Dotson v. Rainbolt

1995 OK 39, 894 P.2d 1109, 66 O.B.A.J. 1413, 1995 Okla. LEXIS 53, 1995 WL 226614
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedApril 18, 1995
Docket80461
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 1995 OK 39 (Dotson v. Rainbolt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dotson v. Rainbolt, 1995 OK 39, 894 P.2d 1109, 66 O.B.A.J. 1413, 1995 Okla. LEXIS 53, 1995 WL 226614 (Okla. 1995).

Opinion

WATT, Justice.

Appellant, Wanda Dotson, appealed from the trial court’s order granting Appellees’, David Rainbolt and Bancfirst Corporation, motion to dismiss Dotson’s petition. Dotson, is the personal representative of Alfred Roberts, and Mary Roberts. Alfred Roberts was Dotson’s father; Mary Roberts was Alfred Roberts’s wife, and Dotson’s step-mother.

FACTS

In 1985 Alfred Roberts was a director and shareholder of Liberty State Bank of Tahleq-uah, Oklahoma. Alfred Roberts’s wife, Mary Roberts, also owned shares in Liberty State Bank, but was an invalid so Alfred Roberts handled her financial affairs. Alfred Roberts had been a Liberty State Bank shareholder and director since the 1960s. In 1985, Alfred Roberts and his wife were two of only thirteen shareholders in Liberty State Bank.

*1111 In 1981 H.E. Rainbolt acquired a majority of Liberty State Bank’s stock. He later sold much of his stock to other investors. In late 1984 Liberty State Bank’s stockholders formed a Holding Company called Liberty State Bancshares, Inc. On May 9, 1985, Alfred Roberts exchanged his Liberty State Bank stock for stock in Bancshares. It is this exchange that gave rise to the lawsuit underlying this appeal. In 1985, David Rain-bolt had allegedly “put the hard sell” on Alfred Roberts and represented to him that the dividends on Bancshares’ preferred stock were “guaranteed and no risk.”

United Community Corporation was to be a holding company for several Rainbolt banks. 1 Prior to the exchange of Liberty State Bank stock for Bancshares stock, H.E. Rainbolt represented to Roberts and the other investors that Bancshares would become a part of United. United was made the holding company for seven of H.E. Rainbolt’s banks in 1985, but Liberty State Bancshares was not among them.

William P. Willis, Jr., and Veraman T. Davis, were shareholders and directors of Liberty State Bank. As had Alfred Roberts, Willis and Davis exchanged their Liberty State Bank stock for Liberty State Banc-shares stock on May 9, 1985.

Roberts held preferred stock in Banc-shares. Consequently, his dividends were guaranteed. Bancshares was to pay Roberts’s guaranteed dividends semiannually, on June 30 and December 31. Bancshares apparently made its last preferred dividend payment to Roberts on July 25, 1986. This payment was seventy percent short of the amount Bancshares owed Roberts, as Banc-shares paid only 1.5% of the 5% owed. There is no indication in the record that Bancshares paid Roberts any dividends after July 25, 1986. Nevertheless, Alfred Roberts continued to actively participate in Banc-shares’ shareholders’ meetings, and as a board member, through the annual shareholders’ meeting held April 12, 1988, shortly before Roberts’s death. Roberts died on May 31, 1988.

Alfred Roberts attended the annual shareholders’ meeting of Liberty State Banc-shares, Inc. on May 5, 1987. According to the minutes of that meeting, H.E. Rainbolt told the shareholders that unless substantial additional money was put into Bancshares, “it is probably not going to be a viable entity.” [Emphasis added.] The minutes of the May 5, 1987 meeting also state that David Rainbolt told the board that the MBank note had come due in November 1986, and whether MBank decided to sue on the note “will dictate what will happen to the Holding Company [Bancshares].”

On January 9,1987 MBank had sued Davis & Willis in federal court in Texas on Banc-shares’ notes they had guaranteed, and to foreclose on their Bancshares stock. Shortly thereafter, on January 21, 1987, Davis and Willis had sued H.E. Rainbolt and other defendants in Case No. 87-45 in the District Court of Cherokee County, Oklahoma. Neither David Rainbolt nor Bancfirst Corporation was a party to Case No. 87-45. Davis testified that in late January or early February 1987 he told Roberts that H.E. Rainbolt was scheming to avoid paying Roberts his preferred dividends.

PROCEDURAL HISTORY

Dotson filed the case at bar on November 30, 1988 on behalf of her father, Alfred Roberts, and her step-mother Mary Roberts, but joined neither David Rainbolt nor Bancfirst Corporation as a defendant at that time. Dotson sued H.E. Rainbolt, Liberty State Bank, Liberty State Bancshares, John Doe, and John Doe, Inc. 2 Although Dotson did not at first sue David Rainbolt and Bancfirst Corporation, she mentioned them by name in her petition. Not until June 29, 1989, when she filed her amended petition, did Dotson join David Rainbolt and Bancfirst as defendants to her suit. In her amended petition Dotson claimed that David Rainbolt and Bancfirst were John Doe, and John Doe, Inc., respectively.

In her original petition Dotson alleged that Roberts “should not have discovered [the *1112 securities claims] any earlier than December 2, 1986.” This statement evidently refers to the December 2, 1986 shareholders meeting, at which H.E. Rainbolt told the shareholders, “we can forget about the Buy-Sell Agreement, the stock is worthless.”

Dotson alleged state securities law violations, breach of contract, common law fraud, breach of fiduciary duty and other wrongs. David Rainbolt and Bancfirst moved to dismiss Dotson’s petition under 12 O.S.Supp. 1984 § 2012.B.6, on the ground that her claims against them were barred by the statute of limitations. 3 The other defendants filed motions for summary judgment. Dotson resisted both motions with a comprehensive statement of facts, supported by over 1,000 pages of documents obtained through discovery in MBank’s suit against Davis and Willis, and in Davis and Willis’s suit against H.E. Rainbolt. Davis and Willis were represented by the same lawyers who have represented Dotson throughout the suit before us today. David Rainbolt and Bancfirst filed an answer to Dotson’s amended petition while their motion to dismiss was still pending. Dotson’s reliance on facts outside the four corners of her petition, and David Rainbolt and Bancfirst’s filing of an answer while their motion was pending, show that the parties regarded the motion to dismiss as a motion for summary judgment. We, therefore, will also treat it as a motion for summary judgment.

After much procedural wrangling, the details of which are irrelevant to the issues before us in this appeal, the trial court held that Dotson’s causes of action against David Rainbolt and Bancfirst were barred by the statute of limitations. The other defendants in this suit are not parties here because the trial court found that there was a question of fact as to whether the statute of limitations barred Dotson’s common law fraud claim against them. The trial court held that Dotson’s claims against David Rainbolt and Bancfirst were barred because Dotson did not join them as defendants until June 29, 1989, and the amended petition did not relate back to the date when Dotson first filed her suit under 12 O.S.1991 § 2015.C. The trial court expressly held that its order for David Rainbolt and Bancshares, and against Dotson, was a final order and immediately ap-pealable, although issues remained for decision concerning the other defendants. The trial court granted David Rainbolt and Banc-shares an attorneys’ fee of $44,000, under 71 O.S.1992 Supp.

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Bluebook (online)
1995 OK 39, 894 P.2d 1109, 66 O.B.A.J. 1413, 1995 Okla. LEXIS 53, 1995 WL 226614, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dotson-v-rainbolt-okla-1995.