15-50342
StatusUnpublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 638 F. App'x 328 (Banco Popular, North America v. Cynthia Kanning) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Banco Popular, North America v. Cynthia Kanning, 638 F. App'x 328 (5th Cir. 2016).

Opinion

PER CURIAM: *

For these diversity-action cross-appeals from rulings on cross-motions for summary judgment, primarily at issue is the right to life-insurance proceeds. Banco Popular North America contends decedent Christopher Kanning (Mr. Kanning) assigned his life-insurance policy to it as collateral for a loan. Cynthia Kanning (Mrs. Kanning), Mr. Kanning’s widow and named beneficiary in the policy, asserts, in part: in deciding the cross-motions, the district court properly concluded there was no enforceable assignment, but erred in ruling that Banco’s attempt to recover the proceeds is not in contempt of her Chapter 7 bankruptcy discharge. AFFIRMED IN PART, VACATED IN PART, AND SUMMARY JUDGMENT AWARDED BAN-CO; REMANDED FOR CONSIDERATION OF THE RESULTING RELIEF TO BE AWARDED.

I.

In 2007, Mr. Kanning was president of BEMK, Inc. d/b/a All About Diamonds, a Texas jewelry store. That October, BEMK sought a loan in the amount of $698,500 through the U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA), for which Banco was the lender. As discussed below, following negotiations, the loan closed that December.

In response to the loan requested by BEMK, Banco, on 14 October, provided Mr. and Mrs. Kanning with a financing proposal “for discussion purposes only.... [which did] not constitute an agreement, an offer to enter an agreement, or a commitment to lend”. The proposal stated: “Collateral assignment of life insurance with respect to the life of Chris Kanning in the amount of $700,000 will be required”. It further stated: “If this proposal is acceptable, please sign the enclosed copy and return it to [Banco]”. Mr. Kanning signed the proposal in his capacity as BEMK president, and both Kannings signed that same document as guarantors. In short, by signing that financing proposal, Mrs. Kanning acknowledged that the assignment of a life-insurance policy would be a condition if a loan was offered.

Therefore, on 2 November, Banco provided the Kannings with a loan-offer letter, which included a checklist detailing the documents it required prior to closing the loan. The loan-offer letter was signed by Mr. Kanning as president and Mrs. Kan-ning as director, and by both as guarantors. Pursuant to that checklist, the Kan- *331 nings were required to submit copies of a life-insurance policy for Mr. Banning in the amount of $695,900, and of an assignment transferring that policy to Banco. But, as of late November, Mr. Banning was unable to obtain a policy in the required amount.

As an alternative, he and Banco agreed to use his existing life-insurance policy as substitute collateral. That existing policy for $500,000 had been issued in 2006 by USAA Life Insurance Company, with Mrs. Banning as the named beneficiary. And, of significance to the issues at hand, the policy permitted assignments “while the Insured is alive”. Concerning such assignments, it stated, in relevant part:

We will not be responsible for the validity or sufficiency of any assignment. To be binding on us, an executed assignment must be by Written Request and consented to by any Irrevocable Beneficiary. Your rights and any Beneficiary’s interest will be subject to the- assignment.

For that assignment provision, the policy defined “Written Request” as “[a] request written to us and received by us” which “must be signed, dated, and notarized (if required by the form) on a fo'i'm satisfactory to us or provided by us ”. (Emphasis added.)

On 21 November, Mr. Banning signed, and had notarized, a form assigning the USAA policy to Banco. The form, which was drafted by USAA, was not signed by either Banco or USAA. Mr, Banning provided the form to both Banco and USAA.

By a 23 November response letter to Mr. Banning, USAA stated: “We were unable to complete the collateral assignment as requested”. Concomitantly, USAA noted in its internal records that the USAA assignment form, signed by Mr. Banning, was missing Banco’s signature and certain tax and corporate information.

Also on 23 November, Banco prepared an internal “Loan File Change Memo” reflecting, in part, “[cjhanges to life insurance”. The memo stated: Mr. Banning was “unable to obtain a life insurance policy to meet the loan requirement”; therefore, he would “assign his existing life insurance policy ($500[,00Q]) as collateral”. It further stated that Banco originally required a policy in the amount of $695,900 as collateral, but the agreement was amended to reflect a “[collateral assignment of existing life insurance in the amount of $500,000 ”. (Emphasis in original.) Banco’s officers subsequently approved the memo’s recommendations.

Banco provided the Bannings on 29 November with an updated checklist for the closing, highlighting documents that were either absent or deficient. The checklist showed Banco had received a copy of the USAA policy in the amount of $500,000. (Neither the checklist, nor the record, reflects when, or from whom, Banco received the policy. In any event, Mrs. Banning does not dispute its receipt by Banco.) Banco, however, requested that Mr. Banning resubmit a copy of the assignment. Next to the paragraph concerning the assignment were the words “POST CLOSING”. That paragraph stated: “Received incorrect copy — Needs to be re-done showing an assignment to Banco Popular North America instead of Banco Popular or Ban-co Popular N.A.”. There is no evidence Mr. Banning ever re-submitted the assignment form.

The loan closing occurred on 3 December: BEMB and Banco executed a SBA note in the amount of $695,900; and both Bannings executed unconditional guarantees, each pledging to pay “all amounts due under the [SBA note] when [Banco] makes written demand”. That same day, Mr. Banning submitted to Banco a nota *332 rized “Post-Closing Affidavit”, which stated: “I guarantee to provide Lender with the original Life Insurance Policy and the Assignment of Life Insurance in the amount of $695,900 listing Banco Popular North America as the beneficiary and lost [sic] payee of such life insurance policy”. Next to that paragraph was handwritten “Received policy NOT assignment”; it is unclear when, or by whom, that comment was written. In any event, although the stated policy amount is erroneous, it is undisputed that the previously agreed upon USAA-policy for $500,000 was delivered to Banco before the loan closing.

Approximately two years later, by letter in February 2010, Banco requested Mr. Kanning provide “proof of the recorded Collateral Assignment of [the policy]”. The letter noted the original due date for the proof of assignment was 13 May 2008. It further stated: USAA had no record of an assignment; and, in order to complete the process, Mr. Kanning needed to sign and notarize a form provided by USAA. Although Banco requested he return the form within 20 business days, there is no evidence he did so.

Following the February 2010 request, BEMK declared Chapter 7 bankruptcy in July. As a result, according to an affidavit filed in district court in this action, Banco “recovered the inventory collateral of [BEMK] in the possession of the bankruptcy trustee”.

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638 F. App'x 328, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/banco-popular-north-america-v-cynthia-kanning-ca5-2016.