Regions Bank v. J.R. Oil Co.

387 F.3d 721, 52 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 1625, 2004 U.S. App. LEXIS 21326
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedOctober 14, 2004
Docket03-2283
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 387 F.3d 721 (Regions Bank v. J.R. Oil Co.) 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
Regions Bank v. J.R. Oil Co., 387 F.3d 721, 52 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 1625, 2004 U.S. App. LEXIS 21326 (8th Cir. 2004).

Opinion

MELLOY, Circuit Judge.

Regions Bank appeals the district court’s 2 adverse grant of summary judgment on its RICO claims against the various defendants. The RICO claims relate to alleged fraud in the procurement of a loan and the subsequent transfer and use of the collateral for the loan before and during a bankruptcy, culminating in a bankruptcy sale. Because Regions Bank neither raised the issue of fraud during the bankruptcy nor timely moved to set aside the bankruptcy sale, we find the current RICO claims to be an impermissible collat *724 eral attack on the final judgment of the bankruptcy court.

In the alternative, we find that Regions Bank suffered no RICO injury and therefore lacks standing to bring a RICO claim. Because Regions Bank’s security interest in the collateral was inferior to the perfected security interest of another lender, whose security interest completely encumbered the collateral, Regions Bank’s security interest was of no value from its inception. Further, Regions Bank has not alleged that other assets existed to satisfy unsecured creditors. Accordingly, any injury to Regions Bank was complete when Regions Bank funded the loan. The RICO injuries Regions Bank alleges in this case relate to the subsequent bankruptcy sale, use of the collateral, and diversion of income generated with the collateral. To the extent there was an injury, it was injury to the third party, priority lienholder whose priority lien fully encumbered the collateral and entitled it to the collateral and/or the proceeds from the collateral. For this additional reason, we affirm the district court’s dismissal of the RICO claims. In addition, we affirm the district court’s dismissal of the supplemental state law claims for lack of federal jurisdiction.

I. Background

Through Jones Realty, Inc. (“Jones Realty”) and J.R. Oil Company, L.L.C. (“J.R. Oil”) Steven Jones owned and operated various gas stations and convenience stores. In April 2000, Steven Jones applied for a $400,000 loan from Regions Bank, ostensibly to buy inventory for J.R. Oil to use in the operation of a truck stop in Cameron, Missouri. Steven Jones submitted personal financial information as well as financial information regarding J.R. Oil and Jones Realty. He represented to Regions Bank that J.R. Oil held assets in excess of $2 million, Jones Realty was worth over $7.6 million, and he and his wife, Marcella Jones, had a net worth in excess of $6.4 million. In addition, he represented that Regions Bank would receive a first lien on J.R. Oil’s accounts receivable, equipment, and inventory. Regions Bank granted and funded the loan to J.R. Oil and Steven Jones. Jones Realty provided a guarantee on the loan. Steven Jones executed a security agreement on behalf of J.R. Oil that granted Regions Bank a lien on J.R. Oil’s accounts receivable, equipment, and inventory.

According to the Regions Bank officer who signed the J.R. Oil security agreement on behalf of Regions Bank, and according to a Regions Bank officer in charge of “trouble loans,” Regions Bank did not complete its lien search until after it funded the loan. The lien search revealed that Regions Bank held a secondary lien position in the collateral.

In early summer 2000, Steven Jones and his wife, Marcella Jones, with the financial assistance of Steven Jones’s friend, Larry Taylor, organized a new company, Jones Travel Mart, Inc. (“JTM”). JTM assumed management of the truck stop in Cameron, Missouri. Regions Bank contends that Jones Realty owned the real estate associated with the truck stop and J.R. Oil owned the equipment, inventory, accounts receivable, and other assets associated with operation of the truck stop. In addition, Marcella Jones nominally assumed control of two other convenience stores owned by Jones Realty and operated by J.R. Oil in Piggot and Paragould, Arkansas. After assuming nominal control of these two other convenience store properties, she started operating them as Piggot Jonesmart and Northend Jonesmart. There is no documentation to memorialize any transfer of assets from J.R. Oil to Jones Realty, Larry Taylor, JTM, Marcella Jones, Piggot Jonesmart, or Northend *725 Jonesmart. J.R. Oil claims that this omission in its records is due to the fact that J.R. Oil lost many records when J.R. Oil failed to pay rent on storage buildings that housed the records. Regions Bank claims that these persons and entities wrongly appropriated the assets of J.R. Oil. Without explanation, after Regions Bank funded the $400,000 loan to J.R. Oil, Elwood Bonner, the accountant for J.R. Oil, wrote off over $2 million of J.R. Oil’s furniture, equipment, inventory and accounts receivable.

On the same day that Steven Jones organized JTM, J.R. Oil filed for bankruptcy under Chapter 11. J.R. Oil included Regions Bank in its list of creditors. Two days later, on July 27, 2000, Jones Realty filed for bankruptcy under Chapter 11. Jones Realty did not list Regions Bank as a creditor. The first meeting of creditors for both bankruptcies took place on September 8, 2000, at 2:00 p.m. in the Federal Building in Jonesboro, Arkansas, in the same room. Counsel for Regions Bank, Marie B. Miller, attended the meeting on behalf of Regions Bank and signed in as the representative for Regions Bank on a sign-in sheet for the J.R. Oil bankruptcy. Regions Bank did not intervene in the Jones Realty bankruptcy nor request notice of proceedings in the Jones Realty bankruptcy. It is undisputed that Regions Bank knew that the guarantor on the loan, Jones Realty, filed bankruptcy.

According to J.R. Oil’s bankruptcy filings, loan documents, security agreements, and UCC filings, J.R. Oil borrowed $900,000 from Enterprise Mortgage Acceptance Corporation (“Enterprise”) in 1997. In 1998, J.R. Oil borrowed an additional $3,202,000.00 from Enterprise. In 1997 and 1998, Enterprise perfected continuing security interests over J.R. Oil’s assets, including accounts receivable, inventory, and equipment at the Cameron, Missouri, and Piggott and Paragould, Arkansas sites, among others. In 1999, Enterprise assigned its security interests to LaSalle National Bank (“LaSalle”). J.R. Oil, apparently, borrowed additional money from Enterprise. When J.R. Oil filed for bankruptcy, J.R. Oil listed its debt to Enterprise as $9,289,235.00. In its bankruptcy filings, J.R. Oil listed inventory as collateral for the debt owed to Regions Bank, listed the value of the inventory as only $2000, and listed the entire $400,000 of debt to Regions Bank as unsecured. Regions Bank neither contested the information J.R. Oil provided to the bankruptcy court, challenged the amount of indebtedness that J.R. Oil listed regarding Enterprise, nor raised the issue of Bonner’s unexplained write-off of $2 million worth of furniture, inventory, equipment, and accounts receivable. It is undisputed that Regions Bank knew at the time of the J.R. Oil bankruptcy that Steven Jones had made misrepresentations to induce Regions Bank to grant him the $400,000 loan.

Between August 1, 2000, and December 2001, JTM paid out approximately $200,000 to Steven and Marcella Jones. Regions Bank alleges in its current RICO claims that these payments were improper diversions of cash generated by assets that JTM misappropriated from J.R. Oil during the time of the J.R. Oil bankruptcy. Regions Bank further alleges that J.R.

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387 F.3d 721, 52 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 1625, 2004 U.S. App. LEXIS 21326, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/regions-bank-v-jr-oil-co-ca8-2004.