Holifield v. BancorpSouth, Inc.

891 So. 2d 241, 2004 WL 1729492
CourtCourt of Appeals of Mississippi
DecidedAugust 3, 2004
Docket2002-CA-01590-COA
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 891 So. 2d 241 (Holifield v. BancorpSouth, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Mississippi primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Holifield v. BancorpSouth, Inc., 891 So. 2d 241, 2004 WL 1729492 (Mich. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

891 So.2d 241 (2004)

Ronald L. HOLIFIELD, et al., Appellants.
v.
BancorpSOUTH, INC. d/b/a Bank of Mississippi, et al., Appellees.

No. 2002-CA-01590-COA.

Court of Appeals of Mississippi.

August 3, 2004.
Rehearing Denied October 26, 2004.
Certiorari Denied January 13, 2005.

*242 Kenneth A. Rutherford, attorney for appellants.

James Patrick Caldwell, Tupelo, attorney for appellees.

EN BANC.

SOUTHWICK, P.J., for the Court.

¶ 1. The Circuit Court of Jones County granted summary judgment to a bank that had been accused of not having properly monitored the financial activities of one of its customers. We agree that there are no genuine issues of material fact and affirm. Recent Supreme Court precedents make clear that since the bank had no actual knowledge of the customer's alleged frauds, it had no liability.

¶ 2. Ronald L. Holifield and approximately fifty other individuals and businesses filed suit against BancorpSouth and other defendants. We will collectively refer to the plaintiffs as "the investors." We will on occasion distinguish Holifield from the remaining plaintiffs. This appeal pertains solely to defendant BancorpSouth. The suit against other defendants continues in the circuit court.

¶ 3. James D. Harrell, IV, a defendant in the case, and Ronald Holifield had a business relation that began in 1995. Holifield assisted Harrell in obtaining a one hundred million dollar annuity contract, but that was canceled by the issuing insurance company, General American Life Insurance Co. A significant participant in that failed endeavor was a man named Douglas R. MacCachran, who described himself as a "management consultant."

¶ 4. A month after the cancellation of the annuity, MacCachran proposed in a lengthy faxed letter to Holifield that the latter assist in acquiring participants in a purported investment opportunity in Europe. MacCachran said that Harrell would be "a participant in this new transaction," but there must be "[a]bsolutely no `sharing of information' referencing any and all parties to the transaction, banks involved, insurance products, government contracts and the actual agreements, incoming and outgoing faxes including the cover sheet information and its originator(s)." Of some importance to later events, MacCachran also stated to Holifield that the "technical procedures involved in this transaction ... [and] virtually every single scrap of this transaction ... will not be made available to any individuals either internal or external."

¶ 5. Ronald Holifield agreed to promote this highly secret investment opportunity to some of his insurance clients and others, many of whom are now plaintiffs with him in this suit. There was no investment prospectus or other printed information. Indeed, MacCachran's agreement with Holifield was that information relating to virtually everything about the transactions was to be withheld from investors. The alleged plan entailed wiring money abroad with the promise to investors of high returns. Apparently the financial fortunes were to be gained through a practice called "forfaiting." Among its variations are those described in the following definition:

The practice of taking promissory notes or other obligations without recourse, usually in connection with the importation of goods. A foreign buyer may cause its bank to avalize its notes, so *243 that the seller of goods or services to whom the buyer gives the notes can forfait them with a domestic bank. The domestic bank will take the notes from the buyer without recourse because the notes are subject to the foreign bank's aval.

www.lettersofcreditonline.com/reports/archive/Glossary.htm

¶ 6. Another challenging word injected into that definition, "aval," is defined this way:

An independent guaranty used in civil law countries, often by banks and often with promissory notes or other commercial obligations. The aval may consist of the words "by aval" with the bank's signature.

Id. A federal court has described "forfaiting" transactions as "an inventive means of facilitating exports to troubled or debt-laden countries." A.I. Trade Fin., Inc. v. Petra Bank, 989 F.2d 76, 78 (2d Cir.1993). High risks apparently are supposed to equate to a potential for high returns.

¶ 7. Whatever prospective investors made of what would actually occur with forfaiting, many must have seen sufficient promise of substantial returns to sign up. Contributions of those who have joined as plaintiffs in this suit ranged in amounts from $12,000 to nearly $600,000. This money was entrusted to Harrell, who then sent the funds abroad. Exactly how the investment would generate the substantial return was poorly explained to anyone. According to a later federal indictment, there was in fact no investment opportunity for anyone except Harrell, MacCachran, and a third insider named Charles Scott Burris. Harrell placed the money in difficult-to-trace foreign accounts. He was charged with making payments to early investors entirely out of funds acquired from new investors, a process which in the parlance of fraud is known as a "Ponzi scheme." MacCachran, Harrell, and Burris were indicted in 1997 for fraud and conspiracy, among other crimes.

¶ 8. The defendant BancorpSouth was the bank that Harrell used for his transactions. Harrell had two accounts at BancorpSouth, which was then known as the Bank of Mississippi. One was a general checking account for the operating expenses for his law firm. The other was an account that he used for his attorney trust funds.

¶ 9. After discovery was completed, the bank filed a motion for summary judgment. The investors in seeking to fend off summary judgment relied solely on common law negligence principles. BancorpSouth was said to have been negligent by permitting Harrell to take large sums of money from these accounts and wire the funds to European destinations. The investors argue that, without the negligent actions of the bank, Harrell would not have been able to defraud them. The circuit court granted the bank's motion, dismissing it from the suit. The court also entered an order certifying that there was no reason for delay in entering a final judgment as to the bank. Ronald L. Holifield initially was the sole appellant from the judgment. The Supreme Court later determined that counsel for the other investor plaintiffs had committed excusable neglect in failing to make a timely appeal, and allowed all the investors to join in the appeal.

DISCUSSION

1. Legal overview

¶ 10. The plaintiffs in this case are individuals and businesses who placed large sums of money into the hands of James D. Harrell, IV. They did this with nothing more than a two page contract with Ronald Holifield for a European investment *244 program. The contracts stated that the funds the client would invest would be placed in Harrell's trust account and the investors would receive returns within 120 days. The account number for the trust account was also revealed in the contract. The funds were placed in Harrell's account at BancorpSouth. He then wired the funds to other banks in Europe as well as in the United States. The claim now made is that the bank should have been alerted to the doubtfulness of this activity and owed the investors a duty to halt it.

¶ 11. Various theories were presented in the case. At summary judgment, the sole legal claims that Holifield presented were based on common law negligence.

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