Bankers Trust Company, Cross-Appellee v. Lee Keeling & Associates, Inc., and Lee A. Keeling

20 F.3d 1092, 1994 U.S. App. LEXIS 6391, 1994 WL 109856
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedApril 5, 1994
Docket92-5225, 92-5235
StatusPublished
Cited by55 cases

This text of 20 F.3d 1092 (Bankers Trust Company, Cross-Appellee v. Lee Keeling & Associates, Inc., and Lee A. Keeling) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bankers Trust Company, Cross-Appellee v. Lee Keeling & Associates, Inc., and Lee A. Keeling, 20 F.3d 1092, 1994 U.S. App. LEXIS 6391, 1994 WL 109856 (10th Cir. 1994).

Opinion

STEPHEN H. ANDERSON, Circuit Judge.

Plaintiff and appellant Bankers Trust Company (“BTC”) appeals from the grant, of defendant Lee Keeling’s (“Keeling”) Fed. R.Civ.P. 50(b) motion for judgment as a matter of law on BTC’s claim of negligence and negligent misrepresentation in the preparation of certain oil and gas reserve reports, and from the grant of summary judgment for Keeling on BTC’s “alter ego” claim against him. Keeling and codefendant Lee Keeling & Associates, Inc. (“LKA”), a firm of oil and gas engineering consultants, cross appeal, arguing the district court erred in ruling that New York law applied to this diversity case and in refusing to reduce BTC’s judgment against LKA and Keeling by amounts which were paid to BTC by other entities. For the following reasons, we affirm.

BACKGROUND

BTC is a banking corporation organized under the laws of New York and with its principal place of business in New York. Keeling is a petroleum engineer and an officer, director, shareholder and employee of LKA, a firm of petroleum consultants organized under the laws of Oklahoma and with its principal place of business in Tulsa, Oklahoma. Seandrill, Inc. is a Texas-based oil and gas company which, in the spring of 1982, sought a “reserve-based” energy loan to expand its operations. Its corporate parents, at the time of the events relevant to this lawsuit, were Seanoil, Inc., Scandinavian Trading Company (“STC”), and Volvo AB (‘Volvo”).

Seandrill representatives met with BTC representatives to explore the possibility of BTC making such a loan. Before making a loan, BTC required a borrower to furnish a report on the borrower’s oil and gas reserves from an engineer satisfactory to BTC. Seandrill furnished to BTC an oil and gas reserve report, dated June 30, 1982 (“June 1982 Report”), which LKA had prepared for Seandrill. This Report appraised Scandrill’s “proved” oil and gas reserves at $405,605,200 which, when'discounted at 14% to present value, amounted to $196,273,510.

In September 1982, BTC loan officers Robert Turner and Drew Axtell, who worked in BTC’s Energy Division in Houston, Texas, met in Tulsa with Keeling and Erhan Ozey, a petroleum engineer and employee of LKA, to discuss the June 1982 Report and to examine the data, maps, and other materials upon which the Report was based. Satisfied that the appraised reserves qualified under its formula for reserve-based loans, BTC agreed to lend $105,000,000 to Seandrill, secured solely by the properties appraised'by LKA in the June 1982 Report. In a letter dated November 5, 1982, signed by Keeling, LKA authorized BTC to rely on the June 1982 Report as if the Report had been originally addressed to the Bank, not to Seandrill.

BTC and Seandrill thereafter closed the loan in New York on November 9, 1982. In accordance with the loan documentation, LKA furnished semi-annual reports to BTC providing updated information on the oil and gas reserves which served as the collateral for the loan. In March 1984, some sixteen months after the loan was made, Seandrill defaulted. Approximately a year later, BTC discovered that the June 1982 Report, as well as three subsequent reports prepared by LKA, dated December 1982, June 1983 and December 1§83, all overstated the value of. Scandrill’s reserves. Evidence at trial suggested that the June 1982 Report overstated the value of those reserves by more than $100,000,000. In 1984 BTC acquired all of Scandrill’s stock, in connection with a settlement agreement between BTC, Seandrill, and Scandrill’s corporate parents, pursuant to which BTC released any claim it might have against Seandrill and others, but specifically reserved its right to sue LKA and Keeling.

BTC commenced this diversity action in the southern district of New York against *1095 Keeling and LKA, claiming ordinary and gross negligence, negligent misrepresentation, breach of contract, breach of third party beneficiary contract and, against Keeling alone, liability as the alter ego of certain family business entities: Savannah Investment Co. (“Savannah”), an Oklahoma limited partnership; Columbia Development Corporation (“Columbia”), an Oklahoma corporation; and Palmeo Management Company (“Palmeo”), another Oklahoma corporation. 1 BTC alleged it lost approximately $51,000,-000 from the Scandrill loan transaction. On defendants’ motion, the case was transferred to the northern district of Oklahoma.

The trial court granted Keeling’s motion for summary judgment on BTC’s breach of contract and breach of third party beneficiary claims against Keeling, and bifurcated the alter ego claim to await a determination of Keeling’s liability.

The remaining claims were tried to a jury. The court determined that New York provided the substantive applicable law. At the close of BTC’s case, and again after presentation of all evidence, Keeling moved for judgment as a matter of law under Rule 50(a). The court denied both motions. The jury subsequently returned a verdict for BTC and against Keeling and LKA for $18,-000,000 on the negligence and negligent misrepresentation claims. It found for LKA on the contract and third party beneficiary contract claims. The district court reduced the judgment to $7,200,000 in reliance on New York’s comparative negligence statute and the jury’s finding that Keeling and LKA were 40% negligent and BTC was 60% negligent. After adding pre-verdict and pre-judgment interest, the court entered judgment in favor of BTC in the amount of $12,409,441.25.

After entry of judgment, Keeling filed a motion for judgment as a matter of law under Rule 50(b), asserting there was insufficient evidence supporting the negligence and negligent misrepresentation verdicts against him individually. The district court abated consideration of the motion until the bifurcated “alter ego” claim was tried. Keeling and LKA both filed a Motion for Order Amending the Court’s Prior Ruling on Choice of Law and Amendment of Judgment to Incorporate Application of Oklahoma Law, and a Motion for Settlement Reduction. Keeling also filed a motion for summary judgment on the alter ego claim. The court granted his alter ego summary judgment motion, as well as his Rule 50(b) motion, concluding that there was “insufficient probative evidence” of Keeling’s negligence or negligent misrepresentations concerning the reserve reports. The court denied Keeling’s and LKA’s motions regarding choice of law and settlement reduction. This appeal and cross appeal followed.

BTC argues that the district court erred in (1) granting Keeling’s Rule 50(b) motion, because there was sufficient evidence from which the jury could conclude that Lee Keeling was personally involved in negligent acts; and (2) granting Keeling’s motion for summary judgment on the alter ego claim. Keeling and LKA cross appeal, asserting that the court erred in applying New York law to the case and in refusing to reduce BTC’s judgment by amounts paid to BTC by other entities.

DISCUSSION

I. Choice of Law

We consider first whether the district court erred in applying New York law to this case. In an interlocutory order dated January 23,1992, the district court held that New York supplied the substantive applicable law. On November 2 it denied LKA’s and Keeling’s motion to reconsider that interlocutory order.

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20 F.3d 1092, 1994 U.S. App. LEXIS 6391, 1994 WL 109856, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bankers-trust-company-cross-appellee-v-lee-keeling-associates-inc-ca10-1994.