First Federal Savings and Loan Association v. Twin City Savings Bank, Fsb, and Twin City Savings Bank, Fsa

868 F.2d 725, 1989 U.S. App. LEXIS 4174, 1989 WL 21792
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedMarch 17, 1989
Docket88-4261
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 868 F.2d 725 (First Federal Savings and Loan Association v. Twin City Savings Bank, Fsb, and Twin City Savings Bank, Fsa) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
First Federal Savings and Loan Association v. Twin City Savings Bank, Fsb, and Twin City Savings Bank, Fsa, 868 F.2d 725, 1989 U.S. App. LEXIS 4174, 1989 WL 21792 (1st Cir. 1989).

Opinion

ALVIN B. RUBIN, Circuit Judge:

The issue presented is whether, under the pre-1985 provisions of the Louisiana Civil Code, a contract may be rescinded for fraud when the party seeking rescission was negligent in not investigating the misrepresentations.

I.

First Federal Savings and Loan contends that Twin City Savings Bank fraudulently deceived it when Twin City sold First Federal a participation in a loan, known as the “Sea Oats” loan. First Federal seeks recision of the contract and return of the purchase price, or, alternatively, damages.

Twin City Savings Bank, which has its main office in Monroe, Louisiana, closed a loan the maximum amount of which was to be $8.6 million to Sea Oats of Juno Beach, Inc., on October 14,1983. Sea Oats was to call on Twin City for disbursements from time to time to be used for the construction in Palm Beach, Florida, of 232 condominium units, which Sea Oats expected to complete in 18 months, by April 1985. As units were sold the proceeds were to be used to reduce the loan. Sea Oats would then seek further disbursements to finance the construction of additional units. Sea Oats contemplated that units would be sold while the project was being completed, with all units to be sold by September 1985.

The loan was for a term of two years, but Sea Oats had options to extend the maturity date for two additional six-month periods if the loan were not in default. Twin City expected to be only the lead lender in the loan and to sell participations in it to other lenders. In accordance with its plan it sold a $1 million participation to Unifirst Savings Bank of Jackson, Mississippi, retaining the remainder of the loan.

Sea Oats fell behind its construction schedule, requiring it to extend the estimated completion date for the project from April 1985 to August 1986. Two of Sea Oats’s officers met with Bill Lewis, the President of Twin City, on November 5, 1985, in Monroe, Louisiana, to advise him of the revised completion date, the new cash-flow projections, and the revised final sale date, which was November 1986, thirteen months later than had originally been contemplated.

Originally, Sea Oats had expected to sell units at an average rate of 12V2 per month. A competitive project had, however, been completed, offering cheaper units nearer to town. As a result, by this time, Sea Oats had sold only 4 units per month, a total of 49, and none of the sales had been closed. Therefore, Sea Oats had been unable to reduce the principal amount of the loan as originally planned. The balance due was $8.6 million, more than twice the amount that had been projected to be due in November. Although Sea Oats requested an additional advance of $1 million, neither Twin City nor Sea Oats wished to advance additional funds.

Twin City stopped further funding of the loan, and commissioned Linda Thomason, the president of the Thomason Corporation, a mortgage broker in Tampa, Florida, to sell participations in the Sea Oats loan and in a number of other loans. As a result of Thomason’s efforts, Wayne Courtney, the president of First Federal, which has its home office in Mayfield, Kentucky, communicated with her to express his interest in buying participations in construction loans maturing within one year from the date of purchase. Thomason arranged for Courtney to meet with Lewis and her in Monroe, Louisiana, on November 14, 1985.

At this meeting, which was nine days after Lewis’ meeting with Sea Oats’s officials, the parties discussed a number of loans including Sea Oats’s. Courtney was given access to the entire extensive file on that loan and permitted to review all the relevant documents. The district court did *727 not resolve a dispute concerning whether Courtney actually reviewed the Sea Oats file, but stated that Courtney’s itinerary indicated that he would have had very little time to look through the files, apparently referring not only to the Sea Oats file but also to the files on other loans that were discussed.

Following the meeting, Thomason sent Courtney a synopsis of information on the Sea Oats loan, indicating that the loan would mature in one year. Thomason had prepared an information package called “the Blue Book” on each of the loans being offered. Six days later she mailed him the Blue Book on Sea Oats, which contained a summary sheet stating that the loan would mature in one year. The Blue Book also contained a copy of the original Twin City commitment letter to Sea Oats, dated September 12, 1983, stating that the term of the loan would be 24 months from closing, which would have been less than one year from the time when Twin City was negotiating with First Federal. In addition, it contained a copy of Sea Oats’s promissory note with a maturity date of November 1, 1985, and a copy of the mortgage and security agreement, stating the same maturity date. While the building loan agreement, which was also contained in the Blue Book, referred to an option to extend the loan, the option itself was not contained in the Blue Book, nor was a later amendment to the commitment letter containing Twin City’s agreement to the option.

The Blue Book contained copies of Sea Oats’s original business plan, appraisals, and cash-flow projections, but it did not contain Sea Oats’s November 4, 1984, revisions that had been delivered to Lewis of Twin City only fifteen days earlier. The Blue Book did contain a year-old market analysis, which did not mention the competing project. It contained no indication that the amount of the loan had been fully drawn by October 1984 or that Twin City had ceased funding the project.

After Courtney had presented the Blue Book to First Federal’s Executive Committee on November 26, 1984, it approved purchase of a participation in the Sea Oats loan subject to a site inspection by Courtney. Two days later Courtney visited the Florida site and inspected the project for approximately one hour. Courtney was given access to the site, the surrounding area, and any documents relating to the loan. Although Sea Oats had completed only 9 of the 29 buildings planned, Courtney made a favorable report to the Executive Committee and signed an agreement to purchase a participation in the loan amounting to $1.9 million. When Twin City received this, it advanced $1 million to Sea Oats, retaining the remaining $900,000.

On December 12, Lewis wrote Courtney that, upon review of the participation certificate, he found that it did not reflect an increase in the loan amount resulting from the number of units under construction from 40 to 72, and that the loan now had a ceiling of $9.6.

Unifirst, the first bank that had bought a participation in the Sea Oats loan, became dissatisfied with Twin City’s administration of the loan and, at its request, Twin City designated Unifirst lead lender. When Sea Oats was unable to repay the loan on November 8, 1985, Unifirst extended it for an additional year. At the time of trial in 1987, construction of the Sea Oats project was not complete, and the loan was still unpaid. Sea Oats’s president testified that, if the project is finally completed and all units are sold, the proceeds will be $3 million less than the balance due on the loans.

While Twin City was lead lender, it sent First Federal all payments of interest it received, in accordance with the participation agreement.

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868 F.2d 725, 1989 U.S. App. LEXIS 4174, 1989 WL 21792, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-federal-savings-and-loan-association-v-twin-city-savings-bank-fsb-ca1-1989.