BancorpSouth Bank v. Albert Jermaine Duckett

CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 17, 2006
Docket2006-CA-01738-SCT
StatusPublished

This text of BancorpSouth Bank v. Albert Jermaine Duckett (BancorpSouth Bank v. Albert Jermaine Duckett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
BancorpSouth Bank v. Albert Jermaine Duckett, (Mich. 2006).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF MISSISSIPPI

NO. 2006-CA-01738-SCT

IN RE THE GUARDIANSHIP OF ALBERT JERMAINE DUCKETT AND WALTER WILLIAMS, JR.; WALTER WILLIAMS, SR., GUARDIAN: BANCORPSOUTH BANK f/k/a BANK OF MISSISSIPPI

v.

ALBERT JERMAINE DUCKETT, WALTER WILLIAMS, JR., AND WALTER WILLIAMS, SR.

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 08/17/2006 TRIAL JUDGE: HON. TALMADGE D. LITTLEJOHN COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: TISHOMINGO COUNTY CHANCERY COURT ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANTS: JAMES PATRICK CALDWELL LES ALVIS ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEES: JOHN R. WHITE GREGORY D. KEENUM NATURE OF THE CASE: CIVIL - OTHER DISPOSITION: REVERSED AND RENDERED IN PART; REVERSED AND REMANDED IN PART - 06/12/2008 MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED: MANDATE ISSUED:

BEFORE DIAZ, P.J., DICKINSON AND RANDOLPH, JJ.

DIAZ, PRESIDING JUSTICE, FOR THE COURT:

STATEMENT OF THE CASE

¶1. The Chancery Court of Tishomingo County granted summary judgment in favor of

Albert Jermaine Duckett (Albert) and Walter Williams, Jr. (Junior) on their claims against

BancorpSouth for allowing their father and former guardian, Walter Williams, Sr. (Walter), to convert the guardianship funds that had been deposited in a BancorpSouth savings

account. After conducting a hearing to determine the damages owed by BancorpSouth, the

chancery court awarded Albert and Junior $1,770,480.40 in actual damages, punitive

damages, attorney’s fees and prejudgment interest. Aggrieved, BancorpSouth now appeals

and raises the following issues for review: (1) whether the court erred in granting Albert

summary judgment because his claim is barred by the three-year statute of limitations; (2)

whether the court erred in not reducing the actual damages awarded against BancorpSouth

by the amount of the unauthorized expenditures made by Walter for the benefit of the wards;

(3) whether the court erred in awarding punitive damages against BancorpSouth; (4) whether

the court erred in awarding attorney’s fees to the plaintiffs; (5) whether the court erred in its

calculation of prejudgment interest; and (6) whether the court erred in allowing Walter to

testify during the hearing on damages.

FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS BELOW

¶2. On April 3, 1993, Sharron Williams was shot and killed by an inmate of the

Tishomingo County Jail who was picking up meals at the hospital facilities of her employer,

Tishomingo Health Services, Inc. She left behind two minor children, Albert and Junior.

Walter, the former husband of Sharron Williams and the father of both children, was

appointed by the Chancery Court of Tishomingo County as their guardian on June 7, 1993.

He posted a $50,000 guardianship bond with the United States Fidelity & Guaranty Company

(USF&G, now Saint Paul Insurance Company).

¶3. Walter filed on behalf of his two minor sons a workers’ compensation suit against

Tishomingo Health Services and two wrongful death actions against the Sheriff of

2 Tishomingo County and the members of the Tishomingo County Board of Supervisors,

among others. On March 10, 1995, the Tishomingo County Chancery Court entered an order

authorizing Walter to settle the workers’ compensation claim for $5,000. On the same day,

the court also issued a decree authorizing Walter to settle the wrongful death claim for an

undisclosed amount. The decree approving the settlement of the wrongful death claim

provided in pertinent part:

This Court finds and Orders that, with the exception of sums to be paid as attorneys fees and/or as reimbursement for necessary costs and expenses of litigation which may forthwith be withheld and distributed to the appropriate counsel described herein, the remainder of the settlement funds shall be placed in trust in a federally insured interest bearing account for the benefit of the heirs at law of Sharron Williams.

The decree further provided that the guardianship funds “shall be held in trust in a federally

insured account with the deposit of said sums to be acknowledged by record of deposit to be

filed of record in a sealed envelope protected from public scrutiny and said funds may not

be distributed prior to or without such adjudication of heirship and/or further approval and

consent of this Court.”

¶4. On July 21, 1995, Walter deposited $267,233 into a variable-rate savings account at

the Iuka Guaranty Bank styled “Albert Jermaine Duckett and Walter J. Williams, Jr., Minors,

Walter J. Williams, Guardian.” A bank officer signed a “Waiver of Process and Entry of

Appearance of Depository,” which provided that the guardianship funds in the savings

account could not be disbursed without an order of the chancery court. The officer also

signed a “Receipt of Funds and Governing Court Order,” in which the bank acknowledged

3 its receipt of a certified true copy of the court’s decree authorizing Walter to settle the

wrongful death claim.

¶5. To prevent the disbursement of funds from accounts to which access was restricted

by court order, Iuka Guaranty created a “message field” in its computer system which caused

the following message – what in banking parlance is known as a “special instruction” – to

appear on a teller’s computer screen when an attempt was made to withdraw funds from the

account: “CAUTION - WITHERAWAL [sic] - COURT ORDER ONLY.” The text of the

special instruction was very conspicuous because it appeared on the screen as a reverse

image with a green background; according to one Iuka Guaranty employee, the instruction

was so noticeable that a teller could not overlook it. The instruction was known as the “green

worm.”

¶6. On September 7, 1995, the chancery court entered another order in the guardianship

proceedings authorizing Walter to withdraw $100 per month per minor ward from the Iuka

Guaranty savings account. In February 1997, Iuka Guaranty was acquired by and merged

into Bank of Mississippi (now BancorpSouth Bank). In March BancorpSouth transferred the

data in the Iuka Guaranty computer system to its own computer system as a part of the

merger process. The first step in this “system conversion” consisted of BancorpSouth’s

“conversion team” studying the numerous “fields” 1 in Iuka Guaranty’s computer system;

learning Iuka Guaranty’s “field definitions” and “field codes”; and determining what data

each “field” contained. The second step involved a process known as “mapping,” in which

1 A “field” is a location in a bank’s database where particular data is stored. The data relating to a single checking account is stored in approximately 1,600 fields.

4 the conversion team tried to match each field in the Iuka Guaranty system with a

corresponding field in the BancorpSouth system. In the third and final step of the

conversion, BancorpSouth electronically transferred the data in Iuka Guaranty’s computer

system – that is, the data stored in the fields in the Iuka Guaranty system that had been found

to correspond with fields in the BancorpSouth system – to its own computer system.

¶7. The conversion team discovered several fields in the Iuka Guaranty system that could

not be transferred via automation to the BancorpSouth system. One of those fields was the

field containing the data responsible for sending the green worm special instruction to tellers

when an attempt was made to withdraw funds from an account with court-ordered limitations

on access. Because this data could not be transferred via automation to the BancorpSouth

computer system, the conversion team was forced to print out all of the data relating to the

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