Kentucky Highlands Investment Corp. v. Bank of Corbin, Inc.

217 S.W.3d 851, 60 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. 2d (West) 1307, 2006 Ky. App. LEXIS 286, 2006 WL 2632652
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedSeptember 15, 2006
Docket2005-CA-000686-MR
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 217 S.W.3d 851 (Kentucky Highlands Investment Corp. v. Bank of Corbin, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kentucky Highlands Investment Corp. v. Bank of Corbin, Inc., 217 S.W.3d 851, 60 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. 2d (West) 1307, 2006 Ky. App. LEXIS 286, 2006 WL 2632652 (Ky. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

OPINION

COMBS, Chief Judge.

Kentucky Highlands Investment Corporation (“Kentucky Highlands”) appeals from a summary judgment granted by the Whitley Circuit Court in favor of the Bank *852 of Corbin, Inc., (“the Bank”). The appeal involves a priority dispute between Kentucky Highlands and the Bank of Corbin. The Bank claimed a right of set-off against funds in a commercial deposit account. Kentucky Highlands asserted a perfected security interest in the same funds. After considering the relevant provisions of Kentucky’s commercial code together with the arguments of counsel, we affirm the summary judgment of the trial court.

Kentucky Highlands was the primary lender to Tri-County Manufacturing and Assembly Incorporated (“Tri-County Manufacturing”) and its affiliates, including Tritech Electronics, LLC (“Tritech”). Various loans extended to these debtors by Kentucky Highlands totaled more than five million dollars. Kentucky Highlands contended that the loans were secured by a properly perfected security interest in all of the debtors’ personal property and an assignment of the debtors’ customer accounts receivable.

Tritech maintained a commercial deposit account with the Bank of Corbin. The Bank obtained a security interest in the deposits held at the Bank pursuant to a loan agreement dated April 6, 2001, between Tritech and the Bank, and it held a well-established right of set-off against the account.

Customer payments generally were not deposited into Tritech’s account. Instead, provisions of its loan agreements with Kentucky Highlands required Tritech to direct customers to remit their payments directly to Kentucky Highlands. The Tritech deposit account was funded primarily by transfers from an account held by TriCounty Manufacturing. Tri-County Manufacturing funded those advances on a line of credit provided by Kentucky Highlands. Kentucky Highlands was aware of Tritech’s account with the Bank of Corbin. Pursuant to the provisions of KRS 2 355.9-104(1), it could have taken steps to protect itself by taking control of the account. But it made no attempts to do so. KRS 355.9-104 provides as follows:

(1) A secured party has control of a deposit account if:

(a) The secured party is the bank with which the deposit account is maintained;
(b) The debtor, secured party, and bank have agreed in an authenticated record that the bank will comply with instructions originated by the secured party directing disposition of the funds in the deposit account without further consent by the debtor; or
(c) The secured ■ party becomes the bank’s customer with respect to the deposit account.

(Emphasis added).

In March or April of 2002, the relationship between Kentucky Highlands and its debtors began to deteriorate. An audit conducted by Kentucky Highlands in mid-July 2002 indicated that its debtors had overstated available accounts receivable and inventory by nearly 1.5 million dollars. In a meeting held on July 24, 2002, the debtors were instructed by Kentucky Highlands not to collect any accounts receivable. By July 26, 2002, at the latest, Kentucky Highlands believed that its debt- or’s president was engaged in illegal activity. (Deposition of Ray Moncrief, Chief Executive Officer of Kentucky Highlands, at 85.) Nevertheless, Kentucky Highlands did not invoke or initiate any judicial process to assert control over Tritech’s accounts receivable.

*853 Kentucky Highlands alleged that from approximately July 2, 2002, and continuing through approximately August 2, 2002, Tritech began depositing customer payments totaling nearly $400,000.00 into its own account at the Bank. Kentucky Highlands claimed that the Bank was paying overdrafts on the account during this period of time. Kentucky Highlands alleged that the Bank applied the funds deposited by Tritech to its overdrafts and to its other credit accounts held by the Bank — despite the Bank’s knowledge that Kentucky Highlands held a properly perfected security interest in all of the debtors’ accounts receivable.

On February 19, 2004, Kentucky Highlands filed a complaint against the Bank, alleging that Tritech had breached several of its agreements with Kentucky Highlands. Kentucky Highlands claimed that by depositing customer payments directly into its account with the Bank, Tritech converted funds belonging to Kentucky Highlands. Kentucky Highlands also alleged that the Bank knew — or should have known — that Tritech’s deposits amounted to a conversion of its funds. Kentucky Highlands claimed that the Bank had colluded with its debtors to divert the proceeds of the collateral assigned to Kentucky Highlands. Kentucky Highlands charged that the Bank had “aided and abetted Tritech in this conversion of funds belonging to Kentucky Highlands.” (Complaint at 3.) Kentucky Highlands sought recovery of the customer payments deposited into the subject account.

In its answer, the Bank denied the allegations. The Bank claimed that it had a superior right of set-off against the disputed funds under the provisions of Kentucky’s commercial code (as amended) and that it had no duty to monitor deposits being made into the subject account or to scrutinize the status of the collateral claimed by Kentucky Highlands. Invoking the provisions of Kentucky’s commercial code, the Bank filed a comprehensive motion for summary judgment.

In its response to the Bank’s motion for summary judgment, Kentucky Highlands argued strenuously and persuasively that the decision of the Kentucky Supreme Court in General Motors Acceptance Corporation v. Lincoln National Bank, 18 S.W.3d 337 (Ky.2000), (“GMAC”), controlled the dispute and that GMAC had not been superseded by subsequent amendments to the commercial code. It also argued that it had offered sufficient evidence of collusion among the parties and related entities to preclude summary judgment on that separate count in the Complaint.

The trial court granted the Bank’s motion for summary judgment on November 24, 2004. It ruled that the 2001 amendments to Kentucky’s commercial code governed the action and that under these statutory provisions, Kentucky Highlands had no viable claims against the Bank. The court reasoned that the Bank’s security interest in the deposit account had priority over the security interest held by Kentucky Highlands and that the Bank had a right of set-off against all of the funds deposited into Tritech’s account that was superior to any right possessed by Kentucky Highlands. In addition, the court rejected the contention of Kentucky Highlands that the Bank had a duty to monitor Tritech’s account in an effort to determine if its deposits might be proceeds of accounts receivable claimed by another secured creditor (namely, Kentucky Highlands). This appeal followed.

The standard of review governing an appeal of a summary judgment is well settled.

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217 S.W.3d 851, 60 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. 2d (West) 1307, 2006 Ky. App. LEXIS 286, 2006 WL 2632652, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kentucky-highlands-investment-corp-v-bank-of-corbin-inc-kyctapp-2006.