Betty Parmer v. United Bank, Inc.

CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 7, 2020
Docket20-0013
StatusPublished

This text of Betty Parmer v. United Bank, Inc. (Betty Parmer v. United Bank, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Betty Parmer v. United Bank, Inc., (W. Va. 2020).

Opinion

STATE OF WEST VIRGINIA SUPREME COURT OF APPEALS

Betty Parmer, Defendant Below, Petitioner FILED December 7, 2020 EDYTHE NASH GAISER, CLERK vs.) No. 20-0013 (Monongalia County 17-C-210) SUPREME COURT OF APPEALS OF WEST VIRGINIA

United Bank, Inc., Plaintiff Below, Respondent

MEMORANDUM DECISION

Petitioner Betty Parmer, by counsel S. Sean Murphy, appeals the Circuit Court of Monongalia County’s December 6, 2019, order enforcing the parties’ settlement agreement. Respondent United Bank, Inc., by counsel Shawn P. George, Jennie Ovrom Ferretti, and J. Michael Benninger, filed a response and supplemental appendix.

This Court has considered the parties’ briefs and the record on appeal. The facts and legal arguments are adequately presented, and the decisional process would not be significantly aided by oral argument. Upon consideration of the standard of review, the briefs, and the record presented, the Court finds no substantial question of law and no prejudicial error. For these reasons, a memorandum decision affirming the circuit court’s order is appropriate under Rule 21 of the Rules of Appellate Procedure.

Ms. Parmer and United Bank, Inc. (“United”) have been involved in various lawsuits related to a $2.5 million loan Ms. Parmer obtained from United and on which she later defaulted. In one lawsuit, assigned Civil Action No. 14-C-374, United was granted summary judgment on Ms. Parmer’s negligence, breach of fiduciary duty, and civil conspiracy claims, and the circuit court’s order directed that the “[p]arties shall bear their own costs and fees.” Ms. Parmer appealed, and this Court affirmed in Brozik v. Parmer, Nos. 16-0292, 16-0400, 16-0238, 2017 WL 65475 (W. Va. Jan. 6, 2017)(memorandum decision).

Subsequent to that litigation, Ms. Parmer was required to pay the loan balance. United applied certain collateral to the loan, and Ms. Parmer wired $606,961.62 to United to satisfy the remaining principal, interest, and charges. Following receipt of the wire transfer, United informed Ms. Parmer that it was calculating its attorney’s fees and would submit a demand for payment the following week, as provided for under the loan documents. United made a demand for payment on April 11, 2016, but Ms. Parmer did not pay the outstanding fees, and the instant litigation ensued.

1 In United’s complaint and motion for declaratory judgment, it alleged that Ms. Parmer pledged shares of United stock, among other assets, as security for the loan; that the commercial loan agreement signed by Ms. Parmer obligated her to pay United’s reasonable attorney’s fees; and that United was authorized under that agreement to liquidate collateral and apply the proceeds to, among other things, attorney’s fees. Accordingly, United sought “a declaratory judgment authorizing the collection, payment and satisfaction of attorneys’ fees, costs and expenses incurred by [it] in prior litigation, as well as in this litigation, and the liquidation of a stock certificate held by United as collateral for a loan to [Ms. Parmer].” United stated that its fees as of January 31, 2017, totaled $294,956.48.

Ms. Parmer filed an answer to United’s complaint and counterclaimed for breach of contract, conversion, and “violation of statute.” In support of her breach of contract claim, Ms. Parmer alleged that United failed to provide her with a statement of the claimed attorney’s fees, that it engaged in collection activities that were in contravention of the loan agreement and/or applicable law, and that it attempted and continues to attempt to force Ms. Parmer to pay for costs/expenses United has no right to collect. To support her conversion counterclaim, Ms. Parmer asserted that United took her valuable assets, exercised dominion and control over them, and converted them. Finally, Ms. Parmer claimed that United violated the “Uniform Commercial Code and/or other statutes” in its collection efforts.

In July of 2017, United moved to dismiss Ms. Parmer’s counterclaims. Following a hearing, the circuit court granted United’s motion by order entered on December 12, 2018. In its order, the court detailed that Ms. Parmer failed to file a response to the motion in the nearly one and a half years it had been pending. Further, the court found that the hearing on the motion to dismiss was properly noticed by United’s service of a notice of hearing by regular mail and e-mail on November 1, 2018; yet, neither Ms. Parmer nor her counsel appeared for the hearing. 1 The court also found that Ms. Parmer could not prevail on any of her counterclaims. First, she had not shown that United failed to comply with any term of the loan documents between the parties. Second, Ms. Parmer’s conversion claim failed because she voluntarily pledged the stock to United as collateral for the loan. Third, Ms. Parmer had yet to specifically identify any statute United violated.

Later in November of 2018, United moved for summary judgment. United noted the prior litigation involving Ms. Parmer’s default on the loan and in which it was granted summary judgment, and it outlined the relevant portions of the parties’ commercial loan agreement entitling United to the attorney’s fees it incurred in protecting, defending, and collecting on its rights with respect to the loan. United claimed entitlement to declaratory judgment in the amount of $294,956.48 related to the prior litigation, plus $25,000 in expenses, interest, costs, and attorney’s fees in the current litigation. United also sought a declaration that it was authorized to liquidate the stock certificate and apply the proceeds to the amounts claimed.

1 The record also shows that neither Ms. Parmer nor her counsel appeared on March 15, 2018, for the hearing at which the motion to dismiss was initially to be heard. That hearing was continued to the following week, but Ms. Parmer and her counsel again failed to appear.

2 Ms. Parmer filed a response and supplemental response to United’s motion for summary judgment. In her supplemental response, Ms. Parmer argued that United’s claim for attorney’s fees was barred by res judicata in light of the order in No. 14-C-374 directing each party to bear their own costs and fees. Ms. Parmer also argued that United was collaterally estopped from seeking its attorney’s fees and had waived any claim for its fees.

Additionally, Ms. Parmer moved for relief from the court’s order dismissing her counterclaims under Rule 60(b) of the West Virginia Rules of Civil Procedure. 2 Ms. Parmer argued that her counsel’s failure to appear for the hearing was due to “mistake, inadvertence, surprise and excusable neglect” stemming from a “severe medical condition” necessitating “immediate surgical intervention” in May of 2018. Counsel represented that, following surgery, he was on medical leave through the end of July of 2018. Ms. Parmer’s counsel also cited the relocation of his office as a basis for relief from judgment.

The parties appeared for a hearing on United’s motion for summary judgment and Ms. Parmer’s motion for relief from the order dismissing her counterclaims on March 4, 2019. 3 The court directed the parties to mediate and stated that it would hold United’s motion for summary judgment in abeyance pending mediation. The court denied Ms. Parmer’s Rule 60(b) motion, noting that the ruling on United’s motion to dismiss her counterclaims would have been the same had counsel appeared for the hearing.

The parties engaged in mediation on April 4, 2019, and they reached a resolution. In relevant part, the four-page, handwritten settlement agreement signed by the parties, their counsel, and the mediator set forth that Ms. Parmer agreed to pay United $212,500 within ten days “in immediately available funds.” Upon receipt of those funds, United agreed to provide to Ms. Parmer’s counsel the United stock certificate at issue.

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Related

Riner v. Newbraugh
563 S.E.2d 802 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 2002)
State v. Allen
539 S.E.2d 87 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 2000)

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Bluebook (online)
Betty Parmer v. United Bank, Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/betty-parmer-v-united-bank-inc-wva-2020.