Bosarge Offshore, LLC v. Compass Bank

943 So. 2d 782, 2006 Ala. LEXIS 97, 2006 WL 1304900
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedMay 12, 2006
Docket1041871
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 943 So. 2d 782 (Bosarge Offshore, LLC v. Compass Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bosarge Offshore, LLC v. Compass Bank, 943 So. 2d 782, 2006 Ala. LEXIS 97, 2006 WL 1304900 (Ala. 2006).

Opinion

Bosarge Offshore, LLC ("Offshore"), and Kenny G. Bosarge ("Bosarge") (hereinafter referred to jointly as "the plaintiffs") appeal from a judgment as a matter of law entered in favor of Compass Bank. We affirm.

Facts and Procedural History
Kenny Bosarge has been a shipbuilder for nearly 30 years. One of the vessels he commonly builds is an "offshore oil field service vessel," which is used to deliver supplies and personnel to offshore oil-drilling facilities in the Gulf of Mexico. Once such a vessel is completed, it is sold to an "operator," a company that will use it to deliver supplies and personnel. Bosarge's brother, Rusty, owns a shipyard known as Boconeo Shipbuilding, Inc. ("Boconco"), and at various times Boconco has employed Bosarge.

In late 2002, Bosarge decided to capitalize upon numerous providential events and become an "operator" himself. The rise of oil and gas prices had generated an increase in exploration and production in the Gulf of Mexico; thus, the demand for field-service vessels had correspondingly increased. In addition, the United States Coast Guard had changed certain of its vessel-design requirements, rendering obsolete many of the vessels then in service and opening a market for operators owning ships built in compliance with the new design requirements. These conditions were present when the most fortuitous event of all occurred: Boconco had on hand approximately $281,000 worth of undedicated shipbuilding inventory. When Bosarge approached Rusty about Boconco's using that inventory to build a vessel, Rusty agreed to direct that inventory toward the construction of a vessel for Bosarge without requiring Bosarge to first purchase the inventory.

Bosarge reasoned, based upon years of experience in the shipbuilding industry, that if he could secure financing for the initial phase of constructing a vessel, he could then secure a contract with an oil-drilling company to include his vessel in its fleet. Securing such a contract would position him to obtain the permanent financing necessary to complete the construction of the vessel. Given the value of Boconco's inventory, Bosarge believed that he would need only an additional $200,000 for the initial construction phase, although he ultimately would need approximately $2 million in permanent financing for the remainder of construction.

Bosarge sought to obtain the necessary $200,000 from Compass. In early January 2003, he visited the Compass branch bank located on Bel Air Boulevard in Mobile. Bosarge was referred to a personal banking officer named Chris Garmon. Bosarge explained that he was interested in an unsecured loan in the amount of $200,000. Garmon began completing the necessary paperwork, using information provided by Bosarge. Bosarge later returned to Compass, at an unspecified date, to meet with Garmon. At this second meeting, Bosarge provided further information not earlier *Page 784 conveyed to Garmon. After each meeting, Garmon sent the information given by Bosarge to Compass's business-loan center located in Birmingham.

Between his first and second visits to Compass, Bosarge incorporated Offshore. Specifically, Bosarge testified that he organized Offshore on the very day that he, on behalf of Offshore, entered into a "Vessel Construction Contract" with Boconco memorializing Boconco's willingness to build a vessel for Offshore. The articles of incorporation of Offshore state that its purpose was "to engage in the operation of oil supply vessels." The date of that contract, and thus the date that Offshore was incorporated, was January 21, 2003.

On February 21, after the second meeting with Bosarge, Garmon received an e-mail from Lisa Vandillon, an underwriter in Compass's business-loan center, informing him that Bosarge's loan had been approved. That day, Garmon telephoned Bosarge and told him that his loan had been approved. Although the plaintiffs maintained at trial that Bosarge had relied upon Garmon's telephone call in later signing the vessel-construction contract, and even reasserted this argument on appeal (Plaintiffs' brief, at 11, and 30-31), in their reply brief, they concede that Offshore — which Bosarge testified was formed on the same date the vessel-construction contract was signed — "was created prior to" Garmon's telephone call. (Plaintiffs' reply brief, at 5; emphasis added.) Thus, there is no support in the record to indicate that Bosarge relied upon Garmon's telephone call in signing the vessel-construction contract.

On February 21, the same day he received Garmon's telephone call, Bosarge returned to Compass and requested that Garmon provide him with some form of written assurance that the Offshore loan had been approved. In Bosarge's presence, Garmon typed and presented to Bosarge a document, on Compass's letterhead, stating:

"Kenny Bosarge D/B/A Bosarge Offshore LLC

Reference # : -------

"To Whom It May Concern:

"This letter of credit in the amount of $200,000.00 (Two Hundred Thousand Dollars and no/100) is available to the above stated customer. Funds are available at customer's request in any increment needed. If any other information is needed, please feel free to contact our office.

"Thanks,

"/s/Chris Garmon

"Chris Garmon, Personal Business Banking Officer"1

After receiving the letter from Garmon, Bosarge spoke with four "operators" to determine whether he could place his vessel with those operators' fleets "under a contract under which [the operators] could make money and so could [Bosarge]." Bosarge also began seeking lenders for permanent financing. Citicorp was solicited for permanent financing, but in February 2003 it indicated that "based upon everything that [it] knew, [it was not] interested in getting involved." Bosarge also had spoken "off and on about this plan of [his] for several years" with a representative of Caterpillar Financial Services Corp., but *Page 785 he conceded that he never applied for permanent financing with that corporation.

Bosarge also contacted Jeffrey Whitcomb, who has been described by various parties as either an employee of Captive Capital Corporation or as an employee of Stewart Stevenson Equipment Finance.2 Although it appears that Bosarge might have e-mailed an application for permanent financing to Whitcomb, the record does not indicate when Bosarge sent that application, nor does the record support the notion that Bosarge ever sent to either Captive Capital or Stewart Stevenson any documentation regarding his business proposal or that lie engaged in any action beyond speaking' with Whitcomb. On March 11, Bosarge received an e-mail from Whitcomb stating that based on Bosarge's statements to him, "we have a strong case for approval," but reminding Bosarge that Whitcomb's employer had yet to receive anything from Offshore regarding its proposal for permanent financing.

On March 7, 2003, Compass's small-business loan center, through an underwriter, rescinded its approval of the Offshore loan. Compass did not inform Bosarge of this change until Bosarge visited Compass on March 12 and requested an initial advance of $23,000 on the loan. Because Compass had rescinded its approval, Garmon declined to provide the requested advance, informing Bosarge only that "I can't do it."

Subsequent to this encounter, Bosarge telephoned Whitcomb and informed him that Compass had withdrawn approval for the loan and that Bosarge would no longer be pursuing permanent financing. On March 13, Offshore's attorney mailed Compass a demand letter requesting the initial advance.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
943 So. 2d 782, 2006 Ala. LEXIS 97, 2006 WL 1304900, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bosarge-offshore-llc-v-compass-bank-ala-2006.