TAZEWELL OIL v. United Virginia Bank

413 S.E.2d 611
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedFebruary 28, 1992
DocketRecord Nos. 910299, 910301
StatusPublished

This text of 413 S.E.2d 611 (TAZEWELL OIL v. United Virginia Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
TAZEWELL OIL v. United Virginia Bank, 413 S.E.2d 611 (Va. 1992).

Opinion

413 S.E.2d 611 (1992)

TAZEWELL OIL COMPANY. INC.
v.
UNITED VIRGINIA BANK/CRESTAR BANK
v.
UNITED VIRGINIA BANK/CRESTAR BANK
v.
TAZEWELL OIL COMPANY, INC.

Record Nos. 910299, 910301.

Supreme Court of Virginia.

January 10, 1992.
As Amended February 28, 1992.

*613 Thomas W. McCandlish, Wyatt B. Durrette, Jr., Richmond (David D. Hopper; Barrett E. Pope, Mezzullo & McCandlish; Durrette, Irvin Lemons & Fenderson, on briefs), for appellant Tazewell Oil Co., Inc.

S.J. Thompson, Jr., Leighton S. Houck, Lynchburg (Joy Lee Price, Caskie & Frost, on brief), for appellee United Virginia Bank/Crestar Bank.

Present: CARRICO, C.J., COMPTON, STEPHENSON, WHITING, LACY and KEENAN, JJ., and POFF, Senior Justice.

*612 LACY, Justice.

In these two cases, the execution by two lien creditors of their agreement to liquidate their security by seizing their debtor's accounts receivable and inventory has generated a number of legal issues. The primary issues involve one creditor's liability for conspiracy, the effect of releases with other tortfeasors on that creditor's liability and on its right to reduction of the recovery award by the amounts paid pursuant to the releases, and the trial court's treatment of compensatory and punitive damages.

According to settled principles of appellate review, we will view the facts in the light most favorable to the debtor which received jury verdicts in its favor which were confirmed by the trial court. In 1981, Southside Oil Company, Inc. (Southside), a wholesale petroleum product distributor in South Boston, borrowed money from the South Boston branch office of United Virginia Bank (UVB) to buy and operate another distributor's business in South Boston.[1] Tucker W. McLaughlin, an officer of Southside and its sole stockholder, dealt with Douglas V. Bowman, president of the UVB branch in South Boston.

The initial banking relationship was satisfactory and expanded as UVB financed other Southside acquisitions and operations *614 of similar corporations in other parts of Virginia. Southside acquired the capital stock of those corporations, and McLaughlin became an executive officer in each of them, but left their management to local personnel.

Because Southside provided the operating capital for the acquired corporations, however, McLaughlin made financial arrangements in his capacity as an executive officer for Southside and its affiliates. While doing so, McLaughlin personally guaranteed payment of the loans and frequently used the assets of one or more of the affiliates as security for another affiliate's debt.

One of Southside's acquisitions was Tazewell Oil Company, Inc. (Tazewell), a highly profitable petroleum distributorship that had been operated for Tazewell in the Buchanan County area for a number of years by S.M. Raines through his corporation, Raines, Inc. (collectively Raines). Raines continued in the same relationship after Southside acquired Tazewell.

In September 1983, McLaughlin's corporations began to withdraw large sums of money from Tazewell to finance McLaughlin's unrelated business enterprises. These withdrawals caused McLaughlin's corporations to issue checks for which there were insufficient funds in their UVB bank accounts and to default in some of their principal and interest payments.

Additionally, some of McLaughlin's corporations failed to pay their suppliers. As a consequence, UVB had to pay those suppliers large sums that it had guaranteed on its letters of credit issued to suppliers on those corporations' accounts. The corporations and McLaughlin were unable to reimburse UVB, thereby increasing their indebtednesses to UVB.

Because UVB had paid, and was continuing to pay, a number of checks issued by McLaughlin's corporations for which they had insufficient funds, UVB requested, and twice McLaughlin furnished, additional collateral in which third parties already had interests. In July 1984, the last time additional collateral was furnished, UVB accepted it with the agreement that it would give 10 days' written notice of a default in any of McLaughlin's corporations' loans before taking "action to realize on the collateral."

On November 29, 1984, UVB paid $150,000 on another letter of credit it had issued for one of McLaughlin's corporations. Again, McLaughlin told UVB it could not repay the amount. On November 30, Bowman told McLaughlin that he would "work with [McLaughlin] to try to ... work out a plan [for McLaughlin to pay it back]." Yet, just after their conversation, Bowman wrote to McLaughlin making demand for immediate payment of all sums McLaughlin's corporations owed UVB. The letter concluded with the following language:

You have repeatedly advised us that these debts can be taken care of and we are still hopeful that this matter can be worked out. In the meantime, however, we have felt it necessary in order to protect the proper interest of the bank to make the demand set forth in this letter.

Despite its demand in the November 30 letter, UVB continued to extend credit to McLaughlin's corporations, to accept partial payments of principal and interest, and to discuss McLaughlin's proposals to make deferred payments on the various debts to UVB. Although Tazewell failed to keep a number of its payment promises, UVB did not repeat its demand for immediate payment of all of McLaughlin's corporate indebtednesses during their many contacts during this period. Tazewell, however, kept its interest payments current and made principal curtailments amounting to approximately $30,000 a month, thereby reducing its indebtedness to UVB from $1.1 million to $914,000 at the end of May 1985.

Southside also owned and operated Cardinal Fuels, Inc. (Cardinal), another petroleum distributorship which operated in Buchanan County. In January 1983, Miners and Merchants Bank (M & M) in Grundy loaned Cardinal $250,000. This debt was evidenced by demand notes secured by Cardinal's accounts receivable.

In the fall of 1984, M & M lost a substantial part of its security. This loss occurred *615 for two reasons. First, Cardinal's manager resigned, became its competitor, and took a number of Cardinal's customers with him. As those customers' accounts were paid, there was no corresponding reduction in Cardinal's debt to M & M. Second, the accounts receivable of those customers who stayed with Cardinal were taken over by Tazewell upon its assumption of Cardinal's operation after its manager's departure. Many of these accounts were then commingled with the Tazewell accounts receivable.

To replace M & M's loss of collateral, McLaughlin offered additional security, including a subordinate lien on Tazewell's accounts receivable and equipment. In January 1985, M & M's president, James G. Graham, called UVB, the first lien holder, apparently for further information. Graham spoke with Bowman in South Boston. Bowman's pencilled notes of their telephone conversation indicated that Cardinal owed M & M $215,000, that M & M had a security agreement on Cardinal's accounts receivable, and that Cardinal's manager had recently left and was operating a competing business.

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