Mercantile Bank of Michigan v. Clmia LLC

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 12, 2015
Docket316777
StatusUnpublished

This text of Mercantile Bank of Michigan v. Clmia LLC (Mercantile Bank of Michigan v. Clmia LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mercantile Bank of Michigan v. Clmia LLC, (Mich. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

MERCANTILE BANK OF MICHIGAN, UNPUBLISHED February 12, 2015 Plaintiff/Counter- Defendant/Appellee/Cross- Appellant,

v No. 316777 Kent Circuit Court CLMIA, LLC, LC No. 09-001639-CZ

Defendant/Third-Party Plaintiff/Cross- Defendant/Appellant/Cross- Appellee, and

DANIEL B. LONGMAN,

Defendant/Third-Party Plaintiff/Appellant/Cross-Appellee,

and

CLIA, INC.,

Defendant, and

WELLS FARGO BANK, N.A.,

Defendant/Counter-Plaintiff/Cross- Plaintiff/Appellee, and

WELLS FARGO ADVISORS, LLC, WILLIAM OCKERLUND, and MICHAEL DRIVER,

Third-Party Defendants/Appellees, and

-1- WACHOVIA BANK and WACHOVIA SECURITIES, LLC,

Third-Party Defendants.

Before: BORRELLO, P.J., and SERVITTO and SHAPIRO, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

CLMIA, LLC and Daniel B. Longman appeal as of right the trial court’s orders granting summary disposition in favor of Wells Fargo Advisors, William Ockerlund, and Michael Driver on CLMIA’s third-party claims against them, denying CLMIA’s motion to dismiss Wells Fargo Bank’s breach of contract claim against it, and granting summary disposition in favor of Mercantile Bank and against CLMIA and Longman for breach of contract. Mercantile Bank cross-appeals as of right from the trial court’s order granting CLMIA’s motion for summary disposition in its favor as to Mercantile’s equitable claims against CLMIA. We affirm.

In 2006, Daniel Longman, owner of CLMIA, LLC (a marine insurance agency) met William Ockerlund (“Ockerlund”) and Michael Driver (“Driver”), stockbrokers who were employed by Wells Fargo Advisors, LLC (f/k/a Wachovia Securities, LLC) and they advised and assisted him in obtaining financing to purchase a marina in Florida. Longman obtained the financing through the purchase of variable rate bond securities in the amount of $6,150,000. In November 2006, the bond sale took place with Mercantile Bank of Michigan (“Mercantile”) providing a letter of credit in support of the bonds and Longman signing a personal guarantee to Mercantile.

Approximately one month after the sale of the variable rate bonds, Driver recommended that CLMIA enter into an interest rate swap agreement as a purported way to “fix” the interest rate on the bonds. Acting upon this advice, CLMIA executed a Master Swap Agreement with Wachovia Bank (later known as Wells Fargo Bank and which shall hereafter be referred to as “Wells Fargo”) in December 2006. Under the Master Swap Agreement, Mercantile was to act as a credit support provider (defined in the swap agreement as “each party to a Credit Support Document that provides or is obligated to provide security, a guaranty or other credit support for [CLMIA’s] obligations under this Agreement, including, without limitation, Mercantile Bank of Michigan”) for CLMIA in any swap transactions entered into by Wells Fargo and CLMIA pursuant to the agreements. At the same time, and unbeknownst to CLMIA, Mercantile also executed a “Master Swap Participation Agreement” with Wells Fargo obligating it to pay Wells Fargo any amounts that CLMIA became required to pay under the swap transactions but failed to pay.

Wells Fargo and CLMIA immediately entered into a swap transaction under the terms of the Master Swap Agreement and from December 2006 to June 2007 the swap transaction resulted in monthly payments of approximately $1,000 from Wells Fargo to CLMIA. The swap transaction was terminated around June 2007, and CLMIA received a termination fee, as required under the Master Swap Agreement, from Wells Fargo. Driver then recommended that

-2- CLMIA enter into another swap transaction with Wells Fargo in August of 2007 and CLMIA agreed. This transaction was not profitable to CLMIA and resulted in CLMIA paying significant monthly amounts to Wells Fargo. In the spring of 2008, CLMIA indicated to Driver that it wanted to terminate the swap transaction and was advised that it could not do so without paying a significant termination fee to Wells Fargo. According to CLMIA, it still wanted to terminate the swap transaction and advised Driver of the same. In November 2008, Longman advised Wells Fargo that it would no longer be making the monthly swap transaction payments owed. Rather than terminate the contract, or accept CLMIA’s termination, however, Wells Fargo accepted the monthly payments from Mercantile that CLMIA failed to make.

Mercantile thereafter initiated this action against CLMIA and Longman seeking repayment of the monies it had paid to Wells Fargo under its Master Swap Participation Agreement on theories of subrogation, reimbursement, exoneration rights as guarantor and subrogee, and breach of guaranty. Mercantile further sought enforcement of its indemnification rights against CLMIA, and pursued claims of unjust enrichment and implied contract and sought a declaration that Mercantile is entitled to be subrogated to Wells Fargo’s current and potential right to future payments.

On CLMIA and Longman’s motion, the trial court granted summary disposition in favor of CLMIA with respect to the equitable relief sought in Mercantile’s complaint (equitable subrogation, equitable indemnification, unjust enrichment, and implied contract) and further granted summary disposition in favor of Longman, but allowed Mercantile to amend its complaint. In its amended complaint, Mercantile claimed breach of contract, and sought declaratory relief regarding the breach of contract and the guaranty obligations of Longman.

CLMIA filed a third-party complaint against Wells Fargo, Wells Fargo Securities, LLC, Ockerlund, and Driver alleging fraud, fraudulent inducement, negligent misrepresentation, negligence per se, and breach of fiduciary duty. Wells Fargo filed a counter-complaint against Mercantile and a cross-claim against CLMIA. In its counter-complaint, Wells Fargo asserted that CLMIA did not make payments as it was supposed to under the Master Swap Agreement and swap transaction and that Wells Fargo terminated the agreement on August 24, 2010. Wells Fargo claimed that according to the participation agreement, Mercantile is obligated to pay CLMIA’s termination amount to Wells Fargo, which is $624,656.46 and that it did not pay the same, thus breaching its contract with Wells Fargo. In its cross-claim against CLMIA, Wells Fargo asserted that CLMIA’s failure to pay the termination amount set forth in the Master Swap Agreement amounts to a breach of contract.

The trial court ultimately dismissed all of CLMIA’s third-party claims against Wells Fargo, Wells Fargo Securities, LLC, Ockerlund, and Driver. The trial court further determined that the Master Swap Agreement was valid and enforceable, that an “event of default” under the definition set forth in Master Swap Agreement was CLMIA’s nonpayment of the August 2010 monthly payment due under the relevant swap transaction and that August 24, 2010, was the early termination date of the Master Swap Agreement. The trial court also declared that when CLMIA and Longman failed to tender the amounts due after notified by Wells Fargo, Mercantile became obligated to pay the same. Upon payment by Mercantile of the swap liabilities, Wells Fargo would be obligated to assign to Mercantile all of its rights under the swap agreement. The

-3- trial court gave the parties 30 days upon which to agree to the actual amount of the swap liabilities owed.

After extensive briefing concerning the swap transaction early termination fee calculation, the trial court entered an order setting forth the termination fee under the master swap agreement as $624,656.46 plus interest of $11,724.73 and ordering CLMIA to pay Wells Fargo the same. Under the order, if CLMIA did not pay the amount ordered, Mercantile was to pay the fees and Wells Fargo was to assign all of its rights under the swap to Mercantile.

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