Brooks v. Bank of New York Mellon Trust Company, The

CourtDistrict Court, D. Kansas
DecidedAugust 14, 2024
Docket2:24-cv-02188
StatusUnknown

This text of Brooks v. Bank of New York Mellon Trust Company, The (Brooks v. Bank of New York Mellon Trust Company, The) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brooks v. Bank of New York Mellon Trust Company, The, (D. Kan. 2024).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF KANSAS

JAMES L. BROOKS, ) ) Plaintiff, ) CIVIL ACTION ) v. ) No. 24-2188-KHV ) BANK OF NEW YORK MELLON TRUST ) COMPANY, et al., ) ) Defendants. ) ____________________________________________)

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER

On May 2, 2024, James L. Brooks filed suit pro se against the United States Internal Revenue Service (“IRS”), the Federal Trade Commission (“FTC”), the State of Kansas, BNY Mellon Trust of Delaware (“BNY”), QC Financial Services, Inc. d/b/a LendNation, J.W. Cole Financial Services (“J.W. Cole”), National Financial Services, LLC (“NFS”) and Transamerica Life Insurance Company (“Transamerica”) (collectively, “defendants”), alleging a variety of claims concerning his inability to cash or deposit checks from the proceeds of his late mother’s estate and his late wife’s insurance policy. This matter is before the Court on the following motions: Defendant QC Financial Services, Inc.’s Motion To Dismiss (Doc. #25) filed June 11, 2024; Defendant’s [State of Kansas] Motion To Dismiss (Doc. #30) filed June 17, 2024; Defendant BNY Mellon Trust Of Delaware’s Motion To Dismiss (Doc. #31) filed June 20, 2024; Defendant J.W. Cole Financial Services’ Motion To Dismiss (Doc. #40) filed June 26, 2024; Defendant National Financial Services, LLC’s Motion To Dismiss Or In The Alternative Compel Arbitration (Doc. #42) filed June 28, 2024; Defendant TransAmerica Life Insurance Company’s Motion To Dismiss (Doc. #44) filed July 2, 2024; Federal Defendants’ Motion To Dismiss Plaintiff’s Claims Against The IRS And FTC (Doc #47) filed July 3, 2024; and Defendant J.W. Cole Financial Services’ Motion To Strike Surreply (Doc. #62) filed July 18, 2024.1 For reasons set forth briefly below and for substantially the reasons set forth in defendants’ motions to dismiss, the Court sustains defendants’ motions to dismiss.2

1 J.W. Cole asks the Court to strike plaintiff’s Surreply To Defendant’s En Banc Demand For Evidence (Doc. #61) which plaintiff filed on July 18, 2024 without leave of court. Under District of Kansas Local Rule 7.1(c), briefing on motions is limited to the motion (with memorandum in support), a response and a reply. Surreplies typically are not allowed. Taylor v. Sebelius, 350 F. Supp. 2d 888, 900 (D. Kan. 2004). The Court permits them in rare cases, and only after a party has first sought leave. Id. J.W. Cole’s reply does not raise new issues or evidence which would permit the filing of a surreply. See Defendant J.W. Cole Financial Services’ Reply Memorandum In Support Of Motion To Dismiss (Doc. #58) filed July 15, 2024. The Court therefore sustains J.W. Cole’s motion to strike plaintiff’s surreply.

Without seeking leave of court, plaintiff filed four additional surreplies to pending motions to dismiss. See Response To QC Financial Services, Inc’s Reply In Support Of Its Motion To Dismiss (Doc. #51) filed July 9, 2024; Response To [LendNation’s] Motion To Dismiss (Doc. #53) filed July 9, 2024; Response To Defendant BNY Mellon Trust Of Delaware’s Motion To Dismiss (Doc. #54) filed July 9, 2024; Plaintiff’s Response To Defendant State Of Kansas’ Reply In Support Of Their Motion To Dismiss (Doc. #59) filed July 15, 2024. For the same reasons the Court sustains J.W. Cole’s motion to strike plaintiff’s surreply, the Court does not consider these surreplies. Even if the Court were to consider the arguments in plaintiff’s surreplies, it would reach the same result on defendants’ motions to dismiss.

2 On June 20, 2024, plaintiff filed his Voluntary More Particular Statement From Plaintiff Directed To Defendant J.W. Cole In Particular And All Others Merely As A Help (Doc. #33). The document lists 31 statements and directs J.W. Cole to either admit or deny each statement.

Despite applying less stringent standards to pro se pleadings, pro se filings must still follow the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. Williamson v. Owners Resort & Exch., 90 Fed. App’x. 342, 345 (10th Cir. 2004). Plaintiff’s filing does not follow Rule 7, Fed. R. Civ. P (listing allowed pleadings) or Rule 8 (pleading must contain “short and plain statement” of court’s jurisdiction, claim showing that pleader is entitled to relief and demand for relief sought). Because the Voluntary More Particular Statement (Doc. #33) is largely redundant of statements contained in the Complaint (Doc. #1) and the Court sustains defendants’ motions to dismiss on the merits notwithstanding the more definite statement, the Court does not consider the Voluntary More Particular Statement (Doc. #33) in its evaluation of the motions to dismiss. Factual Background Plaintiff’s complaint contains mostly conclusory and often unintelligible claims. The Court has attempted to distill the relevant facts, as follows, and otherwise incorporates the complaint by reference. Plaintiff’s complaint alleges as follows: In 1990, based on his political beliefs, plaintiff chose to stop using his Social Security

number. Plaintiff mailed a letter to the Social Security Administration and the IRS in which he asked to rescind his Social Security account and number. Because plaintiff does not use his Social Security number, financial institutions have not allowed him to open bank accounts, deposit checks or cash checks issued to him. In 2023, after his mother and wife each passed away, defendants issued several checks to plaintiff. In February of 2023, plaintiff’s mother died and left a portion of her inheritance to her five children, including $52,000 to plaintiff. Plaintiff’s mother kept her investments and plaintiff’s inheritance proceeds with J.W. Cole and NFS. J.W. Cole, through NFS, issued five checks through BNY to plaintiff for his mother’s inheritance proceeds. On April 23, 2023, plaintiff’s wife died.

Before she died, plaintiff’s wife named plaintiff as the sole beneficiary of a $10,000 life insurance policy with Transamerica. Transamerica issued plaintiff a check for the life insurance proceeds. Despite his many efforts, plaintiff cannot cash the checks issued to him. Transamerica and BNY each told plaintiff that they do not hold cash from which he could cash his checks. After driving from Kansas City to a BNY location in Wilmington, Delaware on November 15, 2023 to try to cash his checks, a security guard for BNY told him he could not cash his checks there and plaintiff experienced persistent mental anguish. Plaintiff sent a complaint to the FTC and alleged that J.W. Cole, BNY, NFS and Transamerica issued him suspect checks. In response, the FTC told plaintiff that it was not the appropriate agency to process his complaint. Plaintiff also tried to cash the checks at a nearby LendNation location because LendNation had an advertisement that read “[w]e cash all checks.” Complaint (Doc. #1) at 11. Despite the advertisement, plaintiff could not cash his checks with LendNation because he does not use a Social Security number. At some unspecified date, J.W. Cole or NFS notified the State of Kansas that the checks they issued to plaintiff were now considered abandoned property because plaintiff had not yet

cashed them. In addition, Transamerica informed plaintiff that it would also declare its check abandoned if plaintiff did not cash it soon. In conclusory fashion, plaintiff also alleges that the Johnson County and Wyandotte County District Courts have “blacklisted” and denied him access to legal representation. Id. at 8. On May 2, 2024, plaintiff filed suit against the IRS, the FTC, the State of Kansas, BNY, LendNation, J.W. Cole, NFS and Transamerica. Plaintiff asserts 18 counts, alleging violations of state and federal law, and seeks one billion dollars in punitive damages. Analysis

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