Go-Best Assets Ltd. v. Citizens Bank

972 N.E.2d 426, 463 Mass. 50, 2012 WL 3055468, 2012 Mass. LEXIS 684
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedJuly 30, 2012
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 972 N.E.2d 426 (Go-Best Assets Ltd. v. Citizens Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Go-Best Assets Ltd. v. Citizens Bank, 972 N.E.2d 426, 463 Mass. 50, 2012 WL 3055468, 2012 Mass. LEXIS 684 (Mass. 2012).

Opinion

Gants, J.

In July, 2000, the plaintiff, Go-Best Assets Limited (Go-Best), wired $5 million to an account entitled “Morris M. Goldings client account” (client account) at Citizens Bank of Massachusetts (Citizens Bank or bank) based on representations made by Morris M. Goldings, who was then a Massachusetts attorney. Goldings later admitted that the representations were false and that he had used the money to pay other debts. Go-Best filed suit against Citizens Bank, bringing claims of misrepresentation, conversion, aiding and abetting a fraud, aiding and abetting a breach of fiduciary duty, aiding and abetting a conversion, and negligence in its first amended verified complaint (complaint).1 A judge in the Superior Court granted Citizens Bank’s motion to dismiss the claims, but a divided panel of the Appeals Court reversed in part, vacating the dismissal of Go-Best’s claims of negligence and of aiding and abetting. Go-Best Assets Ltd. v. Citizens Bank, 79 Mass. App. Ct. 473, 495 (2011). We granted Citizens Bank’s application for further appellate review of the resurrected claims.2 The issue presented in this case is whether Citizens Bank may be found liable on these claims where it had no knowledge of Goldings’s scheme to defraud Go-Best but failed to notify the Board of Bar Overseers (board) of dishonored checks issued on the client account more than six months before Go-Best wired funds into that account. We conclude that it may not be found liable and affirm the dismissal of these claims.

Background. Because the motion judge’s memorandum and order considered facts in the affidavit and exhibits submitted with Go-Best’s opposition to the motion to dismiss, we treat the order of dismissal as one for summary judgment and summarize the relevant facts in the complaint, affidavit, and exhibits. See Juliano v. Simpson, 461 Mass. 527, 529 (2012).

[52]*52During the relevant time period, Goldings was a Massachusetts attorney who was a partner in the law firm of Mahoney, Hawkes & Goldings, LLP (law firm). In 1997 through 1999, Go-Best and an affiliated entity made two separate loans to Goldings, which were repaid with accrued interest and profit. In each transaction, the loaned funds were transferred to an account entitled “Morris M. Goldings client account,” one at Fleet Bank and another at Citizens Bank. Goldings represented that these accounts were “trust accounts,” that the funds would be held in trust for Go-Best in these accounts, and that the accounts were stringently monitored because they were held for the benefit of his clients. Go-Best did not allege that either of these banks made any representation regarding the accounts.

In July, 2000, Goldings represented to Go-Best that he had a client who wanted to relinquish his shares of stock in Starwood Hotels and Resorts, Inc. (Starwood), to avoid a conflict with a new position for which he was being considered. Starwood stock was then selling at approximately thirty dollars per share, but Goldings told Go-Best that it was predicted that a tender offer would be made for Starwood shares before the end of the year at approximately forty dollars per share. Goldings proposed that Go-Best lend Goldings $5 million at an interest rate of two per cent per month and, in return, Goldings would execute a promissory note and place in escrow 170,000 shares of Star-wood common stock and the $5 million. If a tender offer were received on or before January 2, 2001, the shares would be tendered and Go-Best would be repaid $5 million with accrued interest, plus one-half of the net profits arising from the sale of stock. If no tender offer were received by that date, the stock would be transferred and sold, and Go-Best would be repaid $5 million with accrued interest and receive one-half of any net profits.

Goldings told Go-Best to wire the funds to his client account at Citizens Bank. He assured Go-Best that the funds would be held in trust in his account and would be safe because of the careful scrutiny such accounts receive at Citizens Bank. He also assured Go-Best that the stock certificates and loaned funds would be held in escrow by an agent of PaineWebber Securities (PaineWebber). In reliance on these representations, Go-Best sent $5 million to the client account in July, 2000, through two [53]*53wire fund transfers. Go-Best then received from Goldings an escrow receipt that purportedly acknowledged the receipt of the stock and the money on behalf of PaineWebber. In December, 2000, Goldings reported to Go-Best that there were no shares of Starwood stock; that PaineWebber had never received the funds; that Goldings fraudulently executed the documents relating to the transaction, including the escrow receipt; and that he no longer had Go-Best’s money because he had used it to repay other debts. Goldings did not return any of Go-Best’s funds.

In the complaint, Go-Best alleged:

“Citizens Bank knowingly participated in the fraud or conversion or provided substantial assistance to Goldings to accomplish the fraud or conversion . . . by . . . allowing Goldings to use his client funds account to . . . engage in unlawful transactions through his accounts . . . , in failing to follow its own procedures relating to detecting, preventing, and reporting fraudulent activities to the proper authorities, in failing to follow the appropriate banking regulations relating to fraudulent activities, in losing documents relating to such transactions so as to cover them up, and in allowing Goldings to transact irregular cash and wire transactions.”

But Go-Best has made no specific allegation, nor submitted any evidence in the summary judgment record, that would support an inference that Citizens Bank knew of Goldings’s scheme to defraud Go-Best of its $5 million or made any representations to Go-Best.

Rather, Go-Best submitted evidence that Goldings made large deposits to his client account from February, 1999, through October, 2000, and that four checks written on this account were dishonored. The most recent dishonored checks were dated January 13, 2000, one in the amount of $20,000 and another in the amount of $760,460. Monthly bank statements for this account revealed a negative balance in December, 1999; April, 2000; and May, 2000.3 Go-Best alleges that, although Citizens Bank had executed an agreement with the board that it would [54]*54report to the board all dishonored payable instruments presented against any “trust account,” the bank did not report any of the dishonored checks written on the client account. In addition, in late 1999 or early 2000, a bank customer service representative transferred $200,000 from the law firm’s Interest on Lawyers’ Trust Account (IOLTA) at Goldings’s request, even though the representative later admitted that he should not have done that and had no authority to do that because all such transfers had to be approved by the law firm’s accounting department.

Discussion. We review a grant of summary judgment de novo to determine “whether, viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party, ... the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law.” Juliano v. Simpson, 461 Mass. 527, 529-530 (2012), quoting Augat Inc. v. Liberty Mut. Ins. Co., 410 Mass. 117, 120 (1991). We address first the negligence claim in the complaint, because if that claim fails, the others must, too.

1. Negligence.

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Bluebook (online)
972 N.E.2d 426, 463 Mass. 50, 2012 WL 3055468, 2012 Mass. LEXIS 684, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/go-best-assets-ltd-v-citizens-bank-mass-2012.