Bonavire v. Wampler

779 F.2d 1011
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedDecember 26, 1985
DocketNo. 84-2155
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 779 F.2d 1011 (Bonavire v. Wampler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bonavire v. Wampler, 779 F.2d 1011 (4th Cir. 1985).

Opinion

McMILLAN, District Judge:

On July 31, 1984, a jury in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia found defendant Wampler and others guilty of defrauding plaintiffs Bonavire and Reckner, and awarded compensatory and punitive damages. Judgment was entered for plaintiffs. Defendant Wampler and the law firm of Dorfmeier, Stone and Wampler appealed. They question the sufficiency of the evidence on the issues of (1) plaintiffs’ reliance on defendant Wampler; (2) plaintiff Reckner’s efforts to take reasonable business precautions in investigating the transaction; (3) plaintiffs’ lost profits; (4) the existence of a partnership by estoppel between defendant Wampler and attorneys Stone and Dorfmeier; and (5) the partnership’s ratification of Wampler’s conduct. Finding that there was ample evidence in the record to support the jury’s verdict, we affirm.

The record reveals the following:

On November 17, 1982, after overtures from defendant Carl Boyden, plaintiffs met Boyden and one Herbert Coles in Tysons Corner, Virginia, to discuss what Boyden represented as an investment opportunity. Boyden represented that unnamed foreign entities were interested in investing several billion dollars in the United States, and that an unnamed United States bank was trying to borrow a comparable sum. The condi[1013]*1013tion of such loan was that the bank would have to pledge several promissory notes as collateral for the loan of two billion dollars. Boyden suggested that the bank would be willing to pay a fee of what amounted to two percent of the two billion dollars to anyone who could arrange the loan and produce the necessary letters of credit as security for the transaction. Defendant Boyden proposed that plaintiffs retain Unlimited Financing, Inc., operated by defendant Charles Ellington, to obtain the necessary documents and arrange for the interested bank to borrow the two billion dollars. Ellington’s services could be retained by the plaintiffs for a fee of $60,000.00, to be divided equally between the plaintiffs. The plaintiffs expressed interest in sharing the proposed return of forty million dollars on a $60,000.00 investment, and defendant Boyden arranged for each plaintiff to meet with Mr. Ellington in Dayton, Ohio (App. 58).

Two days later, on November 19, 1982, plaintiff Reckner met with Ellington in Dayton, Ohio. Ellington presented Reck-ner with a copy of a “Guarantee Consulting Agreement” for Reckner’s signature. This agreement stated that Unlimited Financing would either produce real documents as the necessary collateral or return the $60,-000.00 fee to the plaintiffs. Plaintiff Reck-ner reviewed the agreement at Ellington’s home but did not sign it until he had met with defendant Wampler at the offices of the law firm Dorfmeier, Stone and Wam-pler. After speaking with defendant Wam-pler about the deal and his role as the escrow agent for the transaction, Reckner asked that an addendum be attached to the consulting agreement (App. 89). This addendum, drafted by defendant Wampler in his office, stated that the agreement was conditioned on the equal participation of both plaintiffs and permitted the return of any deposited funds in the event that either man failed to keep his part of the agreement (App. 243).

In early December, plaintiff Bonavire also traveled to Dayton to meet with Ellington (App. 100). Bonavire brought with him a check for $11,000.00 and planned to send the remainder of the promised $30,-000.00 after meeting with Ellington and signing the consulting agreement. At Ellington’s home, Ellington and Bonavire discussed the deal and Ellington informed Bo-navire that defendant Wampler would act as the escrow agent (App. 151). Ellington then gave Bonavire Wampler’s telephone number. Bonavire telephoned Wampler at his office and had a brief conversation with him about Wampler’s knowledge of the deal and his experience with Ellington (App. 102). Bonavire then signed the consulting agreement at Ellington’s home and subsequently arranged to deliver the additional $19,000.00 to complete the transaction with Ellington.

On December 14, 1982, plaintiff Reckner returned to Dayton and met again with Boyden, Ellington and other investors involved in parallel arrangements with Unlimited Financing, Inc. This meeting took place in the offices of Dorfmeier, Stone and Wampler and was conducted by Ellington, with defendant Wampler coming in and out during the course of the meeting (App. 84). At this meeting, Ellington presented a letter that purportedly represented an agreement by the Manufacturer’s Hanover Bank of New York to secure the loan transaction. The letter, presented as the promised collateral, was addressed to defendant Wampler (App. 221, 253). The letter aroused the suspicions of the investors, some of whom were accompanied by counsel.

•Plaintiff Reckner questioned the authenticity of the letter because it did not appear to bear a bank seal and seemed to be a copy, rather than an original document. Consequently, plaintiff Reckner refused at that time to sign a release turning over the money in Wampler’s escrow account to Ellington. The next day the group assembled again in the law firm’s offices. Defendants Boyden, Ellington and Wampler met in a conference room with several other investors and advisors but kept plaintiff Reckner out of the meeting. When the meeting broke up, defendant Boyden told Reckner that the deal would fail if he re[1014]*1014fused to sign the release. Boyden also told him that his money was already gone anyway, and that he might as well sign. Plaintiff Reckner hesitated but, distressed by Boyden’s statements, signed the release prepared by defendant Wampler. Wam-pler then wrote a check to Ellington for $30,000.00.

At approximately this same time in mid-December, plaintiff Bonavire learned from defendant Boyden that no guaranteed letter of collateral had been obtained by Ellington (App. 105). Soon thereafter, in early January, plaintiff Reckner traveled to New York and went to the Manufacturer’s Hanover office from which the collateral document had supposedly been sent. The Manufacturer’s Hanover employees with whom Reckner spoke denied that the bank ever sent such a letter and informed Reck-ner that the two bank representatives whose signatures appeared on the letter were not employed at the bank. On January 24,1983, both plaintiffs met again with the defendants at the law firm offices in Dayton and discussed the authenticity of the letter that had been offered as the promised collateral for the loan. Plaintiff Reckner did not initially reveal his trip to New York and his discoveries there. Reck-ner asked again to see the purported Manufacturer’s Hanover letter, being held by Wampler. The defendants refused to give the letter to the plaintiffs and plaintiff Bonavire finally pulled the document out of Wampler’s hand and revealed that Reckner had gone to New York and found out the letter was a fake (App. 106). At this point, the arrangement between the parties appeared to have collapsed. However, plaintiffs’ money was not returned to them as promised.

In October of 1983, plaintiffs filed this lawsuit to recover their investment and damages.

JURISDICTION

Defendants challenged both subject matter jurisdiction and personal jurisdiction over the appellants.

As to subject matter jurisdiction, the plaintiffs filed a motion on October 1, 1985, several days before the hearing, requesting permission to amend the complaint to allege diversity of citizenship between the plaintiffs and all the defendants. That motion was allowed at the beginning of the appellate hearing.

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Related

Dow v. Jones
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Hasenfus v. Secord
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Bonavire v. Wampler
779 F.2d 1011 (Fourth Circuit, 1985)

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Bluebook (online)
779 F.2d 1011, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bonavire-v-wampler-ca4-1985.