DZ Bank AG Deutsche Zentral Genossenschaftsbank, Frankfurt Am Main v. McCranie

513 F. App'x 911
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedMarch 21, 2013
Docket11-14618
StatusUnpublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 513 F. App'x 911 (DZ Bank AG Deutsche Zentral Genossenschaftsbank, Frankfurt Am Main v. McCranie) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
DZ Bank AG Deutsche Zentral Genossenschaftsbank, Frankfurt Am Main v. McCranie, 513 F. App'x 911 (11th Cir. 2013).

Opinion

O’CONNOR, Supreme Court Justice (Ret.):

Claiming to be the holder in due course of a commercial loan on which Appellant Michael McCranie had defaulted, Appellee DZ Bank brought an enforcement suit in federal district court. McCranie defended the suit on the grounds that DZ Bank was not in fact a holder of the loan because of a problem in the chain of title, and that even if it was, it had obtained the loan subject to certain valid defenses that prevented enforcement. The District Court granted summary judgment to DZ Bank. Because we find that the facts surrounding the loan’s chain of title were in material dispute, we reverse and remand for further proceedings.

I.

Although our ultimate point is that there are some key facts in dispute, many of them are uncontested. In October 2000, McCranie entered into an agreement with Brooke Corporation, an insurance franchising company, to buy a local franchise in Florida. McCranie borrowed money from a Brooke affiliate called Brooke Credit to finance the sale, and agreed in return to write policies exclusively through Brooke, paying off the loan over time with his commissions. See Dkt. No. 63-1 at 1-4; Dkt. No. 54-1 at 2. The original note, as well as a supplemental note executed in 2002, were both made payable only to Brooke Credit or its successors and assigns. See Dkt. No. 63-1 at 27; Dkt. No. 54-1 at 6.

Trouble arose in August 2008, when McCranie became aware of serious allegations of wrongdoing at Brooke. According to McCranie, these allegations caused the major insurers to stop working through Brooke, making it impossible for McCranie to write policies, earn commissions, and pay back his loan. McCranie also alleges that Brooke stopped paying him commissions that he was owed out of his trust account. As a result, McCranie wrote to Brooke saying that he wanted to terminate his agreement and restructure his relationship with the insurance carriers so that he could work with them directly and keep the agency afloat. Brooke refused, but continued to unravel — leaving McCranie’s franchise all but worthless. Dkt. No. 63-1 at 5-6.

Shortly thereafter, in early October 2008, McCranie received payment demands from two different entities who claimed to have the right to collect on his *913 loan as a consequence of Brooke’s demise. The first was from Appellee DZ Bank. Its letter acknowledged McCranie’s effort to terminate his agreement with Brooke. But it explained that Brooke Credit had sold the loan to Brooke Funding, which in turn had pledged the loan to DZ Bank, which now intended to start collecting payments. Dkt. No. 63-1 at 64. The second letter was from Home Federal Savings & Loan. It explained that Home Federal had purchased a large interest in McCranie’s loan from Brooke Credit in 2004, and that it intended to start collecting payments based on Brooke’s default under that 2004 agreement. A copy of the agreement was attached. Dkt No. 63-1 at 68-71. MeCra-nie did not make payments to DZ Bank. Dkt. No. 54-1 at 3. DZ Bank then initiated the present suit.

As the rival payment demands suggest, the dispute in this case centers on what really happened with McCranie’s loan between 2002 and 2008. DZ Bank contends that, at some point in that span, Brooke Credit assigned the loan to Brooke Funding. See Dkt. No. 54-1 at 2. It further contends that, in August 2006, Brooke Funding pledged the loan to DZ Bank as collateral for a different loan on which Brooke Funding later defaulted. Its evidence for this chain of title is hardly ironclad. It points to a “Surrender of Collateral” agreement entered into on October 30, 2008, which references the supposed 2006 agreement and lists McCranie’s loan among the collateral to be surrendered from Brooke Funding to the bank. Dkt. No. 54-1 at 19, 28. To document the initial transfer from Brooke Credit to Brooke Funding, it points to nothing more than one sentence in an affidavit from a vice president at DZ Bank, who does not explain how he could know anything about internal dealings among Brooke affiliates occurring years earlier. See Dkt. No. 54-1 at 2. Nevertheless, DZ Bank claims that it has standing to seek enforcement of the loan as a holder in due course because it has the original loan documents, see Dkt. No. 54-1 at 3, and obtained them in good faith, for value, and without any knowledge of potential problems with the loan.

McCranie’s response here, as below, is that there is simply not enough evidence of DZ Bank’s story to support summary judgment. First, he argues that there are genuine issues of material fact as to the chain of title, and whether Brooke Credit ever assigned the loan to Brooke Funding in the first place. After all, he says, Home Federal’s documents suggest that it was the one that bought the loan from Brooke Credit. See Appellant’s Br. 12-15. Second, McCranie argues that there is at least a dispute as to when DZ Bank obtained the loan. The only documents DZ Bank has produced to corroborate its purchase are agreements from late October 2008— after it had acknowledged McCranie’s effort to terminate his franchise agreement and news of Brooke’s troubles had become public. That timing shows, McCranie argues, that even if DZ Bank can establish title, it is not a holder in due course because it had knowledge of McCranie’s potential defenses when it actually took the loan. See id. at 15-16.

The District Court sided with the bank. It held that DZ Bank was a holder in due course because “it took assignment of the Loan for value paid, in good faith and without notice of any claim or defense relating to the Loan.” Dkt. No. 71 at 5 (citing Kan. Stat. Ann. § 84-3-302(a)). In so holding, it appears to have assumed that the loan was in fact transferred from Brooke Credit to Brooke Funding, citing only the DZ Bank executive’s affidavit discussed above. See id. at 1-2 (citing Dkt. No. 54-1 at 2). It also agreed with the bank that, per the reference in the October 2008 agreement, Brooke Funding first *914 pledged the loan to DZ Bank in 2006, well before the bank could have had knowledge of the problems at Brooke and McCranie’s suggested defenses. Id. at 5 & n. 4. Accordingly, the court rejected McCranie’s defenses as inapplicable to a holder in due course and granted summary judgment to the bank.

II.

A grant of summary judgment is reviewed de novo, and all inferences must be drawn in McCranie’s favor as the non-moving party. See Chapman v. AI Transp., 229 F.3d 1012, 1023 (11th Cir.2000) (en banc). As the moving party, DZ Bank must establish that there are no genuine issues of material fact for trial, and that the undisputed or indisputable facts entitle it to judgment as a matter of law. Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(a), (c). As the foregoing suggests, the District Court erred in finding that DZ Bank had made this showing.

To begin, there is no question that the parties actually do dispute the chain of title, and with it, whether DZ Bank is properly the owner or holder of the loan, with standing to enforce it.

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513 F. App'x 911, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dz-bank-ag-deutsche-zentral-genossenschaftsbank-frankfurt-am-main-v-ca11-2013.