Transcontinental Holding Ltd. v. First Banks, Inc.

299 S.W.3d 629, 69 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. 2d (West) 763, 2009 Mo. App. LEXIS 1230, 2009 WL 2734990
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 1, 2009
DocketED 91469
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 299 S.W.3d 629 (Transcontinental Holding Ltd. v. First Banks, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Transcontinental Holding Ltd. v. First Banks, Inc., 299 S.W.3d 629, 69 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. 2d (West) 763, 2009 Mo. App. LEXIS 1230, 2009 WL 2734990 (Mo. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

LAWRENCE E. MOONEY, Judge.

Today we tell the tale, admittedly a long tale, of a bank ensnared in a dispute between two businessmen, Ron Scharf and Alexander Kogan. Scharf and Kogan, each operating through various business entities, engaged in a complex series of transactions. Over the course of these, Scharf loaned large sums of money to Ko-gan. In time, Scharf, who believed he was owed millions, learned that Kogan had money on deposit at First Bank. Scharf succeeded in having the bank transfer money from an account controlled by Ko-gan, to a new account, over which Scharf had sole control. From this new account, Scharf then persuaded the bank to issue a cashier’s check payable to one of Scharfs companies. Scharf, however, was not honest with the bank. The bank, upon learning that Kogan disputed Scharfs authority *632 to withdraw funds from the Kogan account, stopped payment on the cashier’s check. The dispute between Scharf and Kogan is not ours to decide. Rather, today we decide only the dispute between Scharf and the bank. In so doing, we must determine a matter of first impression: whether, under Missouri’s Revised Uniform Commercial Code, a bank may refuse payment and assert its own defenses against liability on its cashier’s check. We answer that it may.

Factual and Procedural Background

This appeal concerns events occurring in May of 2006, when Ron Scharf entered First Bank and procured a cashier’s check made payable to the appellant Transcontinental, and the bank then stopped payment on that check. In order to put these events in context, however, we must first travel back to early 2005, when Ron Schai'f met Alexander Kogan and the two embarked on a business venture.

Ron Scharf owns and operates a number of businesses, collectively referred to as the “Scharf Affiliates.” 1 In general, these businesses are either in manufacturing or insurance. Scharfs manufacturing businesses produce and sell many products, among which are large commercial heaters and air conditioners. Of the Scharf Affiliates in the insurance business, one is germane to this appeal: Transcontinental Holding, Ltd., 2 the appellant in this case. Transcontinental is a paying agent; it acts as an escrow agent for its sister corporation, Transcontinental Insurance, a company that provides product-liability insurance policies for hard-to-insure businesses.

Ron Scharf met Alexander Kogan in early 2005. The two were introduced by Kogan’s cousin, a Russian-immigrant engineer who worked for Scharf. Alexander Kogan, himself a Russian immigrant, was represented as having key connections in the Russian government, such that he had been able to broker the sale of some former Soviet Union debt. Kogan purportedly received a substantial commission for his efforts. He reportedly lost that money, however, and was experiencing financial difficulties at the time he was introduced to Scharf.

Kogan approached Scharf "with a proposal to promote and sell air structures in Russia, using Kogan’s relationships and contacts with members of the former Soviet Army. An air structure is a prefabricated, fabric building that relies on air, l'ather than columns, pillars, or posts, for support. 3 Heaters and air-conditioners, such as those manufactured by Scharfs companies, circulate the ah' that holds up the structure. Kogan did not have sufficient financial resources for the endeavor, and approached Scharf about investing in one of his companies. Scharf ultimately agreed to provide financing. As a result, Ron Scharf and Alexander Kogan, both personally and through corporate entities, entered into a series of complex business agreements, evidenced by a number of documents executed between February 1st and August 1st, 2005. Scharf relied on *633 these documents, and the purported powers set forth in those documents, when he procured the cashier’s check at First Bank. We summarize these four general groups of agreements to set the stage for the critical events that later transpired at First Bank. As we shall see, although these agreements may demarcate the rights and liabilities of Scharf and Kogan, ultimately these agreements have little bearing on the rights and liabilities of the bank under the Uniform Commercial Code.

Scharf — Kogan Agreement, Februarg 1, 2005; Promissorg Note; Security Agreement

The first in the series of Scharf-Kogan agreements came on February 1, 2005, when the Kogan Affiliates 4 entered into an agreement with one of the Scharf Affiliates. By its terms, the Kogan Affiliates appointed a Scharf Affiliate company as the Kogans’ sole and exclusive manufacturer and supplier of heating, ventilating, and air-conditioning equipment for use with all air-supported structures sold by the Ko-gan Affiliates. Scharf and Kogan also established a lender-borrower relationship; specifically, the Scharf Affiliate agreed to extend $500,000 in working capital to the Kogan Affiliates, as a line of credit for the purchase of air-handling equipment from the Scharf Affiliates.

In conjunction with this February 1st agreement, the Kogan Affiliates executed a Promissory Note and Line of Credit, by which the Kogan Affiliates promised to pay the Scharf Affiliate the extended loan amount of $500,000, plus interest, no later than July 1, 2005. To secure the payment and performance of the obligations incurred by the Kogan Affiliates under the note, the Kogan Affiliates also executed a Security Agreement, by which the Kogans purportedly granted the Scharf Affiliate a security interest in a broad range of collateral set forth and detailed in the Note and contemporaneously-executed Security Agreement.

Resolution, February 21,2005

Just over two weeks later, on February 21, 2005, Alexander Kogan executed a document entitled “Resolution of the Members of IPD Sales & Marketing, LLC.” In part, this resolution, approved and adopted by Kogan as sole member of the company, stated that Ron Scharf was authorized to open a bank account in the name of the limited liability company and to be sole signatory thereon for all purposes.

Scharf — Kogan Agreement, May 3, 2005

The Scharf Affiliates and Kogan Affiliates entered into an additional agreement on May 3, 2005. This agreement notes that Scharf is forming and capitalizing two corporations to sell and manufacture air-supported structures. The agreement further notes that the Kogan Affiliates would exclusively market air-supported structures in the “Eastern Bloc” territory, which included Poland, the Czech Republic, and the countries of the former U.S.S.R.; Scharf s newly-formed corporations would manufacture and market air-supported structures in the rest of the world. The agreement also includes what is best described as exclusive-purchase provisions. The parties agreed to exclusively purchase any and all air-supported structures they sold, as well as the heating, ventilating, and air-conditioning equipment to be used with those structures, from Scharfs newly-formed corporation and the Scharf Affiliates.

*634

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Bluebook (online)
299 S.W.3d 629, 69 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. 2d (West) 763, 2009 Mo. App. LEXIS 1230, 2009 WL 2734990, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/transcontinental-holding-ltd-v-first-banks-inc-moctapp-2009.