Bank One, N.A. v. Independence Bank

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 30, 2006
Docket01-04-00905-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Bank One, N.A. v. Independence Bank (Bank One, N.A. v. Independence Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bank One, N.A. v. Independence Bank, (Tex. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

Opinion to: SJR TGT SN TJ EVK ERA GCH LCH JB

Opinion issued March 30, 2006




In The

Court of Appeals

For The

First District of Texas


NO. 01-04-00905-CV


BANK ONE, N.A., Appellant

V.

DOUGLAS W. WOHLFAHRT, Appellee


On Appeal from the 11th District Court

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Cause No. 1986-31785A



O P I N I O N

          In a post-judgment garnishment proceeding, appellant, Bank One, N.A., sought to execute on a judgment that its predecessor-in-interest had obtained against appellee, Douglas Wohlfahrt, in 1987.  The trial court granted partial summary judgment to Wohlfahrt based on payment and awarded him $3,878.44 after a jury found Bank One had wrongfully garnished his bank account.  On appeal, Bank One contends the trial court erred in (1) granting partial summary judgment to Wohlfahrt on the ground that he had fully paid the judgment; (2) submitting Wohlfahrt’s wrongful garnishment counterclaim to a jury; and (3) allowing Wohlfahrt to withdraw certain funds from the registry of the court.  We hold that the trial court should not have granted partial summary judgment to Wohlfahrt based on payment, and therefore reverse and remand the cause for further proceedings.

Background

          In 1985, Wohlfahrt executed two promissory notes to Citizens Bank Houston, Bank One’s predecessor-in-interest.[1]  Wohlfahrt failed to repay the notes as agreed, leading to the bank’s collection lawsuit in 1986.  The trial court signed a default judgment against Wohlfahrt in March 1987.  Two months later, the trial court set aside the default judgment and signed an Order of Agreed Judgment, which states that Wohlfahrt owes the bank $107,000, together with post-judgment interest at the rate of ten percent per annum until the debt is paid (“the Judgment”).

          Wohlfahrt failed to pay the Judgment and, in 1989, the bank sought a turnover order and appointment of a receiver for Wohlfahrt’s medical practice.  In August 1989, the parties entered into an “agreement in settlement of” the receivership proceeding (“the Settlement Agreement”).  Pursuant to the Settlement Agreement, the parties agreed that Wohlfahrt owed $107,000, plus $24,419.54 in accrued post-judgment interest and $10,007.11 in post-judgment attorney’s fees the bank had incurred in attempting to collect the debt.  The parties further agreed that interest would continue to accrue at the rate of ten percent per annum, and that the bank would refrain from pursuing its collection rights and remedies against Wohlfahrt as long as he made payments of $3,000 to the bank on the fifteenth of every month.

          From August 1989 through January 1994, Wohlfahrt made a series of payments to Bank One.  In September 1994, Bank One sent Wohlfahrt’s wife a payment summary showing an outstanding balance of $27,373.30.  One year later, Wohlfahrt offered to settle the debt with a payment of $10,000, but the parties did not reach an agreement.

          In February 1999, Bank One filed a motion for scire facias to revive the Judgment.[2]  The trial court signed an Order Reviving Judgment in July 1999.  Two years later, Bank One instituted this post-judgment garnishment proceeding.  In its application for writ of garnishment and affidavit in support, Bank One stated that it had a valid and subsisting Judgment against Wohlfahrt from 1987, which was revived by the court in 1999, and that Wohlfahrt still owed $48,621.90 on the Judgment.  The garnishee, Independence Bank, filed an answer stating that it had frozen $18,408.71 belonging to Wohlfahrt; Independence Bank tendered that amount to the court and asked that it be discharged.

          Wohlfahrt subsequently filed a motion to dissolve the writ of garnishment, contending that he had paid off the Judgment in January 1994.  Bank One responded with a motion for judgment in garnishment.  One month later, Wohlfahrt counterclaimed for wrongful garnishment against Bank One.  The trial court granted Bank One’s motion for judgment in garnishment and discharged Independence Bank from the case.

          Wohlfahrt continued to argue that he had fully paid the Judgment and asked the trial court to set a supersedeas bond and abate discovery by Bank One.  Wohlfahrt’s wife thereafter deposited $37,000 in the registry of the court; a handwritten note included with the money stated, “On behalf of Douglas W. Wohlfahrt, $37,000 is being placed in the registry of court [sic], to be held until the Judge releases to winning party.”

          Bank One subsequently filed a motion for referral to a special master.[3]  The trial court appointed banking expert Charles L. Williams as Special Master “for the purpose of reviewing the submissions of the parties, conducting a hearing if necessary, calculating the outstanding balance of the debt based upon the documents produced by the parties, and filing a report with his findings.”  In the proceedings before the Special Master, Wohlfahrt argued that the $107,000 Judgment had been “more than paid in full.” 

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Bluebook (online)
Bank One, N.A. v. Independence Bank, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bank-one-na-v-independence-bank-texapp-2006.