Harris v. Synovus Bank

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Ohio
DecidedDecember 19, 2022
Docket1:22-cv-00247
StatusUnknown

This text of Harris v. Synovus Bank (Harris v. Synovus Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harris v. Synovus Bank, (N.D. Ohio 2022).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT NORTHERN DISTRICT OF OHIO EASTERN DIVISION

FREDERICK HARRIS, et al., ) Case No. 1:22-cv-00247 ) Appellants, ) Appeal from Bankr. Ct. ) No. 18-16598 v. ) ) Judge J. Philip Calabrese SYNOVUS BANK, ) ) Appellee. ) )

OPINION AND ORDER In this bankruptcy appeal, Dr. Frederick Harris and his wife Bernice Harris appeal the bankruptcy court’s January 2022 judgment overruling their objection to Appellee Synovus Bank’s general unsecured claim for $122,338.11. As the Debtors in the bankruptcy proceeding, Appellants argue that the court improperly failed to: (1) conclude that Synovus committed fraudulent inducement; (2) conclude that Synovus engaged in predatory lending; (3) conclude that Synovus engaged in solicitation in violation of Ohio law; (4) find that Synovus breached its fiduciary duty as an insurance agent; and (5) conclude that the claims calculation was illegal or barred by the law of estoppel or election of remedies. Appellants also argue that the bankruptcy court abused its discretion when it refused to qualify Appellants’ witness Lonnie Sloan as an expert. On each issue, the Court AFFIRMS the judgment of the bankruptcy court. The Court DENIES Appellants’ request for oral argument. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND The facts are largely undisputed. Dr. Harris is a primary care physician at the Cleveland Clinic, where he has practiced medicine since 2005. (ECF No. 1-1,

PageID #47; Harris ECF No. 242, at 5.1) He graduated from Case Western Reserve School of Medicine in 1985. (Id.) In 2013, Dr. Harris earned a salary of approximately $390,000 per year. (Id.) However, by 2014 he was struggling financially and was behind on his mortgage. (Id.) Dr. Harris maintained a life insurance policy for $5,000,000.00 through his employer. (Id.; ECF No. 15, PageID #182.) A. Legacy Point Capital In 2014, Dr. Harris met Byron Holley, who owned and managed Legacy Point

Capital, an investment bank and advisory firm. (ECF No. 1-1, PageID #47; Harris ECF No. 242, at 5.) John Loudon co-owned and co-managed Legacy Point. (Id.) Dr. Harris was interested in Legacy Point’s premium financed life insurance product as a retirement tool. (Id.) Specifically, Dr. Harris was interested in the tax advantages he would enjoy if an irrevocable life insurance trust held the policy. (Id.) If he financed the insurance premiums, Dr. Harris would pay very little up front on

the policy. (Id.) Also, because Dr. Harris was himself a licensed insurance agent, Legacy Point promised him a commission if he recruited other physicians to purchase the product. (Id.) Theoretically, the commission would cover the cost of Dr. Harris’s policy. (Id.)

1 For citation purposes, the Court refers to the docket in the bankruptcy case, In re Harris, 18-bk-16598 (Bankr. N.D. Ohio), as Harris, and the docket on this appeal without specific designation. Legacy Point identified Global One Financial, Inc., Appellee’s predecessor, as a potential lender to finance the policy. (Id.) Legacy Point primarily worked with Global One’s marketing arm, Global Financial Distributors, to negotiate a loan to

purchase Dr. Harris’s premium-financed life insurance policy. (ECF No. 1-1, PageID #47–48; Harris ECF No. 242, at 5–6.) Financing the policy had other advantages. First, the outstanding principal the borrower owed on the loan would never exceed the cash surrender value of the insurance policy. (Id.) Even in the event of default, the lender could use the cash surrender value of the policy to repay the outstanding principal. (Id.) For Global

One, this meant little risk of losing any principal on the loan. (Id.) However, in the event of default the borrower might still owe prepayment penalties, interest, and fees associated with early termination of the loan. (Id.) Dr. Harris testified that Legacy Point assured him that Global One would waive any such penalties, interest, and fees in consideration for Dr. Harris’s efforts in referring other physicians to purchase similar insurance. (Id.; Harris ECF No. 277, at 72 & 194.) Also, Legacy Point agreed to share the commission earned on the sale of the life insurance policy with Global

Financial Distributors. (ECF No. 1-1, PageID #49 & 75; Harris ECF No. 242, at 7 & 33.) In June 2014, Appellee proposed making the loan to Dr. Harris’s trust. (Id.) This loan required a personal guaranty from Dr. Harris. (Id.) Dr. Harris rejected the proposal because he did not want to sign a personal guaranty. (Id.) Global Financial Distributors understood that it was important to Dr. Harris that he not sign a personal guaranty. (Id.) Next, Dr. Harris and Legacy Point proposed that Global One make the loan to

an existing corporation that Dr. Harris controlled. (Id.) Global Financial Distributors represented that making the loan to a corporation would not require a personal guaranty from Dr. Harris. (Id.) However, this loan proved unworkable. (Id.) Legacy Point proposed that Dr. Harris create a new corporation to take out the loan. (Id.) Dr. Harris formed Galaxy Investors, Inc. for this purpose. (Id.) However, in November 2014, Lincoln Financial Group, the entity issuing the life insurance

policy, declined to issue the policy under this arrangement. (Id.) B. The Note and the Personal Guaranty On November 13, 2014, Global Financial Distributors sent Legacy Point a draft personal guaranty that Dr. Harris would need to sign to satisfy Lincoln Financial. (ECF No. 1-1, PageID #50; Harris ECF No. 242, at 8.) Like the first iteration of the deal, the life insurance trust would be the borrower under this arrangement. (Id.) On November 24, 2014, Lonnie Sloan, the trustee for Mr. Harris’s irrevocable trust,

signed an underwriting form that detailed Dr. Harris’s assets. (Id.) That form listed one of Dr. Harris’s assets as $7,500,000 in “business value.” (Id.) According to Dr. Harris, this information was based on a letter from Dr. Harris’s accountant, Ali Mohammadpour. (Harris ECF No. 277, at 88–90; ECF No. 15, PageID #183.) On November 26, 2014, Global Financial Distributors sent Legacy Point thirteen documents, including the promissory note which Sloan signed as trustee and the personal guaranty Dr. Harris was to sign. (ECF No. 1-1, PageID #50; Harris ECF No. 242, at 8.) Legacy Point did not explain the guaranty to Dr. Harris or bring it to his attention. (Id.) On December 1, 2014, Dr. Harris signed the personal guaranty. (Id.; Harris

ECF No. 62-2, at 47.) The bankruptcy court could “only speculate as to exactly how Dr. Harris came to sign the personal guaranty on December 1, 2014, after having repeatedly expressed his unwillingness to do so.” (Id.) Dr. Harris explained that the personal guaranty “slipped in at signing,” and he relied on Global Financial Distributors’ understanding that he did not want to sign a personal guaranty. (ECF No. 21, PageID #257–58.) Also, he testified that on the day of signing, he felt rushed

because he attended to several patients. (Harris ECF No. 277, at 134.) The next day, Global Financial Distributors sent the loan documents to Lincoln Financial and finalized the life insurance policy. (ECF No. 1-1, PageID #51; Harris ECF No. 242, at 9.) The promissory note, security agreement, and the personal guaranty did not include a waiver of prepayment penalties, interests, or fees, and the note expressly rejects any oral representations to the contrary. (ECF No. 1-1, PageID #48–49; Harris ECF No. 242, at 6–7; Harris ECF No. 62-2, at 31.)

Under the terms of the loan, Global One agreed to finance annual insurance premiums of approximately $341,198 per year as advances for each of the first seven years. (Harris, ECF No. 62-2, at 27.) The trust would make interest payments during that period. (Id.) The note provides the following: Dr.

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Harris v. Synovus Bank, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harris-v-synovus-bank-ohnd-2022.