Nine-O-Five Royal Apartment Hotel, Inc. v. Atkins

151 So. 3d 739, 2014 La.App. 4 Cir. 0325, 2014 La. App. LEXIS 3139, 2014 WL 5034238
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 8, 2014
DocketNo. 2014-CA-0325
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 151 So. 3d 739 (Nine-O-Five Royal Apartment Hotel, Inc. v. Atkins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nine-O-Five Royal Apartment Hotel, Inc. v. Atkins, 151 So. 3d 739, 2014 La.App. 4 Cir. 0325, 2014 La. App. LEXIS 3139, 2014 WL 5034238 (La. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

Judge MAX N. TOBIAS, JR.

_JjThe defendant, Regions Bank, appeals an adverse judgment rendered on 23 December 2013 in favor of the plaintiff, Nine-O-Five Royal Apartment Hotel, Inc., declaring the Regions Bank mortgage invalid and canceling the mortgage. For the following reasons, we affirm.

Factual Background and Procedural History

This matter involves the validity of a Multiple Indebtedness Mortgage and Security Agreement (“the Mortgage”) executed on 10 December 2003 by Donna Morell Rotonti (“Donna”) purportedly on behalf of Nine-O-Five Royal Apartment Hotel, Inc. (“Nine-O-Five”) in favor of Regions Bank (“Regions”), the successor by merger to AmSouth Bank (“AmSouth”). Regions avers that the doctrines of apparent authority and agency by estoppel apply, clothing Donna with authority to execute the Mortgage on behalf of Nine-O-Five and that, in any event, Nine-O-Five later ratified the Mortgage. Conversely, Nine-O-Five contends that Donna lacked authority, either actual or apparent, to execute the Mortgage binding Nine-O-Five and, consequently, the Mortgage is invalid.

Nine-O-Five is a closely held corporation that was formed by members of the Morell family and incorporated in 1964, with the controlling interest in the [{.corporation initially held by Marie S. Mo-rell (“Marie”). Marie had three daughters, who are involved in the instant case: Jane Morell (“Jane”), Joyce Morell (“Joyce”), and Donna.1 Nine-O-Five’s primary asset is a small seven-room hotel located at 905 Royal Street in New Orleans (“the Property”). The record owner of the Property is and at all relevant times was Nine-O-Five. For many years, Jane and Joyce have operated the hotel located at the Property, whereas Donna has never been involved in its daily operation.

In the 1990’s, following Marie’s death, Nine-O-Five’s stock was placed in a family trust, with the understanding that Jane and Joyce are to remain in the Property for their lifetime, after which those rights are to succeed to Donna’s children, as successive beneficiaries. Since their mother’s death, Jane and Joyce have been the sole [742]*742officers and directors of Nine-O-Five. According to the corporate records filed by Nine-O-Five with the Louisiana Secretary of State, Donna has been neither an officer nor director of the corporation since 1984.

In February 2000, Nine-O-Five entered into a loan transaction with Whitney Bank (“Whitney”) in order to fund needed renovations to the Property. The loan was secured with a mortgage on the Property. Appearing as president, Joyce signed the Whitney mortgage on behalf of Nine-O-Five, with her authority to do so confirmed by a corresponding corporate resolution signed by Jane as Nine-O-Five’s secretary. Donna’s name does not appear anywhere on the Whitney mortgage, either as an officer or director of Nine-O-Five, or otherwise.

Two months later, in April 2000, Nine-O-Five borrowed an additional $175,000 from AmSouth in order to complete the renovations to the Property. |sThis time, Donna signed the AmSouth note as the corporate secretary of Nine-O-Five. The promissory note in favor of AmSouth contains the signatures of all three Morell sisters. Donna signed as secretary, Joyce as president, and Jane, individually, but not as an officer or director of Nine-O-Five. Additionally, the record contains a personal guarantee signed by Donna for the April 2000 AmSouth loan made to Nine-O-Five. Subsequent disbursement requests and authorizations made in connection with the AmSouth loan were also signed by all three.sisters.2 In short, the record reveals that, except for Donna’s personal guarantee executed by her alone, all documents executed in connection with the April 2000 AmSouth loan transaction bear the signatures of all three Morell sisters on behalf of Nine-O-Five.3

On 10 December 2003, AmSouth made a personal loan to Donna and her husband, John Rotonti, in the amount of $525,000.4 The loan was evidenced by a promissory note, entitled Note for Business and Commercial Loans (“the Note”), executed by Donna, individually, and as the agent and attorney-in-fact for John Rotonti. Nine-O-Five is nowhere mentioned or otherwise identified in the Note. |4The Note specifically provided, among other things, that AmSouth retained the right, in the event of default, to pay itself by drawing on any “moneys, securities and other property” of the Rotontis in the possession of, or on [743]*743deposit with, the bank. According to Donna’s testimony, she and her husband had approximately two million dollars in certificates of deposits with AmSouth.

On the same date that the loan transaction between the Rotontis and AmSouth took place, though Nine-O-Five was neither a maker nor a guarantor of the loan, Donna, purporting to act on behalf of Nine-O-Five, executed the Mortgage on the Property as security for the Rotontis’ personal loan with AmSouth.5 The Mortgage purports to have been given by Nine-O-Five to AmSouth in order to secure the indebtedness and obligations arising under the Note given by Donna and John Roton-ti.6 In connection with the Mortgage, Donna submitted a resolution, signed solely by her as the alleged secretary of Nine-O-Five, purportedly clothing her with the requisite authority on behalf of Nine-O-Five to execute the Mortgage. Specifically, the document states that by resolution of the Board of Directors of Nine-O-Five in November 2003, Donna was duly | sauthorized to execute the Mortgage on behalf of the corporation.7 Neither Jane nor Joyce signed the resolution.

It is undisputed that Donna held no corporate office in Nine-O-Five at the time the Mortgage was executed in 2003, and had not held an office in the corporation for 19 years. At that time, the only officers and directors of the corporation were Jane and Joyce, who were solely responsible for the day-to-day operations of the hotel.8 Moreover, contrary to the recitations contained in the resolution presented by Donna with the Mortgage to AmSouth, the testimony adduced at trial was that the shareholders or Board of Directors of Nine-O-Five did not meet in November 2003 and did not confer any authority upon Donna on that date, or on any other date, to act for or on behalf of Nine-O-Five in granting a mortgage or other lien or privilege on the Property. Additionally, Jane and Joyce testified that, while they had been aware of the prior Whitney loans9 and mortgage, as well as the 2000 AmSouth loan, they knew nothing [744]*744about the December 2003 AmSouth loan made by Donna and John Rotonti or the Mortgage on the Property to secure that debt until several years following Hurricane Katrina, when they received a telephone call from someone at the bank (either AmSouth or Regions) advising that a mortgage loan apparently signed by Donna binding the | fihotel was in default. Jane contacted Donna to ask her about the loan, and was advised by Donna that she would be “taking care of it.”10

Subsequently, on 14 January 2009, Nine-O-Five filed a petition for mandamus seeking a declaration that the Mortgage was invalid and requesting that the Clerk of Court cancel the Mortgage inscription. In answer to Nine-O-Five’s petition, Regions (as AmSouth’s successor) affirmatively pled the defense of unjust enrichment11 and the defense of fraud.12

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151 So. 3d 739, 2014 La.App. 4 Cir. 0325, 2014 La. App. LEXIS 3139, 2014 WL 5034238, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nine-o-five-royal-apartment-hotel-inc-v-atkins-lactapp-2014.