Brannon v. BankTrust, Inc.

50 So. 3d 397, 2010 Ala. LEXIS 70, 2010 WL 1640938
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedApril 23, 2010
Docket1060637 and 1061059
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 50 So. 3d 397 (Brannon v. BankTrust, Inc.) 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
Brannon v. BankTrust, Inc., 50 So. 3d 397, 2010 Ala. LEXIS 70, 2010 WL 1640938 (Ala. 2010).

Opinion

On Applications for Rehearing

MURDOCK, Justice.

This Court’s opinion of July 31, 2009, is withdrawn, and the following opinion is substituted therefor.

Retha J. Brannon, as executrix of the estate of Lemuel Morrison, deceased (“the Morrison estate”), the plaintiff below, appeals from a judgment as a matter of law in favor of BankTrust, Inc. (“BankTrust”), on the Morrison estate’s common-law tort claims of negligence and wantonness (case no. 1060637). BankTrust cross-appeals from a summary judgment in favor of Brannon on the Morrison estate’s claim of breach of contract (case no. 1061059). We reverse both judgments.

I. Facts and Procedural History

Morrison died in March 2001, and Bran-non was appointed executrix of his estate. After her appointment as executrix, Bran-non retained Douglas McCoy of the law firm of Hand Arendall, LLC, to assist her in the administration of the Morrison estate. Because Hand Arendall maintained its own account at BankTrust and had regularly done business with it, McCoy recommended that Brannon open a checking account for the Morrison estate at BankTrust. On June 26, 2001, Brannon and McCoy met with Lyn Peterson, a vice president of BankTrust, and Brannon opened a checking account (“the estate account”) by filling out an information sheet and signing a signature card. Attached to the signature card was a document entitled “Deposit Account Terms and Conditions” (“the agreement”), which provided that the “terms [of the agreement] governed] the operation of this account unless supplemented in writing.” The agreement specified that,

“[u]nless otherwise clearly indicated on the account records, any one of you who signs this form including authorized signers, may withdraw or transfer all or any part of the account balance at any time.... Each [signatory] authorizes each other person signing this form to endorse any item payable to you or your order for deposit to this account or any other transaction with [BankTrust].”

The agreement also provided that the signatory on the account must review bank statements with “reasonable promptness” and must “promptly notify” BankTrust of any “unauthorized payments or alterations.” The agreement provided, in addition to the foregoing, that no claim for an unauthorized transaction could be made [400]*400more than 60 days beyond the date Bank-Trust made available to the signatory a statement reflecting that transaction.

The signature card contained spaces for multiple signatories, but it is undisputed that Brannon was the only person whose name appears on the signature card as a signatory. The signature card also included the option for making an “agency designation,” but no such designation was made on the signature card.

Although McCoy’s name does not appear on the signature card, Peterson testified by deposition that Brannon told her that “Doug [McCoy] would handle this account for her.” Brannon instructed Peterson to send checks for the estate account to McCoy, and she listed the mailing address as “Estate of Lemuel Morrison, c/o Douglas L. McCoy,” followed by Hand Ar-endall’s mailing address. It is undisputed that McCoy initially received all bank statements for the estate account and that he had a responsibility to Brannon to forward them to her.

On April 17, 2002, McCoy telephoned Peterson at BankTrust and told her to transfer $34,821.73 from the estate account to Hand Arendall’s account at BankTrust. Peterson testified that McCoy told her that the transfer was for legal fees and that he said nothing else. Peterson did not ask McCoy if he had authorization from Brannon for the transfer, and McCoy did not tell Peterson that he had such authorization. Their conversation lasted less than one minute. Peterson testified that she “assumed” that McCoy had authorization for the transfer and that she trusted McCoy.1 Thereafter, in May, June, July, August, September, and October 2002, McCoy placed similar telephone calls to Peterson and obtained transfers of varying amounts from the estate account to Hand Arendall’s account. In all, eight separate transfers from the estate account to Hand Arendall’s account, totaling $240,185.19, were made at McCoy’s direction.

In October 2002, Brannon telephoned Peterson to inform her that she had not been receiving bank statements on the estate account, and she asked Peterson to change the address on the account. Bran-non claims that, upon receiving a printout of the bank statements from Peterson, she noticed that a large amount of money was missing from the estate account. She telephoned Peterson to inform her that there had been unauthorized transfers from the estate account to Hand Arendall, and she asked to speak to Peterson’s supervisor. Peterson transferred Brannon to Bank-Trust’s chief financial officer, Michael Johnson. Brannon demanded that Bank-Trust credit the missing funds to the estate account. Johnson told Brannon that he would get back to her.

Johnson testified that, after he received Brannon’s telephone call, he telephoned McCoy2 for legal advice on how to handle the situation because McCoy also was one of BankTrust’s attorneys.3 McCoy provided Johnson with “suggestions” for how to respond to Brannon’s inquiry. McCoy then drafted a response to Brannon, which Johnson printed on BankTrust’s letterhead and signed as the author. Johnson sent the letter to Brannon on January 21, 2003, explaining that the transfers were carried [401]*401out by Peterson on McCoy’s instructions. The letter advised Brannon that “[s]ince [BankTrust] knew of your close fiduciary relationship with Mr. McCoy, we assumed ... that his instructions to us were known to you.”

Upon receiving the letter, Brannon went to the BankTrust office and again requested that the estate account be credited for what she deemed to be McCoy’s unauthorized transfers. Upon BankTrust’s refusal, Brannon closed the account.

In October 2003, Brannon sued Bank-Trust in the Geneva Circuit Court; the complaint alleged breach of contract, negligence, and wantonness, stemming from the eight transfers of funds from the estate account to Hand Arendall’s account between April and October 2002.4 Following a change of venue from Geneva County to Mobile County, BankTrust answered the complaint, asserting, among other things, that Brannon had not timely reviewed the estate account’s statements or notified BankTrust of the alleged problems with the account. Among other things, Bank-Trust cited the provisions of Article 4 of the Uniform Commercial Code (“the UCC”), codified at § 7-4-101 et seq.5

During discovery, BankTrust filed a notice of intent to serve a subpoena on a nonparty, Hand Arendall. The nonparty subpoena requested all statements, records of payment, notes, memoranda, and correspondence related to the Morrison estate and directed to or received from Brannon. Brannon objected to the non-party subpoena. BankTrust contended that it needed the information to demonstrate that Brannon owed money to Hand Arendall for legal services McCoy had rendered to the Morrison estate. In a memorandum of law responding to Brannon’s objection to BankTrust’s nonparty subpoena to Hand Arendall, BankTrust also stated that it “asserts as a factual matter that it made the transfer from the [estate] account to Hand Arendall’s account with the understanding that the transfers were authorized by [Brannon].”6

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50 So. 3d 397, 2010 Ala. LEXIS 70, 2010 WL 1640938, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brannon-v-banktrust-inc-ala-2010.