Thomas Rusnack v. Cardinal Bank, N.A.

695 F. App'x 704
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedJuly 25, 2017
Docket16-1676
StatusUnpublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 695 F. App'x 704 (Thomas Rusnack v. Cardinal Bank, N.A.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thomas Rusnack v. Cardinal Bank, N.A., 695 F. App'x 704 (4th Cir. 2017).

Opinion

Unpublished opinions are not binding precedent in this circuit.

PAMELA HARRIS, Circuit Judge:

Thomas Rusnack and Cardinal Bank disagree over the balance due on a home equity loan. The Bank claims that Rusnack *706 owes approximately $70,000. But Rusnack insists that he owes at least $20,000 less, because the Bank, despite his instructions to the contrary, honored two $10,000 checks made out to his ex-wife and signed only by her.

After the Bank tried to collect on the loan, Rusnack initiated bankruptcy proceedings. The bankruptcy court sided with Rusnack, holding that the Bank improperly honored the checks and that because Rpsnack did not benefit from the $20,000, the Bank would have to bear the cost of its error. The district court reversed and ruled for the Bank. According to the district court, the bankruptcy court clearly erred in finding that Rusnack did not benefit from the $20,000 in checks cashed by his ex-wife. Moreover, the district court held, Rusnack’s objection was barred by a Virginia five-year statute of limitations for contract actions, raised by the Bank for the first time in the district court proceedings.

We cannot agree with the district court. In our view, the bankruptcy court’s finding that Rusnack did not benefit from the Bank’s mistake cannot be deemed clearly erroneous. Nor does Virginia’s limitation period for contract actions bar Rusnack’s objection in bankruptcy, both because the Bank failed to raise it before the bankruptcy court and because Rusnack is not bringing a contract action. Accordingly, we reverse.

I.

A.

Thomas Rusnack and his then-wife, Ana-lisa Rusnack, opened a home equity line of credit (HELOC) with Cardinal Bank in August 2008. Between 2008 and 2006, the Rusnacks periodically drew on the HE-LOC using checks issued by Cardinal Bank. In March 2006, Rusnack and his wife separated. On June 22, 2006, Rusnack wrote a letter to Cardinal Bank directing the Bank to “freeze my loan ... from further advances.” J.A. 321. The Bank acknowledged Rusnack’s request the same day in a letter addressed to the Rusnacks. The letter, written by loan services manager Barbara Hudson, informed the Rus-nacks that the Bank had “placed a freeze on the above loan that will stop all future withdrawals from this account. If you need us to honor an item or release the freeze, both of your signatures will be required.” J.A. 322.

Although the Bank received and confirmed Rusnack’s request, the Bank failed to honor it. Even after the separation and the June 22 correspondence, Rusnack’s then-wife withdrew money against the HELOC without Rusnack’s signature on two occasions. On July 26, 2006, Ms. Rus-nack wrote a check for $10,000 made out to herself. The Bank honored the check. According to Rusnack, he called the Bank to complain after this first check cleared, and was told that “the account was blocked; that the money would be placed back into my account and that no other checks could be written on it[.]” J.A. 31. But on September 12, 2006, the Bank once again honored a $10,000 check made out to and signed only by Ms. Rusnack. The two withdrawals increased the principal balance on the HE-LOC to $70,000.

After Ms. Rusnack’s second withdrawal, the Bank’s senior vice president wrote Ms. Rusnack a letter stating that “according to our records these two checks were inconsistent with the prior notification that no further withdraws were to occur on the account.” J.A. 323. The letter instructed Ms. Rusnack: “You may forward repayment of these withdraws or any other amounts outstanding on your home equity account to Cardinal Bank[.]” Id. Ms. Rus-nack did not repay the $20,000, and the *707 Bank continued to charge Rusnack interest on the full principal balance until the loan matured in 2013. During that time, Rusnack made timely interest payments, including on the disputed $20,000. The Rusnacks finalized their divorce in February of 2008.

B.

When the HELOC matured on August 4, 2013, Rusnack did not pay off the principal amount the Bank claimed it was owed. The Bank filed a foreclosure action in the Circuit Court for Montgomery County in February of 2014. Around the time the Bank filed the foreclosure action, Rusnack started filing complaints with various consumer protection agencies regarding the $20,000 the Bank had distributed to his ex-wife. In July of 2014, after the state court judge ordered that the foreclosure sale proceed, Rusnack filed a voluntary Chapter 13 bankruptcy petition listing a disputed $50,674 debt to Cardinal Bank. Rusnack’s Chapter 13 filing halted the foreclosure proceeding.

In response to Rusnack’s filing, the Bank filed a proof of claim asserting that Rusnack owed $70,804 on the HELOC, rather than the $50,674 listed by Rusnack. Rusnack then filed an objection to the Bank’s proof of claim, arguing that he should not be responsible for the $20,000 in checks honored by the Bank without his permission, or for the subsequent interest payments on the $20,000.

The bankruptcy court held a hearing on the disputed debt. At the hearing, a senior credit officer for Cardinal Bank testified that the Bank’s decision to honor the checks “was an error on the part of the bank, in fact.” J.A. 72. The hearing also revealed a disagreement between Mr. and Ms. Rusnack over how the $20,000 was spent. Mr. Rusnack testified that he received no benefit from the $20,000. Ms. Rusnack, on the other hand, surmised that the money was used to pay joint debts, given that she was handling marital finances at the time. But in light of the passage of time and the absence of any records, she acknowledged, she was “assuming” joint use of the funds. J.A. 50.

The bankruptcy court agreed with Mr. Rusnack, sustaining his objection to the Bank’s proof of claim. Applying Virginia law, 1 the court held that the withdrawals were unauthorized because they lacked the second signature required during the freeze period. The court also found that Rusnack was not barred from recovery on the ground that he had benefitted from the $20,000. The court credited Rusnack’s testimony that he had received no benefit from his estranged wife’s withdrawals, deeming it “specific and credible”; by contrast, it declined to give “persuasive weight to Ms. Rusnack’s testimony that she assumes she deposited the money into their joint account and assumes she paid joint bills with it.” J.A. 231.

The Bank appealed, and the parties jointly filed for a stay of the bankruptcy proceedings pending appeal. The district court reversed the bankruptcy court, holding that the Bank was entitled to the full amount claimed. The district court noted that the bankruptcy court had relied on an outdated section of the Virginia Code in finding the withdrawals unauthorized, but agreed that “[Unquestionably, the honoring of these checks was in error.” J.A. 360. Nevertheless, the district court ruled for the Bank on two separate grounds. First, it held that the bankruptcy court’s finding that Rusnack did not benefit from the $20,000 was clearly erroneous—and under *708 Virginia law, an account holder who benefits from a bank’s mistake may not recover against the bank.

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