Duffield v. First National Bank

715 F. Supp. 255, 1989 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 6945, 1989 WL 68584
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Arkansas
DecidedJune 7, 1989
DocketCiv. No. 88-5137
StatusPublished

This text of 715 F. Supp. 255 (Duffield v. First National Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Duffield v. First National Bank, 715 F. Supp. 255, 1989 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 6945, 1989 WL 68584 (W.D. Ark. 1989).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

H. FRANKLIN WATERS, Chief Judge.

Pending before the court is a motion by defendant asking that the court impose [256]*256sanctions against the plaintiff for violation of the provisions of Rule 11 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. The motion was filed on May 2, 1989, and plaintiffs attorney did not get around to responding until May 30, 1989, some fourteen days after his time to do so had expired under the provisions of Rule 20 of the rules of the United States District Courts for the Eastern and Western Districts of Arkansas (Local Rules). This exceedingly untimely filing would justify the court striking the response but it will not, under the circumstances, do so, and will consider the matters contained in the response irrespective of its untimeliness.

Plaintiff, James P. Duffield, the son of O.F. and Sueann Duffield, had a checking account in defendant bank. Sometime pri- or to August 11, 1986, he agreed to utilize funds in that account to allow his father to post what was believed then to be a refundable deposit in connection with a loan that he was seeking in Dallas, Texas. His mother, Sueann, was a joint holder of the bank account, or at least she had authority to draw checks on it. Apparently with plaintiffs approval, on August 11, 1986, she purchased from defendant bank a cashier’s check in the amount of $25,000 payable to Murray Savings Association. There were no restrictions on the cashier’s check. In other words, it appears to be a rather ordinary cashier’s check payable to the payee and there is no indication that the check was to be utilized for any particular purpose. It was delivered to the father, O.F. Duffield, who used it to pay the loan application fee in respect to the Dallas loan. The next day after it was issued, the payee, Murray Savings Association, endorsed the check and it was negotiated. Months later the Dallas loan “soured” and the loan application fee was1 apparently forfeited. According to filings in this case, that dispute has resulted in a lawsuit between O.F. Duffield and Murray Savings Association filed in the district court of Dallas, County, Texas.

In July, of 1988, the president of defendant bank received a letter from a Mena, Arkansas, lawyer, Danny Thrailkill, claiming that the cashier’s check was improperly paid because it did not have “proper and legal endorsement.” Demand was made that the bank refund to James Duffield $25,000. The bank’s attorney responded, pointing out that the check was properly endorsed by Murray Savings Association, and that the bank owed Mr. Duffield nothing.

This lawsuit was then filed by Fayette-ville attorney, Robert R. White, on September 12, 1988. That filing resulted in a letter from the bank’s attorney dated September 14, 1988, pointing out to Mr. White that the bank had previously been contacted by Mr. Thrailkill and Mr. White was advised of the results of those contacts. It was claimed in the letter that when attorney Thrailkill was “advised of the true facts of the situation he essentially apologized, explained that he was a school friend of Jim Duffield, agreed that there was no liability on the part of the bank and that was the end of the matter until now.” The attorney for the bank went on to advise Mr. White that the bank does not “like to be sued” and that he had been instructed by his client “to take whatever counter measures are available to us if Jim persists in this lawsuit.” The bank’s attorney then said that “after you have a chance to review the enclosed and talk to Jim, it is my hope that you will agree that the case should be dismissed forthwith without further adieu and before our answer date runs.”

In spite of this invitation by the bank’s attorney that Mr. White make the investigation required by Rule 11 if he had not already done so, Mr. White responded but set forth no basis for his belief, if he had one, that the bank owed his client money. He said:

As far as the bank not liking to be sued, I could care less; it certainly doesn’t bother them to sue other people. Should the bank feel there is a counterclaim or that their dignity has been impugned, I feel sure that you will announce that in your response. I cannot imagine the lending institution being so upset at what might be considered a legitimate dispute. I can assure you that if Judge Waters [257]*257rules for me or he rules for you in this matter, that it won’t be the first time that either one of us has taken it on the chin. Lord knows you are a good enough lawyer to make my clients out to be not very smart if in fact they are dead wrong.

The bank was required to file an answer and engage in discovery, including the deposition of plaintiff, Duffield. Subsequent to that deposition, on February 21, 1989, the defendant filed a motion for summary judgment. Although he was given almost two months to do so, plaintiffs attorney did not respond to the motion for summary judgment and the court, by judgment dated and entered April 17, 1989, granted the motion. The motion for Rule 11 sanctions followed.

In his late response, plaintiffs attorney contends that “this suit was brought in good faith and with good grounds to support it. As facts unknown to the plaintiff and his attorney were brought to light during discovery which changed the initial perception of this case, it was disposed of by summary judgment according to Rule 56.” Inexplicably, he cites1 and relies on cases decided long before the 1983 amendments to Rule 11, and quotes verbatim from the main volume of 5 Wright & Miller, Federal Practice and Procedure: Civil, § 1333, a volume that was copyrighted by West Publishing Company some 14 years before the Rule 11 amendments. It is not apparent from the response that it was recognized that the amendments were made, a fact that could have been readily determined from a cursory examination of the 1987 supplement to the above cited Wright & Miller article. Thus, it appears that plaintiffs counsel believes that “the signature of an attorney to a pleading amounts to an affirmation that he believes the pleading to have merit” and that little if anything is required of the attorney in forming that belief, relying on cases decided a great number of years before the 1983 amendments and on a discussion in the Wright & Miller treatise written years before.

As the supplement to the Wright & Miller volume points out, at § 1331:

Rule 11 was amended in 1983 to expand the nature of the lawyer’s certification requirement and to add new sanctions for its violation.
* sfc # sfc * *
Rule 11 was amended in 1983 to expand significantly the nature of the signature requirement and to clarify the meaning of the certification. The amended rule substitutes a more focused standard of the one of ‘good ground to support’ the pleading and makes its requirements explicitly applicable to the attorney and unrepresented parties. It provides that the signature constitutes that the signer has read the document, ‘that to the best of his knowledge, information, and belief formed after reasonable inquiry it is well grounded in fact and is warranted by existing law or a good faith argument for the extension, modification, or reversal of existing law_’ (emphasis supplied).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
715 F. Supp. 255, 1989 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 6945, 1989 WL 68584, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/duffield-v-first-national-bank-arwd-1989.