Dyer v. Arkansas Insurance Department

2015 Ark. App. 446, 468 S.W.3d 303, 2015 Ark. App. LEXIS 527
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedSeptember 2, 2015
DocketCV-14-342
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 2015 Ark. App. 446 (Dyer v. Arkansas Insurance Department) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dyer v. Arkansas Insurance Department, 2015 Ark. App. 446, 468 S.W.3d 303, 2015 Ark. App. LEXIS 527 (Ark. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

WAYMOND M. BROWN, Judge

| ^Appellant Charles Dyer and his title-insurance agency, Edwards Title, LLC, challenge the revocation of their insurance license by appellee, the Arkansas Insurance Department (Department). Dyer appealed to the Crawford County Circuit Court, which affirmed the revocation. We affirm the circuit court and the Department.

I. Background

Dyer owns Edwards Title, LLC, formerly known as Edwards Abstract Company. His business involves selling title insurance to prospective home buyers and performing closing services in real-estate transactions. Closing services include preparation of settlement documents; maintenance of an escrow account, which primarily consists of the purchase money forwarded by home buyers or their lenders; and payment of the purchase money to the seller or the seller’s mortgagee.

In 2003, Dyer discovered that a trusted employee named Susan Hudson had embezzled |amoney from his agency. Dyer did not fire Hudson but allowed her to continue as a closer for the agency. He attempted to prevent future losses by, among other things, requiring two signatures on checks, although Hudson was retained as a signatory. He also began reconciling the escrow account weekly for a period of time. 1

In 2008, one of Dyer’s title-insurance underwriters, Chicago Title, conducted an audit of Dyer’s agency. The audit found that Dyer was delinquent in performing escrow-account reconciliations and that management did not critically review or formally approve bank reconciliations. Dyer’s relationship with Chicago Title was later terminated by mutual consent. Dyer then entered into a contract with another title-insurance underwriter, Stewart Title Guaranty. ,

Stewart conducted initial audits of Dyer and noted that Dyer had delayed in reconciling escrow accounts; had outstanding checks and deposits from 2007; experienced excessive time lapses between closing and the recording of documents; and delayed mortgage payoffs in some files. Subsequent audits identified similar issues, plus overdraft charges; insurance policies not being sent to Stewart in a timely fashion; and infrequent reconciliations.

In early 2011, Dyer learned that Susan Hudson had resumed embezzling from the agency as early as 2009. Hudson’s methodology was complex but, simply put, she manipulated the agency’s automated escrow accounting system, into which she entered real-estate closing information. She made entries to show that a check had been written to payoff |3a seller’s mortgage but, in reality, the check would be voided and the funds not disbursed — rather, the funds remained in the agency’s escrow account, or one of its old escrow accounts that had never been closed. Hudson diverted some of the hidden funds for her own use, thereby leaving the seller’s mortgage unpaid for a long period of time. At some point, she would use funds from a subsequent closing to satisfy the unpaid mortgage. This, however, simply resulted in the subsequent closing having a late payoff as well.

Hudson’s activities were not detected by Dyer until February 2011. In that month, a bank officer , called Dyer to report that the mortgage of a Mr. Mize, who had closed at Dyer’s agency a few months earlier, had not been paid off. While investigating the matter, Dyer learned that Hudson had been taking money from the agency and that she had used the proceeds from the Mize closing and other closings in furtherance of her scheme. Dyer terminated Hudson and paid off the Mize loan with escrow-account funds. Approximately six weeks later, Dyer obtained a personal loan and placed $185,000 into the escrow account. During that six-week interim, there were insufficient-funds charges on the escrow account, and Dyer continued to perform closings, despite the escrow account’s being short of money.

Dyer did not disclose Hudson’s theft to Stewart Guaranty until September 2011. At that point, Stewart reminded Dyer to inform the Department, which Dyer did not do. Stewart also audited Dyer and terminated its relationship with him. Stewart informed the Department of its split with Dyer, and this marked the first notification to the Department about Hudson’s theft.

|4II. Insurance Department Investigation

The Department launched an investigation upon learning of the situation at Dyer’s agency. It obtained the files on which Hudson had been the closer between January 2009 and February 2011, and reviewed Dyer’s bank statements and the audits that had been performed by" Chicago Title and Stewart Guaranty.

In the course of the inquiry, investigator Sarah Gray discovered problems with over 300 of Dyer’s files. Many of the files still contained the client’s original title policy or original warranty deed, which had never béen mailed to the client. Gray also found occasions where Dyer had waited a significant amount of time after closing to pay some insurance premiums to Stewart and had made untimely mortgage pay-offs as well. In particular, the Department learned that mortgage payoffs of two sellers were delayed to the extent that they received late notices from their banks and, in one instance, a foreclosure action was filed. Gray additionally saw that title policies were sometimes issued to the new home buyer before the previous owner’s loan on the property was paid off, which was an incorrect procedure.

Probing further, Gray found that Dyer’s post-2008 policies and other documents listed his business name as Charles B. Dyer d/b/a Edwards Abstract Company rather than Edwards Title, LLC, which had been his business name since January 2009. She observed that these documents also lacked Dyer’s license number and the required Department contact information. Additionally, Gray learned that, during the Stewart audits, Dyer had not reported the existence of either his old escrow accounts or a high-yield “sweep” account, into which monies from the escrow account were temporarily placed to earn interest for the agency.

| sAnother Department examiner, Taryn Lewis, investigated Dyer’s files in an attempt to discover the extent of Hudson’s misappropriations. Lewis observed that some of the information she found did not coincide with the information that Dyer had provided to her during the course of the investigation. Her inquiry also revealed errors, inconsistencies, and changes in Dyer’s disbursement sheets and settlement statements; lack of payoff information in some files; and several transfers between escrow accounts, or between the escrow accounts and the high-yield account. Lewis questioned the effectiveness of the security measures that Dyer imposed after Hudson’s 2003 theft.

The Department also received two complaint letters regarding Dyer. In one, a consumer complained that he waited five months for his title policy and that he had yet to receive his original deed. In a second, a credit union complained about Dyer’s poor service and lack of timeliness in providing recorded documents and responding to questions.

The Department also discovered problems regarding funds in Dyer’s bank accounts. One of his old escrow accounts had a balance of approximately $17,000 that could not be satisfactorily explained. Dyer claimed the money as his own, despite its presence in an escrow account.

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Bluebook (online)
2015 Ark. App. 446, 468 S.W.3d 303, 2015 Ark. App. LEXIS 527, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dyer-v-arkansas-insurance-department-arkctapp-2015.