MCC Management of Naples, Inc. v. International Bancshares Corp.

468 F. App'x 816
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 5, 2012
Docket10-6283
StatusUnpublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 468 F. App'x 816 (MCC Management of Naples, Inc. v. International Bancshares Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
MCC Management of Naples, Inc. v. International Bancshares Corp., 468 F. App'x 816 (10th Cir. 2012).

Opinion

ORDER AND JUDGMENT *

PAUL KELLY, JR., Circuit Judge.

Defendant-Appellant International Bancshares Corporation (“IBC”) appeals from the judgment of the district court, after trial, in favor of Plaintiff-Appellee MCC Management of Naples (“Colliers”). The Colliers sued for breach of contract and fraud in a dispute over tax benefits. We have jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291 and we affirm.

Background

This is a contract and tort dispute over entitlement to $16 million in tax benefits accruing over a period of years to an Oklahoma bank called Local. The “benefits” at issue are tax deductions that reduce taxable income. On one side are Miles and Barron Collier, brothers and investors, who owned Local at the time the tax benefits arose; on the other is International Bancshares Corporation, which now owns the bank. In 1988, Local began buying troubled loan assets. An agency later absorbed into the FDIC guaranteed the value of the assets; in return Local had to “share” some of its profits. When Congress repealed the deductions Local claimed on losses from these assets, Local stopped its sharing payments and sued in the Court of Federal Claims; the FDIC counterclaimed for non-payment.

Local’s potential liability in the FDIC suit — possibly as much as $20 million— made prospective purchasers of the bank wary. So when, in 1997, the Townsend Group, a band of investors, purchased Local from the Colliers, the contract (or “Re *819 demption Agreement”) required that the Colliers escrow $10 million of the $154 million purchase price on account of the FDIC liability. Local already had a $12.7 million FDIC reserve. If the FDIC won more than the combined $22.7 million, the Colliers had to indemnify Townsend/Local. The contract was designed to allow Townsend to buy Local while carving out the potential FDIC liability. In 1999, the parties signed a “Settlement Agreement” to resolve certain post-closing disputes not relevant here. What is relevant, however, are clauses in the contract that reaffirmed the terms of the Redemption Agreement as they bore on the FDIC litigation.

In 2002, Local and the FDIC settled the suit for somewhere around $25-27 million. That same day, Townsend/Local and the Colliers signed a “Resolution and Modification Agreement,” or RMA. This is the nub of the conflict. Two things now happened. First, the parties signed an agreement whose effect they dispute: IBC claims the RMA released any Collier claims on Local assets, which Local takes to include the disputed tax benefits. The Colliers contend that the agreement specifically carved out from supersession their interest in these tax benefits. Second, in 2004, Local realized that by using a different method of measurement it could claim about $7 million more in tax deductions than it thought — the “Excess Basis Deduction,” which increases losses attributable to already-written-down loans that are liquidated at less than book value. Local also claimed a $7 million deduction on the principal payment made to the FDIC and some $140,000 in deductions for attorney’s fees. That year IBC bought Local and inherited this dispute.

Finally, in 2006, as Local prepared for an audit of the Excess Basis Deduction, Kristy Carver, Local’s “tax director,” abruptly quit over what she believed was a bonus owed her for “discovering” the deduction. Instead she began consulting for the Colliers and alerted them to the millions in deductions that Local claimed. R. 15, 10891. A few months later the Colliers sued IB C/Local for these amounts on a variety of fraud and contract theories. IB C/Local counterclaimed against the Colliers, and added third-party claims against Ms. Carver for breach of confidentiality and tortious interference with contract.

The Colliers and Ms. Carver prevailed after a 17-day jury trial in March 2010. The jury found IBC liable for breach of contract. They also found that Local not only failed to disburse the tax benefits, owed by contract to the Colliers, but concealed from the Colliers that the deductions had been taken. IBC was found liable for breach of the duty of good faith and fair dealing, breach of fiduciary duty, non-disclosure, false representation, constructive fraud, and negligent misrepresentation. The jury awarded $15.8 million in compensatory damages and $1.4 million in punitive damages. The district court added $4.3 million in prejudgment interest. The final recovery was $21.6 million.

Discussion

IBC contends that it was entitled to judgment as a matter of law or, in the alternative, a new trial. Denial of a Rule 50 motion is reviewed de novo, but IBC must prove that the evidence and its inferences (viewed in the light most favorable to its opponents) points but one way, i.e., in its favor. Rocky Mountain Christian Church v. Bd. of Cnty. Comm’rs, 613 F.3d 1229, 1235 (10th Cir.2010). Denial of a motion for a new trial is reviewed for abuse of discretion. Minshall v. McGraw Hill Broad. Co., Inc., 323 F.3d 1273, 1283 (10th Cir.2003). This court will reverse the denial of a motion for a new trial “only if the trial court made a clear error of *820 judgment or exceeded the bounds of permissible choice in the circumstances.” Id. We address the issues raised in turn.

A. Did the 2002 RMA supersede or waive the Colliers’ entitlement to the tax benefits?

This is the central dispute. IBC argues that the 2002 RMA terminated any Collier claims and that the district court erred in deeming its provisions ambiguous, obligating a jury to sort out the arrangement. It points to paragraph 3 of the RMA as expressing the crucial terms. The Colliers claim that the contract did not release them claims, and, in any event, it was a good-faith dispute resolved by the jury. They look to Section 4 of the 2002 RMA, which refers to Section 7 of the 1999 Settlement Agreement, which in turn refers to the Collier’s rights under Section 5.1 of the 1997 Redemption Agreement.

Under Oklahoma law, the determination of whether a contract is ambiguous is a question of law; but if the court determines that a contract is ambiguous, its construction depends on extrinsic evidence and interpretation becomes a question of fact. Pitco Prod. Co. v. Chapatal Energy, Inc., 63 P.3d 541, 545 (Okla.2003). Ambiguity exists when the contract is reasonably susceptible of more than one construction, such that reasonable persons could honestly disagree as to the meaning. Id. at 545-46.

We find language in the RMA stating that its terms supersede those of prior agreements; we also find language that prevents such superseding effect, at least with regard to liabilities in the FDIC suit. The RMA, in Section 4 (headed “This Agreement Supersedes the Redemption and Settlement Agreements”), states, in its opening words, “Except for Section 7 of the Settlement Agreements which will remain in full force and effect as originally stated.... ” Then, Section 7, for its part, styled a “Mutual Release and Waiver of Claims,” purports to discharge both sides from any claims — “except for any and all rights ...

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