Frost National Bank v. Midwest Autohaus, Inc.

241 F.3d 862
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedFebruary 23, 2001
Docket99-3872
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 241 F.3d 862 (Frost National Bank v. Midwest Autohaus, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Frost National Bank v. Midwest Autohaus, Inc., 241 F.3d 862 (7th Cir. 2001).

Opinion

KANNE, Circuit Judge.

This case arises from the collapse of a check kiting scheme operated by account holders at Frost National Bank (“Frost”), plaintiff-appellant, and First of America Bank-Illinois (“FOA”), defendant-appellee. Frost asks us to find that the district court erroneously granted FOA’s motion for summary judgment, dismissing Frost’s claims accusing FOA of acting unlawfully in dealing with the scheme operated by Robert Geekie (“Geekie”) and Peter Parker (“Parker”). Frost disputes the district court’s ruling generally, arguing that the court improperly construed the evidence presented in the light most favorable to FOA when determining whether to grant FOA’s motion for summary judgment. Additionally, Frost challenges certain specific findings of the court, including its *864 conclusion that FOA did not violate 18 U.S.C. § 1962(d),. the conspiracy provision of the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (“RICO”), and that FOA did not breach its duty of good faith imposed by section 4-103 of the Illinois Uniform Commercial Code. We find that the district court properly construed the evidence in this case, and we agree with the court’s determination regarding Frost’s specific claims. We therefore affirm the decision of the district court.

I. History

Defendants Geekie and Parker operated a check kiting scheme through their respective automobile dealerships, Midwest Autohaus (“Midwest”) and Rovers Southwest (“Southwest”). Geekie, using the Midwest account at FOA, 1 and Parker, through the Southwest account at Frost, 2 effectuated their scheme by continuously repeating a cycle of writing checks to each other for amounts their actual account balances could not cover, and then depositing each other’s checks into their respective accounts. FOA and Frost would then provisionally credit Geekie and Parker’s accounts based on these deposits, thereby covering the checks they had just written to one another and enabling them to write other checks as well. This cycle, until it was eventually detected and collapsed, allowed Geekie and Parker to borrow their banks’ money interest free.

While the nature of Frost’s claims requires us to focus primarily on the relationship between FOA and Geekie and the steps FOA took to deal with the suspected kite, we will also discuss relevant facts relating to the relationship between Frost and Parker.

FOA’s lending relationship with Geekie and Midwest began in 1984 and steadily developed to the point that FOA provided financing for vehicle purchases of individual Midwest customers. This line of credit matured in November 1994, however, and it was not renewed by FOA because Geek-ie failed to provide certain financial records needed to evaluate the credit risk. FOA’s credit file on Geekie also expressed concerns regarding the location and identity of some of Midwest’s automobiles and some overdrafts in the Midwest account.

Additionally, the Midwest account often showed negative collected balances. An account’s .collected balance is based on a bank computer’s estimate of how long it will take to collect items deposited into the account through the banking system. Collection usually takes between one and five days. These negative collected balances meant that despite the Midwest account’s positive ledger balance — the balance based on all deposits made into the account minus checks paid from the account — the deposits making up that balance had not been collected through the Federal Reserve System. Nevertheless, FOA consistently allowed Geekie to draw on these uncollected balances. Eventually, FOA told Geekie that it would charge him interest on the average uncollected balances because the uncollected balances were “like an unsecured loan.” In spite of this warning, however, FOA never did charge the Midwest account any interest.

At the same time, FOA received check-clearing services from First of America Service (“FAS”). FAS employs the Vector 9 Check Kite Suspect Computer System in processing each customer’s account, looking for and identifying suspicious activity. FAS reviews each account that is identified as suspicious to determine if the activity warrants further investigation. When FAS finds sufficient evidence of a possible kite, it notifies the bank that *865 holds the account. After FAS notifies a bank about a specific account, that bank ■will sign off on that customer’s account if it determines that the activity of the account is legitimate. Once a bank signs off on a customer’s account, FAS will not refer the account to that bank again. In the first few months of 1995, the Midwest account appeared on the Vector 9 computer system nearly every day. FAS referred the account to FOA as a possible kite situation and FOA signed off on the Midwest account. Frost had a similar detection system in place. Frost received Kite Research Reports which can indicate suspicious activity that might be associated with a check kiting scheme. Parker’s Southwest account appeared on Frost’s Kite Research System Reports forty-three times from January to mid-May of 1995.

In May of 1995, after months of tolerating Geekie’s use of the Midwest account, events transpired causing FOA to respond swiftly to the suspicious activity surrounding the Midwest account. On May 11, one of Geekie’s employees requested a $50,000 cashier’s check from FOA. In processing this request, the teller assisting the employee discovered that the Midwest account had a negative collected balance. Seeing this uncollected balance, the teller sought approval from a supervisor on whether to issue the cashier’s check. Michael Gordon (“Gordon”), the officer in charge of the Midwest account, was unavailable, but another officer instructed the teller to deny the request because of the uncollected balance. Gordon was subsequently made aware of this incident by the officer who instructed the teller to deny the request, and at that time Gordon proceeded to examine the Midwest account.

The Midwest account exhibited a frequent and growing disparity between a large positive ledger balance and an even larger uncollected balance. Additionally, Gordon observed checks totaling unusually large amounts of money being deposited into the Midwest account in very short periods of time. Despite previous financial statements totaling Midwest’s annual sales at $7.2 million, the Midwest account had received $11 million in deposits during just the first ten days of May 1995. Furthermore, two days earlier, Frost had returned eight checks drawn on Parker’s Southwest account at Frost totaling $701,800, refusing to pay FOA because of insufficient funds in the Southwest account. These returned checks were charged against Midwest’s account at FOA.

Concerned with the state of the Midwest account and the activity surrounding it, Gordon approached FOA’s regional bank president, Jeff Smith (“Smith”) with the information he had compiled. The two officers examined the account’s activity to determine whether the significant increase in deposits was the result of legitimate business transactions. Smith and Gordon recognized that the uncollected funds balance in the Midwest account had grown substantially over the past six months.

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241 F.3d 862, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/frost-national-bank-v-midwest-autohaus-inc-ca7-2001.