Interfirst Bank Abilene v. Federal Deposit Insurance

590 F. Supp. 1196, 1984 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 24127
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Texas
DecidedAugust 24, 1984
DocketCiv. A. A-83-CA-197
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 590 F. Supp. 1196 (Interfirst Bank Abilene v. Federal Deposit Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Interfirst Bank Abilene v. Federal Deposit Insurance, 590 F. Supp. 1196, 1984 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 24127 (W.D. Tex. 1984).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

JACK ROBERTS, Senior District Judge.

This case arises out of the insolvency and receivership of the Ranchlander National Bank in Melvin, Texas. It is before the Court for trial on the joint stipulations of fact of the parties and on the motion of the defendant, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, for partial summary judgment. Pursuant to Federal Civil Procedure Rule 54(b), the Court denies the FDIC’s motion and enters final judgment for the plaintiff, InterFirst Bank Abilene, on all claims for relief except its request for attorney’s fees and interest on sums recovered.

InterFirst’s claim arises out of four loan participations it purchased from Ranchlander. Prior to its closing, Ranchlander maintained a correspondent account and a federal funds account at InterFirst. After learning of Ranchiander’s insolvency, InterFirst transferred all funds from the federal funds account to the noninterest-bearing correspondent account and then set off the correspondent account against the participated loans. InterFirst has refused the FDIC’s request to pay to it the Ranchlander funds. InterFirst seeks a declaratory judgment that its setoff of the Ranchlander account against the participated loans was proper and that it has no resulting liability to the FDIC. In addition, InterFirst seeks to collect its share of the proceeds the FDIC has recovered against two of the participated loans, interest on the funds recovered, and attorney’s fees for bringing this action.

The FDIC contends that the loan participations were contingent claims and were not debts of Ranchlander at the time of its insolvency or when it was placed in receivership. For these reasons, the FDIC contends that the claims were not provable in the receivership. It counterclaims against InterFirst for the amount in the Ranchlander correspondent account plus interest at a six percent rate, the amount in the federal funds account plus interest at the federal funds rate, and attorney’s fees.

FINDINGS OF FACT

The parties have stipulated the facts. InterFirst is a national bank operating in Abilene, Texas. Until November 19, 1982, when it was closed, Ranchlander was a national bank operating in Melvin, Texas. It was forced to close upon the discovery that Orrin Shaid, the de facto chief executive officer of the bank, was using his control of the bank to carry out a fraudulent scheme. Shaid had acquired a controlling interest in Ranchlander in May 1981, with the stock held in the name of Lynn Caruth Maree. He controlled the operations of the bank through Jean Moon, the president of Ranchlander.

Acting through Shaid and Moon, Ranchlander sold to InterFirst the four loan participations that are the basis of this action. In May 1982, InterFirst bought a $10,000 participation in a $10,500 loan from Ranchlander to Shaid. In July 1982 Inter-First bought two participations: a $45,000 participation in a $86,000 loan purportedly made by Ranchlander to Henry E. McClanahan, and a $15,000 participation in a $30,-000 loan made by Ranchlander to Joyce Webb. Finally, in October 1982, InterFirst purchased a $42,000 participation in a $43,-994.71 loan purportedly made by Ranchlander to Central Texas Factors (Cen-Tex). InterFirst paid for these participations by depositing funds into the correspondent *1198 checking account that Ranchlander maintained at InterFirst.

Ranchlander delivered to InterFirst certificates of participation executed by Jean Moon. The certificates provide that (1) Ranchlander would account for all payments received on the loans and disburse to InterFirst its portion of the funds, and (2) Ranchlander would not be liable to Inter-First for losses or expenses caused by the loans unless the losses or expenses were due to Ranchlander’s fraud or gross negligence.

Upon maturity of the Webb loan in January 1983, the FDIC collected substantially all the principal and interest due. Inter-First’s share of the collections is $15,-824.51. Upon maturity of the Shaid loan in June 1983, the FDIC collected $2,500, of which InterFirst’s share is $1,416.19.

In purchasing the loan participations, InterFirst relied on several misrepresentations by Ranchlander and its officers. The signature of McClanahan was forged on the $86,000 note and the underlying security agreement, and Moon and Shaid falsified inspection reports relating to nonexistent collateral securing the McClanahan loan. Ranchlander misrepresented to InterFirst that Cen-Tex was creditworthy, that Ranchlander had perfected a security interest in Cen-Tex accounts receivable sufficient to secure the loan, and that Ranchlander would disburse to InterFirst its share of payments on the accounts receivable as they were received. Ranchlander instead credited the payments to a Cen-Tex account from which Shaid withdrew funds for his personal use.

Each of the foregoing misrepresentations was knowingly made by Shaid or Moon, acting on behalf of and with the authority of Ranchlander with an intent to deceive InterFirst and induce it to purchase the participations. Ranchlander therefore was grossly negligent and acted with fraudulent intent in making the McClanahan and Cen-Tex loans and selling participations in them to InterFirst.

On November 18, 1982, Ranchlander had a balance of $25,994.99 in its correspondent account at InterFirst. Also as of that date, InterFirst owed Ranchlander $35,000 that it had previously purchased as federal funds out of the correspondent account. On November 19, 1982, the FDIC notified InterFirst that Ranchlander was insolvent and that it was appointed receiver and instructed InterFirst not to accept any charges to Ranchlander’s accounts. That same day, InterFirst transferred $35,008.99 (representing principal & interest) from its general ledger account to the Ranchlander correspondent account to repay the previously purchased federal funds. InterFirst thereafter paid no interest on Ranchlander funds deposited with it. Although the FDIC had not requested this transaction, there is no evidence that the FDIC at any time instructed InterFirst to sell federal funds on Ranchlander’s account. Taking judicial notice of the common practice of banks to reverse federal funds transactions on a daily basis unless a provision is made for a longer-term transaction, the Court finds that the transfer did not violate the FDIC’s instructions to InterFirst and that the funds were properly carried by Inter-First in a noninterest-bearing account.

On November 26, 1982, the FDIC requested InterFirst to remit to it $61,003.98, which represented the outstanding balance of the Ranchlander account. InterFirst refuses to pay the FDIC the money and has claimed a right to set off the funds in the account against its share of the McClanahan and Cen-Tex loans. It also asserts a right to its portion of the collection made by the FDIC on the Webb and Shaid loans. The FDIC has refused to pay InterFirst a share of the money collected on the loans until InterFirst remits the balance of the Ranchlander account.

CONCLUSIONS OF LAW

The distribution of assets of an insolvent national bank by the FDIC is a matter of federal law:

Under the relevant provisions of the National Bank Act (12 U.S.C. §§ 191-200) and the Federal Deposit Insurance Act (12 U.S.C.

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Bluebook (online)
590 F. Supp. 1196, 1984 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 24127, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/interfirst-bank-abilene-v-federal-deposit-insurance-txwd-1984.