Pine Bluff National Bank v. St. Paul Mercury Insurance

346 F. Supp. 2d 1020, 2004 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 24565, 2004 WL 2750154
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Arkansas
DecidedOctober 20, 2004
Docket5:03CV00400 JLH
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 346 F. Supp. 2d 1020 (Pine Bluff National Bank v. St. Paul Mercury Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pine Bluff National Bank v. St. Paul Mercury Insurance, 346 F. Supp. 2d 1020, 2004 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 24565, 2004 WL 2750154 (E.D. Ark. 2004).

Opinion

OPINION AND ORDER

HOLMES, District Judge.

The issue in this case is whether Pine Bluff National Bank (the “Bank”) has cov *1023 erage under a financial institution bond (the “Bond”) issued by St. Paul Mercury Insurance Company (“St.Paul”) for losses that the Bank suffered as a result of a fraud perpetrated by one of its borrowers. St. Paul has moved for summary judgment.

I. THE UNDISPUTED FACTS

In July 1998, the Bank established a revolving line of credit for Ralph Croy & Associates, Inc. (“Croy”). Croy was a vendor of copy machines. Many of his customers were state agencies. To secure the line of credit, the Bank obtained from Croy a general assignment of Croy’s assets. The assignment of assets included an assignment of the stream of payments due to Croy under lease agreements with its customers. Periodically, Croy would deliver to the Bank packages of signed lease contracts. In exchange for the leases, the Bank would advance funds against the line of credit. The Bank determined the amount of credit it would extend based on the value of the lease contracts that Croy delivered. The value of a lease was computed by multiplying the lease term by the monthly lease payment.

Croy continued to make payments to the Bank until late 2001 or early 2002, when the payments ceased and the loan went into default. After the loan went into default, the Bank discovered in Croy’s records purchase orders that generally corresponded to the leases that Croy had delivered to the Bank, except for the length of the lease terms. The lease terms on the leases delivered to the Bank were greater than the lease terms indicated on the corresponding purchase orders. For example, many of the state agency leases delivered to the Bank showed that the agencies had leased copy machines for 60 months, whereas the corresponding purchase orders showed that the state agencies had leased the copy machines for only 12 or 86 months. Further investigation showed that some of the signatures of lessees in the leases delivered to the Bank were forged. A few leases were wholly fictitious.

The scheme was carried out as follows. The lease transaction between Croy and the state agency would be initiated by a state purchase order. Croy would subsequently deliver a copy machine and get a delivery form signed by a local agent of the particular state agency. In most or all cases, the person who initiated the purchase order for the state agency was an authorized purchasing official, who had authority to bind the state agency, and who was typically located somewhere other than the delivery location. For example, James Lipsey is an authorized purchasing agent for the University of Arkansas Cooperative Extension Service. His office is in Little Rock. Mr. Lipsey executed purchase orders whereby the Cooperative Extension Service leased copy machines from Croy for Cooperative Extension Service offices in various counties throughout the State of Arkansas. Croy would deliver those copy machines to the offices in the various counties and have delivery forms signed by the person in the various counties who received those copy machines. At the direction of Ralph Croy, the company owner and president, an employee named Wendell Brown or some other employee would prepare lease forms showing that the copy machine had been leased for 60 months, when in fact it had been leased for only 12 months or 36 months. In some instances, Brown or another Croy employee would ask the person who received the copy machine to sign the lease form and represent that the lease form was merely a delivery receipt. In other incidences, Brown or another Croy employee would forge the signature, using the name of the person who received delivery of the copy *1024 machine as the person who was signing on behalf of the agency.

Croy would then deliver these falsified lease forms, with 60-month lease terms, to the Bank. The Bank would calculate the value of the lease contracts based on 60-month lease terms, not on 12-or 36-month lease terms as reflected in the actual purchase orders. The effect was that the Bank loaned Croy substantially more money than Croy was entitled to receive based upon his actual contracts. As described by the Bank, Croy’s scheme was much like a Ponzi scheme, with Croy continually borrowing more money than the lease income could repay and having to falsify more and more leases to service the loan. Croy would keep the old debt serviced by pyramiding new debt. The scheme worked until Ralph Croy became ill in late 2001 and missed work for about three months. During that time, the line of credit went in default, and the fraudulent scheme was discovered.

The Bank alleges that it suffered a loss exceeding $1.1 million as a result of the fraudulent scheme. The Bank gave timely notice of its claims and its losses to St. Paul. St. Paul denied coverage, and the Bank initiated this action.

The Bank’s claim is based upon 83 leases that it possesses as collateral for the line of credit. 1 Apparently, all 83 had lease terms that exceeded the actual terms to which Croy’s customers agreed. The attorney representing the Bank stated at oral argument that Brown or another Croy employee forged the signatures on 39 of the 83 leases containing inflated terms. The Bank contends that the Bond covers its losses on all of the 83 leases and perhaps on others. St. Paul contends that the Bond does not cover the Bank’s losses on any of the 83 falsified leases.

II. THE PROVISIONS OF THE BOND

The Bank contends that two separate insuring provisions of the Bond cover its losses on the falsified leases. The Bank first contends that it has coverage under Insuring Clause (D) of the Bond, which provides:

(D) FORGERY OR ALTERATION
Loss resulting directly from
(1) Forgery or alteration of, on, or in, any Negotiable Instrument (except an Evidence of Debt), Acceptance, Withdrawal Order, receipt for the withdrawal of Property, Certificate of Deposit or Letter of Credit;
(2) transferring, paying or delivering any funds or Property or establishing any credit or giving any value on the faith of any written instructions or advices directed to the Insured and authorizing or acknowledging the transfer, payment, delivery or receipt of funds or Property, which instructions or advices purport to have been signed or endorsed by any customer of the Insured or by any banking institution but which instructions or advices either bear a signature which is a Forgery or have been altered without the knowledge and consent of such customer or banking institution. Telegraphic, cable or teletype instructions or advices, as aforesaid, exclusive of transmissions of electronic funds transfer systems, sent by a person other than the said customer or banking institution purporting to send such instructions or advices shall be deemed to bear a signature which is a Forgery. *1025 A mechanically reproduced facsimile signature is treated the same as a. handwritten signature.

Secondly, the Bank contends that its losses are covered under Insuring Clause (E), which provides:

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Bluebook (online)
346 F. Supp. 2d 1020, 2004 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 24565, 2004 WL 2750154, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pine-bluff-national-bank-v-st-paul-mercury-insurance-ared-2004.