Khan v. Alliance Bank

80 Va. Cir. 235, 2010 Va. Cir. LEXIS 50
CourtFairfax County Circuit Court
DecidedMarch 24, 2010
DocketCase No. CL 2009-14692
StatusPublished

This text of 80 Va. Cir. 235 (Khan v. Alliance Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Fairfax County Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Khan v. Alliance Bank, 80 Va. Cir. 235, 2010 Va. Cir. LEXIS 50 (Va. Super. Ct. 2010).

Opinion

By Judge Randy I. Bellows

This case presents the following question: Are sanctions warranted when a plaintiff files suit seeking relief he has already obtained? For the reasons stated below, the Court answers that question in the affirmative and imposes sanctions on both the plaintiff and his counsel.

Background

On October 9, 2009, the plaintiff, Asim Khan, filed suit against the defendant, Alliance Bank (hereinafter “the bank”), asserting claims of conversion, breach of contract, and specific performance. The facts of the case have been described in detail in the Court’s Letter Opinion of December 22, 2009, which reads in part as follows:

Plaintiff Asim Khan and his business partner, Sibtain Kazmi, members of Advantage Title and Escrow, L.L.C. (“Advantage Title”), opened a business account with Alliance Bank in November 2003. Both were signatories on the account. The parties’ business relationship soured over time.
On May 12, 2009, Kazmi wrote a letter to Alliance Bank requesting that Khan be removed as a signatory from [236]*236all the accounts of Advantage Title. On May 20, 2009, Khan wrote Alliance Bank a $35,000 check from the business account in exchange for a cashier’s check. On May 21, 2009, Kazmi delivered an “Affidavit of Unauthorized Transaction” to Alliance Bank, stating that the $35,000 cashier’s check was “fraudulently obtained.” In response, Alliance Bank issued a stop payment on the cashier’s check issued to Khan and re-credited the money to Advantage’s account. Defendant then wrote a letter to counsel for Khan and Kazmi informing them that the funds in the Joint Account would be interpleaded with the Court. In June 2009, Kazmi’s counsel sent Alliance Bank a letter requesting that it transfer the funds pursuant to a joint agreement between the parties, which was signed by both Khan and Kazmi. Counsel’s letter stated that this arrangement would “avoid the necessity of an interpleader action.” The “Joint Agreement to Close Account” directed Alliance Bank to wire transfer the balance of Advantage Title’s account, which included the $35,000 referenced above, to the trust account of Kazmi’s attorney. Defendant wired this money pursuant to the signed instructions from Khan and Kazmi.
Khan, as an individual, now asserts claims against Alliance Bank for conversion, breach of contract, and specific performance for issuing the initial stop payment order on the $35,000 cashier’s check. Asserting that the cashier’s check constituted an unconditional promise of payment pursuant to Va. Code § 8.3A-106, Khan claims he is entitled to damages, interest, and attorney’s fees pursuant to Va. Code § 8.3A-411.

Khan v. Alliance Bank, 79 Va. Cir. 634, 634-35 (2009).

In the Court’s Letter Opinion of December 22, the Court sustained the defendant’s Plea in Bar and dismissed the action with prejudice. Id. at 639. The Court found that the bank was entirely within its rights to stop payment on the cashier’s check after Mr. Kazmi presented the bank with a sworn affidavit alleging that the check was obtained by fraud. Id. The Court’s Letter Opinion, however, did not resolve or even address the issue of sanctions and attorney’s fees and costs. That matter was argued on February 19, 2010, and is now ripe for decision.

[237]*237 Discussion

That this Court sustained the Plea in Bar in no way resolves the matter of sanctions, for a sanctions motion is never resolved on the basis of who wins and who loses the underlying litigation. Were it otherwise, sanctions would lie in virtually every case, because it is the inherent nature of litigation that one side prevails and the other side does not. Rather, the question presented by a sanctions motion is whether the Complaint “is well grounded in fact and is warranted by existing law or a good faith argument for the extension, modification, or reversal of existing law and is not interposed for any improper purpose, such as to harass or to cause unnecessary delay or needless increase in the cost of litigation.” Va. Code § 8.01-271.1.

If all the Court had before it were the “four comers” of the Complaint and knew nothing else of the case, it would impose no sanctions. That, however, is not all the Court has before it. Rather, the circumstances preceding the filing of the Complaint make clear that the Complaint was not “well grounded in fact” and was “interposed for a[n] improper purpose.” Ya. Code § 8.01-271.1 That “improper purpose,” succinctly stated, was to obtain from the bank $35,000 that had already been paid out by the bank to Advantage Title at the specific request and at the specific instruction of the very plaintiff seeking relief in the instant case. Under these circumstances, sanctions are warranted, and must be imposed against both the plaintiff and his counsel.

To understand this conclusion, it is necessary first to examine a chronology of events:

On May 20, 2009, Mr. Khan wrote a $35,000 check on Advantage’s account and used the check to purchase a $35,000 cashier’s check from Alliance Bank.

On May 21, 2009, Mr. Kazmi filed with the bank a sworn affidavit of unauthorized transaction, alleging that the $35,000 check was “fraudulently obtained.” On that basis, Alliance Bank issued a stop payment on the cashier’s check.

On May 26, 2009, Alliance Bank credited $35,000 back to Advantage’s account, representing the value of the cashier’s check that had been purchased with Advantage’s funds six days earlier by Mr. Khan.

On June 17, 2009, Patricia Fettmann, counsel for Alliance Bank, wrote both Horace McClerklin (Mr. Khan’s counsel) and Asim A. Ghafoor (Mr. Kazmi’s counsel). The letter reads in part as follows:

[238]*238Both members of Advantage Title and Escrow, L.L.C., have made claims on the money in the account. Mr. Kazmi’s actions in this matter resulted in the account being frozen.
Mr. Kazmi directed Alliance in writing to stop Mr. Khan from taking one-half of the funds from the account. Nevertheless, Mr. Ghafoor and his client have each argued that Mr. Kazmi owns at least one-half of the account and should be able to write a rent check. However, such an argument requires Alliance Bank to take sides as to which party can access the funds, something which Alliance will not, and cannot, do.
The parties have placed the Bank in an untenable position. Therefore, be advised that I have been directed to interplead the funds with the Court unless this office receives written instructions, signed by both Mr. Kazmi and Mr. Khan, on or before noon, Monday June 22, 2009.

Letter from Ms. Fettmann to Mr. Ghafoor and Mr. McClerklin (dated June .17, 2009).

On June 19, 2009, according to Plaintiffs Opposition to Defendant’s Plea in Bar, “both counsel [i.e., Mr. Horace McClerklin, on behalf of Mr. Khan, and Asim Ghafoor, on behalf of Mr. Kazmi] and Ms. Fettmann, in a joint conference call, agreed that, to avoid the needless legal fees and the necessity of the interpleader action and since the Bank wanted to terminate its relationship with the LLC, the LLC’s account would be closed and the funds remaining in the LLC’s account would be transferred to Mr. Khazmi’s [sic] counsel’s trust account.” (Pl.’s Opp. to Plea in Bar ¶ 5 (emphasis in original).)

On June 25, 2009, Mr. Ghafoor sent a letter to Ms. Fettmann and Mr.

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Related

Khan v. Alliance Bank
79 Va. Cir. 634 (Fairfax County Circuit Court, 2009)

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Bluebook (online)
80 Va. Cir. 235, 2010 Va. Cir. LEXIS 50, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/khan-v-alliance-bank-vaccfairfax-2010.