Regional Investment Company v. Haycock

723 F.2d 38
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedDecember 15, 1983
Docket83-1008
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 723 F.2d 38 (Regional Investment Company v. Haycock) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Regional Investment Company v. Haycock, 723 F.2d 38 (8th Cir. 1983).

Opinion

723 F.2d 38

REGIONAL INVESTMENT COMPANY, Appellee,
v.
Allen Peter Dennis HAYCOCK; Bellefonte Underwriters
Insurance Company--U.S.A.; Bellefonte Insurance
Company--International; Excess Insurance Company;
Assicurazioni Generali Company; and Bankers Insurance
Service Corporation, Appellants.

No. 83-1008.

United States Court of Appeals,
Eighth Circuit.

Submitted Oct. 14, 1983.
Decided Dec. 15, 1983.

F. Philip Kirwan, John M. Cave, II, Kansas City, Mo., for appellants; Margolin & Kirwan, Kansas City, Mo., of counsel.

Michael W. Lerner, Mary L. Barrier, Stinson, Mag & Fizzell, Kansas City, Mo., for appellee Regional Investment Co.

Before LAY, Chief Judge, and HEANEY and ARNOLD, Circuit Judges.

ARNOLD, Circuit Judge.

Plaintiff Regional Investment Company is a Kansas mortgage-banking corporation. Defendants are Allen Peter Dennis Haycock, an underwriter at Lloyds, London, appearing as named defendant on behalf of certain other underwriters at Lloyds; Bellefonte Underwriters Insurance Company--U.S.A.; Bellefonte Insurance Company--International; Excess Insurance Company; Assicurazioni Generali Company (collectively referred to as "underwriters"); and Bankers Insurance Service Corporation. In this diversity case, Regional brought an action against defendants under a mortgage bankers' blanket bond to recover losses caused by forgery of a Veterans Administration Certificate of Commitment, which, according to plaintiff, had induced it to lend money on the security of a certain house. The jury returned a verdict for Regional and assessed damages at $45,000.00.

All defendants filed motions for a new trial or in the alternative for judgment notwithstanding the verdict. Plaintiff filed a motion for attorneys' fees and expenses. Defendant Bankers Insurance Service Corporation was granted judgment notwithstanding the verdict, and this action is not before us on this appeal. The District Court1 denied the underwriters' motion. Regional's motion for attorneys' fees and expenses was granted. The underwriters appeal the adverse judgment and plaintiff's award of attorneys' fees. We affirm.

I.

Because the jury verdict was for Regional we will state the facts in light of the evidence, and the reasonable inferences from the evidence, most favorable to Regional. Dewitt v. Brown, 669 F.2d 516, 518 (8th Cir.1982); Alabama Great Southern Railroad Co. v. Chicago & Northwestern Railway Co., 493 F.2d 979, 983 (8th Cir.1974).

On April 5, 1979, Frederick E. English, a veteran, applied to Regional Investment Company's Houston, Texas, office for a residential loan to purchase property in Texas. The following day, Regional submitted a Veterans Administration Request for Determination of Reasonable Value (Real Estate). A Certificate of Reasonable Value issued from the V.A. on May 23, 1979. Charles Wakefield was Regional's employee in its Houston office handling English's loan. Regional's normal procedure, after receipt of a Certification of Reasonable Value, was to apply for a V.A. Certificate of Commitment. Issuance of a loan is contingent upon Regional's receipt of a Certificate of Commitment.

Regional received a Certificate of Commitment dated June 1, 1979, bearing the signature of an Anthony Lorino. In reliance on the Certificate of Commitment, Regional lent $90,000 to English. Regional subsequently assigned the loan, as part of a pool of similar mortgages, to the Government National Mortgage Association (GNMA).

English defaulted on the loan before making any payments. After the default, Regional learned that Anthony Lorino's signature was a forgery, and that no Certificate of Commitment ever issued from the V.A. Regional suspected Charles Wakefield of the forgery. Because of the forgery, Regional became obligated to GNMA for the full amount of the loan balance plus interest. To fulfill that obligation, Regional repurchased the English note from GNMA for $93,746.62.

Regional notified the underwriters of the forgery. It continued to keep the underwriters posted of developments in relation to the loan. Regional informed the underwriters that it would follow its usual procedure, which was to foreclose on the property. The underwriters assented to Regional's use of its usual procedure (although they later contended that they did not agree to a foreclosure). A foreclosure sale was held; Regional was the only bidder at the sale, and it bid $97,530.20, the amount of the loan plus accrued interest and certain other expense items. Regional later sold the property for a net price of $34,091.40. The decrease in value was at least partly due to vandalism on the property, most of which occurred before the foreclosure.

Regional sent a letter to Bankers Insurance Service Corporation claiming under the bond a loss of $72,287.87 resulting from acts of forgery or dishonesty. Plaintiff supplied information concerning the claim to the underwriters when requested. During the investigation, Regional provided Charles Wakefield's address on the condition that it be notified of and included in the underwriters' meeting with him. The underwriters agreed to this procedure, but in spite of that they held a meeting with Wakefield, at which he denied any forgery, and notified Regional only after the meeting had taken place.

The underwriters denied the claim. In the letter which notified Regional of the meeting between Wakefield and the underwriters, the underwriters' attorney stated that Wakefield denied either forging or falsifying documents in connection with English's loan or receiving any improper personal gain. Regional then filed this action.

II.

Defendant underwriters argue on appeal that Regional suffered no loss on the forgery because the foreclosure sale discharged the debt; that the trial court erred in giving and in denying certain jury instructions; and that the trial court erred in awarding attorney's fees.

The principal point urged on the merits is that plaintiff suffered no loss, because at the foreclosure sale it "received" $97,530.20, the amount of its bid. As this was exactly the amount at which the English loan was carried on Regional's books, the argument goes, Regional has been fully reimbursed, and no loss exists for which it can claim indemnity from the insurers. We disagree with this argument. If there had been another bidder at the foreclosure sale, and if Regional had therefore been forced to bid as much as it did to buy in the property, the argument would have substance. In that case, the money bid for the land would have represented a real payment to Regional, a real increase in its cash on hand, replacing the cash it had been forced to lay out to GNMA. But as it was, the $97,530.20 bid was in practical effect only a paper transaction, a bookkeeping device for obtaining title to the land. Regional could have bid a much lesser sum, presumably as low as one dollar plus the expenses of sale, and accomplished the same result.

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