Midland States Life Insurance v. Cardillo

797 N.E.2d 11, 59 Mass. App. Ct. 531, 2003 Mass. App. LEXIS 1064
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedOctober 9, 2003
DocketNos. 00-P-709 & 01-P-1830
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 797 N.E.2d 11 (Midland States Life Insurance v. Cardillo) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Appeals Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Midland States Life Insurance v. Cardillo, 797 N.E.2d 11, 59 Mass. App. Ct. 531, 2003 Mass. App. LEXIS 1064 (Mass. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

Beck, J.

In 1997, two unrelated previous winners of the Massachusetts Lottery Commission’s “Megabucks” game obtained lump sum payments from two Colorado corporations. In exchange, the winners pledged to the corporations a certain portion of their future annual prize money distributions. The plaintiff, Midland States Life Insurance Co. (Midland), is the present holder of the “promissory note[s]” reflecting these transactions. Both of the winners defaulted on the terms of the lump sum agreements not long after receiving the money. When the Lottery Commission (Lottery) refused Midland’s request to transfer the winners’ payments to Midland, Midland initiated actions against the Lottery in Superior Court seeking the money. Midland now appeals from judgments dismissing its complaints.

1. Factual and procedural background. Although the cases were not formally consolidated, the panel heard them together at oral argument. We refer to the cases by the names of the lottery winners, despite the fact that one of them is not a party to the appeal in his case. For convenience we use words such as “loan,” “lender,” “promissory note,” and “security agreement” as set out in the documents, even though it is the legal significance of these documents that is at issue. The complicated but undisputed factual and procedural backgrounds are as follows.

a. The Cardillo case, 00-P-709. On March 6, 1991, Joseph P. Cardillo, of Utica, New York, won a Massachusetts Megabucks prize of $766,520, to be paid in twenty equal installments. Six years later, he signed a so-called loan agreement with Sparcons, Inc., a Colorado corporation, for $104,100. In exchange he pledged to Sparcons the majority of his remaining annual lot[533]*533tery payments. Shortly thereafter, Sparcons endorsed the note and assigned it to Midland.

The documents in the record include a “loan agreement,” “a security agreement,” and “a promissory note.” (There is also mention of a Uniform Commercial Code filing but it does not appear in the record.) The loan agreement and the security agreement are in conflict with the promissory note as to the amount to be paid to Midland annually as well as the number of payments involved. We do not dwell on this point. It is the legal significance of the agreement with which we are concerned.

The “collateral” set out in the security agreement included “all of Debtor’s right, title and interest to . . . twelve [annual] lottery payments.” Covenants to the loan agreement required Cardillo to write to the Lottery requesting that the lottery payments be made to a bank account in his name, “provided that Lender or its assignee shall have the sole right and power to withdraw funds from such account and borrower shall have no right or power to withdraw funds from such account.” Cardillo was obligated to execute whatever documents were necessary to redirect loan payments to the lender. Apparently he did not do so. There was also a covenant of confidentiality prohibiting Cardillo from disclosing the terms of the agreement, with a penalty of $250,000 should he violate the covenant.

By the time the second loan payment was due, Cardillo had defaulted. Midland sued on the note in Colorado, as the agreement specified, and obtained a default judgment against Cardillo in the amount of $211,633.91. That figure included $103,288.42 (the unpaid balance on the loan), plus $56.77 per day in interest on the unpaid principal (an interest rate of 20.06 percent), attorney’s fees of $560, and costs of $189. Midland also brought suit against Cardillo and the Lottery in Massachusetts, seeking to reach and apply Cardillo’s promised annual prize payments to satisfy the Colorado judgment. Midland also sought injunctive relief.

The Lottery filed a motion for judgment on the pleadings, see Mass.R.Civ.P. 12(c), 365 Mass. 756 (1974), asserting that, under the doctrine of sovereign immunity, the Superior Court did not have jurisdiction over the Commonwealth in a reach and apply action. The Lottery contended that Midland should proceed [534]*534against Cardillo directly. Midland then filed a motion for an order redirecting payment of lottery proceeds to it. A month later, a judge of the Superior Court allowed Midland’s motion for default judgment against Cardillo. Another judge allowed the Lottery’s motion for judgment on the pleadings against Midland. The second judge also denied Midland’s motion to redirect the lottery proceeds. Subsequently a third Superior Court judge ordered that judgment in favor of the Lottery be entered on the docket.

b. The Celestin case, 01-P-1830. In May, 1992, Emmanuel C. Celestin, apparently of Miramar, Florida, won a Megabucks drawing of $920,320, payable in twenty annual payments of $46,016, less amounts withheld for State and Federal taxes. Five years later, he borrowed $100,000 from Feta Corp., a Colorado corporation with a different name but identical address as Sparcons, the company that lent a similar amount to Cardillo at about the same time. The Celestin note was payable in seven annual installments of $30,000.

The loan covenants required that Celestin establish a customer checking account in a named Colorado bank and execute a limited power of attorney vesting authority in Feta to deposit the annual lottery installments in the account with “the sole and exclusive authority” to withdraw funds from the borrower’s account. A so-called security agreement defined the collateral as the lottery payments due and “[a]ll proceeds” in a bank account maintained by Celestin in the Colorado bank. The loan agreement also required Celestin to allow the lender to obtain a court ' order confirming the terms of the agreement. As with Cardillo, it appears that Celestin did not carry out his part of the bargain. It, too, included a covenant of confidentiality with presumed damages of $250,000 for any breach thereof.

A year after signing the first agreement, Celestin borrowed another $34,000 from Feta. The second loan was payable in four additional annual installments of $30,000. Feta assigned both loans to Midland. Celestin’s second loan was similar to the first except that the terms were more onerous. Again there appear to be discrepancies between the note and the security agreement.

When Celestin defaulted in 1999, Midland held an auction of [535]*535Celestin’s interest in the lottery payments still pending. The sole bid for $135,000 was that of Midland. Midland then notified the Lottery of the auction and requested that the Lottery make Celestin’s lottery payments to Midland. The Lottery refused on grounds that Celestin had “no legal right to assign the proceeds or grant a security interest in the proceeds,” citing G. L. c. 10, § 28, and 961 Code Mass. Regs. § 2.28. Midland then filed a second action against the Lottery. The first count sought a detailed declaration that Midland had an enforceable security interest in Celestin’s lottery winnings, the second count sought injunctive relief, and the third sought money damages from the Lottery. The Lottery filed a motion to dismiss Midland’s complaint pursuant to Mass.R.Civ.R 12(b)(1) and 12(b)(6), 365 Mass. 755 (1974). A Superior Court judge allowed the motion. (Only the appeal from count one is before us.)

2. Discussion, a. The Singer Friedlander decision. Before either of the present actions had been filed, the Supreme Judicial Court, interpreting G. L. c. 10, § 28, had already held that the voluntary assignment of lottery proceeds is prohibited. Singer Friedlander Corp. v. State Lottery Commn., 423 Mass. 562 (1996).

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Bluebook (online)
797 N.E.2d 11, 59 Mass. App. Ct. 531, 2003 Mass. App. LEXIS 1064, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/midland-states-life-insurance-v-cardillo-massappct-2003.