Capital Plus v. Parker Enterprises, Unpublished Decision (7-23-2004)

2004 Ohio 3896
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 23, 2004
DocketAppeal No. C-030046.
StatusUnpublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 2004 Ohio 3896 (Capital Plus v. Parker Enterprises, Unpublished Decision (7-23-2004)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Capital Plus v. Parker Enterprises, Unpublished Decision (7-23-2004), 2004 Ohio 3896 (Ohio Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

DECISION.
{¶ 1} On January 28, 2000, plaintiff-appellee Capital Plus, Inc., ("Capital") sued defendants-appellants Troy Parker, d/b/a Imperial Distribution Company ("Imperial"), Parker Enterprises Imperial Distribution, Inc., Maid Service Systems, Inc., and Troy Parker individually (collectively, "Parker") for breach of contract, breach of guaranty, fraud, and foreclosure of pledged assets. After a five-day bench trial, the trial court entered judgment against Parker.

{¶ 2} On appeal, Parker does not contest that he breached the contract with Capital, but he does take issue with the amount of damages awarded and the finding of fraud. Additionally, Parker argues that he was not personally liable for the damages because he did not sign a guaranty, nor did he enter into a contract with Capital on behalf of Imperial, a sole proprietorship.

{¶ 3} Upon our review of the record, we hold that Parker fraudulently induced Capital to continue a financing relationship with Imperial, and that Parker, as guarantor of the companies and as the sole proprietor of Imperial, was personally liable for the damages resulting from that fraud. We also hold that there was some competent, credible evidence to support the amount of damages that was awarded. Accordingly, we affirm the judgment of the trial court.

The Business Relationship
{¶ 4} Imperial is a chemical distribution company owned by Parker. Imperial's only customer is International Paper ("IP"). Capital is a commercial lender owned and operated by Robert Setzer. Capital provided two types of financing to Imperial: it factored accounts receivable and provided purchase-order advances.

{¶ 5} When Capital factored accounts receivable for a customer, it purchased invoices that were due to the customer from account debtors. In the factoring relationship at issue here, Capital purchased invoices that were due to Imperial from IP. Capital would advance 80% of the face amount of each invoice to Imperial and wait for payment from IP. Capital notified IP of the factoring relationship and directed IP to make checks payable to Imperial but to send the payments to Capital's lockbox in Columbus, Ohio. When Capital received payment, it would deduct the 80% it had advanced and its fees, which were based on the amount advanced and the number of days the account was outstanding, and then remit any difference to Imperial.

{¶ 6} With purchase-order advances, Capital would simply advance money to Imperial so that it could purchase inventory to sell to IP. When Imperial would receive purchase-order invoices from IP, Imperial would transfer the invoices to Capital, who would use them to pay down the line of credit it had extended to Imperial. Thus, in purchase-order advances, Capital would eventually receive an invoice in the amount of the initial advance, but no new money would be advanced. This was somewhat confusing because purchase-order financing would be made to look like factoring accounts receivable in Capital's accounting records.

The Contracts
{¶ 7} There is considerable dispute about the formation and authenticity of the contracts that formed the relationship between Capital and Parker's businesses. Because of that dispute, we note that Capital had previously factored accounts receivable for Imperial Building Cleaning Services, Inc., another company owned by Parker. In order for Parker to have entered into that previous relationship, he had to execute a personal guaranty, a factoring agreement, an Exhibit B (a schedule of commissions and charges), and an Exhibit C (an acknowledgement and representation regarding misdirected payments). Setzer testified that Parker had to execute the same documents to enter into the relationship with Capital at issue here.

{¶ 8} Before entering into that business relationship, Setzer informed Parker that he would have to incorporate Imperial. On the date of the execution of the contracts, Parker provided Setzer with a filed copy of the articles of incorporation for Parker Enterprises Imperial Distribution, Inc. ("Enterprises"). Because there were some invoices that predated the existence of Enterprises that Parker wanted to finance, Capital required that Parker execute two factoring agreements: one on behalf of Troy Parker, d/b/a Imperial, and one on behalf of Enterprises. Setzer and John Hopper, a Capital employee, both testified that Parker executed three original agreements for each company name. One of the originals was for Capital's file, one was for Parker's file, and one was to file with the Ohio Secretary of State pursuant to the Uniform Commercial Code ("UCC"). Setzer and Hopper also testified that Parker had executed a personal guaranty on behalf of Enterprises. But Parker denied executing (1) a guaranty on behalf of Enterprises; (2) Exhibit B and C to the Enterprises factoring agreement; and (3) a factoring agreement on behalf of Imperial.

{¶ 9} Unfortunately, no originals of the contracts or the guaranty were produced at trial. Setzer testified that Capital had been unable to produce the original factoring agreements and guaranty because Parker had stolen them from Setzer's office. Setzer testified that Parker had been left alone in Setzer's office with the original files for approximately five minutes during a business meeting in the fall of 1999. After Parker had left the office, the originals could not be found. Setzer testified that he had employees search the offices and their cars for the original contracts. Setzer and Hopper testified that this was the first time in the 12-year history of the company that an original file had been missing. Parker was unable to produce originals of the agreements because, according to his testimony, a fire at his warehouse on December 31, 1999, had destroyed all of his records.

{¶ 10} Capital did produce a copy of the Enterprises factoring agreement and the guaranty signed by Parker that it had found in another file. Capital also produced a copy of the Imperial factoring agreement, which it had obtained from the Ohio Secretary of State. This copy had originally listed the customer as Enterprises, but that had been crossed out and in its place "Parker d/b/a Imperial" had been typed. Hopper testified that Capital had employed a company called NCS to make its UCC filings, and that, in order to save money, he had only given a copy of the Enterprises agreement to NCS to file with the secretary of state. After NCS informed him that Enterprises did not exist or was not yet registered, Hopper authorized NCS to cross out Enterprises as the customer and type in "Parker d/b/a Imperial" in its place. Hopper explained that since there was an original of the "Parker d/b/a Imperial" agreement in Capital's file and because there was a power of attorney in both agreements, he thought the change would be acceptable.

{¶ 11} Parker produced a copy of the Enterprises factoring agreement and a copy of the personal guaranty on behalf of Enterprises. (Parker had received a copy of the factoring agreement from Setzer during a previous business meeting.) Parker admitted that he had signed a factoring agreement on behalf of Enterprises, but he could not indicate which of the copies produced at trial bore an actual copy of his original signature.

{¶ 12}

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2004 Ohio 3896, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/capital-plus-v-parker-enterprises-unpublished-decision-7-23-2004-ohioctapp-2004.