Mika v. Planters Bank & Trust Co.

404 S.E.2d 222, 241 Va. 415, 7 Va. Law Rep. 2246, 1991 Va. LEXIS 48
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedApril 19, 1991
DocketRecord No. 900844
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 404 S.E.2d 222 (Mika v. Planters Bank & Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mika v. Planters Bank & Trust Co., 404 S.E.2d 222, 241 Va. 415, 7 Va. Law Rep. 2246, 1991 Va. LEXIS 48 (Va. 1991).

Opinion

JUSTICE COMPTON

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This appeal arises in a fraud action brought by a commercial bank to recover sums it paid as “cash advances” on a personal credit card. The sole issue we consider is whether the trial court erroneously admitted into evidence a letter written by the holder of the credit card who did not testify at the trial.

In November 1988, Leslie J. Blakeslee was confined in the Augusta County jail on a series of criminal charges pending in local courts. Blakeslee was employed in Georgia managing property owned by a holding company based in Kuwait.

Blakeslee asked appellant Frank A. Mika, an attorney at law, to represent him. Mika was a sole practitioner with an office in Waynesboro. Mika’s only employee was appellant Tammy V. Campbell, who acted as Mika’s secretary and “right arm.”

On November 16, Mika interviewed Blakeslee at the jail. After discussing the need for Blakeslee to provide funds for bond and for Mika’s fee, Mika agreed to represent Blakeslee. Blakeslee told Mika that he, Blakeslee, was authorized to use a credit card issued to his employer, Mohammed Afif Diab. Diab was a resident of Dubai, United Arab Emirates, and was an employee of the Bank of Oman in its Dubai branch. Blakeslee did not possess the card. He suggested to Mika that cash advances be obtained from a local bank to cover the expenses necessary for Mika to undertake the representation. Mika rejected this idea and suggested that Blakeslee contact Diab and that he ask Diab to wire funds to Mika through Western Union in Waynesboro. Blakeslee agreed.

On November 17, Mika spent the day in Richmond attending a legal education seminar. He instructed Campbell to expect a call from Western Union, to obtain the wired funds, and to deposit the money in his escrow account.

During the day, without Mika’s knowledge, Blakeslee called Campbell, stating that the plans to obtain wired funds had “fallen through.” Blakeslee instructed Campbell to obtain “blank cash advance forms” from a local bank so that sums could be charged [418]*418to Diab’s credit card. Stating he was authorized to use Diab’s card, Blakeslee furnished Campbell with the account number for a VISA credit card together with telephone numbers for Diab and the Bank of Oman, which issued the credit card, so that the authorization could be verified.

Campbell, unfamiliar with the procedure for obtaining credit-card cash advances, went to the main office in Staunton of appellee Planters Bank & Trust Company of Virginia. At the bank, Campbell obtained blank “Bankcard Cash Advance” forms, took them to the jail, and Blakeslee completed two forms for cash advances of $2,500 and $4,000. Blakeslee signed the forms and wrote Diab’s name on them. Additionally, he signed a handwritten statement, notarized by Campbell, authorizing her to “pick up cash” on his behalf “relative to 2 VISA cash advances.”

Campbell returned to Waynesboro and took the documents to a Planters Bank branch. There, the advances were approved and the bank deposited $6,500 to Mika’s escrow account. From those funds, a check for approximately $2,200 was mailed to Atlanta at Blakeslee’s request “to pay his rent.”

On November 30, Mika went to the bank’s Staunton office to procure additional cash advances on Diab’s card, pursuant to instructions from Blakeslee, in order to provide funds to cover the amount of bail bonds fixed in connection with the criminal charges. When Mika requested blank cash advance forms to be taken to jail for Blakeslee to sign, a bank employee advised Mika that such blank forms could not be removed from the bank, and that cash advances could not properly be made unless the cardholder was present with his card. Puzzled by the apparent change in procedure by the bank, Mika returned to Waynesboro and asked Campbell to obtain the advances at the Waynesboro branch.

On December 1, Campbell went to the branch and, dealing with the same bank employee with whom she had dealt on November 17, obtained two cash advances on Diab’s credit card totalling $8,000 using the same procedure employed for the initial advances.

Bonds were posted and Blakeslee was released from jail. Subsequently, he personally obtained two cash advances from the bank’s Waynesboro branch on Diab’s card totalling $5,500, making a total of $20,000 charged to the card.

[419]*419Later, the Bank of Oman notified Planters Bank that all the charges were being refused. Neither Diab nor the Bank of Oman had been reached by telephone by any of the parties.

In January 1989, Planters Bank brought the present action against Mika, Campbell, and Blakeslee. Basing the action on actual and constructive fraud, the bank alleged the defendants misrepresented that Blakeslee was authorized to draw cash advances on Diab’s credit card. The bank further alleged that prior to procuring any advances, Campbell and Mika, as well as Blakeslee, were advised by the bank’s main office that, in order to process a cash advance, “the cardholder had to be present with the credit card, properly identified, and authorization from the Credit Card Center had to be obtained.” The bank further alleged that, notwithstanding this information, defendants proceeded to improperly obtain cash advances from a branch of the bank without presentation of the card and in the absence of the cardholder. Thus, according to the allegations, the defendants, jointly and severally, were liable to the bank for the full amount of the advances.

Responding, Mika and Campbell denied the bank’s allegations and specifically asserted that the cash advances “were duly authorized and drawn” on Diab’s credit card. Blakeslee, answering the bank’s allegations, contended that he had verbal authorization to use Diab’s credit card.

During a November 1989 jury trial, plaintiff's exhibit 11 was offered in evidence. The exhibit includes 15 pages of various sizes joined by a staple. The first page, a printed form with blanks completed by hand, is dated in January 1989 and labelled “Charge-Back/Re-presentation Documentation Transmittal.” At the foot of the page is printed “VISA INTERNATIONAL Operating Regulations.” The form instructs the user to employ “this form for all Charge-Backs which require documentation and all Representations.” Referring to a charge-back for Planters Bank, the form lists an amount of $4,500. Another such form carrying the same date is included in the exhibit; it refers to a like charge-back for Planters Bank in the amount of $3,500. Both of the forms, within a section titled “Second Charge-Back Reasons,” contains the following entry written by hand opposite “Comments:” “Enclosed cardholder’s letter.” The forms are signed opposite “Prepared by:” by a person whose signature is unintelligible and who is otherwise unidentified on the form.

[420]*420Also included in the exhibit are documents labelled “Merchant Advice and Checking Account Entry” showing charges totalling $20,000 against Planters Bank’s account by a bank card center. Also included in the exhibit are completed “Bankcard Cash Advance” forms designated “Bank Copy,” apparently signed by Blakeslee with Diab’s name also written on the signature lines.

Additionally, the 15 pages include two machine copies óf a typewritten letter dated December 17, 1988 written on stationery of the Khor Dubai branch of the Bank of Oman Limited. The letter is addressed to “Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
404 S.E.2d 222, 241 Va. 415, 7 Va. Law Rep. 2246, 1991 Va. LEXIS 48, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mika-v-planters-bank-trust-co-va-1991.