Bancorpsouth Bank v. Justin Herter & Capitol Management, Inc.

643 F. Supp. 2d 1041, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 54548, 2009 WL 1596654
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Tennessee
DecidedJune 5, 2009
Docket04-2420 B
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 643 F. Supp. 2d 1041 (Bancorpsouth Bank v. Justin Herter & Capitol Management, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bancorpsouth Bank v. Justin Herter & Capitol Management, Inc., 643 F. Supp. 2d 1041, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 54548, 2009 WL 1596654 (W.D. Tenn. 2009).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

J. DANIEL BREEN, District Judge.

INTRODUCTION

This action, filed in June 2004, arises from a series of defaulted mortgage loans made by the Plaintiff, BancorpSouth Bank (sometimes referred to herein as “BancorpSouth” or the “Bank”) to certain family members of the individual Defendant, Justin Herter. The Plaintiff has alleged that these family members, who have been dismissed as Defendants in this case, were “straw borrowers” for Herter and Defendant Capitol Management, Inc. (“CM”) and that Herter and CM should be held jointly and severally liable for the defaulted loans. The Court tried this civil action without a jury commencing on March 3, 2008. Following the trial, the parties filed proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law. Rule 52 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure requires that, “[i]n an action tried on the facts without a jury ..., the court must find the facts specially and state its conclusions of law separately.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 52(a)(1). In accordance with the Rule, the Court finds and states the following.

FINDINGS OF FACT

The loans at issue in this case were taken out in the names of Robert and Janet Powell, Herter’s grandparents, and Sylvestre Loera, his uncle, and secured by various residential investment properties in Memphis, Tennessee. Some of the loan documents were signed by Herter, a Memphis, Tennessee resident, as attorney-in-fact for his family members, who lived in Texas and Ohio. Herter was the person who dealt with BancorpSouth during the loan process.

He had approached his grandparents, who lived in Lorain, Ohio, with a business proposition, hoping that they would assist him in starting a business. He told them that, if they would provide their credit, he would be able to purchase homes, make improvements and rent them out. In exchange, Herter promised to give the Pow-ells a certain amount of money over time. They assented. Janet Powell, who at the time of her deposition was approximately seventy-one-years-old, testified that they were to receive $1,500 per house. Herter also agreed to pay off the mortgage on their home in Ohio. The Powells understood that Justin intended to use their credit in order to maintain loans to purchase houses. Robert and Janet Powell signed powers of attorney giving Justin the ability to sign in their stead for the house loans.

In his deposition, seventy-seven-year-old Robert Powell advised that his memory was “not like it used to be” but recalled that he and his wife made the initial start-up loan for Herter’s business venture and were some of the first to receive houses. Powell stated that

my understanding was that [Herter] would purchase the houses, he would fix them up, he would rent them, he would pay all the taxes, he would pay all the rent and everything, but he would rent them out and all I was supposed to get was so much for each house that he sold — I mean, that he bought and rented out. And we set it up where we could get so much a month and he said he would be paying us the rest of our lives, so we set it up where we’d get so much a month for — for a lifetime, and that’s the whole idea. To us, it was nothing. Justin was — Justin was going to do it all. He was going to do everything. All we had to do is just sit back and — after we signed the houses and he would pay us.

*1048 (Oral and Videotaped Dep. of Robert 0. Powell, Sr. (“Powell Dep.”) at 5-6.) Powell had finished the eighth grade and had no prior experience with real estate or bank loans beyond selling his own home. Powell related that he “would get [loan documents] and take them down to the bank and get them notarized and ... fax them ... back to [Herter] and ... put [his] initials on the papers.” (Powell Dep. at 7.) He acknowledged that neither he nor his wife read the documents. Powell insisted that he “thought everything was going through Justin” and was unaware he “was obligated to do anything. He [ (Herter) ] was making all the payments and all the taxes, everything else.” (Powell Dep. at 8.) Justin never told Powell that he was not obligated on any of the loans and he understood the houses were to be in his name. He did not know how many loans or houses were in his name. It was Powell’s impression that he was lending Herter his name and credit and that the individual Defendant would “take care of everything.” (Powell Dep. at 8.) Powell did not believe he and his wife were responsible for the loans “in reality” because they thought Herter “was going to do the right thing and make the payments and— until everything was settled.” (Powell Dep. at 8-9.) Powell described himself as “just a figurehead.” From time to time, the Powells’ daughter and Herter’s aunt, Betty Dolores Loera, was in Ohio and would advise her parents on the documents sent to them for execution.

With respect to CM, Powell offered the following testimony:

Q: Okay. Did you understand' — what was your understanding of your involvement with [CM]?
A: All I understand was it was a loan in my name so he could buy houses and rent them out and we’d get money in exchange for that. That’s it, the whole understanding I was in.
Q: Okay. Did you — do you know what a corporation is?
A: A corporation is like a company, isn’t it?
Q: All right. A company. Were you involved with — with any—
A: I think they had my name down as a minute man or something.
Q: Okay. Was that with your understanding?
A: That was my understanding. It was a — I laughed at it. It was a joke to me. I never sat on a meeting. I never done anything.
Q: Okay. So, I mean, when you say minute man, when I’m looking at documents that—
A: I was supposed to take the minutes.
Q: You were actually elected as an — as the office of secretary of a corporation. That’s a joke to you?
A: It — well, I’m in Ohio and he’s in Tennessee, and I’m supposed to be sitting in on meetings?

(Powell Dep. at 12-13.)

Janet Powell recalled in her deposition that employees at Lorain State Bank told her and her husband when they signed the documents that Justin “could really screw” them but they did so anyway because they loved him. He was her favorite grandson. According to their testimony, the Powells knew what they were doing when they signed the loan documents, but did not “in reality” believe they would be responsible for repayment, not because they were ignorant but because they trusted Justin to repay the loans. Mrs. Powell acknowledged that Justin was using their credit with her permission. Only later did she decide he had misused it.

The Powells and Loera did not make investigation of the loan transactions because they chose not to.

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Bluebook (online)
643 F. Supp. 2d 1041, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 54548, 2009 WL 1596654, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bancorpsouth-bank-v-justin-herter-capitol-management-inc-tnwd-2009.