Sunwest Bank of El Paso v. Basil Smith Engineering Co.

939 S.W.2d 671, 1996 WL 681982
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 29, 1997
Docket08-95-00297-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 939 S.W.2d 671 (Sunwest Bank of El Paso v. Basil Smith Engineering Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sunwest Bank of El Paso v. Basil Smith Engineering Co., 939 S.W.2d 671, 1996 WL 681982 (Tex. Ct. App. 1997).

Opinion

OPINION

LARSEN, Justice.

This is an appeal by the defendant bank from adverse jury findings on theories of conversion and negligence. We reverse and render, based on the bank’s statute of limitations defense.

FACTS

The appellee, Basil Smith, is an engineer in El Paso, Texas. In the late 1960s, Smith began doing business with North American Land Development (“NALD”). NALD was developing raw land in Timberon, New Mexico into a residential community. NALD sometimes paid for Smith’s engineering services by assigning installment contracts for the purchase of Timberon lots to him. Smith, in turn, would assign the contracts to others for cash. Smith’s employee, Pete Dix, handled sales and assignments of the contracts. During 1982 and 1983, the appellant, Sunwest Bank, formerly known as American Bank of Commerce (“ABC”), purchased some of Smith’s contracts as investments for various trust accounts. Dix and Scott Flower, ABC’s senior vice-president in charge of the trust department, concocted a scheme to skim money from Smith. In most instances, Dix would take a contract to Smith for signature. The contract would have an exhibit attached which outlined basic information such as the principal amount remaining on the contract, the interest rate, the monthly payment, and the sale price from Smith to ABC. Smith would execute the contract, with its exhibit attached, as assignor to ABC. When Dix took a contract to ABC to complete the assignment, Flower would issue two cheeks. One check would be to Smith for several thousand dollars less than the stated sale price. The second cheek would be to Dix as “agent,” or to a corporation owned by Dix. The two checks always added up to the sale price stated on that particular contract’s exhibit.

Apparently knowing that Smith trusted him and would not check or notice the discrepancy, Dix would deposit Smith’s cheek and report the deposited amount to Smith. Smith, who controlled the business’s checkbook at the time, would himself enter the “skimmed” amount in the company books. At trial, Smith admitted that he had seen the contracts with their exhibits prior to the assignment and that he could have caught the discrepancy easily had he ever compared the sale price on the exhibit with the deposit amount he received. He never did so because he trusted Dix, and he had “a lot of things I had to take care of.” In a few instances of even more brazen conduct, Dix either forged Smith’s name as assignor, or signed as assignor himself, and kept all of *673 the proceeds. Despite having kept the records for billings to and payments from NALD himself, Smith never noticed that these contracts, assigned to him in payment for his engineering work at NALD, had been assigned to someone else with no payment whatsoever to Smith.

Sometime late in 1985 or early 1986, Smith discovered that Dix had committed various acts of conversion and other misconduct not involving the land contracts at issue here. Dix quit before Smith could fire him. Investigating Due’s activities, Smith found, among other things, forged cheeks on Smith’s business accounts, an unauthorized checking account Dix used for personal expenses, and unauthorized payments to Dix out of company funds. Smith’s investigation, which he performed without the aid of an accountant or other professional auditor, failed to uncover the skimmed land contract deals.

In 1986, ABC began negotiating with Sun-west for the sale of the bank. As part of the process, outside auditors reviewed ABC’s trust department records. The auditors and ABC Bank personnel noticed documentation discrepancies in some of the land contracts Flower had purchased from Smith through Dix. On September 16 and 17, 1987, ABC sent ten letters to Smith, one for each affected trust account, requesting missing documents and information. Smith asked for ABC’s documents and disbursement records to help him respond to the request. When Smith received the disbursement records from ABC, he realized that Flower had issued two checks on each transaction, and that one of the checks on each transaction was made out to Dix or a related entity. After obtaining NALD’s records of all of the NALD-to-Smith contract assignments, Smith further realized that some of the contracts were entirely missing and unaccounted for. Smith- concluded that “Flower was a thief.” He filed this lawsuit against Sunwest as ABC’s successor on April 4,1989.

After a jury trial in April of 1995, Smith obtained findings of conversion and negligence against ABC/Sunwest. Smith submitted issues seeking a finding that he had a fiduciary relationship with ABC/Sunwest, and that ABC/Sunwest committed constructive fraud against Smith, but the jury found against Smith on those issues.

DISCUSSION

ABC/Sunwest appeals the judgment alleging forty-two points of error. The points are grouped into eleven substantive areas of argument. As we find that the points concerning the statute of limitations control, we do not reach the others.

Application of the Discovery Rule

In its first two points of error, ABC/Sunwest argues that the trial court erred in failing to find that Smith’s negligence and conversion causes of action were barred by limitations as a matter of law. The trial court applied the discovery rule to the causes of action and entered judgment for Smith based on the jury’s finding that Smith should not, in the exercise of reasonable diligence, have discovered his causes of action against ABC/Sunwest until December 14, 1987, the day Smith received the disbursement records from the bank. 1 Smith argues that until he saw that two checks had been issued on each of the contract transactions, he did not and could not have known that Flower and Dix were skimming funds from each deal.

The parties do not contest that, upon accrual, Section 16.003(a) of the Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code establishes *674 a two-year statute of limitations for injury to the property of another or conversion of the property of another. TEX.Civ.PRAa & Rem. Code Ann. § 16.003(a)(Vemon 1986 and Supp.1997). A cause of action for negligence normally accrues when the duty of ordinary care is breached by some act or omission, even though the injury is not immediately apparent and the injured party is not aware of a cause of action. Martinez v. Humble Sand & Gravel, Inc., 860 S.W.2d 467, 470 (Tex.App.-El Paso 1993), rev’d on other grounds, 875 S.W.2d 311 (Tex.1994). Similarly, unless possession is initially lawful, a cause of action for conversion accrues on the date of the conversion. See Hofland v. Elgin-Butler Brick Co., 834 S.W.2d 409, 414-15 (Tex.App.-Corpus Christi 1992, no writ). In this ease, it is undisputed that by the end of 1983, Smith was no longer assigning contracts to ABC/Sunwest. His negligence and conversion causes of action based on the contract transactions therefore must have accrued, at the very latest, sometime in 1983.

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Bluebook (online)
939 S.W.2d 671, 1996 WL 681982, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sunwest-bank-of-el-paso-v-basil-smith-engineering-co-texapp-1997.