Rocky Mountain MacHinery Co., Cross-Appellant v. First National Bank of Trinidad, Cross-Appellee, and Gary C. Carden and Triad Industries, Inc.

767 F.2d 722, 1985 U.S. App. LEXIS 20523
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedJuly 15, 1985
Docket83-1486, 83-1509
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 767 F.2d 722 (Rocky Mountain MacHinery Co., Cross-Appellant v. First National Bank of Trinidad, Cross-Appellee, and Gary C. Carden and Triad Industries, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rocky Mountain MacHinery Co., Cross-Appellant v. First National Bank of Trinidad, Cross-Appellee, and Gary C. Carden and Triad Industries, Inc., 767 F.2d 722, 1985 U.S. App. LEXIS 20523 (1st Cir. 1985).

Opinion

SETH, Circuit Judge.

This is an appeal by the defendant from a judgment entered on a jury verdict for the plaintiff in a diversity contract action brought by Rocky Mountain Machinery Co. against the First National Bank of Trinidad. The plaintiff brings a cross-appeal on the trial court’s failure to award prejudgment interest.

A customer of the defendant Bank, Mr. Alvin Wiggins, had some property on which he had been mining coal but the venture was unprofitable. This person at the beginning of these transactions owed the defendant Bank a substantial amount of money — an amount which may have exceeded the Bank’s loan limit. The Bank President knew a coal miner and another person experienced in the coal business. This Bank officer made arrangements with Mr. Wiggins to give these persons the right to mine coal on the Wiggins property with the expectation that money could thereby be generated to be used to pay to the Bank on Mr. Wiggins’ loan. The two individuals had no equipment and not enough money to buy any.

Negotiations began between the two prospective miners, the representative of Rocky Mountain Machinery Co., and the Bank President to procure equipment from Rocky Mountain. It developed that the two prospective miners did not have credit ratings which would warrant the usual rental and sale contracts. Rocky Mountain concluded that it needed some additional protection. Thus it was agreed that Rocky Mountain would provide the equipment and the Bank would control the funds received from the sale of coal and would make the rental payments on the equipment to Rocky Mountain before any other payments were made out of such proceeds.

There were subsequent letters and additions to the agreement. However, it remained basically the same in that the first payments from proceeds from sales after wages were to be applied by the Bank on the machinery rental obligations. The Bank had been provided with a schedule of rental payments due Rocky Mountain and it received the invoices for rentals. The Bank was thoroughly familiar with all the arrangements as it had participated in most of the negotiations and was advised and acquiesced in the others. At trial the Bank President acknowledged the obligation of the Bank under the agreement. He further admitted that the Bank had not made payments to Rocky Mountain out of the proceeds from coal sales.

The evidence showed that the Bank had instead applied the proceeds to its own advantage — thus to use portions to pay first as royalties to Mr. Wiggins which were applied directly by the Bank on his loan from the Bank. The concern of the Bank officer with the Wiggins loan if it was over the Bank’s legal limit was understandable, but could not justify the use of the coal proceeds which was made by the Bank.

The Bank also used the funds to permit the miners now known as “Triad” to pay accounts of other Bank customers which were due, and apparently to otherwise have unrestricted use of the money. The Bank thus used the coal proceeds in ways which would benefit the Bank. It further actively misled Rocky Mountain when inquiries were made as to the mining and sales of coal.

*724 The Bank collected slightly over a million dollars from sales of coal under the described arrangement. Of this, some $270,-000 was applied on royalties to Mr. Wiggins and the Bank used this money to reduce his loan balance due the Bank as mentioned. Other obligations of Mr. Wiggins were also paid from the proceeds. The Bank paid into Triad’s account, without restrictions, $550,000 which apparently went to local creditors. The rest of the million went into Triad’s payroll account. The Bank also permitted overdrafts by Triad in substantial amounts.

The Bank paid nothing whatever from the coal proceeds to Rocky Mountain for rental on the equipment used to mine the coal as provided in the agreement. More than enough money was paid to the Bank from buyers of the coal to have enabled the Bank to fully perform under the contract.

There is no substantial question but that the agreement and its terms were established by sufficient evidence. The Bank official who testified acknowledged the existence of the agreement in all its essential provisions as asserted by Rocky Mountain. The evidence further established that the Bank did not disburse the money in accordance with its obligations under the agreement.

The Bank in its post-trial motions and on this appeal argues that there were conditions precedent to its duty to remit the equipment rental payments to Rocky Mountain out of the proceeds from coal sales. The Bank urges that Triad had first to agree to the payments before the Bank had a contractual duty to pay.

However, the Bank official who handled the transactions testified that when the agreements were reached no such condition was mentioned. No condition appears in the letters or the basic agreement. Triad, which was the Bank’s customer and depositor, was a party to the agreement which provided that the Bank was to receive the coal payments and was to disburse these funds in accordance with the agreement. Triad had thus itself agreed that the Bank make the payments “up front” for equipment rental and directly to Rocky Mountain. The evidence was overwhelming that there was no condition precedent as urged by the Bank.

As the trial court indicated, there was nothing to prevent the Bank from obligating itself to handle the proceeds as the agreement provided regardless of whatever rights the Bank may have had against its depositor by way of set off or otherwise. The Bank undertook this contractual obligation to Rocky Mountain which was not bound by any Bank-depositor relationship. Rocky Mountain was not a depositor, not a customer, and not concerned with the Bank’s relations with a depositor, but it could and did rely on its contract with the Bank.

The Bank argues that the money was placed by it into Triad’s account and the Bank thereafter had no right under general banking law and practice to withdraw funds. ,

The Bank had obligated itself to handle in a certain way the coal proceeds which it initially received and controlled. This argument of the Bank acknowledges that it failed to secure the authority it now argues was lacking to enable it to perform. If this be so the Bank at the outset did not prepare itself to carry out its obligation but contracted otherwise. It must be assumed that the Bank then knew what it now urges as to its authority. If the Bank did not make the necessary arrangements internally with its depositor-customer Triad to enable itself to perform its obligations to Rocky Mountain it would nevertheless be liable for non-performance. Also, if after receiving the coal proceeds it handled them in a way whereby it lost control over them for whatever reason, it would be liable for not making the agreed application of the funds.

The Bank in the conditions precedent argument, as mentioned herein, seeks to ignore its contractual duty to Rocky Mountain and to argue the Bank-depositor relationship with Triad as some sort of defense. The trial court applied the proper *725 standards in ruling on the motion for directed verdict made by the Bank on this point. See Hidalgo Properties, Inc. v. Wachovia Mortgage Co., 617 F.2d 196 (10th Cir.); Champion Home Builders v.

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Bluebook (online)
767 F.2d 722, 1985 U.S. App. LEXIS 20523, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rocky-mountain-machinery-co-cross-appellant-v-first-national-bank-of-ca1-1985.