Huntington National Bank v. Physician's Auditing and Billing Services Inc.

CourtDistrict Court, D. Minnesota
DecidedJune 4, 2024
Docket0:22-cv-02271
StatusUnknown

This text of Huntington National Bank v. Physician's Auditing and Billing Services Inc. (Huntington National Bank v. Physician's Auditing and Billing Services Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Huntington National Bank v. Physician's Auditing and Billing Services Inc., (mnd 2024).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT DISTRICT OF MINNESOTA

Huntington National Bank, successor-by- Case No. 22-CV-2271 (JMB/DTS) merger to TCF National Bank,

Plaintiff,

v. ORDER

Physician’s Auditing and Billing Services Inc. and Douglas Davis,

Defendants.

Mark G. Schroeder, Daniel N. Moak, Taft Stettinius & Hollister LLP, Minneapolis, MN, for Plaintiff Huntington National Bank. Mark K. Thompson, MKT Law, PLC, Minneapolis, MN, for Defendants Physician’s Auditing and Billing Services Inc. and Douglas Davis.

Defendant Physician’s Auditing and Billing Services Inc. (PABS) entered into a commercial loan agreement with Plaintiff Huntington National Bank (Huntington),1 which was guaranteed by PABS’s CEO, Defendant Douglas Davis (together with PABS, Defendants). After PABS stopped making payments on the loan, Huntington sued Defendants for, among other things, breaching the commercial loan agreement and guaranty. Huntington now moves for summary judgment on its breach-of-contract claims. For the reasons set forth below, the Court grants in part and denies in part Huntington’s

1 Huntington is the successor-by-merger to TCF National Bank. Though some events referenced in this Order occurred prior to the relevant merger, for the sake of simplicity, Plaintiff will be referred to as “Huntington.” motion for summary judgment on its contract claims (Counts I and II) and dismisses Huntington’s remaining non-contract claims (Counts III–VI).

FACTS On April 7, 2021, PABS purchased computer equipment and software (the Equipment) for its business from a non-party equipment vendor for a total purchase price of $339,359.05. (Doc. No. 1-1 [hereinafter, Compl.] at Ex. A.2) PABS engaged a non- party broker to facilitate this transaction. (E.g., Doc. No. 28 ¶ 3; Doc. No. 24-2 at 18:16– 21:4.)

To finance the purchase of the Equipment, PABS entered into an Installment Payment Agreement (IPA) with Huntington on April 7, 2021. (See Compl. at Ex. B [hereinafter, IPA].) In order to obtain the loan financing, PABS assigned Huntington a security interest in the Equipment and made assurances to Huntington that PABS had already received and was satisfied with the Equipment. (Compl. at Ex. D; IPA ¶¶ 3, 5.)

To this end, PABS “confirm[ed], represent[ed], warrant[ed] and agree[d]” that, as of April 7, 2021, (i) all of the Software and Equipment described in the IPA has been delivered to [PABS] at the Location set forth in the IPA and has been accepted by [PABS] through a duly authorized representative, [and] . . . .

2 Huntington submitted a declaration of Jordan Shamblott, a Huntington “officer and financial recovery representative,” in which Shamblott verifies the truth and accuracy of the factual allegations in the Complaint and its exhibits. (See Doc. No. 23 ¶¶ 3–4.) (iii) the Software and Equipment is exactly what [PABS] ordered and is satisfactory in all respects and has been accepted by [PABS] . . . . (Compl. at Ex. D.) Relatedly, PABS and Huntington agreed that PABS alone bore responsibility for the Equipment in the event of “any loss, theft or destruction of, or damage to” it. (IPA ¶ 5.) Under the IPA’s terms, PABS was to repay Huntington over a five-year period in sixty monthly installment payments of $6,637.96 each, with the first installment due on May 8, 2021. (Id. ¶ 2.) Huntington and PABS also agreed that, if PABS failed to make a

payment by or before the 18th day of any given month, Huntington had the right to impose a late fee up to 10% of the amount of the late payment. (Id.) PABS further agreed that its payment obligations under the IPA were “absolute and unconditional and shall not be subject to any defenses . . . of any kind” regardless of whether the Equipment “is installed or implemented to the satisfaction of [PABS]” or whether “any . . . distributor breaches

any of its obligations, warranties or covenants relating to the [Equipment.]” (Id. ¶ 10(a), (c).) The IPA further provides that a failure by PABS to timely pay any monthly installment payment constitutes a material breach of the IPA, in which event Huntington would have the following available remedies, among others: (1) charging interest on the

unpaid amount as liquidated damages; (2) accelerating all remaining payments, (3) making the remaining principal amount immediately due; (4) charging a penalty fee of 4% on the present value of future monthly installments; and (5) recovering expenses incurred by Huntington to enforce the IPA (including attorneys’ fees and costs). (See id. ¶¶ 7(a), 8.) Davis, PABS’s CEO and sole shareholder, executed a Guaranty of PABS’s obligations to Huntington under the IPA (Doc. No. 28 ¶ 1; see also Compl. at Ex. E

[hereinafter, Guaranty]), under which he “unconditionally and absolutely guarantee[d] the full and prompt payment and performance when due (at maturity, by acceleration, or otherwise) of all payments, rents, debts, liabilities, and other obligations of every type and description of [PABS] to [Huntington] . . . .” (Guaranty.) The Guaranty further provides that Davis’s liability as Guarantor extends to all costs and expenses incurred by Huntington in connection with enforcement of the IPA and/or Guaranty, plus interest. (Id.)

Upon receipt of PABS’s executed IPA and Equipment-receipt confirmation (among other things), Huntington paid the $339,359.05 principal loan amount directly to the non- party equipment vendor, as expressly directed and authorized by PABS. (Compl. at Ex. G.) PABS thereafter made timely monthly installment payments until, as described below, either July or September 2022. (See Doc. No. 23 ¶ 10, Ex. 3; Doc. No. 28 ¶ 5, Ex. B; Doc.

No. 24-1 at Nos. 11, 12.) Even though PABS confirmed to Huntington that it had received the Equipment before it executed the IPA, the undisputed record evidence shows that PABS never— neither before executing the IPA nor after—received any equipment from the non-party equipment vendor. (Doc. No. 28 ¶¶ 2–3, 6, 8, Ex. A.) Davis testified that PABS

nevertheless made timely monthly installment payments to Huntington under the IPA for over a year because PABS “had the hope that the computer equipment would arrive and [Davis] wanted to honor the [loan] contract and be current when the equipment was located.” (Id. ¶¶ 5–6, Ex. B.) However, Davis testified that, by July 2022—approximately fifteen months after executing the IPA—the vendor still had not delivered the Equipment. (Doc. No. 24-2 at 64:2–11.) Davis testified as follows: “it reached a point where it [waiting

for the Equipment] was ridiculous; that I wasn’t going to get the equipment, so why pay for it?” (Id. at 64:14–16.) Huntington and PABS agree that PABS stopped making monthly installment payments to Huntington altogether in the latter half of 2022; however, they dispute when PABS first missed a payment. Huntington argues and submitted record evidence showing that it last received payment from PABS in July 2022. In support of its motion, Huntington

submitted a document, through the declaration of a Huntington “officer and financial recovery representative” entitled “Payment History Report—All Contract Payments” that appears to show payments from May 8, 2021, through July 8, 2022; entries in August, September, and October 2022 read: “ACH RETURN CHECK—Unaut.”3 (Doc. No. 23 ¶¶ 1, 10, Ex. 3.) Huntington also submitted documents showing that, in both August and

September 2022, it notified PABS that its missed monthly payments constituted material breaches of the IPA. (Compl. Exs. H, I.) Meanwhile, PABS argues and submitted conflicting record evidence showing that it last paid Huntington in September 2022. It submitted, through a declaration from Davis, a report characterized as a “copy of an accounting record showing the payments [PABS]

made to TCF Bank and Huntington National Bank through September 2022,” which

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