Conti v. Fid. Bank (In re NC & VA Warranty Co.)
This text of 594 B.R. 316 (Conti v. Fid. Bank (In re NC & VA Warranty Co.)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, M.D. North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
BENJAMIN A. KAHN, UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY JUDGE
This Adversary Proceeding is before the Court on the Motion for Summary Judgment and Memorandum in Support, ECF No. 178 ("Fidelity's Brief"), filed by Defendant Fidelity Bank ("Fidelity") and the Motion for Summary Judgment, ECF No. 184 ("Dealers' Motion for Summary Judgment"), filed by Defendant Dealers Assurance Company ("Dealers") (collectively, the "Motions for Summary Judgment"), Dealers' Memorandum of Law in Support of Motion for Summary Judgment, ECF No. 185 ("Dealers' Brief"), Fidelity's Reply in Support of Summary Judgment, ECF No. 196 (Fidelity's Reply), and Dealers' Reply Memorandum in Support of Motion for Summary Judgment, ECF No. 197 (Dealers' Reply). For the reasons set forth herein, the Motions for Summary Judgment will be denied.
Jurisdiction and Authority
The Court has jurisdiction over the subject matter of this proceeding pursuant to
Procedural History
NC & VA Warranty Co., Inc. ("NCVA" or "Debtor") commenced the underlying bankruptcy case by filing a voluntary petition for relief under chapter 7 on January 7, 2015. Plaintiff serves as the duly appointed chapter 7 trustee under
Fidelity raises several defenses, including that Debtor, as grantor of the trust, could not have suffered any damages because the trust funds that Fidelity represented it originally received were misappropriated long before Fidelity became trustee. Fidelity further contends that Debtor authorized all of the actions that it undertook through express authority given to the bank on behalf of Debtor by the principal of the fraud and Debtor's agent, Tray Thomas. Finally, Fidelity argues that any claims in tort are barred by North Carolina's economic loss rule.
Dealers argues that it is entitled to summary judgment on Plaintiff's breach of contract claim because Plaintiff's claim is barred by the statute of limitations and there is no evidence it breached the contracts or caused Debtor any damages. Dealers also seeks summary judgment on its affirmative claims against the estate for Debtor's breach of those same contracts, or alternatively, unjust enrichment. In the Court's prior Amendment Opinion, the Court denied Dealers' motion to dismiss the remaining breach of contract claim. Amendment Op. 28-33. Applying the standards under Rule 12(b)(6), the Court denied Dealers' motion because the Court previously permitted Plaintiff to amend the Complaint over Dealers' objection that the amendment was futile and because the allegations in the Amended Complaint were sufficient to invoke equitable estoppel against Dealers' assertion of the statute of limitations for purposes of the motion to dismiss. Dealers now argues that the record at summary judgment establishes that its defense based on the statute of limitations is not subject to equitable estoppel, and that Plaintiff's breach of contract claim is time barred.
Plaintiff timely responded to the Motions for Summary Judgment. ECF Nos. 191, 192. The Court conducted a hearing on the Motions and took the matters under advisement. The Motions are ripe for determination.
Factual Background4
Fidelity Bank, as trustee, agreed to take possession of over four million dollars in *326trust to ensure the payment of warranty claims by NCVA's customers or reimbursement of Dealers, and to return the balance of funds to NCVA. Fidelity represented to Dealers and NCVA that it had received those funds, and over the next three years issued ongoing statements reflecting its receipt of the original funds and its continued receipt of further funds into trust that it did not in fact receive, all while failing to disclose to NCVA that it did not hold any trust funds in custody, and charging NCVA fees for fiduciary custodial services that it did not provide. Among other claims for relief, Plaintiff alleges that Fidelity's actions and inactions as a fiduciary abdicated its responsibilities as trustee, breached its contract, breached its fiduciary duties, and facilitated the concealment and continued perpetration of a fraud against Debtor.
Ronnie Thomas was the president and sole shareholder of NCVA.5 Fidelity's Br. ¶ 5. His son, Tray Thomas, owned and controlled Marbury Advisors ("Marbury"), an unregistered investment adviser. Id.; Dep. Ex. 325, at 1.
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BENJAMIN A. KAHN, UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY JUDGE
This Adversary Proceeding is before the Court on the Motion for Summary Judgment and Memorandum in Support, ECF No. 178 ("Fidelity's Brief"), filed by Defendant Fidelity Bank ("Fidelity") and the Motion for Summary Judgment, ECF No. 184 ("Dealers' Motion for Summary Judgment"), filed by Defendant Dealers Assurance Company ("Dealers") (collectively, the "Motions for Summary Judgment"), Dealers' Memorandum of Law in Support of Motion for Summary Judgment, ECF No. 185 ("Dealers' Brief"), Fidelity's Reply in Support of Summary Judgment, ECF No. 196 (Fidelity's Reply), and Dealers' Reply Memorandum in Support of Motion for Summary Judgment, ECF No. 197 (Dealers' Reply). For the reasons set forth herein, the Motions for Summary Judgment will be denied.
Jurisdiction and Authority
The Court has jurisdiction over the subject matter of this proceeding pursuant to
Procedural History
NC & VA Warranty Co., Inc. ("NCVA" or "Debtor") commenced the underlying bankruptcy case by filing a voluntary petition for relief under chapter 7 on January 7, 2015. Plaintiff serves as the duly appointed chapter 7 trustee under
Fidelity raises several defenses, including that Debtor, as grantor of the trust, could not have suffered any damages because the trust funds that Fidelity represented it originally received were misappropriated long before Fidelity became trustee. Fidelity further contends that Debtor authorized all of the actions that it undertook through express authority given to the bank on behalf of Debtor by the principal of the fraud and Debtor's agent, Tray Thomas. Finally, Fidelity argues that any claims in tort are barred by North Carolina's economic loss rule.
Dealers argues that it is entitled to summary judgment on Plaintiff's breach of contract claim because Plaintiff's claim is barred by the statute of limitations and there is no evidence it breached the contracts or caused Debtor any damages. Dealers also seeks summary judgment on its affirmative claims against the estate for Debtor's breach of those same contracts, or alternatively, unjust enrichment. In the Court's prior Amendment Opinion, the Court denied Dealers' motion to dismiss the remaining breach of contract claim. Amendment Op. 28-33. Applying the standards under Rule 12(b)(6), the Court denied Dealers' motion because the Court previously permitted Plaintiff to amend the Complaint over Dealers' objection that the amendment was futile and because the allegations in the Amended Complaint were sufficient to invoke equitable estoppel against Dealers' assertion of the statute of limitations for purposes of the motion to dismiss. Dealers now argues that the record at summary judgment establishes that its defense based on the statute of limitations is not subject to equitable estoppel, and that Plaintiff's breach of contract claim is time barred.
Plaintiff timely responded to the Motions for Summary Judgment. ECF Nos. 191, 192. The Court conducted a hearing on the Motions and took the matters under advisement. The Motions are ripe for determination.
Factual Background4
Fidelity Bank, as trustee, agreed to take possession of over four million dollars in *326trust to ensure the payment of warranty claims by NCVA's customers or reimbursement of Dealers, and to return the balance of funds to NCVA. Fidelity represented to Dealers and NCVA that it had received those funds, and over the next three years issued ongoing statements reflecting its receipt of the original funds and its continued receipt of further funds into trust that it did not in fact receive, all while failing to disclose to NCVA that it did not hold any trust funds in custody, and charging NCVA fees for fiduciary custodial services that it did not provide. Among other claims for relief, Plaintiff alleges that Fidelity's actions and inactions as a fiduciary abdicated its responsibilities as trustee, breached its contract, breached its fiduciary duties, and facilitated the concealment and continued perpetration of a fraud against Debtor.
Ronnie Thomas was the president and sole shareholder of NCVA.5 Fidelity's Br. ¶ 5. His son, Tray Thomas, owned and controlled Marbury Advisors ("Marbury"), an unregistered investment adviser. Id.; Dep. Ex. 325, at 1. NCVA provided vehicle service contracts and warranty programs to purchasers of motor vehicles, and was responsible for paying claims under these agreements directly to the insured consumer. Dealers' Br. ¶ 1. Dealers was in the business of re-insuring motor vehicle warranty obligations of the issuers of such warranties, like NCVA.
NCVA and Dealers entered into an Insurance Agreement, ECF No. 88-2, on August 9, 2001.
As a condition to providing re-insurance, the Insurance Agreement required NCVA to maintain a letter of credit or a trust account for the benefit of Dealers.
*327
From its inception, and despite the terms of the US Bank Trust Agreement, US Bank began authorizing wire transfers out of the Trust Account into Marbury's account at Interactive Brokers. Dealers' Br. ¶ 7. Despite having permitted the transfer of trust funds out of the trust account since its inception, NCVA, US Bank, and Marbury did not enter into a Control Agreement ("Control Agreement") until March 31, 2009. Dep. Exs. 3. The Control Agreement permitted Marbury to hold the Trust Funds on behalf of US Bank as trustee in a segregated account in the name of "U.S. Bank National Association, as Trustee for N.C. & V.A. Warranty, Inc. and Dealers Assurance Company Trust Funds and Sub-accounts." Control Agreement ¶ 1. The Control Agreement further provided that US Bank would retain legal title to all assets in the account.
As a result of Borchardt's objection, US Bank sent a letter purportedly addressed to Ronnie Thomas9 and Tray Thomas on July 14, 2009, stating that Dealers contended that the account at Interactive Brokers was not in compliance with the requirements of the US Bank Trust Agreement,10 and that it had requested that Tray Thomas return the funds to US Bank. Dep. Ex. 31. Ten days later, and three years after U.S. Bank began authorizing transfers from the US Bank Trust Account to Interactive Brokers, US Bank sent another similarly addressed letter, admitting that it had not contacted Interactive Brokers directly about the status of the trust account purportedly in its name until that day. Dep. Ex. 36. Having then done so, US Bank learned to its "amazement" that the account was not in US Bank's name.
As a result of the termination of the US Bank Trust Agreement, NCVA and Dealers entered into a new Trust Agreement, ECF Nos. 88-5, 88-6 ("Trust Agreement"), *330with Fidelity in November of 2009.11 Fidelity's Br. ¶ 35. Prior to entering into the Trust Agreement, Ronnie Thomas sent a letter to Jonathan Perry, Trust Officer and director of Fidelity's trust department, providing: "Tray Thomas is authorized to receive information from the Trustee, provide information to the Trustee, give direction to the Trustee, and is an authorized signatory for NCVA Warranty Inc." Dep. Ex. 160.12 No control agreement was executed with respect to the Fidelity Trust Account. After the Trust Agreement was entered, and after Fidelity represented it had received over $3.4 million in trust as custodian, NCVA provided further corporate resolutions identifying Tray Thomas as a vice president of NCVA, giving him signature authority over the deposit accounts with the bank, and ratifying all actions previously taken by Tray Thomas to the same extent given in the resolutions as "if said authority [in the resolutions] had been in effect prior to this meeting ...." Dep. Ex. 161; see also Dep. Exs. 162-66 (authorizing, inter alia, Tray Thomas to direct fund transfers on behalf of NCVA). Nothing in these documents purported to modify the Trust Agreement, nor could NCVA have done so unilaterally.
At the time that it agreed to act as trustee, Fidelity only recently had begun handling trust accounts, and none of its officers or board members had prior trust experience. Willis Dep. 21-24; Perry Dep. 31. Fidelity hired Perry as its trust department director, although Perry had only a "cursory" undergraduate-level education in trust administration and no prior work experience or training in that area. Perry Dep. 13, 19-20. Perry had no ability to review the Trust Agreement, which he executed on behalf of the bank, to determine whether the bank was in compliance with its obligations under the agreement or applicable law, nor did he do anything to confirm that the bank had properly taken possession of the trust funds as required by the Trust Agreement and as it represented that it had.
*331Dealers similarly executed the Trust Agreement. The record is unclear which version of the agreement was executed by each of the parties, and the Court may not make such a determination in the context of summary judgment. Borchardt contends that he would not have executed the version represented by Dep. Ex. 5, but does not purport to have a specific recollection of which version Dealers executed. Borchardt Dep. 245-48. The signature on both Dep. Exs. 4 and 5 purports to be that of Robin Ratchford's, Dealers' prior president, on behalf of Dealers. The version of the agreement reflected in Dep. Ex. 5 required Fidelity to take possession of the Trust Funds14 "for the sole use and benefit of the Beneficiary and Grantor,"15 and to maintain the funds at "all times separate and distinct from all other assets of the Trustee or any other person or entity at an office or branch of the Trustee in the United States." Dep. Ex. 5, § 1.(a). This version of the Trust Agreement permitted withdrawals by Dealers only in the event of a default by NCVA under the insurance agreement. In the absence of such notice given by Dealers to Fidelity, Fidelity was required to "allow no substitution or withdrawal of any Asset from the Trust Account."
Despite the obligations imposed on Fidelity both as a fiduciary and under the terms of its Trust Agreement, Tray Thomas and Perry agreed that Tray Thomas would continue to hold the funds and all further remittances to the trust at Interactive Brokers under the management of Marbury Advisors.19 Fidelity's records required the bank to allocate the funds to "All Income," with 95-100% in "Fixed Income" and 0-5% "Cash." Dep. Ex. 136. Fidelity's internal documentation further reflects that it was to "[t]ake custody of short term U.S. Treasuries," and that the "client's expectations with the account" were for Fidelity to "[p]rovide custody services and provide quarterly statements to insurer." Id.; Dep. Ex. 137. Fidelity's Trust Account statements, which were issued to Dealers and made available through the portal to NCVA, reflect a deposit into trust of $3,985,000 on December 31, 2009 and continuing deposits into the Trust Account thereafter. Dep. Ex. 400. The statements represent that the funds were held by Fidelity.
In fact, by the time Fidelity became trustee in 2009, most of the Trust Funds that were previously transferred from the US Bank Trust Account to the Marbury Advisors account had been lost or transferred out of the Marbury Advisors account with the exception of approximately $202,745.05.20 Fidelity's Br. ¶ 24; Ward Aff. 1-2, ECF No. 179-2; ECF No. 180 ("Smith Report"), at 7. For more than two years, Fidelity continued to record in its account records putative deposits into trust that it never received, reflect these fictitious receipts in its online statements and report them to Dealers, and continued to charge NCVA fees for custodial services that it never provided. See, e.g., Willis Dep. 26, 180-82; Dep. Exs. 400, 404.
To disguise the fact that the Trust Funds were not at Interactive Brokers, Tray Thomas provided Perry with falsified Interactive Brokers account statements reflecting *333that the Trust Funds were held there in an account under Fidelity's name as custodian for NCVA. Sierer Decl., Ex. 2-8.21 During Fidelity's 2012 investigation into these events, Interactive Brokers confirmed that the statements provided by Tray Thomas were falsified.
These falsified statements were the only bases on which Fidelity accounted for the Trust Funds under the Trust Agreement. Perry Dep. 39-47. In a procedure that Fidelity itself refers to as "shadow accounting," Fidelity input the information from the falsified portable document format (.pdf) statements directly into Fidelity's own account records and statements without any communication with Interactive Brokers or due diligence by anyone at Fidelity.
This arrangement and practice did not exist with any other trust customer of the bank.
*334Under the Trust Agreement, Fidelity was required to provide NCVA with a statement of assets held in trust at the inception of the Trust Agreement and at the end of every calendar quarter thereafter. Trust Agreement § 7.(e).24 Fidelity did not send written statements to NCVA, but merely provided Tray Thomas with online access to view the Trust Account balance at any time via its electronic statement vendor, Accutech. Fidelity's Br. ¶ 54; Henderson Aff. ¶ 14, ECF No. 179-4. Separately, Fidelity provided annual written confirmations to Dealers' auditors, signed by a representative of Fidelity, confirming that significant Trust Funds continued to be deposited and held in the Trust Account. ECF Nos. 88-7, 88-8, 88-9.25 Fidelity sent these confirmation statements to Dealers in 2010, 2011, and on March 6, 2012.
Two years after Fidelity first represented that it received the initial funds and after Fidelity had continuously represented the further receipt and custody of additional trust funds from the proceeds of NCVA's ongoing sales of warranties, Mr. Perry first attempted to verify the existence of the Trust Funds, but did so only by contacting Tray Thomas. On June 29, 2011, Perry sent an email to Tray Thomas, requesting that Thomas provide Fidelity with a login and password for "our account(s) with Interactive Brokers" because the Fidelity auditors "were not a fan of the accounts we are doing for you and at least want me to be able to see the accounts without having to get the statements via Marbury." Dep. Ex. 346.
After several further and unfruitful inquiries during July, 2011, see Dep. Ex. 351, Perry stated the following in an August 11, 2011 email to Tray Thomas:
In the face of the Bernard Madoff scheme, our consultants are worried about the legitimacy of what is happening in these accounts. They are concerned that we are solely serving as a conduit to fraudulent activity. They are saying that we solely are getting snapshots of what the account looks like from your firm and not directly from [Interactive Brokers ("IB") ], therefore these reports could be fabricated. They were irate when I explained that we were not in fact the owners of the account at IB, that these accounts are under Marbury's umbrella, and we have no way of accessing information on these accounts for reconcilement purposes unless we receive the information through Marbury. They really think we just receive wires in and send them out to a location that has nothing to do with IB. They think *335we are being used as a fraudulent conduit, basically. They really flipped when I told them that I have had zero contact with our end clients on any of these accounts.
At this point, I am being told that I need to close these accounts by the end of next week if I can't get some process in place where I can do a random daily check on the assets that are in the various accounts independent of anything that Marbury produces. For example, we have two custodians that we use currently. Each of those either has straight through data feed to our trust accounting system that we can reconcile with on a daily basis, or we can go online and view the assets held in our custody account with view only access. They were not satisfied with the plan we came up with yesterday where you may be able to pull off the transactions in the accounts, export them to excel, and then send them to me. They want me to be able to do an independent reconciliation of the accounts at any time independent of anything the [sic] Marbury, or you, have any input on.
Dep. Ex. 332. Despite indicating that Fidelity would close the account if it could not verify the existence of the assets by the following week, Fidelity did not close the account. Perry Dep. 167. Perry informed the bank's CEO, Mary Willis, the internal audit committee, and the bank's trust consultants of these events.
Instead of closing the account, Tray Thomas mollified Perry in a telephone conversation by assuring him that Thomas would find some way to verify the account to provide support for the information in the statements that Fidelity was issuing to Dealers and NCVA through shadow accounting.
Perry sent further emails to Tray Thomas in October, November, and December of 2011, threatening to close the accounts if Fidelity could not "access [the custodial] account at any time" so that Fidelity could "independently reconcile the assets in the accounts at any time," Dep. Exs. 333, 357, 358, but these emails similarly failed to succeed in obtaining any documentation of the affirmative representations that the bank continued to make as trustee. There is no evidence that Perry or anyone else at Fidelity ever attempted to contact anyone else at NCVA during this time, including Ronnie Thomas. On December 14, 2011, Perry sent an email to Willis, telling her that he was going to terminate the trust relationship because he could not "get comfortable with the arrangement with Marbury Advisors and not being able to independently verify the assets in the accounts." Dep. Ex. 365. Perry justified this purported decision because he did not "want to pay out more money to attorneys than we are making on the accounts."
In January of 2012, five months after conceding that the bank's own auditors believed it was being used as a conduit for *336fraud based on information known to Perry since the inception of the account, and with the account still open and operating, Fidelity continuing to charge fees for custodial services that it did not provide,26 and continuing to falsely and baselessly report the existence, receipt, and maintenance of trust funds that it did not have, Perry again wrote Tray Thomas an email stating that Fidelity had "marked all of the accounts 'pending closed' as we have an FDIC audit starting on Monday," and indicating that Fidelity's internal auditors were concerned that Fidelity did not have "custody of the assets or appropriate accounting controls." ECF No. 193-27, at 9.
Fidelity did not formally close the Trust Account until another three months later in March of 2012, and ceased contact with Tray Thomas in April. Fidelity's Br. ¶¶ 58-59; Ex. 413; ECF No. 193-28, at 4. Despite the knowledge of Fidelity's internal auditors, trust consultants, management, and employees that Fidelity had been shadow accounting the Trust Account with no direct access to the funds or any verification of the existence and control of the funds for over two years, Fidelity continued to operate under the Trust Agreement through this time, maintaining the online access to the shadow-accounted Trust Account balance and sending a confirmation statement to Dealers as late as March 6, 2012, reflecting it was holding $3,851,000 in Trust Funds as required by the Trust Agreement. Dep. Ex. 338. During this time, NCVA continued to sell warranties to customers, collect the premiums, and believe that the required reserves were being deposited and held in a custodial account as required and as reported by Fidelity as trustee.
Standard of Review
Summary judgment is appropriate when the matters presented to the Court "show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law." Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(c) ; Fed. R. Bankr. P. 7056 ; Celotex Corp. v. Catrett,
The Court may consider any evidence in the record or submitted by the parties if it would be possible to introduce the evidence at trial. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(c)(2)
*337("A party may object that the material cited to support or dispute a fact cannot be presented in a form that would be admissible into evidence."); see also Celotex, 477 U.S. at 324,
Discussion
The Amended Complaint asserts eight remaining claims for relief against Fidelity as follows: (1) conspiracy; (2) breach of contract; (3) breach of fiduciary duty; (4) negligence; (5) actual fraud; (6) constructive fraud;27 (7) unfair and deceptive trade practices; and (8) aiding and abetting conversion. Plaintiff asserts a claim for breach of contract as the sole remaining claim for relief against Dealers. Amended Compl. ¶¶ 51-84. Fidelity moves for summary judgment in its favor on all claims, asserting that: (1) the record demonstrates that any actions by Fidelity were neither the cause in fact nor proximate cause of any injury to NCVA; (2) it cannot be liable for breach of contract due to impossibility of performance; (3) the non-contract claims are barred by the economic loss rule; (4) the actions of Tray Thomas as NCVA's agent bar any recovery by the Trustee; (5) the fraud claim should be dismissed because NCVA did not actually or justifiably rely on any misrepresentations or omissions by Fidelity; (6) North Carolina does not recognize a cause of action for aiding and abetting conversion; (7) the constructive fraud claim should be dismissed because the record does not indicate any benefit to Fidelity arising out of its alleged breaches of fiduciary duties; and (8) the civil conspiracy claim must be dismissed because it is a dependent and derivative claim, and no other claims should survive. Dealers moves for summary judgment on the surviving breach of contract claim against it, as well as its two counterclaims as further reflected in its proof of claim against NCVA under the same contract. Dealers contends that it is entitled to summary judgment because the Trustee's breach of contract claim is barred by the statute of limitations, and NCVA's knowledge through its agent Tray Thomas and Dealers' lack of knowledge of the transfer of the trust funds out of trust defeat any claim of estoppel by the Plaintiff. Dealers further contends that, even if Dealers is estopped from asserting the statute of limitations, it did not in fact breach the contract or cause NCVA any damages. The Court will discuss seriatim each of the bases on which the defendants assert in their respective briefs that they are entitled to judgment as a matter of law, beginning with Fidelity. Before reaching the respective bases on which Fidelity and Dealers seek summary judgment, however, *338the Court will address the overlapping arguments made by Fidelity and Dealers regarding the knowledge and authority of Tray Thomas and his status as NCVA's agent.
Tray Thomas's Authority and Knowledge as Agent of NCVA
Dealers and Fidelity, see Dealers' Br. 2-7, 16-18; Fidelity's Br., passim; Fidelity's Reply 4-7, spend significant portions of their arguments contending that the Plaintiff's claims fail because Tray Thomas was NCVA's authorized agent and Ronnie Thomas's individual attorney in fact based on a 2002 financial power of attorney. See, e.g., Dealers' Br. ¶ 6; Fidelity's Br. ¶ 30; Dep. Ex. 214. Based on this agency and authority, Dealers and Fidelity argue, variously, that; (1) Tray Thomas's knowledge is imputed both to Ronnie Thomas and to NCVA; (2) NCVA did not in fact rely or reasonably rely on any of Fidelity's misrepresentations; and (3) NCVA, through its agent Tray Thomas, authorized the Trust Funds to be removed from a custodial trust and NCVA was in the best position to discover the truth. The record in this case does not support any of these contentions for purposes of summary judgment.
Prior to entering the Trust Agreement, Ronnie Thomas sent a letter to Fidelity establishing that Tray had authority "to receive information from the Trustee, provide information to the Trustee, give direction to the Trustee, and is an authorized signatory for NCVA Warranty Inc." Dep. Ex. 160. Thereafter, Ronnie Thomas, on behalf of NCVA, entered the Trust Agreement with Fidelity that expressly required the trust funds to remain in trust, under the custodial control of Fidelity as trustee, and segregated from other funds. Dep. Ex. 5, § 1.(a). Nothing in this authorization, nor in the corporate resolutions that followed it, authorized Tray Thomas to modify the terms of the Trust Agreement to which Fidelity subsequently agreed, or to authorize the transfer of funds out of trust to a non-custodial account.28
*339Generally, in North Carolina, an agent may contractually obligate his principal in three situations: 1) when the agent acts within the scope of his actual authority; 2) when the agent acts within the scope of his apparent authority and the third-party does not have reason to believe that the agent is exceeding his actual authority; and 3) when the principal ratifies the agent's previously unauthorized actions.
*340Wachovia Bank of N.C., N.A. v. Bob Dunn Jaguar, Inc.,
Similarly, Fidelity and Dealers cannot successfully contend at this stage that Tray Thomas had apparent authority on behalf of NCVA to authorize the transfer of the funds to an account beyond the control of Fidelity as trustee. "Apparent authority 'is that authority which the principal has held the agent out as possessing or which he has permitted the agent to represent that he possess.' " Bob Dunn Jaguar,
Third parties who deal with agents must act in good faith and investigate where there is a reasonable basis upon which to believe that the agent is acting beyond the scope of his actual authority. As explained by the North Carolina Supreme Court:
In the Restatement of the Law of Agency, 2d, § 166, it is said, 'A person with notice of a limitation of an agent's authority cannot subject the principal to liability upon a transaction with the agent if he should know that the agent is acting improperly.' Comment (a) upon this section of the Restatement reads: 'If a person has information which would lead a reasonable man to believe that the agent is violating the orders of the principal or that the principal would not wish the agent to act under the circumstances known to the agent, he cannot subject the principal to liability. Any substantial departure by the agent from the usual methods of conducting business is ordinarily sufficient warning of lack of authorization.' In 2A C.J.S. Agency § 166, it is said, 'Any apparent authority that might otherwise exist vanishes in the presence of the third person's knowledge, actual or constructive, of what the agent is, and what he is not empowered to do for his principal.'
Lucas v. Li'l Gen. Stores,
'A third person dealing with a known agent may not act negligently with regard to the extent of the agent's authority or blindly trust the agent's statements in such respect. Rather, he must use reasonable diligence and prudence to ascertain whether the agent is acting and dealing with him within the scope of his powers. The mere opinion of an agent as to the extent of his powers, or his mere assumption of authority without foundation, will not bind the principal; and a third person dealing with a known agent must bear the burden of determining for himself, by the exercise of reasonable diligence and prudence, the existence or nonexistence of the agent's authority to act in the premises.'
Fleming v. Emp'rs Mut. Liab. Ins. Co. of Wis.,
As stated above, both Fidelity (Dep. Ex. 5, § 1) and Dealers (Dep. Ex. 4, §§ 1(a), (2)(a) ) were aware of the contractual requirement that the funds be held under the control of Fidelity as trustee, unless withdrawn at the direction of Dealers for one of the limited purposes set forth in the Trust Agreement. See Dep. Ex. 4, § 3. Where a principal specifically and expressly limits his agent's actual authority in communications with a third-party, the third-party cannot rely on general agency principles to expand the authority of the agent or to override the prior express limitation given by the principal. See Bob Dunn Jaguar,
Further, there is ample evidence in the record from which a trier of fact could determine that both Dealers and Fidelity knew or should have known that Tray Thomas was acting outside the scope of his actual authority and against the wishes of his principal. The relationship between Tray Thomas and Perry reflected a substantial departure from the usual methods of conducting business, and a reasonable jury could find that this substantial departure provided Fidelity and Dealers with sufficient notice of Tray Thomas's lack of authorization. Borchardt stated that he allowed Tray Thomas to control the trust funds even though he did not understand what Tray Thomas was doing. Borchardt Dep. 169-71.30 Borchardt specifically faulted *342Fidelity for failing to follow usual bank practices by permitting the funds to leave the bank's control. Id. at 256 ("Trustees all the time, when there's anything outside the ordinary, simply ask for our consent or check with us so they're held harmless. Whenever they take any external function and put it outside their scope of potential liability, they ask for us to indemnify and consent to it.").
Tray Thomas's actions also were outside the usual methods of conducting business from the bank's perspective. Perry testified that Fidelity's relationship with Tray Thomas was a substantial departure from the bank's usual methods and practices, conceding that Fidelity did not have any other trust account where it engaged in shadow accounting without direct access to the purported custodial account. Perry Dep. 39.
Perry's and Borchardt's written correspondence is further evidence that both Fidelity and Dealers possessed information that a trier of fact could find would lead a reasonable businessperson to believe that Tray Thomas was violating the orders of NCVA and that NCVA would not have wished him to remove the funds from the custody of Fidelity under the circumstances. Perry's own email tacitly concedes that the bank should have been aware that Tray Thomas was acting outside the scope of his authority, describing the reaction of the bank's trust consultants as follows:
They were irate when I explained that we were not in fact the owners of the account at IB, that these accounts are under Marbury's umbrella, and we have no way of accessing information on these accounts for reconcilement purposes unless we receive the information through Marbury. They really think we just receive wires in and send them out to a location that has nothing to do with IB. They think we are being used as a fraudulent conduit, basically.
Dep. Ex. 332. Borchardt sounded similar alarms in his internal May 30, 2009 email, in which he stated:
I have no doubt that Tray says the funds are held in trust, but they do not appear to be held by Wachovia or U.S. Bank's trust department. Shumpert's email indicates that the funds left the bank's physical control in January 2006 and I assume the same is true for all funds generated since then. This situation is no different than if Dealers Alliance, for example, were to wire several million dollars to my personal account against my pledge that I will hold the funds in trust and register any investments in Dealers Alliance's name. Of course I would always possess the power *343to move the assets out of Alliance's name, so I don't think anyone would be happy with that kind of arrangement. How do we know that the funds are really there? Bernie Madoff invested client funds for over 30 years and gave all of them investment statements, but it turns out that not a single investment was ever made. When we place the fund in the hands of an institutional trustee, we gain the comfort of knowing that the trust funds are protected.
Dep. Ex. 26. At a minimum, these statements and the other evidence in the record present material issues of fact regarding the nature, extent, and effect of Tray Thomas's agency which the Court will not determine at summary judgment. See Bob Dunn Jaguar,
Similarly, the knowledge of an agent is not imputed to his principal when he is acting outside the scope of his authority. Jenkins Bros. Shoe Co. v. G.V. Renfrow & Co.,
As it is the rule that whether the principal is bound by contracts entered into by the agent depends upon the nature and extent of the agency, so does the effect upon the principal of notice to the agent depend upon the same conditions. Hence, in order to determine whether the knowledge of the agent should be imputed to the principal, it becomes of primary importance to ascertain the exact scope and extent of the agency.
Ring Furniture Co. v. Bussell,
The knowledge of an agent also will not be imputed to his principal when he is acting in his own interest, has a motive for concealing the knowledge from his principal, or when he participates in fraud. See Sparks v. Union Tr. Co. of Shelby,
If the agent is so circumstanced as to make it his interest to withold [sic] information from his employer, then the rule that notice to him is notice to his principal, or the doctrine of imputed knowledge, does not apply. Stanford v. [A. F. Messick] Grocery Co.,143 N.C. 419 , 44 [55] S.E. 815 [ (1906) ], and Tiffany on Agency, 262, 263, where it is said: 'The principal is not bound by the knowledge of his agent when it would be against the agent's interest to inform him of the facts. Therefore, if the agent is engaged in perpetrating an independent fraud on his own account, knowledge of facts relating to the fraud will not be imputed to the principal.
Wilson Lumber & Milling v. Atkinson,
Fidelity's Motion for Summary Judgment
I. Causation
The element of causation for tortious conduct in North Carolina31 addresses whether a defendant's action or failure to act actually and proximately caused damage to the plaintiff. Lamm v. Bissette Realty, Inc.,
A. Actual Cause
As an initial matter, Fidelity inappropriately limits NCVA's asserted injury. Fidelity assumes that "[c]ause in fact in this case is a simple matter of timing. Alleged misconduct of a defendant cannot be the cause in fact of loss when the loss occurs years before the conduct." Fidelity's Br. § II.2.B.1; Fidelity's Reply 7 ("Whether due to the actions of Tray Thomas, NCVA, Dealers Assurance, Interactive Brokers, or U.S. Bank, or any combination of them, the trust funds were lost and the damage done long before Fidelity Bank became the purported trustee."). The record before the Court is insufficient to determine the full damage to Plaintiff resulting from Fidelity's breaches of its obligations. Nevertheless, over $200,000 remained in the Interactive Brokerage account when Fidelity obligated itself to take possession of all trust funds as trustee. Further, NCVA continued to sell warranties from 2009 until 2012, believing that it was remitting the required reserve amounts to Fidelity's custody, and relying on the insurance provided by Dealers as required by state law and on the custodial services of Fidelity as trustee of the Trust Funds, for which Plaintiff paid fees to Fidelity. Under these facts, NCVA's injury continued and grew after Fidelity became trustee.
Construing the facts in a light most favorable to the nonmoving party, Fidelity repeatedly breached duties owed to Dealers and Plaintiff by not taking custody of the Trust Funds as required by the Trust Agreement and state law, failing to disclose this fact, and specifically representing that it had custody of the Trust Funds among other breaches. Fidelity's breaches and failures actually caused Plaintiff to lose funds that were required to be, and should have been, entrusted from 2009 until 2012. Had Fidelity performed its due diligence in establishing the Trust Account by assuming the role of trustee and taking control of the remaining Trust Funds as agreed, there would have been no opportunity for Tray Thomas to abscond with those funds, which was the primary purpose of having the funds put in trust in the first place.
Similarly, had Fidelity furnished accurate information that the Trust Funds did not exist and Fidelity did not have control over the Trust Account, NCVA could have stopped the ongoing loss of revenues it believed were being placed in trust. Instead, Fidelity continued to represent to Dealers both the existence and its possession of the funds (and failed to disclose to NCVA otherwise), even after Perry conceded in writing that Fidelity could not "independently verify" the existence of Plaintiff's Trust Funds in December of 2011, two years after Fidelity assumed the role of trustee. In fact, four months later, Fidelity certified the availability of $4,327,974.21 as "[s]ecurities held by [Fidelity] for [Dealers'] account." Dep. Ex. 338.
The Wisconsin Supreme Court held a fiduciary liable for breaching its duties in an analogous case. In that case,
[Wells Fargo Bank,] during its tenure as trustee, ... became aware of a defect in a trust that it had not drafted. It did not reveal that defect to the grantor .... After [the grantor]'s death, the trust was subject to increased tax liability due to the drafting defect. [Plaintiff] sued Wells Fargo on behalf of [the grantor]'s estate, alleging several theories of liability. The circuit court concluded that *346Wells Fargo breached a duty to [the grantor], and the court of appeals affirmed.
Hatleberg v. Norwest Bank Wisconsin,
The court did not determine the agency issue. Id. ¶ 34,
Wells Fargo's potential duty under various theories: its duty as trustee, its duty as financial planner or advisor, and its duty under the Restatement (Second) of Torts to avoid negligent misrepresentations. Under any of these theories, Wells Fargo had a duty to ensure that the information it actually provided to [the grantor] was correct. Wells Fargo breached that duty by failing to exercise ordinary care; it told [the grantor] to continue contributing to the trust even though it knew the trust was defective for her objective.
Id. ¶ 41,
On the issue of causation, the court held that
both the causal link and resulting injury are clear; [the grantor]'s estate paid increased taxes due to Wells Fargo's failure to inform her of the deficiencies. Had it told her of the problem, [the grantor] could have remedied it in part by giving the beneficiaries a present interest in future gifts or by setting up a new trust.
Id. ¶ 41,
B. Proximate Cause
Liability may not be established solely on breach of a duty accompanied by actual cause of injury; there also must be a showing of proximate cause. King v. Allred,
[A] cause which in natural and continuous sequence, unbroken by any new and independent cause, produced the plaintiff's injuries, and without which the injuries would not have occurred, and one from which a person of ordinary prudence could have reasonably foreseen that such a result ... was probable under all the facts as they existed.
Hairston v. Alexander Tank & Equip. Co.,
*347'It is only in exceptional cases, in which reasonable minds cannot differ as to the foreseeability of injury, that a court should decide proximate cause as a matter of law. Proximate cause is ordinarily a question of fact for the jury, to be solved by the exercise of good common sense in consideration of the evidence of each particular case.'
Holt v. N.C. Dept. of Transp.,
Whether a defendant, exercising ordinary prudence, should have foreseen the plaintiff's injury is a question of reasonableness. See Adams v. Mills,
Fidelity's central contention is that Tray's intentional fraud was both unforeseeable and the sole proximate cause of any injury to NCVA. Fidelity argues that "the intentional misconduct on the part of a third party is, as a matter of law, unforeseeable when determining the proximate cause of a loss." Fidelity's Br. § II.B.2. Specifically, Fidelity contends that Tray Thomas's acts constitute such a new and independent cause as to "prevent the alleged acts and omissions of Fidelity from being the proximate cause of NCVA's loss."
The Court disagrees. Construing the record in a light most favorable to the Plaintiff, a reasonable fact-finder could conclude that Fidelity's failure to take possession of both the funds remaining at Interactive Brokers and the funds generated thereafter, its representation of the existence-and its possession-of the Trust Funds, and its failure to disclose suspected fraudulent activity, among any other breaches and failures, actually and proximately caused injury to Plaintiff.
Though "[a]n essential element of proximate cause is that the harm be foreseeable[,]" S. Watch Supply Co. v. Regal Chrysler-Plymouth, Inc.,
In assessing proximate cause, the critical inquiry is not the degree of intentionality of the act, but whether the intervening act was foreseeable. As explained by the North Carolina Supreme Court,
"An efficient intervening cause is a new proximate cause which breaks the connection with the original cause and becomes itself solely responsible for the result in question. It must be an independent force, entirely superseding the original action and rendering its effect in the causation remote. It is immaterial how many new elements or forces have *348been introduced, if the original cause remains active, the liability for its result is not shifted.... If, however, the intervening responsible cause be of such a nature that it would be unreasonable to expect a prudent [person] to anticipate its happening, [the defendant] will not be responsible for damage resulting solely from the intervention. The intervening cause may be culpable, intentional, or merely negligent."
Hairston v. Alexander Tank & Equip. Co.,
The case of Southern Watch Supply is analogous.
four cases of sample jewelry worth over $59,000 were stolen from [the car owner]'s automobile while he was calling on a customer .... A police investigation stated that the vehicle's trunk was opened with a key or similar device. The trunk was not pried open nor was the trunk lock broken.
Id. at 165,
a reasonably prudent dealer would know that with the correct serial numbers keys can be duplicated.
Taken in the light most favorable to plaintiff, th[e] evidence present[ed] a genuine issue of material fact as to whether defendant's negligence proximately caused the loss of the jewelry. Certainly, it is reasonably foreseeable that the unauthorized act of giving the serial numbers to the caller could have been the cause of the theft.
Id. at 166-67,
Similarly, a jury could find in this case that a reasonably prudent trustee would know that failing to provide custodial services of a trust's funds could cause a theft of those funds, and, as set forth above, Fidelity was aware of sufficient facts that a reasonable jury could find that it suspected that was exactly what was occurring. Yet Fidelity, as trustee, repeatedly failed to address the mounting evidence of fraud resulting from its failure to act as custodian of the Trust Funds. Instead, Perry emailed Tray Thomas reciting concerns of fraudulent activity without disclosing these concerns to NCVA or to Dealers. See Dep. Exs. 332, 333, 357, 358. Even these emails *349to Tray Thomas did not begin until 2011, more than two years after Fidelity assumed its role as trustee. From this record, a reasonable fact finder could conclude that Fidelity created the opportunity for Tray Thomas's conduct, a risk of harm to NCVA that Fidelity should have foreseen.32
Fidelity's reliance on Staton v. Brame,
Nothing in Staton supports the position that Fidelity's breaches of its fiduciary and contractual obligations to take and maintain custody and control of the trust assets as required by the Trust Agreement did not actually or proximately cause damages in this case, and, for the reasons set forth above, there is sufficient evidence in the record from which a trier of fact could conclude that there was the requisite causation. Therefore, Fidelity's motion for summary judgment based on causation will be denied.
II. Impossibility of Performance
Fidelity contends that it is entitled to summary judgment on Plaintiff's claim for breach of contract under the doctrine of impossibility of performance. In support of this affirmative defense, Fidelity asserts that it was unable to perform under the contract because the funds were "lost or stolen years before Fidelity became trustee" and "the loss of the funds happened through no fault of Fidelity." Fidelity Br. § II.C.
As Fidelity concedes, contractual impossibility is closely related to the concept of causation.
As set forth above, a reasonable jury could find that Fidelity was not without fault, and that the loss of the additional funds, which Fidelity should have taken into custody from and after November 30, 2009, was foreseeable. Specifically, and without limitation to any damages arising from Fidelity's failure to take possession of funds generated on and after its execution of the Trust Agreement, Fidelity argues that Plaintiff has not come forward with sufficient evidence of the steps NCVA could have taken to recover the funds remaining at Interactive Brokers at the time Fidelity initially agreed to take possession *351of the trust assets if Fidelity had not misrepresented that it possessed the funds. See, e.g., Fidelity's Br. ¶ 64. On the contrary, to the extent that Fidelity breached its contractual obligation to take possession of those funds and appropriately and timely has raised the affirmative defense of impossibility, the burden of proof at trial will be on Fidelity to demonstrate that, through no fault of its own, it could not have taken possession of the remaining funds and that the impossibility of taking possession of any of the putative Trust Funds was unforeseeable at the time it executed the agreement. Therefore, the Court will deny summary judgment based on impossibility of performance.
III. Economic Loss Rule
Relying on this Court's prior dismissal of the extra-contractual claims against Dealers under the economic loss rule, Fidelity argues that "the purported trust agreement defines Fidelity's duties, and the limitations upon its duties, and it expressly states that Fidelity has no duties beyond those stated in the contract. As such, all other causes of action should be dismissed." Fidelity's Br. § II.D, at 25. As this Court noted in its prior opinion, Dealers owed no fiduciary or other extra-contractual duties to NCVA under the Insurance Agreement or due to a special relationship of trust and confidence, and Plaintiff did not assert any actions by Dealers that breached a legal duty other than those which Dealers owed under the agreement. NC & VA Warranty Co., Inc. v. Fidelity Bank,
In contrast, the gravamen of Plaintiff's claims against Fidelity do not arise solely from those duties set forth in the contract. As a trustee and fiduciary,35 Fidelity was saddled with additional, extra-contractual duties, including a duty of loyalty; see Wachovia Bank & Tr. Co. v. Johnston,
Construing the record in a light most favorable to Plaintiff, Fidelity not only failed to take custody of the Trust Funds and reserves as required by the contract and statute, but Fidelity also repeatedly *352failed to disclose that it had not done so despite having sufficient information that a reasonable banker could (and did) come to the conclusion that the bank likely was being used as a conduit for fraud, and it charged NCVA fees for which it provided no services. The economic loss rule "does not bar tort claims based on an independent legal duty, which is ' "identifiable" and "distinct" ' from the contractual duty." Legacy Data Access, Inc. v. Cadrillion, LLC,
IV. Actual and Justifiable Reliance
Fidelity contends that NCVA did not actually or justifiably rely on Fidelity's misrepresentations and omissions because: (1) the statements that it held the trust funds were sent only to Dealers and its auditors, and therefore, NCVA could not have relied on those statements; (2) there is no evidence that NCVA relied on the misrepresentations because Ronnie Thomas is dead and cannot testify as to what he would have done to recover the remaining funds in the Interactive Brokers account at the inception of the Trust Agreement; and (3) because Tray Thomas, as NCVA's agent, was aware of the facts, and "[a] party cannot be deceived as to a material fact of which it is already aware." Fidelity's Br. § II.F. The Court has already addressed the issue of Tray Thomas's imputed knowledge above and need not recapitulate that discussion here. The remaining two bases similarly are insufficient to support summary judgment with respect to Fidelity's omissions and its representation that it had received the original funds as reflected in EXHIBIT A to Dep. Ex. 4. Ronnie Thomas's signature *353appears on Dep. Ex. 4 and there is sufficient evidence in the record from which a reasonable jury could conclude that NCVA relied on that assurance. Nevertheless, Plaintiff may not rely on the audit statements to support a claim for fraud because there is no evidence that NCVA directly relied on those statements. Fidelity provided the false custodial statements to Dealers and its auditors and not directly to NCVA, and there is no evidence in the record that the statements in the audit confirmations were repeated to NCVA by Dealers.
Actual and justifiable reliance are questions for the jury, "unless the facts are so clear that they support only one conclusion." Choplin v. Int'l Bus. Mach. Corp., Case No. 1:16CV1412,
In North Carolina, a showing of justifiable reliance requires that a plaintiff demonstrate that it actually and directly relied on allegedly false statements. See Raritan River Steel Co. v. Cherry, Bekaert & Holland,
*354Construing the record in a light most favorable to Plaintiff, however, there is evidence that NCVA actually relied on Fidelity's representation that it had taken possession of the original trust funds and its failure to disclose that it did not hold the funds in trust and had no access to the putative account. Fidelity, Dealers, and NCVA all were in direct privity with respect to the Trust Agreement and the information provided by and between the parties to that agreement. In fact, the agreement purports to require statements only to be sent to NCVA "for" Dealers. See Trust Agreement § 7.(e). Borchardt specifically testified that Dealers would have acted if it had not been told that Fidelity had custody of the funds. See Borchardt Dep. 207-08. This testimony is consistent with the entire circumstances of the case and common sense. As stated above, the central purpose of the Trust Agreement was to protect the reserve through custodial services. To the extent that Fidelity failed to disclose its compliance with this central purpose-especially in light of the surrounding circumstances indicating fraud-it would be reasonable to conclude that NCVA relied on Fidelity's original assurance that it had taken possession of the Trust Funds and that both beneficiaries relied on its subsequent omissions. Therefore, the Court will deny Fidelity's motion for summary judgment based on any argument that NCVA did not actually rely on Fidelity's original representation in Dep. Ex. 4 and its subsequent omissions.
V. Aiding and Abetting Conversion
In matters pending in federal courts in which state law controls, the federal courts apply two closely related but different precepts. The first precept provides that, in such proceedings and where there is no controlling precedent from the state's highest court on the issue presented, the federal court "must ... offer its best judgment about how [the] state's highest court would rule on [the] claims, giving appropriate weight to any opinions of [the] state's intermediate appellate courts." Anderson v. Sara Lee Corp.,
These precepts are not contradictory and may be reconciled by understanding that federal courts should not expand state law to previously unrecognized claims for relief. Nevertheless, where state courts previously have recognized claims, although the recognition is unsettled, federal courts should not dismiss claims that are consistent with prior state rulings, but inconsistent with others, where the state's highest court has not spoken. Instead, the federal court must use its best judgment to anticipate the ruling of the state's highest court. Though "[f]ederal courts are to tread carefully when asked to extend state tort law to new scenarios[,]" such restraint does not require dismissal. See, e.g., *355Lee v. Certainteed Corp.,
Claims for conversion are well recognized in North Carolina, and the Court need not consider the viability of the underlying tort in North Carolina. See, e.g., Eley v. Mid/East Accept. Corp. of N.C., Inc.,
Despite this uncertainty surrounding whether aiding and abetting a common law tort is actionable in North Carolina, at least one North Carolina Court of Appeals opinion has recognized a claim for aiding and abetting breach of fiduciary duty, and adopted the definition for aiding and abetting a common law tort in the Restatement (Second) of Torts § 876 (1979). Blow v. Shaughnessy,
There is some indication that the North Carolina Supreme Court will adopt the standard in the Restatement. In Boykin v. Bennett,
Even if the Court were inclined to agree with those courts that have anticipated that the North Carolina Supreme Court will cabin its previous adoption of the Restatement definition for aiding and abetting liability, it would not grant summary judgment in this case. Construing the facts in a light most favorable to Plaintiff and for the reasons set forth herein, the record is sufficient such that a reasonable jury could find that Fidelity's conduct fell below an ordinary standard of care and rose to the level of culpability required by the lower courts that have limited the holding in Boykin. In addition, as in Boykin, Fidelity's conduct may have breached a statutory standard of care under N.C. Gen. Stat. § 36C-8-809. See Hinson v. Jarvis,
VI. Constructive Fraud
Fidelity contends that it is entitled to summary judgment with respect to its claim for constructive fraud because the record is devoid of any evidence of the consummation of a transaction as a result of its failure to disclose that it did not have custody of any trust funds and because it did not receive any benefit from the omissions. Fidelity's Br. § II.H. Plaintiff counters that Fidelity benefited by "continuing to collect Trustee fees until [Fidelity's] and Tray Thomas' fraud was exposed .... The benefit Fidelity received was in the form of fees which it did not earn, having failed completely to take possession of NCVA's funds ...." Plaintiff's Br. 23 (citing NationsBank of N.C., N.A. v. Parker,
In Parker, the court held that "payment of a fee to a defendant for work done by that defendant does not by itself constitute sufficient evidence that the defendant sought his own advantage in the transaction."
This Court does not read Sterner and its progeny as broadly as Fidelity's arguments suggest, and the record in this case contains sufficient evidence of an unearned benefit to Fidelity to support a claim for constructive fraud for purposes of summary judgment. As set forth herein, the central purpose of the Trust Agreement was for Fidelity to provide custodial services, services that Fidelity concedes it never provided. Moreover, the fees Fidelity charged to NCVA were based on the *358amount of funds it claimed were held in trust by the bank, but the bank charged these fees based on the amounts reflected in its shadow accounting-amounts that in fact were never held in custody by the bank at all. Willis Dep. 25-26, 180-82; Dep. Exs. 400, 404; Fidelity's Br. ¶¶ 52. Therefore, whatever amount charged was more than the amount that would have been charged ($0) if Fidelity had disclosed that it was holding no funds whatsoever. Under the circumstances of this case, Plaintiff has come forward with sufficient evidence of a benefit to Fidelity to withstand summary judgment. Cf. Loftin v. QA Invs. LLC,
VII. Conspiracy
Under North Carolina law, the elements of a civil conspiracy are: (1) an agreement between two or more individuals; (2) to do an unlawful act or to do a lawful act in an unlawful way; (3) resulting in injury to plaintiff inflicted by one or more of the conspirators; and (4) pursuant to a common scheme. Privette v. Univ. of N.C. at Chapel Hill,
Fidelity contends that any claim for conspiracy fails because it is derivative of the underlying tort claims for which it is entitled to summary judgment. Fidelity's Br. § II.I.40 Having determined that summary judgment will be denied on the underlying tort claims, the Court similarly will deny the motion with respect to civil conspiracy.41
*359Dealers' Motion for Summary Judgment
I. Breach of Contract
NCVA's sole remaining claim against Dealers is for breach of the Insurance and Trust Agreements. Plaintiff contends that Dealers breached these contracts by removing "millions of dollars of NCVA's funds from the Trust Account at U.S. Bank ...." Amended Compl. ¶ 8.
A. Equitable Estoppel
Although otherwise barred by the statute of limitations, this claim survived dismissal because Plaintiff alleged sufficient facts to support the application of equitable estoppel. See Dismissal Op. 28-33. Dealers asserts that the record at summary judgment fails to establish any of the elements of equitable estoppel, and that it would not be unjust for it to benefit from the statute of limitations. Dealers' Br. 13-20. In the alternative, Dealers asserts that the record does not demonstrate that it committed any breach of contract.
"[A] defendant may properly rely on a statute of limitations as a defensive shield against stale claims, but may be equitably estopped from using a statute of limitations as a sword, so as to unjustly benefit from its own conduct which induced a plaintiff to delay filing suit." Leciejewski v. S. Entm't Corp., No. 1:09-CV-995,
[T]he essential elements of an equitable estoppel as related to the party estopped are: (1) [c]onduct which amounts to a false representation or concealment of material facts, or at least, which is reasonably calculated to convey the impression that the facts are otherwise than, and inconsistent with, those which the party afterwards attempts to assert; (2) intention or expectation that such conduct shall be acted upon by the other party, or conduct which at least is calculated to induce a reasonably prudent person to believe such conduct was intended or expected to be relied and acted upon; (3) knowledge, actual or constructive, of the real facts. As related to the party claiming the estoppel, they are: (1) lack of knowledge and the means of knowledge of the truth as to the facts in question; (2) reliance upon the conduct of the party sought to be estopped; and (3) action based thereon of such a character as to change his position prejudicially.
*360
Dealers argues that none of the elements are met because: (1) Dealers did not know the transfers out of trust had occurred and did not take any action to conceal the transfers; and (2) NCVA had actual and constructive knowledge of the transfers through its agent, Tray Thomas. Dealers' Br. 18-20. Again, the Court will not impute Tray Thomas's knowledge to NCVA for purposes of summary judgment. Moreover, as set forth above, the Court cannot conclude for purposes of summary judgment that Dealers was unaware that the trust funds had been transferred out of US Bank and not returned at the time that it executed the Trust Agreement with Fidelity and NCVA.42 At that time, Dealers had reason to believe Tray Thomas was committing a fraud, and knew that there was no account at Interactive Brokers in the name of US Bank despite Tray Thomas's previous assurances to the contrary. In the face of this knowledge, Borchardt affirmatively decided to "play it out and see what Tray will do next." Dep. Ex. 32. At that time, Dealers knew that Tray Thomas already had lied to US Bank about the existence of a custodial account in the bank's name at Interactive Brokers. Thereafter, with no indication that the funds had been returned other than Fidelity's execution of the Trust Agreement itself and without any evidence of an affirmative inquiry to Fidelity or Interactive Brokers regarding the same, Dealers executed the Trust Agreement with the attached Exhibit A reflecting possession of over $3.4 million in assets. For the reasons set forth above, the Court cannot conclude for purposes of summary judgment that Ronnie Thomas or NCVA had any knowledge of these facts. Therefore, for reasons similar to those set forth in its prior Dismissal Opinion, the Court will deny Dealers' Motion for Summary Judgment based on the statute of limitations.43
B. Dealers Proof of Claim and Counterclaims
Dealers' counterclaims are asserted against the estate and have been consolidated in this adversary proceeding with its proof of claim.44 Therefore, the Court will consider the claims within the rubric established by the Fourth Circuit under
The Bankruptcy Code establishes a burden-shifting framework for proving the amount and validity of a claim. The creditor's filing of a proof of claim constitutes prima facie evidence of the *361amount and validity of the claim.11 U.S.C. § 502 (a) ; Fed. R. Bankr. P. 3001(f). The burden then shifts to the debtor to object to the claim.11 U.S.C. § 502 (b) ; [Canal Corp. v.] Finnman, 960 F.2d [396] at 404 [ (4th Cir. 1992) ]. The debtor must introduce evidence to rebut the claim's presumptive validity. Fed. R. Bankr. P. 9017 ; Fed. R. Evid. 301 ; 4 Collier at ¶ 501.02[3][d]. If the debtor carries its burden, the creditor has the ultimate burden of proving the amount and validity of the claim by a preponderance of the evidence.Id. at ¶ 502 .02[3][f].").
In re Harford Sands, Inc.,
Plaintiff contends that Dealers is not entitled to recover for any amounts it has paid to warranty claimants because it permitted the loss of the Trust Funds by its own actions. Specifically, based on the record as set forth in this opinion, Plaintiff contends:
Dealers is responsible for having placed NCVA in position to be unable to pay those claims and knowingly obligated itself for them knowing full well that the Trust Funds were actually not in trust to secure them. Moreover, Dealers' conduct in both permitting the transfers and keeping them secret directly caused millions in losses and damages as the NCVA Trust Funds which were to have always been at Wachovia/US Bank were transferred out and lost, and NCVA was deprived of timely and relevant information concerning its funds so that it could pursue their recovery and claims against Dealers. NCVA's damages and Dealers having paid out claims is a direct result of Dealers' conduct.
Br. Opp'n to Dealers Assurance Company's Mot. Summ. J. 23-24, ECF No. 191. Dealers has not presented evidence in support of its claim beyond the unitemized statement attached to its claim, the Holmes Affidavit, and the underlying Insurance Contract. The Holmes Affidavit, like the proof of claim, is simply a statement under oath, and is not entitled to any greater weight than the prima facie validity of a proof of claim for purposes of summary judgment. For the reasons set forth herein, and construing the record in a light most favorable to Plaintiff, the record in this case is sufficient to rebut the prima facie validity of Dealers' counterclaims and to create a material issue of fact preventing the entry of summary judgment in favor of Dealers for the amounts set forth in its proof of claim or the Holmes Affidavit. At a minimum, there is a material issue of fact as to the proximate cause of any contractual damages under Ohio law.45 Therefore, the Court will deny Dealers' Motion for Summary Judgment under the Insurance Agreement.
CONCLUSION
For the reasons set forth herein, the Court will enter its orders denying the Motions for Summary Judgment. The Court will enter an order scheduling a further pretrial hearing to consider schedules *362for pre-trial briefing, procedures, and motions, and setting a trial date.
SO ORDERED.
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