National Bank & Trust Co. v. Campbell

463 N.W.2d 104, 1990 Iowa App. LEXIS 448, 1990 WL 192331
CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedSeptember 26, 1990
Docket88-89
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 463 N.W.2d 104 (National Bank & Trust Co. v. Campbell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
National Bank & Trust Co. v. Campbell, 463 N.W.2d 104, 1990 Iowa App. LEXIS 448, 1990 WL 192331 (iowactapp 1990).

Opinion

SCHLEGEL, Judge.

Defendant-counterclaimant Frank L. Campbell appeals a trial court judgment denying money damages. Plaintiff and counterclaim-defendant National Bank and Trust Co. cross-appeals the same judgment finding that it had committed fraud. We affirm.

After a ten-day bench trial, the court issued a lengthy and detailed decision including findings of fact and conclusions of law, from which we borrow extensively. This is a difficult and complicated case, and only a basic recitation of the facts can be undertaken here.

The trial court found and we agree that “Campbell is a person of more than average business intelligence, operating a complex admixture of elevator, livestock, tiling and farm businesses, and his wife [B. Iline Campbell, from whom he is now divorced,] was active in the various business pursuits.” Campbell also holds a real estate agent’s license. By late 1980, the Camp-bells jointly held title to a 1155-acre farm on which they cultivated grain and livestock. Through Campbell Grain they owned two elevator businesses. Campbells held numerous bank accounts both personally and through their various business enterprises at several local banks.

Campbell Grain experienced financial difficulties aggravated in early fall 1979 by Citizens State Bank’s (CSB) change in policy requiring funds be collected before the corporation could draw on its account. Campbell sought and received short term operating loans from National Bank & Trust Company (NBT). At the same time NBT gave immediate credit on the corporation’s third-party checks, but by late 1980, this degenerated to cheek “kiting.” 1 The trial court found that both NBT and Campbell knew Campbell was “in essence writing the amounts of his own [unsecured] loans” on the “float.” The court also found NBT had led Campbell to believe that the procedures were acceptable. NBT eventually surpassed legal lending limits. Because of the debt structure, the court noted, “[b]oth the Campbells and the Bank had too much to lose to stop the transactions .... ”

William Carter, president and a director of NBT, and Dale Bankus, a loan officer, were Campbells’ primary contacts. 2 Short *106 ly before a consultant was to examine accounts in April 1981, Carter disclosed the predicament to his board of directors. NBT immediately sought security for the float, which sometimes exceeded $1.1 million, and to bring NBT in line with lending limits and avoid criminal or civil liability. In compliance with NBT requests, Camp-bells liquidated some assets and entered into numerous transactions required by NBT.

Campbells signed numerous instruments in blank, issued mortgages, and personally guaranteed corporate debt at the behest of NBT. This included “paper transfers” to two Campbell children of part of the unsecured debt, for which all parties understood Frank and Iline would remain liable. The series of “paper transfers” culminated in, and the crux of our problem here developed from, a quit claim deed of the 1155-acre farm to NBT in late April 1981. The trial court states:

[T]he Court believes and finds, that Frank repeatedly indicated that even if a quit claim deed were given, he was not selling the farm. The Court specifically finds that the Campbells believed, and were led to believe by Bankus, that the Quit Claim Deed was merely yet another “paper transaction” to satisfy banking examiners....
******
... The Court finds the Campbells signed the Quit Claim Deed to their farm in direct reliance upon representations by both Bankus and Carter that the deed would not change ownership, management or possession of the farm.

After the deed, Campbells treated the farm as their own, paying accrued real estate taxes and a mortgage installment to a lender and making improvements. NBT assumed responsibility for making these payments in 1982 and 1983. During that time, NBT insisted on a lease to satisfy bank examiners and set rent equal to the mortgage payment to the third-party lender, insurance, and taxes.

Deed in hand and estimating the value of the farm at $1500 per acre, less an $800,-000 mortgage, NBT took the $648,000 worth of notes assumed by the Campbell children off its books. NBT also reduced a Campbell Grain debt by $120,700. Camp-bells claimed the farm should be valued at $2200 per acre, but the court determined fair market value was $1750 per acre, or $2,021,250, at the date of the deed. We concur in that valuation.

In 1983 NBT exercised more control over the farm, notifying real estate brokers to reduce the asking price the parties had agreed to. NBT also monitored planting and production. NBT finally served Camp-bells with termination of the farm tenancy and sued when Campbells failed to pay the 1983 “rent.” 3 Campbells brought several counterclaims, all of which were dismissed except the cause of action based upon the fraud of NBT. No appeal of the court’s dismissal of those counterclaims has been taken.

The trial court dismissed NBT’s action. It determined that the quit claim deed should be set aside to the extent it affected relationships between the parties before it, and it found Campbells entitled to a money judgment equal to the equity they lost by NBT’s interference with and loss of the real estate. It noted, however, that “[bjoth [parties] were not only involved but voluntarily continued (for their own reasons) the clearly questionable procedures that brought them to this Court.” The court, therefore, considered NBT’s amendments seeking setoff amounts owed by Campbells and determined that equitable principles demanded setoffs.

On appeal, Frank Campbell challenges the trial court’s calculation of damages and inclusion of setoffs against the award to the Campbells. «He also argues that he *107 should receive punitive damages. On cross-appeal, National Bank & Trust contends that a finding of fraud is unsupported, and it urges that if there was fraud, there either was no injury or the trial court calculated the damages correctly-

The parties disagree on whether the cause was tried in law or equity, and consequently, they disagree on our scope of review. At several points throughout its decision, the trial court uses equity principles, and it seems clear that the trial court considered the case in equity. Moreover, despite its protestations, it appears that Campbells sought relief in equity. When the parties and the court treat a claim as equitable in nature, and it is tried on that theory, we will consider it as equitable on appeal. Burrell v. Burrell, 256 Iowa 490, 493, 127 N.W.2d 78, 80 (1964). Our review, therefore, is de novo. Iowa R.App.P. 4. We will give weight to the trial court’s findings of fact, especially when considering the credibility of witnesses, but we are not bound by them. Iowa R.App.P. 14(f)(7).

The Iowa Supreme Court has enumerated the elements of fraud as: (1) representation, (2) falsity, (3) materiality, (4) scienter, (5) intent to deceive, (6) reliance, and (7) resulting injury and damage. Cornell v. Wunschel,

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Bluebook (online)
463 N.W.2d 104, 1990 Iowa App. LEXIS 448, 1990 WL 192331, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/national-bank-trust-co-v-campbell-iowactapp-1990.