F.D.I.C. v. W. Hugh Meyer & Associates, Inc.

864 F.2d 371, 1989 WL 1746
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedMarch 23, 1989
Docket87-1943
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 864 F.2d 371 (F.D.I.C. v. W. Hugh Meyer & Associates, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
F.D.I.C. v. W. Hugh Meyer & Associates, Inc., 864 F.2d 371, 1989 WL 1746 (5th Cir. 1989).

Opinion

PATRICK E. HIGGINBOTHAM, Circuit Judge:

In 1982, Hugh Meyer signed an agreement pledging some stock to the First National Bank of Midland. The pledge agreement entitled the bank to a security interest in the dividends upon the stock, but neither the bank nor the FDIC, the bank’s successor in interest, registered the pledged shares in the bank’s name. As a result, dividends from the pledged stock were delivered to Meyer. Among these dividends was a stock dividend worth about $500,000. Meyer eventually pledged these dividend shares to his law firm, Grambling & Mounce, to secure payment of a $125,000 retainer. Meyer then went bankrupt. His total indebtedness to the bank is in the neighborhood of $3 million. First Midland became insolvent and went into receivership. The FDIC sued Meyer and Gram-bling & Mounce to get the dividend shares. The district court held that the law firm had a perfected security interest in the shares up to the amount of its retainer, and that the FDIC was an unsecured creditor of the Meyer estate. The FDIC appeals. Because we find that possession is essential under Texas law to obtain a secured interest in securities, and because the bank never obtained possession of the contested securities, we affirm.

I

Meyer regularly entered into financing agreements with First Midland. In 1982, he and the bank executed a “Separate Collateral Agreement,” whereby Meyer pledged to the bank some stock (in Power Test) he owned, and the dividends thereon. Meyer delivered the base stock — five certificates — to the bank. Meyer testified that he did not realize that he had also pledged the dividends from the stock, that he did not intend to do so, and that, as was customary in the dealings between Meyer and the bank, the bank did not give Meyer a copy of the pledge agreement.

In September of 1983, various notes owed by Meyer’s company, and personally guaranteed by Meyer, with a combined principal exceeding $2 million, matured and became due. These debts, plus interest, remain outstanding. In October of 1983, the comptroller declared the bank insolvent, and appointed the FDIC as receiver.

Shortly thereafter, Wiley James, a partner at Grambling & Mounce, met Meyer and began representing him. The FDIC sent Meyer a letter about the debts he had personally guaranteed. In December 1983, Grambling & Mounce, on Meyer’s behalf, asked the FDIC for copies of any security agreements executed by Meyer in the FDIC’s favor. In January 1984, the FDIC replied that such agreements were privileged. The FDIC’s local counsel likewise refused to release the agreements.

The bank, and later the FDIC, could have stopped Meyer from receiving dividends on the pledged stock by registering its holding of the pledged stock, or by putting a stop transfer order on the stock. The bank and the FDIC had on file forms, signed by Meyer, that would have permitted them to take these actions. The FDIC finally put a stop transfer order on the stock in June of 1985. But by that time, the horse was out of the barn.

The “horse,” for purposes of this suit, is a 19,580 share stock dividend issued by Power Test in April 1985, and received by Meyer. Meyer claims, and the district court found, that he pledged and delivered this dividend stock to Grambling & Mounce in May 1985 as security for his promise to pay the firm’s retainer. The FDIC hotly contests this claim, arguing that Meyer did not deliver the dividend stock to the firm until November 1985.

*373 In June 1985, the FDIC notified Wiley James of the FDIC’s claim upon the dividend stock. Meyer claims that he discovered the FDIC’s claim upon the dividend stock when he tried in July 1985 to sell the stock. He was prevented from doing so by the “stop transfer” order. Meyer claims that upon finding he was unable to sell the stock, he returned the stock to the law firm, and informed the law firm of the reasons for his inability to sell the stock.

In November 1985, Meyer and his lawyers executed a written retainer agreement which they claim memorializes the May 1985 pledge of the securities. The agreement recites that the pledged securities were deposited at Grambling & Mounce contemporaneously with the execution, in November, of the agreement. The law firm and Meyer say that this recital is erroneous. They say that the pledge and delivery both took place in May, but that no written agreement was necessary until November, when James decided that it was likely that Meyer would go into bankruptcy. The FDIC contends that the recital is accurate, or, alternatively, that Meyer and the law firm should not be heard to contest the accuracy of the recital.

Meyer did go into bankruptcy in December 1986.

The FDIC also filed this suit in December 1986. A bench trial was had on October 19,1987, on which date the value of the contested shares declined significantly. On October 26, 1987, Judge Bunton rendered judgment for defendants, holding that Grambling & Mounce had a perfected security interest in the shares, and that the FDIC was an unsecured creditor of the bankrupt estate. The FDIC appeals.

II

The outcome of this case turns upon interpretation of Article 8 of the Uniform Commercial Code, as amended in 1977 and enacted into Texas law in 1983. See Tex. Bus. & Com.Code Ann. § 8.101-8.408 (Vernon 1988 Supp.). That article governs security interests in securities. The key question is whether the Code recognizes a security interest in stock shares — more precisely, in the language of the code, “certificated securities” 1 — if the holder of the putative security interest has never possessed the shares. If not, then the FDIC is an unsecured creditor with respect to the dividend shares, and Grambling & Mounce is apparently the only secured creditor. Resolving this question of UCC law requires this court to write upon a rather clean slate.

There is a preliminary dispute between the parties as to the proper order of the issues. The FDIC asks the Court to consider first whether Grambling & Mounce took the stock as a bona fide purchaser, and then, if the Court finds that Grambling & Mounce did not, whether the FDIC had a perfected security interest in the stock. Meyer and the law firm contend that if the District Court was correct in its finding that the FDIC had no security interest in the stock and that Grambling & Mounce did have a perfected security interest, it is irrelevant whether or not Grambling & Mounce took without notice of any claims that the FDIC was trying to make.

We agree that we should first determine which, if any, parties developed security interests in the stock, and that we may thereby avoid the bona fides purchaser issue. Mere knowledge of a possible but as yet uncreated security interest does not suffice to defeat the perfected security interest of a later creditor. A contrary rule would undermine the “race of diligence among creditors” contemplated by the U.C.C. See Matter of E.A. Fretz Co., Inc., 565 F.2d 366, 371 (5th Cir.1978).

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864 F.2d 371, 1989 WL 1746, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fdic-v-w-hugh-meyer-associates-inc-ca5-1989.