BASEMENT SOLUTIONS LLC v. WELLS FARGO BANK

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedFebruary 2, 2021
Docket2:21-cv-00104
StatusUnknown

This text of BASEMENT SOLUTIONS LLC v. WELLS FARGO BANK (BASEMENT SOLUTIONS LLC v. WELLS FARGO BANK) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
BASEMENT SOLUTIONS LLC v. WELLS FARGO BANK, (E.D. Pa. 2021).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA

BASEMENT SOLUTIONS LLC : CIVIL ACTION : v. : NO. 21-104 : WELLS FARGO BANK, NA :

MEMORANDUM

KEARNEY, J. February 2, 2021

Banks hold deposits from small closely held entities owned by partners who may eventually no longer own part of the closely held entity. The bank’s customer remains the depositor entity relative to its bank account absent a change directed by the depositor. The bank must be careful to avoid getting caught in the middle of an internal dispute between its depositor’s partners. But the bank cannot be held liable for breaching a fiduciary duty to a depositor customer under Pennsylvania law if it follows one allegedly departing partner’s direction to the detriment of the remaining partner absent the bank somehow exercising control or dominion over its depositor’s business affairs. Banks are not typically fiduciaries in a deposit or creditor relationship. The relationship is usually at arms-length and governed by the bank’s deposit documents. We today grant a bank’s uncontested motion to dismiss an closely held entity-depositor’s claim the bank owed it a fiduciary duty in relation to two of its bank accounts and breached this duty by allowing an allegedly departing partner to open competing bank accounts in the entity’s name and transfer funds from original accounts to these allegedly unauthorized accounts opened by the departing partner at another bank branch. The partners may have valid fiduciary or contract claims against each other able to be resolved in state court, but the depositor does not today state a claim against the bank for breach of fiduciary duty. I. Alleged Facts Michael Jones and Scott McFarland each owned half of Basement Solutions LLC, a Pennsylvania limited liability company.1 Basement Solutions opened two bank accounts with Wells Fargo Bank at its Phoenixville, Pennsylvania branch.2

On September 11, 2019, Mr. Jones and Mr. McFarland dissolved the partnership resulting in Mr. McFarland becoming the sole owner of Basement Solutions.3 The parties filed the Partnership Dissolution Agreement with the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania.4 But then Mr. Jones began to act contrary to Mr. McFarland’s understanding of their separation. In November 2019, Mr. McFarland learned Mr. Jones closed out both of Basement Solutions’ accounts at Wells Fargo without providing the Partnership Dissolution Agreement to Wells Fargo.5 Mr. McFarland made a first attempt at providing Wells Fargo with the Dissolution Agreement, but it did not accept.6 He returned to the Wells Fargo Phoenixville branch and the manager then accepted the paperwork showing he solely owned Basement Solutions.7

Mr. Jones then went to the Wells Fargo Exton branch to open accounts under Basement Solutions’ name but did not provide the “full paperwork.”8 Mr. McFarland learned about Mr. Jones’s actions from a voicemail left by Kathy Reed, a bank employee with the Wells Fargo Exton branch.9 The Wells Fargo Exton branch opened up the two accounts for Mr. Jones and transferred money from the two closed Phoenixville branch accounts.10 Basement Solutions (through Mr. McFarland) could not access these two new accounts Mr. Jones opened at the Exton branch.11 Mr. Jones had sole authorization to access and distribute money from these new accounts opened at the Exton branch.12 Mr. McFarland feared Mr. Jones would attempt to open other accounts in Basement Solutions’ name and became concerned Wells Fargo would allow him to do so.13 On December 2, 2019, Mr. McFarland went to the Wells Fargo Pottstown branch to open a new business account for Basement Solutions to keep the company operational.14 He told Wells Fargo employee Imane Saif of his plan.15 Mr. McFarland filled out an authorization form

to set up the account for Basement Solutions with Mr. Saif.16 Wells Fargo declined his request to open an account for Basement Solutions without explanation.17 Two days later, Mr. McFarland contacted Ms. Reed from the Exton branch.18 Mr. McFarland’s counsel, Francis Walsh, also sent an email to the manager of the Phoenixville branch, notifying Wells Fargo Mr. Jones had established an account, either under his name or Basement Solutions’ name, and stole from Basement Solutions’ original two accounts at the Phoenixville branch.19 The email addressed to the manager, Jonathan Duncan, referenced a call between Mr. Duncan and Attorney Walsh.20 Attorney Walsh claimed Wells Fargo facilitated the theft, and Wells Fargo “should immediately freeze [the Exton branch] account . . . [and] advise

[Mr.] Jones to reimburse the account for any monies withdrawn from that account since its establishment.”21 He also requested Mr. Jones return additional money if the assets of Basement Solutions’ account when closed are greater than the assets in the new account opened under the company’s name at the Exton Branch.22 By December 12, 2019, Mr. Jones had transferred all monies from the two original Basement Solutions’ accounts to the accounts he opened at the Exton branch, leaving the original accounts with zero balance.23 In March 2020, Wells Fargo’s lawyer explained Mr. Jones had been an authorized signer of Basement Solutions’ original two bank accounts at the Phoenixville branch as of December 12, 2019.24 Basement Solutions claims it took the necessary steps to attempt to remove Mr. Jones from the bank accounts, but Wells Fargo refused even though Mr. Jones had not owned units in the entity since September 2019.25 Because Wells Fargo did not remove Mr. Jones from the accounts, Basement Solutions claims it incurred significant fees and penalties and could not pay its vendors, employees, or outstanding debt.26 After December 12, 2019, Basement

Solutions continued to incur penalties and fees from Wells Fargo for various overdrafts from Mr. Jones’s transfer of monies from the original bank accounts to two accounts opened at the Exton branch to which neither Mr. McFarland nor Basement Solutions had access.27 II. Analysis Basement Solutions sued Wells Fargo alleging Wells Fargo breached its fiduciary duty by failing to take the necessary steps to remove Mr. Jones from the original bank accounts and allowing him to open two new bank accounts in its name at the Exton branch.28 Wells Fargo never did an internal investigation as to the true owner of Basement Solutions after September 2019 and neither required Mr. Jones to provide verification nor checked with the Commonwealth State Department to verify ownership.29 Basement Solutions claims Wells Fargo had an

obligation to remove Mr. Jones from the two original accounts after Mr. McFarland notified it Mr. Jones no longer owned the business on November 30, 2019.30 Wells Fargo now moves to dismiss Basement Solutions’ breach of fiduciary duty claim for failure to state a claim arguing a bank does not owe a fiduciary duty to its customer.31 Basement Solutions elected to not respond. While we may grant Wells Fargo’s motion as uncontested under Local Rule 7.1(c), we alternatively grant Wells Fargo’s motion on the merits because Basement Solutions fails to plead facts establishing a fiduciary relationship existed between it and Wells Fargo. We dismiss its complaint without prejudice to timely filing an amended complaint if it can state a claim consistent with Rule 11. A. We may grant Wells Fargo’s motion to dismiss as uncontested. Basement Solutions chose not to timely oppose Wells Fargo’s Motion to dismiss its

Complaint. Under Local Rule 7.1(c), “[f]ailure to respond to a properly filed motion within the time set forth in this rule permits the court to treat any motion as uncontested except as provided under Fed. R. Civ. P. 56.”32 “When a party fails to respond . . .

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Bluebook (online)
BASEMENT SOLUTIONS LLC v. WELLS FARGO BANK, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/basement-solutions-llc-v-wells-fargo-bank-paed-2021.