Benton State Bank v. Warren

562 S.W.2d 74, 263 Ark. 1
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedApril 17, 1978
Docket77-22
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 562 S.W.2d 74 (Benton State Bank v. Warren) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Benton State Bank v. Warren, 562 S.W.2d 74, 263 Ark. 1 (Ark. 1978).

Opinions

George Rose Smith, Justice.

The appellees, the Warrens, are engaged in building and operating apartments in California and elsewhere in the United States. In 1974 the Warrens, as owners and general contractors, began the construction of a 111-unit apartment complex at 2000 Reservoir Road in Little Rock. Four separate sub-contracts — for concrete work, rough carpentry, finish carpentry, and heating and air conditioning — were let to Harps General Contractors.

Harps failed to pay its suppliers of labor and materials, even though adequate progress payments were made from time to time by the Warrens. Those progress payments were made by checks payable jointly to Harps and to the appellant, Benton State Bank, which had lent money to Harps and had taken an assignment of Harps’s right to receive progress payments. Eventually the Warrens had to take over and complete Harps’s four subcontracts. Various unpaid materialmen brought this suit against Harps and the Warrens, asserting liens against the apartment property. The Warrens cross-complained against Harps and the bank for any loss that the Warrens might ultimately sustain. That loss proved to be $13,367.12, for which the chancellor entered judgment in favor of the Warrens against Harps and the bank. The bank appeals. The sole question is whether the loss should be borne by the bank or by the Warrens. As we view the case, that question in turn depends upon which was more seriously at fault in allowing the loss to occur, both being at fault to some degree.

The facts, though undisputed, are not simple. The subcontract between Harps and the Warrens for rough carpentry is typical of the four subcontracts. The agreement provides that the Warrens will pay Harps $55,080 for its performance of the subcontract. On the tenth of each month the Warrens will make a progress payment to Harps for 90% of the work done in the preceding month. If there are unpaid suppliers of labor and materials the Warrens at their option may make the progress-payment checks payable jointly to Harps and to the suppliers. The contract also provides that Harps’s right to compensation under the contract is assignable. Any assignment is subject to the Warrens’ rights against Harps.

Shortly before construction began, the bank made a $60,000 loan to Harps to pay a tax delinquency owed by Harps, secured by a lien on some cattle. Later on Harps, as additional security, assigned to the bank its right to the progress payments under its subcontracts with the Warrens.

The president of the bank testified that the bank agreed to make additional loans to Harps of up to 75% of the amount due upon each application by Harps for a progress payment. In practice, the matter was handled in this way: Harps signed a printed form of application for each progress payment. The form set out the amount due and requested payment of 90% of that amount. Harps certified on each form that all bills for labor and materials covered by earlier progress payments had been paid. Those certifications were false. Harps was delinquent all along in the payment of its outstanding accounts, as the bank had reason to know even if it did not have actual knowledge.

Whenever Harps submitted an application for a progress payment to the bank, the bank would advance money to Harps, as it had agreed to do. The bank president testified that he understood generally that the advances were to be used by Harps to meet its payroll. The bank sent each progress-payment application to the Warrens, with a covering letter like this one: “Enclosed is a copy of [Harps’s] Application for Payment . . ., which has been assigned to us. Please make your check payable to Benton State Bank, as per our agreement with Harp’s Construction Company, and sign [an acceptance of the assignment] in the space provided at the bottom of this page, and return the original to us.”

The Warrens, upon the receipt at their California office of each application for a progress payment, would send their check for the requested amount to the bank. The checks were payable jointly to Harps and to the bank and bore this statement above the payee’s endorsement: “By endorsement of this check payee acknowledges payment for labor, materials, or both, in construction at the following address: 2000 Reservoir Road, Little Rock, Ark.” Such progress-payment checks totaled $82,686.24. Of that amount the bank used $27,271.86 to repay itself for loans on the Warren project, used $9,393.42 to repay itself for other loans, and deposited the balance of $46,020.96 to Harps’s general account at the bank.

The procedure that we have outlined was followed by the parties for several months. Finally, however, a representative of one of the unpaid materialmen visited the Warrens’ superintendent at the project site and expressed concern about getting money that was overdue from Harps for materials delivered to the job. The Warrens at once made an investigation and learned that Harps was delinquent in its indebtedness to its suppliers and was unable to demonstrate its solvency. The Warrens then took over the responsibility for completing the work, arid this suit followed.

In our study of the case we have been assisted not only by the briefs of opposing counsel but also by a brief, submitted at our request, by counsel for the Permanent Editorial Board for the Uniform Commercial Code.

The case falls within the general purview of the Code, which applies by its terms to any transaction which is intended to create a security interest in accounts. Ark. Stat. Ann. § 85-9-102(1) (Supp. 1977). Harps’s right to progress payments from the Warrens was an “account” as that term is defined in § 85-9-106. The Warrens were “account debtors” with respect to that account. § 85-9-105. Hence Harps was the assignor of an account, and the bank the assignee, as a result of Harps’s assignment to the bank of its right to progress payments.

Section 85-9-318 (1) (a) provides that the rights of an assignee (the bank) are subject to all the terms of the contract between the account debtor (the Warrens) and the assignor (Harps) and to any defense or claim arising therefrom. It follows that the bank necessarily took some risk in lending Harps up to 75% of the amount specified in each application for a progress payment. That is, if the Warrens, upon receipt of an application, had discovered that there were outstanding bills for labor and materials, the Warrens, under the subcontract, could have made their check payable jointly to the bank and to the suppliers of labor and materials. In that situation it cannot be doubted that the bank’s interest in the check would have been subordinate to the suppliers’ primary right to payment. That is so because the bank’s rights as assignee were subject to any claim by the Warrens against the bank’s assignor, Harps, who was primarily liable to its own suppliers.

That, however, is not what happened. Instead the Warrens, with no knowledge of Harps’s indebtedness to its suppliers, made their checks payable to Harps and to the bank. The bank cashed the checks and applied part of the money to its own loans to Harps. The narrow question is: In that situation, are the Warrens entitled to recover from the bank their payments up to the amount of their net loss, $13,367.12? '

This precise question seems to have been considered in only one case, Farmers Acceptance Corporation v. DeLozier, 178 Colo. 291, 496 P. 2d 1016, 10 UCC Rep. 1099 (1972).

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Benton State Bank v. Warren
562 S.W.2d 74 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1978)

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Bluebook (online)
562 S.W.2d 74, 263 Ark. 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/benton-state-bank-v-warren-ark-1978.