Fina Oil and Chemical Company v. First American Bank

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 29, 1996
Docket10-95-00054-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Fina Oil and Chemical Company v. First American Bank (Fina Oil and Chemical Company v. First American 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.

Bluebook
Fina Oil and Chemical Company v. First American Bank, (Tex. Ct. App. 1996).

Opinion

Fine Oil & Chem v. Fist Amer Bank


IN THE

TENTH COURT OF APPEALS


No. 10-95-054-CV


     FINA OIL AND CHEMICAL COMPANY,

                                                                                              Appellant

     v.


     FIRST AMERICAN BANK, ET AL.,

                                                                                              Appellees


From the 361st District Court

Brazos County, Texas

Trial Court # 38,726-361


O P I N I O N


      Fina Oil and Chemical Company (Fina) appeals from a directed verdict in favor of First American Bank (the Bank) in Fina's suit for breach of contract, conversion, negligence, and gross negligence arising out of the Bank's failure to pay on a certificate of deposit issued by the Bank when Fina presented it for redemption. Because we conclude that the court failed to properly interpret and apply the parties' stipulations, we will reverse the judgment and remand this cause for trial.

BACKGROUND

Facts

      Fina sold petroleum products to Brazos Oil Company d/b/a Brazos Fuel and Supply, a wholesale company owned, at least in part, by F. Kyle Read. In November 1989, Read guaranteed payment of Brazos' revolving account, and gave Fina a security interest in the principal and interest of a $56,042.58 Certificate of Deposit issued by the Bank to secure his guaranty. Fina perfected its security interest in the CD by obtaining possession of the instrument.

      Read made two withdrawals from the CD without notice to Fina or its consent—$16,000 on August 28, 1991, and $45,000 on November 20, 1991. Both of these withdrawals were made without presenting the original CD to the Bank. When Brazos defaulted on its obligations to Fina in early 1993, Fina asked Read to satisfy the debt under the terms of his guaranty. Read refused, asserting that he had revoked the guaranty some two years earlier. Fina claimed that it had not received the revocation letter and presented the CD and security agreement to the Bank for payment on March 13, 1993. The Bank forwarded a check for $3,494.31, all that was left in the account.

Proceedings in the Trial Court

      Fina rejected this payment and sued the Bank on breach of contract, conversion, negligence, and gross negligence theories. All of the claims were premised on Fina's claim that the Bank breached its duty to Fina when it allowed Read to withdraw money from the CD without presenting the instrument itself. The Bank answered with a general denial. Tex. R. Civ. P. 92. Although the Bank brought Read into the suit as a third-party defendant, Fina did not seek relief from him. Prior to the beginning of the trial, Fina and the Bank filed stipulations pursuant to Rule 11 of the Rules of Civil Procedure. Id. 11. Among the seven stipulations, Fina and the Bank agreed:

2.First American Bank ("FAB") stipulates that its actions in paying the proceeds of Certificate of Deposit 707586 ("CD") to F. Kyle Read ("Read") in August and November 1991 and failing to pay Fina Oil and Chemical Company ("Fina") the proceeds after timely demand violated contractual and tort obligations and duties to Fina.

3.FAB stipulates that it is liable to Fina for actual damages caused to Fina by the wrongful payments to Read and its failure to pay Fina upon proper demand.

4.The parties stipulate that the amount of these damages is the lesser of (1) the value the CD would have had if the withdrawals were not made; or (2) the amount that Read owes Fina on his personal guarantee of the Brazos Oil Sales, Inc. account with Fina.

5.FAB stipulates that Fina is also entitled to recover interest on the CD at the applicable CD rate up to the date this action was filed. Thereafter, Fina is entitled to prejudgment interest at the highest rate allowed by law.

      At trial, Fina called Walter Henson, Fina's credit manager responsible for Brazos' account. He testified generally to the dealings between Brazos and Fina. He also testified specifically that Fina did not receive a written revocation of Read's guaranty until June 1993, and that the balance owed on the Brazos account as of March 31, 1993, was $81,277.46. During Henson's testimony, Fina introduced the end-of-month statement for the Brazos account for March 1993, a copy of the security agreement, and a copy of the CD. Through Charlie Zikes, a Bank employee, Fina produced evidence that the beginning balance of the CD was $56,042.58 and that the amount of the interest on the principle through June 23, 1993, the date Fina filed its petition, would have been $12,645.85, for a total CD value of $68,688.43 on that day.

      After Fina rested its case in chief, both the Bank and Read presented motions for a directed verdict against Fina. The Bank argued that it was entitled to a directed verdict on four theories: (1) Fina failed to comply with the requirements of section 17.001(a) of the Civil Practice and Remedies Code because it had failed to obtain a judgment against Read or Brazos and had failed to included a claim that Read or Brazos owed Fina money in its pleadings, Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code Ann. § 17.001(a) (Vernon 1986); (2) Fina failed to present evidence of the amount Read owed Fina on his personal guaranty as of the dates Fina pleaded for breach of the contract, August 28, 1991, and November 20, 1991; (3) there was no evidence of an amount owed by Read on his personal guaranty for any specific date tied to a "liability fact"; and (4) there was no evidence of a declaration of default or foreclosure of the security agreement or notice to Read that any kind of disposition of the collateral under the security agreement was going to be made.

      Read's motion was also premised on four theories: (1) the evidence established that Read did not owe any money to Fina on August 28, 1991, or on November 20, 1991; (2) "no evidence, no credible evidence," that Brazos owed Fina a specific amount on a specific date; (3) "no evidence and no credible evidence" as to a date upon which a breach occurred between Brazos and Fina; and (4) "no evidence or no credible evidence" of a debt owed by Brazos to Fina for which Read would be liable under his guaranty or under the security agreement secured by the certificate of deposit.

      Fina replied to both motions with the same arguments. First, Fina argued that the stipulations covered liability; thus, any arguments which would defeat its claim that the bank was liable on the CD were not valid.

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Fina Oil and Chemical Company v. First American Bank, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fina-oil-and-chemical-company-v-first-american-ban-texapp-1996.