Hny Holding v. Danis Transportation, 02-6561 (2004)

CourtSuperior Court of Rhode Island
DecidedSeptember 9, 2004
DocketC.A. No. PB 02-6561
StatusUnpublished

This text of Hny Holding v. Danis Transportation, 02-6561 (2004) (Hny Holding v. Danis Transportation, 02-6561 (2004)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hny Holding v. Danis Transportation, 02-6561 (2004), (R.I. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.]

DECISION
Before this Court are the "Report and Recommendations" of Allan M. Shine (Shine), the receiver (Receiver) for Danis Transportation Company, Inc. (Danis).

FACTS/TRAVEL
Danis was a Rhode Island trucking corporation that provided interstate transportation services to major consumer durable and non-durable goods manufacturers and retailers. It employed approximately one hundred employees, including truck drivers, office staff, and independent contractor driver-owners. HNY Holding Company, Inc. (HNY) was a Delaware corporation that owned the majority of Danis' outstanding capital stock. Danis' co-chief executive officers (co-CEOs), Craig C. MacKay (MacKay) and Steven C. Bussey (Bussey), acquired Danis through HNY in July 2000.

At issue in this case are a series of loans (Citizens' loans) that Citizens Bank of Rhode Island (Citizens) extended to Danis. The Citizens' loans include: a $1,200,000 term loan issued on July 19, 2000; a $320,000 term loan issued on August 23, 2001; and a $1,000,000 revolving line of credit loan issued on July 19, 2000. MacKay and Bussey personally guaranteed the term loans, and Citizens took security interests in Danis' accounts receivable, inventory, equipment, and fixtures.1

In August of 2001, Danis acquired Transcontinental (also known as Danis South), a truck load company operating from a garage in metropolitan New Jersey. During the second half of 2001, Danis attempted to secure additional investments for working capital. The events that transpired on September 11, 2001, as well as the onset of an economic recession, however, significantly impacted the trucking industry, hurting Danis' sales and making it difficult for Danis to secure equity capital.

By mid-January of 2002, Danis expected to receive $200,000 in subordinated financing from First New England Capital (FNEC) for use as working capital. Danis informed Citizens of this fact, and on or after February 27, 2002, Citizens demanded that this subordinated financing be utilized to pay down the debt to Citizens and not be used for working capital. FNEC subsequently withdrew its offer of financing.

Danis and HNY allege that, through words and conduct, they formulated a particular course of dealing with Citizens. Indeed, for a significant period of time, Danis failed to comply with certain financial convenants associated with the Citizens' loans, and Citizens acquiesced in Danis' conduct. For instance, Danis overdrafted its checking accounts, and Citizens neglected to impose fees or charge interest in response. Furthermore, Citizens failed to enforce or apply the borrowing base formula under the revolving line of credit and permitted Danis to treat deposited but uncollected funds as within Danis' line of availability.

Reacting to this situation, on or about March 1, 2002, Citizens removed the loan officer who had been servicing the Citizens' loans from the account, involved its "workout team," and began dishonoring Danis' checks. On or about this same date, Citizens' counsel sent MacKay and Bussey a letter providing notice of default under the loan agreements and documents, triggering "the commencement of any applicable cure period," demanding that Danis and HNY immediately cure the defaults to the extent possible, and reserving Citizens' rights and remedies under the loan documents. March 1, 2002 Letter at 2. The letter further stated that "[e]ffective immediately, there shall be no further advances to Danis or HNY under the Loans" and that "Citizens . . . shall have no obligation to make any advances to Danis or HNY, nor to honor any over-drafts on any of Danis or HNY's accounts." Id.

Going forward, Citizens' practice concerning the authorization of overdrafts, particularly with respect to Danis' payroll, proved inconsistent. At one point, Citizens instructed Danis that it could overdraft to pay payroll. The checks to the independent contractors, however, bounced while the direct payroll costs were apparently met. Citizens' inconsistent practices caused problems with certain key vendors, including fuel vendors and interline connecting carriers that revoked credit terms and began requiring complete or nearly complete payment of Danis' accounts as a prerequisite to providing goods or services.

On March 8, 2002, Citizens demanded, in consideration of its forbearance from the exercise of its default rights and remedies, that HNY and Danis sign a Forbearance Agreement. Specifically, the Forbearance Agreement provided that Citizens would forbear until March 22, 2002 from taking further action with regard to the defaults if certain terms and conditions were met. Forbearance Agreement at 3. As part of the Forbearance Agreement, Citizens demanded a release in its favor.2

On or about March 12, 2002, Citizens' counsel sent a letter to Danis' co-CEOs stating, in pertinent part, that:

"Effective immediately, . . . Citizens . . . will not honor any check or draft written by Danis, where such check or draft exceeds the available funds in Danis' operating account at Citizens.

. . . Danis' operating account balance and overdraft status is determined by the amount of collected funds in the operating account — not the amount of deposited funds. Checks which have been deposited in Danis' operating account, but which have not yet cleared are not collected funds, and therefore said funds are not available to be used to honor checks presented to Citizens.

Demand is hereby made that Danis immediately deposit at Citizens the amount of cash or other good funds necessary to retire the total amount by which Danis' operating account is overdrawn. As indicated . . . Citizens has no obligation to make any further advances to Danis and HNY under the above-referenced loan or any other credit facility."

March 12, 2002 Letter at 1-2.

On March 15, 2002, Danis and HNY filed in this Court a Verified Complaint against Citizens. See case docketed in the Office of the Clerk of the Providence County Superior Court as Danis Transp. Co. v. CitizensBank, Case No. PB 02-1346.3 On this same date, Danis and HNY filed a Motion for Temporary Restraining Order in which Danis and HNY urged this Court to restrain Citizens from (1) exercising any of its default rights and remedies under the loan documents, (2) refusing to honor Danis' checks drawn upon deposited but uncollected funds, and (3) for a reasonable time, dishonoring checks drawn on Danis' account, so long as the aggregate of the balance due on the line of credit and the amount of checks drawn on Danis' account did not exceed $1,120,000. On March 20, 2002, the Superior Court (Silverstein, J.) granted the first and second of these requests, but denied the third.

The parties then engaged in extensive discovery, and in June and July of 2002, they appeared before this Court upon Danis and HNY's prayer for a preliminary injunction.

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Bluebook (online)
Hny Holding v. Danis Transportation, 02-6561 (2004), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hny-holding-v-danis-transportation-02-6561-2004-risuperct-2004.