Premier Bank, National Ass'n v. Mosbacher

959 F.2d 562
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedMay 20, 1992
Docket19-30612
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 959 F.2d 562 (Premier Bank, National Ass'n v. Mosbacher) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Premier Bank, National Ass'n v. Mosbacher, 959 F.2d 562 (5th Cir. 1992).

Opinion

REAVLEY, Circuit Judge:

Premier Bank, N.A. (Premier) sued the Economic Development Administration (EDA) of the United States Department of Commerce to collect on EDA’s guarantee of a loan that Premier’s predecessor made to Louisiana Chemical Polymers, Inc. (Polymers) and its president, William J. MeFer-rin. The district court found that Premier breached the Guarantee Agreement by modifying McFerrin’s obligations on the loan, and that this breach released EDA from its obligation as guarantor. We affirm.

I. BACKGROUND

Polymers purchased two adjacent tracts in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, in November 1985. Louisiana National Bank, Premier’s predecessor, made a $4,450,000 loan to Polymers (the Premier/ IRB Loan), through an industrial revenue bond issued by the Louisiana Public Facilities Authority, to finance this purchase. Premier also provided a second loan for $2,550,000 (the Premier/EDA Loan) to finance Polymers’ conversion of a plastics plant located on one of the tracts into a chemical processing facility. Polymers and McFerrin were co-obli-gors on the Premier/EDA Loan note. The parties executed these loan agreements on November 18, 1985. On November 20, EDA offered to guarantee eighty percent of the Premier/EDA Loan. Premier, Polymers, and McFerrin accepted this offer, and the parties executed a Guarantee Agreement on November 22, 1985.

*564 Polymers and McFerrin defaulted on both Loans, and Polymers filed bankruptcy on June 7, 1988, placing EDA at risk on its guarantee of the Premier/EDA Loan. EDA, however, suspected that Premier had breached the terms of the Guarantee Agreement by making incomplete and incorrect representations in connection with its application for EDA’s guarantee. So in December 1988 EDA asked the United States Office of the Inspector General (OIG) to audit Premier’s performance of its obligations under the Guarantee Agreement. The OIG began this audit on January 9, 1989.

On April 13, 1989, Premier sent a letter to EDA demanding payment under the Guarantee Agreement. EDA received this letter the following day. As required in Paragraph 9.1 of the General Terms and Conditions of the Guarantee Agreement, Premier attached to its demand letter Premier’s plan for obtaining maximum recovery on the Loan. Premier noted in this “recovery plan” that, because Polymers filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy relief, Premier’s “options in administering this loan are limited by the bankruptcy code.” Because of this limitation, combined with appraisal results showing Polymers’ assets to be most valuable as a going concern, Premier’s recovery plan proposed the complete sale of Polymers and its assets to a third party. The recovery plan briefly outlined the process that Premier intended to follow in effectuating this sale. Premier’s demand letter also instructed EDA that, according to the Guarantee Agreement, EDA had sixty days from its receipt of Premier’s demand to either: (a) require Premier to conduct the liquidation of the security, or (b) pay Premier the amount due.

Michael Oberlitner, Director of EDA’s Liquidation Division, responded to Premier’s demand on May 3, 1989, with a letter informing Premier that EDA “is unable to act upon the request for payment” until completion of the OIG’s audit. On May 23, 1989, Premier sent a letter to Oberlitner in which Premier informed Oberlitner that the Guarantee Agreement did not give EDA the right to delay its response to Premier’s demand because of an ongoing OIG audit, and that EDA’s proper response was due by June 13, 1989, sixty days after EDA received Premier’s demand letter. The parties subsequently exchanged numerous letters, but EDA neither instructed Premier to conduct the liquidation nor paid the demand by June 13.

In the meantime, Premier filed claims and sought a valuation of Polymers’ assets in Polymers’ bankruptcy proceeding. Premier’s role in this proceeding was complicated by its conflicting interests in obtaining from the sale of Polymers’ assets the maximum recovery on both the Premier/IRB Loan and the Premier/EDA Loan. So Premier requested EDA to join the bankruptcy proceeding to ensure protection of EDA’s interests, but EDA declined and instructed Premier that Premier was obligated to protect EDA’s interests on EDA’s behalf. On August 10, 1989, Premier filed a motion to join EDA in the bankruptcy court, but that court ruled that EDA was not an indispensable party and denied the motion.

On October 24, 1989, more than six months after EDA received Premier’s demand for payment, Premier filed this suit against EDA. In its complaint, Premier alleged that EDA had failed to respond to Premier’s demand as required by the Guarantee Agreement, and thus EDA had forfeited “its rights to require Premier to liquidate any collateral securing the indebtedness and/or to deny Premier’s demand for payment....” Premier prayed for a judgment against EDA in the amount of eighty percent of all amounts due under the Loan.

While this suit was pending, Polymers’ bankruptcy proceeding continued. On January 18, 1990, the bankruptcy court confirmed a plan (the Bankruptcy Plan) that called for Polymers to sell all of its assets and pay Premier $2.6 million, in exchange for which Premier was to release “any and all claims” that Premier had against Polymers, Polymers’ assets, or McFerrin. The bankruptcy court attributed $755,740 of the $2.6 million to Polymers’ assets that secured the Premier/EDA Loan, and the remainder to the security for the Premi *565 er/IRB Loan. EDA was notified of the Bankruptcy Plan on that day and, although it questioned whether the Plan would effect a release of EDA’s liability, it is not clear whether EDA expressly objected to the Plan.

Pursuant to the Bankruptcy Plan, Premier and McFerrin executed a document entitled “Release Agreement and Covenant Not to Sue” (the Release Agreement) on February 2, 1990. In the Release Agreement, Premier released McFerrin from liability for any and all claims that Premier may have had from the Premier/IRB Loan, and covenanted not to sue on any claim that Premier may have had against McFer-rin on the Premier/EDA Loan. In return, McFerrin paid the $2.6 million to Premier and released any and all claims arising out of the two loans that he may have had against Premier. The Release Agreement includes four provisions that are particularly important to this case. First, the Agreement states:

It is understood by Premier that McFer-rin’s acceptance of [Premier’s release of claims associated with the Premier/IRB Loan] is in no way an acknowledgement by McFerrin that any' such claim ever existed or exists, and to the extent that any such claim does exist without knowledge of McFerrin, McFerrin expressly denies any liability with respect thereto.

Second, the Agreement provides that “Premier does not intend this covenant not to sue [on the Premier/EDA Loan] to be a novation of the Premier/EDA Loan, and Premier specifically reserves its rights against all other endorsers, sureties, guarantors and collateral for the Premier/EDA Loan.” Third, the Agreement provides that “McFerrin specifically reserves his rights to establish that he is entitled to a full release of all claims óf Premier and EDA on the Premier/EDA Loan.” Finally, after referring to Premier’s pending suit against EDA, the Agreement states: “McFerrin does not hereby admit liability to the EDA and specifically denies liability to the EDA.”

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Related

Premier Bank, Nat. Ass'n v. Mosbacher
959 F.2d 562 (Fifth Circuit, 1992)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
959 F.2d 562, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/premier-bank-national-assn-v-mosbacher-ca5-1992.