Gary Green v. Maurice P. Foley, Gary Green v. Maurice P. Foley

856 F.2d 660
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedOctober 14, 1988
Docket87-2639, 87-2685
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 856 F.2d 660 (Gary Green v. Maurice P. Foley, Gary Green v. Maurice P. Foley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gary Green v. Maurice P. Foley, Gary Green v. Maurice P. Foley, 856 F.2d 660 (4th Cir. 1988).

Opinion

MURNAGHAN, Circuit Judge:

The appellee, Gary Green, tries to portray the case as involving an ordinary commercial transaction in which a guarantor (appellant Maurice P. Foley) is simply trying to duck liability on a note. The attempted characterization is far from accurate. In fact, Green has been part of a scheme with two of Foley’s business partners (Alan Silverstein and Stephen M. Zim-pel), in which the two partners have paid off $291,647.81 in partnership indebtedness and caused the uncancelled notes to be given to Green. Green subsequently has tried to collect the face value of the notes from Foley, the third partner in the partnership, who signed the partnership notes as a guarantor.

Green repeatedly has stated in his court pleadings and arguments that he was a bona fide purchaser of the notes for value. Green claims he took the notes for value because Silverstein and Zimpel owed him $10,000 in legal fees for services unrelated to the partnership. Green has further claimed that the notes were properly discounted from their face value of nearly $300,000 because Green assumed the risk that Foley would be unable to make good on the guaranty.

Green is, in fact, far from an innocent holder of the notes, however. Foley discovered the true nature of the transaction between his partners and Green only after the hearing on the cross-motions for summary judgment. Foley’s lawyer received, as part of discovery, the letter outlining the arrangement between Green and Foley’s partners only on the morning the motion for summary judgment was being argued (he received the material after arriving in the courtroom and did not read the papers until after the hearing); he then examined Zimpel in a deposition and discovered the true nature and extent of the transaction. Until Foley obtained the letter outlining the actual agreement between Green and Foley’s partners, Foley had no way of knowing that the money used to “purchase” the notes from the banks was actually money supplied by Zimpel and Silverstein. And until Foley’s attorney questioned Zimpel in a deposition, he had no way of knowing that the money used was first put into the partnership bank account in order to retire the notes and was then withdrawn.

Meanwhile, summary judgment had been granted to Green on his claim. Foley sought relief under Fed.R.Civ.P. 60(b)(3), but the district judge ruled that the letter was “neither newly discovered evidence or fraud that would warrant any relief from the judgment.” 1 We disagree.

The new evidence about Green’s relationship with Foley’s partners reveals the silk purse and sow’s ear characteristic of the transaction. The belated disclosure that Foley’s partners supplied the money (via the partnership account) to pay Sovran Bank gives Foley a meritorious defense to Green’s claim. As discussed more fully below, under Virginia law, the note held by Sovran Bank was extinguished because it was paid with partnership funds. See Va. Code Ann. § 50-8 (1986). Even if the money had not gone through the partnership account, the note would have been extinguished because it was paid by its makers (Zimpel and Silverstein). Whitehead v. Planters Bank & Trust Co., 180 Va. 76, 21 S.E.2d 724 (1942).

Because the newly discovered evidence corrects material misrepresentations in *662 Green’s pleadings and gives Foley an ironclad defense of payment, we conclude that the district court abused its discretion in denying relief from summary judgment under Fed.R.Civ.P. 60(b)(3). We therefore reverse and remand in order that summary judgment may be entered for Foley, as there are no material disputed facts remaining.

I.

Foley, Zimpel, and Silverstein were partners in Fairfax Associates, Ltd. (“the partnership”). Zimpel and Foley were general partners, each with a 40% interest, and Silverstein was a limited partner with a 20% interest. Zimpel was Managing General Partner.

The partnership executed notes with two banks. In 1982, Foley and Zimpel signed a note on behalf of the partnership for $7,800,000.00 to secure a loan from Mount Vernon Savings & Loan Association. Mount Vernon’s successor is Crossland Savings Bank (“Crossland”). Foley, Zim-pel, and their spouses executed a guaranty agreement promising to make good on the Crossland note.

On January 28, 1983, Foley and his wife executed a guaranty agreement with Virginia National Bank (successor: Sovran Bank) promising to make good on any loan made to the partnership up to $221,500. On September 4, 1984, Zimpel executed a note on behalf of the partnership to Virginia National Bank to secure a loan for $260,000, with payment due December 3, 1984. An additional $40,000 loan seems to have been made by Sovran Bank to the partnership; that loan was guaranteed by Zimpel and Silverstein but not by Foley.

Gary Green provided legal counsel to Zimpel and Silverstein in matters unrelated to the partnership. For that representation Zimpel and Silverstein owed Green $10,000. On December 14, 1984, Green sent a letter to Silverstein and Zimpel detailing their agreement regarding satisfaction of the $10,000 debt through assignment or purchase in Green’s name of negotiable partnership notes that had been guaranteed by Foley. In the letter (reproduced as an appendix to this opinion), Green noted that Silverstein and Zimpel “offered to buy the notes and guarantees from the banks in my name in order to free up your lines of credit on the one hand, and to pay your debt to me on the other.” Outlining their agreement, the letter provided that Zimpel and Silverstein would “purchase in or have assigned to [Green’s] name” certain notes guaranteed by Foley with a net amount due in excess of $275,000. The notes and guarantees were not to be marked can-celled, and Zimpel and Silverstein were to pay the “costs of acquiring the notes and guarantees and of enforcing them,” unless Green elected to assume the costs of enforcement. Green was to receive anything collected on the notes and guarantees without regard to whether Foley could successfully pursue Zimpel and Silverstein for contribution or other claims involving the partnership or the notes: “In other words,” Green concluded, “I will retain whatever I recover from Foley without regard to what occurs between you and Foley.” 2

On December 31, 1984, Zimpel deposited $219,256.42 of his own funds into the partnership bank account. The same day, Sil-verstein deposited $93,967.05 of his own funds into the partnership account. Zimpel testified in his deposition, 3 “Alan Silver-stein and I deposited the money from our personal accounts into Fairfax Associates account in preparation for retiring debts of Fairfax Associates. We subsequently had discussions with our counsel in Philadelphia 4 ... Mr. Green_ And subsequent *663 ly took the money back out of the Fairfax Associates and proceeded in another manner.”

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Bluebook (online)
856 F.2d 660, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gary-green-v-maurice-p-foley-gary-green-v-maurice-p-foley-ca4-1988.