Flying J Fish Farm v. Peoples Bank of Greensboro

12 So. 3d 1185, 2008 Ala. LEXIS 222, 2008 WL 4687091
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedOctober 24, 2008
Docket1061833 and 1070120 and 1070140
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 12 So. 3d 1185 (Flying J Fish Farm v. Peoples Bank of Greensboro) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Flying J Fish Farm v. Peoples Bank of Greensboro, 12 So. 3d 1185, 2008 Ala. LEXIS 222, 2008 WL 4687091 (Ala. 2008).

Opinion

SEE, Justice.

Flying J Fish Farm, Charles Jay, and Charles’s mother Anne Jay (hereinafter referred to collectively as “the Jays”) and Renee Laurie Jay (“Renee”), Charles’s wife, appeal from a summary judgment in favor of Peoples Bank of Greensboro (“Peoples Bank”), its directors, Wynne Coleman, and C. Reid Lawson, Jr. (hereinafter referred to collectively as “the Peoples Bank defendants”), on the Jays’ claims of breach of fiduciary duty, suppression, deceit, unjust enrichment, and conspiracy and on Renee’s claim of loss of consortium (case no. 1061833). The Jays and Renee also appeal from a summary judgment in favor of Alabama Catfish, Inc., d/b/a Harvest Select (“Alabama Catfish”), on all of their claims against it (case no. 1070140). The Peoples Bank defendants cross-appeal, pursuant to Rule 5, Ala. R.App. P., from the trial court’s denial of their motion for a summary judgment on the Jays’ negligence and/or wantonness and negligent- and/or wanton-supervision claims (case no. 1070120). We affirm in case no. 1061833 and case no. 1070140, and we reverse and remand in case no. 1070120.

Facts and Procedural History

The Jays entered the catfish-farming business around 1994. At that time Charles Jay met with Wynne Coleman, a loan officer at Peoples Bank, to secure financing for the business venture, which was named the Flying J Fish Farm. Coleman initially refused to provide financing for the venture because Charles could not offer collateral to guarantee the loan. Charles returned to the bank with Anne, and, based on her personal guarantee, Coleman agreed to provide financing for the Flying J Fish Farm. Coleman renewed and modified the loan each year in order to finance the continuing operations and the expansion of the Flying J Fish Farm, until his retirement in 1998. Upon Coleman’s retirement, C. Reid Lawson, Jr., took over as the Jays’ loan officer at *1189 Peoples Bank, and he continued to renew and to modify the Jays’ loan until the Jays left the catfish-farming business in 2003. By that time, the Jays owed Peoples Bank $640,000. Anne Jay sold some timberland to satisfy her personal guarantee of the loan.

Coleman, and later Lawson, had met with the Jays each year while they were operating the Flying J Fish Farm to discuss their loan. Based on his own experience in the catfish-farming business, Lawson offered suggestions to the Jays on ways they could improve the operation and financial condition of their catfish farm.

Alabama Catfish is one of two main catfish-processing businesses located in the area in which the Flying J Fish Farm operated; the other is Southern Pride Fish, LLC. Alabama Catfish and Southern Pride employ tasters who determine whether catfish are “on flavor” or “off flavor” at the time of harvest. The processors will refuse to accept catfish that they determine are “off flavor” and that, therefore, cannot be sold to customers. All catfish farmers have periodic issues with “off flavor” fish.

Coleman and Lawson were both shareholders in Alabama Catfish while they were acting as the Jays’ loan officer, but they did not disclose that fact to the Jays. Charles regularly offered to sell his fish to Alabama Catfish, and Lawson encouraged him to do so. Charles did not have a contract with either Alabama Catfish or with Southern Pride. He initially focused his catfish-selling efforts on Alabama Catfish, partly based on Lawson’s advice and experience. The Jays’ catfish were often refused by Alabama Catfish as being “off flavor.”

In 1999, Alabama Catfish began building catfish ponds of its own, with the goal of providing all the catfish for the processing plant from its own ponds or the ponds of its shareholders. This action, combined with a declining market, prompted Charles to shift the focus of his sales efforts to Southern Pride. He experienced difficulties similar to those he had experienced in trying to sell his catfish to Alabama Catfish. In January 1999, George Smelley, president of Alabama Catfish, sent a letter to the catfish farmers with whom it did business informing them that he, along with Paul Bryant and Lawson, had purchased Alabama Catfish. The Jays deny that they received the letter; however, they rely on the information in that letter to support their allegation that Alabama Catfish suppressed material information regarding its decision to increase the proportion of catfish raised by Alabama Catfish supplying its processing plant.

The Jays sued the Peoples Bank defendants and Alabama Catfish in the Hale Circuit Court, alleging, in their complaint as finally amended, (1) that Peoples Bank, Lawson, and Alabama Catfish had breached a fiduciary duty, (2) that the Peoples Bank defendants and Alabama Catfish, in violation of § 6-5-102, Ala.Code 1975, had suppressed material facts, (3) that Lawson, Peoples Bank, its directors, and Alabama Catfish, in violation of § 6-5-103, Ala.Code 1975, had deceived the Jays regarding material facts, (4) that the Peoples Bank defendants and Alabama Catfish were unjustly enriched at the Jays’ expense, (5) that the Peoples Bank defendants and Alabama Catfish were negligent and/or wanton in their dealings with the Jays, (6) that Peoples Bank and its directors had negligently and/or wantonly supervised Lawson, (7) that the Peoples Bank defendants and Alabama Catfish conspired to commit the aforementioned tortious acts, and (8) that, as a result of the actions of the Peoples Bank defendants and Alabama Catfish, Renee had suffered a loss of Charles’s consortium. The Peoples Bank *1190 defendants and Alabama Catfish each moved for a summary judgment on all the Jays’ claims and Renee’s loss-of-consortium claim. The trial court entered a summary judgment for Alabama Catfish on all claims and, in a separate order, for the Peoples Bank defendants on all claims except for the claims alleging negligence and/or wantonness and negligent and/or wanton supervision. This Court consolidated the Jays’ and Renee’s appeals of the trial court’s summary judgments with the permissive cross-appeal filed by the Peoples Bank defendants of the order denying summary judgment on the Jays’ negligence and/or wantonness and negligent- and/or wanton-supervision claims for the purpose of writing one opinion.

Issues

The issues presented are whether the trial court erred in entering a summary judgment in favor of the Peoples Bank defendants on the Jays’ breach-of-fiduciary-duty, suppression, deceit, unjust-enrichment, and conspiracy claims and on Renee’s loss-of-consortium claim; whether the trial court erred in entering a summary judgment in favor of Alabama Catfish on all the Jays’ claims and on Renee’s loss-of-consortium claim; and whether the trial court erred in denying the motion for a summary judgment filed by the Peoples Bank defendants on the Jays’ negligence and/or wantonness and negligent- and/or wanton-supervision claims.

Standard of Review

“ ‘ “On appeal, this Court reviews a summary judgment de novo.” DiBiasi v. Joe Wheeler Elec. Membership Corp., 988 So.2d 454, 459 (Ala.2008) (citing Ex parte Essary, 992 So.2d 5, 8 (Ala.2007)). In order to uphold a summary judgment, we must determine that “there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law.” Rule 56(c)(3), Ala. R. Civ. P.

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12 So. 3d 1185, 2008 Ala. LEXIS 222, 2008 WL 4687091, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/flying-j-fish-farm-v-peoples-bank-of-greensboro-ala-2008.