Federal Deposit Insurance v. Franchise Finance & Management Co.

354 F. Supp. 1016, 1973 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14965
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Florida
DecidedFebruary 9, 1973
DocketCiv. 72-88
StatusPublished

This text of 354 F. Supp. 1016 (Federal Deposit Insurance v. Franchise Finance & Management Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Federal Deposit Insurance v. Franchise Finance & Management Co., 354 F. Supp. 1016, 1973 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14965 (S.D. Fla. 1973).

Opinion

ROETTGER, District Judge.

This seemed less like a trial than watching a “B” movie on the late show. The setting for this bizzare transaction is an unlikely one: Petersburg, Kentucky, a town of 430 people, approximately 40 miles down river from Cincinnati. The Farmers Bank of Petersburg is quartered in a simple one-story building which appears to be less than 15 feet in width. The liquidator testified that it is the smallest bank, both in physical size and in assets, seen by him during *1017 his several years experience as a bank examiner and liquidator for the plaintiff.

The bank was established shortly before 1908 and at the pertinent times had capital of $25,000 and a surplus of $30,000. As of the end of June, 1969, the bank’s total assets were $579,000. The minutes of the meeting of the board of directors in July, 1969 indicate its attention was directed to such matters as an increase in an employee’s salary of $5 per week and car allowances of $25 per month.

Kentucky law limits a bank’s loans to a percentage of its capital and surplus which in this case placed a ceiling of $11,000 on unsecured loans and $16,500 on secured loans.

Meanwhile, Franchise Finance and Management, a franchisor corporation with its offices in St. Petersburg, Florida, was in serious financial straits. It owed over $300,000 to more than 100 creditors and had no money. It owned no land, but had approximately six fast-food restaurants open for business near St. Petersburg. It was operating on a cash-only basis and would not deposit funds in any checking accounts for fear of attachment.

Miami defendant Alvin Klupt, a law school graduate at age twenty and disbarred as a lawyer in Maryland at twenty-nine, is presently appealing a conviction in the United States District Court for the District of Vermont for a conspiracy in 1970 to conceal assets from a bankrupt estate. He acquired control of the defendant Franchise Finance by paying less than fifteen hundred dollars to the original shareholders for approximately two-thirds of the shares and for compromising the claims of creditors. It must be noted that the latter efforts were hardly successful because numerous final judgments were obtained against Franchise Finance.

Among Klupt’s enterprises was a collection system and he had a franchise-salesman in Kentucky named John Osborne. Osborne had met one Truitt DeMoisey, a lawyer in Kentucky who was counsel for the Farmers Bank of Petersburg as well as one of its directors. Osborne introduced Klupt and DeMoisey in November of 1969.

Klupt took over Franchise Finance in January, 1970 and installed Osborne, his salesman, from the small hamlet of Russell Springs, Kentucky, as president of the St. Petersburg corporation. Osborne’s father, a career federal civil servant residing in Kentucky, was named vice president of Franchise Finance. The pitch was made to De-Moisey — and apparently to some of the directors of Farmers Bank — that in return for loans Franchise Finance would arrange for deposits of large amounts of certificates of deposit. In fact, about $600,000 of such certificates were deposited in Farmers Bank during the winter and spring of 1970. These two officers signed a corporate note for $40,000 to Farmers Bank on February 13, 1970, and the proceeds were turned over to Franchise Finance. Since $30,000 of the loan on this note was from a participating bank the loan used up $10,000 of Farmers Bank $11,000 limit for unsecured loans.

The testimony as to the events at Franchise Finance during the early months of 1970 reveal a course of conduct totally manipulated by Klupt. He dispatched defendant Michael Shipley to St. Petersburg- supposedly to compromise the claims of creditors. Shipley, however, dealt with only one creditor, and that rather unsuccessfully as the creditor subsequently obtained a judgment against Franchise Finance. The testimony corroborates the observation of Fentress, the comptroller of Franchise Finance, that after January 28, 1970, Klupt acted like the owner of Franchise Finance. Klupt vacillated between various corporate alternatives to take control of Franchise Finance and to obtain the loan from Farmers Bank.

Defendant’s witnesses then reveal a classic series of events. Franchise Finance had set a closing date of March 20, 1970, with its creditors. On Thurs *1018 day, March 19th, Klupt chartered a plane in Florida and flew to Cincinnati to receive an additional $200,000 pursuant to a note executed by the Osbornes for Franchise Finance in the office of DeMoisey. After banking hours that afternoon, DeMoisey demanded that the Bank’s cashier prepare and sign a cashier’s check for $200,000. He assured her that everything had been approved and it would be quite all right. De-Moisey then delivered the check for $200,000 to Klupt and, according to Klupt, assured him an additional $360,000 would be forthcoming and that he should deposit Franchise Finance checks in the amounts of $100,000, $100,000, $100,000 and $60,000 on alternate banking days beginning the following Monday. Klupt returned to Florida that night on the chartered plane and turned over the cashier’s check and the four executed checks to his lawyer. 1 The cashier’s check was deposited in the trust account of Klupt’s lawyer and the four checks totalling $360,000 were made payable to his lawyer. Klupt’s lawyer deposited the cashier’s check on the 20th, and evidently becoming impatient, also deposited the first $100,000 check that same day rather than waiting until the following Monday.

The testimony was uncontradicted that there was no authority whatsoever for the disbursal of the $200,000 by the Farmers Bank. The monthly meeting of the board of directors was held on March 7th and no mention is made in the minutes of any such loan. On Monday, March 23rd, the bank’s cashier, plainly upset over what had happened, tried to stop payment on the cashier’s check. Farmers Bank evidently had no executive officer present at the bank during banking hours. A special meeting of the directors was held as quickly as possible on March 26th with all but one of the directors present. The minutes reveal that the meeting was called to discuss the fact that a loan had been made to Franchise Finance and a check had been drawn in the amount of $200,000 without the approval of the directors and in violation of Kentucky statutes and the loan policy of the bank. The directors were unanimous in voicing their disapproval of this loan. The strong feeling of the directors is underlined by the fact that each of the directors present, with the exception of De-Moisey, signed the minutes for this particular meeting, a heretofore nonexistent practice. In addition, the minutes of this meeting reveal an additional uncharacteristic, and perhaps improvident, act on the part of the directors: this was the only meeting not opened and closed with prayer.

Unfortunately, the complete circumstances surrounding the issuance of the $200,000 check were not presented to the Court because DeMoisey vanished shortly after the bank’s collapse. In addition, counsel did not bother to depose Ms. Toole, the cashier; anyone who grew up in a town the size of Petersburg would have counted on her to provide the most accurate and complete testimony about what happened.

There was no participation with any other bank in the $200,000 loan and the purported $360,000 loan was never consummated.

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Bluebook (online)
354 F. Supp. 1016, 1973 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14965, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/federal-deposit-insurance-v-franchise-finance-management-co-flsd-1973.