Ennis State Bank v. Heritage Bank
This text of Ennis State Bank v. Heritage Bank (Ennis State Bank v. Heritage Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
IN THE
TENTH COURT OF APPEALS
No. 10-02-00226-CV
ENNIS STATE BANK,
Appellant
v.
HERITAGE BANK,
Appellee
From the 40th District Court
Ellis County, Texas
Trial Court # 55369
MEMORANDUM OPINION
Ennis State Bank brought suit against Heritage Bank for negligence and bad faith in returning a check to Ennis drawn on an account at Heritage for insufficient funds. The account on which the check was drawn was being used in a kite. The trial court rendered judgment for Heritage, and Ennis appeals. We affirm.
Background
Gary Stephenson induced several businessmen to open bank accounts at various banks to engage in the buying and selling of cattle. Stephenson used those accounts in a kite. A kite is a scheme in which a person maintains accounts at several banks and deposits checks in each bank drawn against non-existent funds in the others. When checks in this scheme were presented to Heritage for payment, Heritage would require cashier’s checks to be deposited to cover the presented checks. Ennis and another bank, First National Bank of Ennis, would issue the cashier’s checks, generally with insufficient funds. When First National refused to issue any more cashier’s checks, the kite collapsed. As in the game of musical chairs, Ennis was left without a chair. It was the bank left with a check for over $230,000 which was returned, unpaid, by Heritage.
Duties of the Banks
In its first and second issues, Ennis contends that Heritage owed Ennis a duty of good faith under the UCC and a general duty of care to stop the check kiting scheme.
Texas courts have not addressed either issue. But other courts have; and those decisions are instrumental in our resolution of Ennis’s first two issues.
Is There a General Duty of Care?
Generally, one bank does not have any duty to discover a check kite. See Citizens National Bank v. First National Bank, 347 So.2d 964 (Miss. 1977). In Citizens, the Mississippi Supreme Court held that absent any fiduciary or confidential relationship or some other legal duty, one bank had no duty to inform the other that a customer was kiting checks. Id. at 967. Taking this concept another step further, the Ninth Circuit court, relying on Citizens, determined that if a bank is not liable for failing to notify another bank of kiting activity even when it knows of the activity, the bank should not be called to account for failing to discover information that, in any event, it was not required to convey. Mid-Cal Nat’l Bank v. Federal Reserve Bank, 590 F.2d 761, 764 (9th Cir. 1979). There being no special duty between the banks, the court held that one did not owe the other a duty to discover the kite. Id. This is especially true where the other bank is in just as good a position to discover the kite. Alta Vista State Bank v. Kobliska, 897 F.2d 930, 934 (8th Cir. 1990). Thus, absent some special relationship or other legal duty, if there is no duty between banks to discover a kite and no duty to warn of a kite once discovered, a bank has no duty to stop a kite it had no duty to discover.
Some Other Legal Duty?
Ennis has neither alleged nor argued that it and Heritage had any kind of fiduciary or confidential relationship. It has argued, however, that the Uniform Commercial Code creates a legal duty between the banks to act in good faith. Thus, the logical extension of this argument is because Heritage had a legal duty to act in good faith, Heritage owed Ennis a duty to stop the kite.
Ennis relies on former section 1.203 of the Uniform Commercial Code to provide a legal duty of good faith between the banks. See Act of 1967, 60th Leg., ch. 785, §1 (amended 2003)(current version at Tex. Bus. & Com. Code § 1.203 (Vernon Supp. 2004)). That section provided, “Every contract or duty within this title imposes an obligation of good faith in its performance or enforcement.” Id. (emphasis added). The principle involved is that in commercial transactions, good faith is required in the performance or enforcement of all agreements, that is, contracts, or duties. Id. at Uniform Commercial Code Comment. Former section 1.203 does not support an independent cause of action for failure to perform or enforce in good faith. Id. It does not create a duty where none previously existed. Rather, the section means that a failure to perform or enforce, in good faith, a specific duty or obligation under a contract, constitutes a breach of that contract or makes unavailable under the particular circumstances, a remedial right or power. Id. There is no separate duty which can be independently breached. Id. There has to be some contract or duty under the Code for the obligation of good faith to arise.
And as specifically regarding any kind of duty to detect or warn of a check kiting scheme, courts have held there is no good faith duty under the UCC to do so. See Frost Nat’l Bank v. Midwest Autohaus, 241 F.3d 862, 871-874 (7th Cir. 2001); First Nat’l Bank v. Colonial Bank, 898 F. Supp. 1220, 1229-1233 (N.D. Ill. 1995).
Contract or Duty?
Ennis does not argue that there was a contract between the parties. So, is there a duty in this situation under the Code which would impose an obligation of good faith?
Ennis argues that sections 4.301(a)(1) and 4.302(a)(1) provide the necessary legal duty to invoke the good faith obligation. Section 4.301 provides:
If payor bank settles for a demand item... before midnight of the banking day of receipt, the payor bank may revoke the settlement and recover the settlement if, before it has made final payment and before its midnight deadline, it: (1) returns the item....
Tex. Bus. & Com.
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