Moen v. Norwest Bank of Minot

647 F. Supp. 1333, 1986 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 17904
CourtDistrict Court, D. North Dakota
DecidedNovember 10, 1986
DocketCiv. A4-84-177
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 647 F. Supp. 1333 (Moen v. Norwest Bank of Minot) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. North Dakota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moen v. Norwest Bank of Minot, 647 F. Supp. 1333, 1986 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 17904 (D.N.D. 1986).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

MAGILL, Circuit Judge, Sitting by Designation.

I. INTRODUCTION.

In this diversity case, 1 Plaintiff Harold M. Moen (“Moen”) alleges that Defendant Norwest Bank of Minot (“Norwest”) allowed an unauthorized party to enter a safe deposit box Moen was renting, and that as a result Moen lost money. The task before this court is to determine whether Norwest breached the safe deposit contract, whether Norwest was negligent, and if so, what damages Moen has sustained. The court finds that Norwest breached the safe deposit contract and did so negligently, but that Moen has failed to prove damages.

II. FACTS.

Moen, currently a resident of California, was from about 1950 to 1962 involved in oil venture investment. In the early 1950’s he joined Russell Ballantyne and his brother Melvin W. Ballantyne (“Ballantynes”), and Theodore P. Clifford (“Clifford”), acquiring oil leases and royalty interests, buying and selling mineral interests, and obtaining venture capital to develop oil interests.

On February 13, 1962, Moen and the Ballantynes drafted a memorandum agreement, in which Moen agreed to sell real estate in Renville and Bottineau Counties, mineral interests and oil and gas leases in the United States and Canada, and oil company stock to the Ballantynes. On April 14, 1962, the deal was finalized through an Agreement for Sale and Purchase of Property (“Agreement”). 2

The consideration for the sale was $330,-000. The Ballantynes paid $500 down, with the rest to be paid in semi-annual payments of $25,000 plus interest up to and including the June 15, 1965 payment. After that date, the Agreement called for semi-annual payments of $20,000 plus interest.

The sixth paragraph of the Agreement was entitled “Escrow Agreement,” and required Moen to prepare documents conveying his interest in the various properties to the Ballantynes, then deposit the documents in the American State Bank of Minot, which was to act as an escrow agent. On April 26, 1963, Moen and the Ballantynes replaced the sixth paragraph with a paragraph containing two major changes: Norwest replaced American State Bank of Minot as escrow agent, and a clause describing Norwest’s liability was inserted. The new sixth paragraph stated in part:

It is understood and agreed that the Vendors have executed to the Vendees instruments of Assignment and conveyances of the properties and interests in the properties as described in the attached exhibits and have deposited in a safety [sic] deposit box at First National Bank of Minot, North Dakota, 3 to be held in said safety deposit box until all sums due under this agreement for Sale and Purchase have been fully paid. It is further agreed that the key to said safety deposit box shall be delivered in escrow to the *1336 managing officer of the First National Bank in Minot, North Dakota, with the direction that the key may be delivered for repeated entries to said safety deposit box only to Harold Moen or Theo. P. Clifford and Melvin W. Ballantyne or Russell Ballantyne, it being the intention of the parties that one of the parties Harold Moen or Theo. P. Clifford and one of the parties Melvin W. Ballantyne or Russell Ballantyne be present at any time that the key is delivered by the managing officer of the bank. It is agreed between the parties that the Bank shall be responsible for the contents of said safety deposit box only to the extent of cost of replacing any instruments therein, and in no event shall the liability of the Bank be more than $10,000.00 (Emphasis added).

Moen, Clifford, and the Ballantynes also drew up a document at this time, addressed to Norwest, which essentially reiterated the new sixth paragraph of the Agreement. In the document, the parties agreed to deliver to Norwest the keys to a Norwest safe deposit box [number 1771], to be held in escrow by Norwest’s managing officer. The document directed the managing officer to give the keys only to Moen, Clifford, or the Ballantynes, and stated that it was “the intention of the undersigned that one of the parties, Harold Moen or Theo. P. Clifford together with one of the parties, Melvin W. Ballantyne or Russell Ballantyne be present whenever said key is delivered.” It appears, however, that Moen and the Ballantynes each kept a key, and Nor-west held only a master key.

The document then recited essentially the same exculpatory language as underlined above in the amendment to the Agreement, and also stated: “This escrow instrument shall terminate only upon a written terminating instrument executed by all of the undersigned and delivered to you [Nor-west].”

On May 10, 1963, pursuant to an additional agreement with Moen, the Ballantynes sold to ten oil companies the shares of oil company stock referenced in the Agreement. This transaction is not in dispute.

On May 16, 1963, pursuant to the Agreement, Moen rented safe deposit box number 1771 (“box number 1771”) at Norwest. The safe deposit rental contract (“Rental Contract”) contained a special notation as to box number 1771. This notation read:

This box to be opened only in presence of Russell Ballantyne or Melvin Ballantyne and Theo P. Clifford or Harold Moen.

The United States property that Moen was to sell to the Ballantynes under the Agreement consisted of real estate deeds, a mineral deed, and four assignments of interest in oil and gas leases. These documents were placed in box number 1771. 4 The real estate deeds were subsequently disposed of, 5 and it is the mineral deed and four assignments of interest that are the subject of this dispute. The five properties are located in Bottineau County, North Dakota. The mineral deed, referred to by Moen as the “Kerr-McGee” interest, conveyed to the Ballantynes an “interest in and to all of the oil, gas and other minerals in and under and that may be produced from” a described parcel of land. The four assignments of interest in oil and gas leases, referred to by Moen as the “Albert Houmann # 1,” “C. Houmann # 2,” “C. Houmann #3,” and “Krogen” interests, each conveyed to the Ballantynes an “interest in and to the following described oil and gas lease * * * together with the rights incident thereto and the personal property thereon.”

*1337 All five properties (collectively, “mineral interests”) produced oil and royalty income (“income”) from oil production. The parties intended the Ballantynes to receive this income. Moen wrote to the oil companies operating the wells, directing them to make income payments directly to the Ballantynes.

Thus, under the Agreement, Norwest was to hold these assignments of mineral interests as an escrow agent until the parties had complied with all the terms of the Agreement. The Ballantynes were to pay all installments under the Agreement by deposit with Norwest, the escrow agent.

On June 26, 1964, Clifford died.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
647 F. Supp. 1333, 1986 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 17904, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moen-v-norwest-bank-of-minot-ndd-1986.