Branch Banking & Trust Company v. L&S Investment Partners, LLC, Robert Lemelin, Leo Lemelin, Brian Lemelin and Scott Seideman

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 21, 2018
Docket05-17-00381-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Branch Banking & Trust Company v. L&S Investment Partners, LLC, Robert Lemelin, Leo Lemelin, Brian Lemelin and Scott Seideman (Branch Banking & Trust Company v. L&S Investment Partners, LLC, Robert Lemelin, Leo Lemelin, Brian Lemelin and Scott Seideman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Branch Banking & Trust Company v. L&S Investment Partners, LLC, Robert Lemelin, Leo Lemelin, Brian Lemelin and Scott Seideman, (Tex. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

AFFIRM in Part, REVERSE in Part, and RENDER; Opinion Filed June 21, 2018.

In The Court of Appeals Fifth District of Texas at Dallas No. 05-17-00381-CV

BRANCH BANKING & TRUST COMPANY, Appellant & Cross-Appellee V. SCOTT SEIDEMAN, Appellee & Cross-Appellant, AND L&S INVESTMENT PARTNERS, LLC, Appellee

ROBERT LEMELIN, LEO LEMELIN, AND BRIAN LEMELIN, Appellants V. BRANCH BANKING & TRUST COMPANY, Appellee

On Appeal from the 95th Judicial District Court Dallas County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. DC-14-12543

MEMORANDUM OPINION Before Justices Lang, Fillmore, and Schenck Opinion by Justice Fillmore L&S Investment, LLC (L&S) borrowed over eight million dollars from Colonial Bank,

N.A. to finance the purchase of 6.72 acres of land in San Bernardino County, California, and the

construction of a building (the Property). Robert Lemelin (Robert), Leo Lemelin (Leo), Brian

Lemelin (Brian), and Scott Seideman personally guaranteed the loan. After Colonial Bank failed,

Branch Banking & Trust Company (the Bank) acquired the L&S loan from the Federal Deposit

Insurance Corporation (the FDIC). L&S defaulted on the loan, and the Property was sold at a

nonjudicial foreclosure sale. The Bank then filed this action seeking to recover from L&S and the four guarantors the deficiency between the outstanding balance on the loan and the foreclosure

sale price. After a bench trial, the trial court rendered judgment that the Bank take nothing from

L&S and Seideman, but recover from the Lemelins, jointly and severally, actual damages of

$5,070,172.22, attorneys’ fees of $179,230.95, expenses of $13,170.37, and three-fifths of the

court costs. The trial court also ordered that, if Robert, Leo, or Brian unsuccessfully appealed the

trial court’s judgment, that person would be responsible for additional appellate attorneys’ fees.

The Bank appealed the trial court’s judgment in favor of L&S and Seideman, Seideman

filed a cross-appeal, and the Lemelins appealed the trial court’s judgment in favor of the Bank. In

its appeal, the Bank asserts in four issues that the trial court erred by ordering the Bank take nothing

on its claims against L&S and Seideman because (1) Seideman contractually waived all pleaded

affirmative defenses, (2) the Bank provided proper notice of the foreclosure sale to L&S and

Seideman, (3) L&S’s and Seideman’s affirmative defenses of fraud, waiver, and estoppel were

barred by the statute of frauds and, alternatively, the evidence was legally and factually insufficient

to support those defenses, and (4) the California anti-deficiency statute does not bar the Bank’s

claims against L&S. Seideman, in a cross-issue, and the Lemelins, in the first issue of their appeal,

argue the trial court erred by determining the California anti-deficiency statute does not bar the

Bank’s claims against the guarantors. In an additional issue, the Lemelins contend the trial court

erred by entering judgment against them on their affirmative defenses of fraud, waiver, and

estoppel because those defenses were based on the same facts as Seideman’s affirmative defenses

and, alternatively, the evidence was legally and factually insufficient to support the trial court’s

judgment.

We conclude the California anti-deficiency statute does not bar the Bank’s claims against

L&S or the guarantors. We further conclude the statute of frauds bars the affirmative defenses of

fraud, waiver, and estoppel and Seideman contractually waived any defense based on lack of notice

–2– of the foreclosure sale. Accordingly, we affirm the trial court’s judgment against the Lemelins

and reverse the trial court’s judgment in favor of L&S and Seidman. We render judgment that the

Bank recover its actual damages of $5,070.172.22 from the Lemelins, L&S, and Seidman, jointly

and severally. Because we have significantly changed the trial court’s judgment, we reverse the

trial court’s judgment as to the assessment of attorneys’ fees, expenses, and court costs and remand

this case to the trial court for reassessment of the parties’ liability for those fees and expenses.

Background

L&S is a California limited liability company owned by Seideman and the Lemelins. In

2007, Seideman, an attorney, was licensed to practice and lived in Texas. Further, Seideman’s

law firm had a “rather extensive banking relationship” with Colonial Bank in Texas. Effective

June 29, 2007, L&S borrowed $8,870,524 from Colonial Bank. Robert, as L&S’s manager, and

the Lemelins and Seideman, as guarantors, signed a Loan Agreement that required L&S to execute

a promissory note (the Note) and a deed of trust (the DOT) for the Property that secured the Note

and required Seideman and the Lemelins to execute guaranty agreements. Under the Loan

Agreement, an “event of default” included L&S’s failure to pay when due any installment of

principal or interest or any other monetary obligation arising under the Note. The Loan Agreement

provided that:

THE NOTE AND THIS AGREEMENT ARE EXECUTED AND DELIVERED IN CONNECTION WITH A LENDING TRANSACTION NEGOTIATED AND CONSUMMATED IN DALLAS COUNTY, TEXAS, AND SHALL BE GOVERNED BY AND CONSTRUED IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE LAWS OF THE STATE OF TEXAS.

The parties agreed the Loan Agreement “embodie[d] the entire agreement between the parties

relating to the subject matter hereof” and could be amended only by a written instrument executed

by both L&S and Colonial Bank.

–3– The Note required L&S to make monthly payments of principal and interest at Colonial

Bank’s offices in Dallas or Collin County, Texas, unless a different place was designated by

Colonial Bank in writing. The Note provided that L&S and any guarantor of the Note waived

presentment for payment, demand, notice of nonpayment or nonperformance, protest, notice of

protest, notice of intent to accelerate, notice of acceleration, grace, diligence in collecting the Note

or enforcing any security for the Note, or “any other notices” or action. The Note stated:

THIS NOTE IS EXECUTED AND DELIVERED IN CONNECTION WITH A LENDING TRANSACTION NEGOTIATED AND CONSUMMATED IN DALLAS COUNTY, TEXAS, AND SHALL BE GOVERNED BY AND CONSTRUED IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE LAWS OF THE STATE OF TEXAS.

Section fourteen of the DOT gave the trustee a power of sale in the event L&S defaulted

under the Note or the Loan Agreement. The foreclosure sale was required to be conducted in

California, and the trustee was required to give notice of the sale “in accordance with applicable

laws in the State of California in effect at the time such notice is given.” Section fourteen of the

DOT also specified notice was to be served, at least twenty days preceding the sale, by certified

mail on “each debtor obligated to pay the debt secured hereby according to the records” of Colonial

Bank. Section thirty-six of the DOT stated the instrument was executed in Texas and “shall be

governed by and construed in accordance with the laws of the State of Texas, except to the extent

such laws have been preempted by federal laws, in which case federal laws as applied in Texas

shall govern.”

The Lemelins and Seideman each signed a Guaranty Agreement, in which they

“unconditionally, absolutely and irrevocably” guaranteed the prompt payment when due of “any

and all indebtedness or other liability, fixed or contingent, which [L&S] may now or at any time

hereafter owe” Colonial Bank. The guarantors waived diligence on the part of Colonial Bank in

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Branch Banking & Trust Company v. L&S Investment Partners, LLC, Robert Lemelin, Leo Lemelin, Brian Lemelin and Scott Seideman, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/branch-banking-trust-company-v-ls-investment-partners-llc-robert-texapp-2018.