First National Bank of Logansport v. Logan Mfg. Co.

577 N.E.2d 949, 18 A.L.R. 5th 999, 1991 Ind. LEXIS 130, 1991 WL 172117
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedJune 28, 1991
Docket66S03-9106-CV-494
StatusPublished
Cited by67 cases

This text of 577 N.E.2d 949 (First National Bank of Logansport v. Logan Mfg. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
First National Bank of Logansport v. Logan Mfg. Co., 577 N.E.2d 949, 18 A.L.R. 5th 999, 1991 Ind. LEXIS 130, 1991 WL 172117 (Ind. 1991).

Opinion

ON PETITION TO TRANSFER

KRAHULIK, Justice.

In a memorandum decision, the Court of Appeals affirmed, with certain amendments and corrections, the trial court's judgment against The First National Bank of Logansport, awarding $726,582 in damages for breach of a loan commitment, allegedly made to the plaintiffs below, Logan Manufacturing Co., Inc., Donald Moore, Sondra Moore, Clifford Garrett and Judith Ann Garrett (collectively "Garrett and Moore"). The bank has petitioned us to accept transfer of this case. We accept the request.

The issues presented are whether a contract to loan money was entered into by the parties and what damages are recoverable. The facts relevant to our discussion follow.

In 1982, Max Brandt was a senior vice president and senior loan officer at the bank. During this time, there was high unemployment in Logansport and Brandt was interested in bringing new industry to the area and in obtaining new business for the bank. In 1982, Brandt became aware of a small corporation in Michigan called Winamac Plastics Drinkwear which was undercapitalized and had suffered losses as the result of high rental payments, high labor costs and some questionable management practices, but which also was considering a move to Indiana. Representatives of the bank reviewed the products and potential of Winamac Plastics, its customer lists, contracts, equipment lists and appraisals, and its financial data, and determined that with additional capital and new management, the business was viable.

Thereafter, in late 1982, Garrett and Moore became interested in Winamac Plasties. In January 1983, Garrett and Moore met with Brandt at the bank. Numerous meetings and telephone conversations over the following weeks culminated in Brandt's determination that the bank would get involved with financing the business if Garrett and Moore were involved and the business moved to Logansport.

Both Garrett and Moore were told by Brandt that the limit on his lending authority was $100,000, and that requests for loans above that amount had to be approved by certain bank committees. Pursuant to that authority, Brandt approved a loan to Garrett and Moore personally for $100,000, $80,000 of which was to be used to acquire a two-thirds interest in the business for Garrett and Moore. Ultimately, Garrett and Moore borrowed a total of $100,000 from the bank.

In March, Brandt prepared a loan application for Winamac. The request was for a term loan of $420,000 and an operating loan of $120,000. At the same time, Brandt prepared a loan request for Garrett and Moore for $206,000 which included the *951 $80,000 already borrowed. Brandt submitted the Winamac loan request to the bank's loan committee and it was turned down because of the company's heavy debt load. When Garrett and Moore learned that the loan had been denied, they were upset and frustrated because they already had borrowed money from the bank and spent it on the project. Without additional loans, they would not be able to proceed with operation of the business.

Brandt assured Garrett and Moore that the bank would help them purchase the Winamac machinery and go into operation under a new corporate entity. Brandt encouraged them to continue the process of moving the business to Logansport and setting up a new corporation to operate it. Garrett and Moore decided to proceed in that fashion.

Brandt then prepared a new loan application using the name Logan Drinkwear, Inc., which was one of the names proposed by Garrett and Moore for the new corporation. Neither Garrett nor Moore were asked to sign the new application. This application, for a term loan of $346,000 and a line of credit of $250,000, was approved the same day it was submitted (four days after the Winamac application was denied) by both the officer's loan committee and the director's loan committee of the bank. Garrett and Moore were advised of the approval that day also.

On March 31, 1983, the bank issued letters of commitment for a $346,000 term loan and a $250,000 operating loan. This commitment provided, for the first time, that the term loan ($346,000) had to be guaranteed by the state. When Garrett and Moore questioned Brandt about this requirement, he indicated that the guaranty would be a good thing, but that the bank did not need it, and assured them that the bank would lend the money to buy the machinery whether or not the Indiana Economic Development Commission guaranteed the loan. The commitment also provided that Garrett and Moore would give the bank a security interest in the machinery, equipment, furniture and fixtures. The letters of commitment carried an expiration date of May 31, 1988. Subsequently, the bank refused to close on either loan. Garrett and Moore used the remaining $20,000 from the $100,000 initially borrowed, and they sought loans elsewhere without success, until 1987. Then, with loans from state agencies, they opened a similar plastics business in Iowa.

Garrett and Moore sued the bank for damages suffered as a result of its refusal to make the term loan and extend the line of credit as provided in the loan commitment letters, and proceeded to trial on the theories of breach of contract, breach of implied contract, promissory estoppel, interference with contractual relations, and fraud. Following a bench trial, a judgment in favor of Garrett and Moore in the amount of $726,582 was entered, consisting of the following components:

1. Lost profits from mid-1988 to mid-1987; $588,452

2, Loss of equity in their personal machinery and equipment; and $ 70,000

3. Out-of-pocket expenses. $ 78,080

Item one included lost profits from mid-1983, after the bank refused to make the loan, until mid-1987 when Garrett and Moore began operations in lowa. Both sides presented expert testimony relating to the issue of lost profits.

The second item of damages was assessed for "the difference between the fair market value of assets which were repossessed and the fair market value as unre-possessed items." This finding refers to personal property owned by Garrett and Moore which secured a loan from a Craw-fordsville bank unrelated to the loans in question here. After the defendant bank refused to go ahead with the loans at issue here, Garrett and Moore were unable to repay the Crawfordsville bank loan. The Crawfordsville bank then repossessed the personal property and sold it to satisfy the outstanding loan it had made. Garrett testified at trial that the value of the equipment repossessed was "somewhere between $70,000 and $80,000."

The third item of damages reflects the amount spent by Garrett and Moore in preparing to move the business from Michigan to Logansport and includes amounts *952 for monies spent on a facility in Logans-port. This item of damage was computed as follows: total amount spent on preparing to operate the business in Logansport ($154,000) plus interest on this amount of eight per cent from June 1988 through December 1987 ($19,080), less the amount Garrett and Moore borrowed from the bank ($100,000), resulting in a sum of $78,080.

On appeal, the bank challenges both liability and damages.

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Bluebook (online)
577 N.E.2d 949, 18 A.L.R. 5th 999, 1991 Ind. LEXIS 130, 1991 WL 172117, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-national-bank-of-logansport-v-logan-mfg-co-ind-1991.