Trapp v. Tidwell

418 So. 2d 786
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 11, 1982
Docket53333
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 418 So. 2d 786 (Trapp v. Tidwell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Trapp v. Tidwell, 418 So. 2d 786 (Mich. 1982).

Opinion

418 So.2d 786 (1982)

Wendell H. TRAPP, Jr., Substituted Trustee, FOR the USE AND BENEFIT of First Mississippi Bank of Commerce, and First Mississippi Bank of Commerce
v.
B.E. TIDWELL and Elizabeth Tidwell.

No. 53333.

Supreme Court of Mississippi.

August 11, 1982.
Rehearing Denied September 8, 1982.

*787 Smith, Downs, Ross, Trapp & Coleman, Wendell H. Trapp, Jr., Corinth, for appellants.

Price, Krohn & McLemore, Robert G. Krohn, Corinth, for appellees.

Before PATTERSON, C.J., and BOWLING and DAN M. LEE, JJ.

DAN M. LEE, Justice, for the Court:

This is an appeal from the Chancery Court of Alcorn County wherein B.E. Tidwell and Elizabeth Tidwell, defendants/appellees, obtained a temporary injunction enjoining First Mississippi Bank of Commerce (FMBC) from conducting a foreclosure sale on a certain piece of property securing a promissory note executed by B.E. Tidwell while he was employed as an officer of FMBC. FMBC filed an answer, crossbill and motion to dissolve the injunction, seeking to foreclose on the above-mentioned property. Although the note executed by B.E. Tidwell was current, FMBC sought to foreclose on its deed of trust under a dragnet clause due to several fraudulent transactions consummated by B.E. Tidwell while Tidwell served as an officer of the bank. Following a lengthy hearing, the chancellor found the dragnet clause applied only to those sums which were contracted for by Tidwell (Tidwell's promissory note and Tidwell's bank overdraft). Aggrieved of the chancellor's findings, FMBC appeals. We affirm.

B.E. Tidwell began working for FMBC in July 1974. During his employ at FMBC, Tidwell served as vice-president, senior vice-president and director. In July 1976 Tidwell left the bank.

On January 23, 1976, B.E. Tidwell executed a promissory note in the amount of $33,000 in favor of FMBC. This note was secured by a deed of trust on certain property known as the Cross Town Package Store. The deed of trust contained the following provision:

"Also, to secure any other indebtedness heretofore, now or hereafter (within the period of four years from the date hereof) contracted with either the payee in or the holder of the above described note or notes by the grantor or grantors herein or either of them whether such other indebtedness be evidenced by note, open account, overdraft or any other manner whatsoever, including also, any indebtedness of any grantor made as a joint maker, surety, endorser or guarantor."

The note was current when the present controversy arose.

The property that was secured by this deed of trust was later conveyed to Frankie Tidwell (B.E. Tidwell's wife) and then to Elizabeth Tidwell (B.E. Tidwell's mother).

FMBC subsequently instituted foreclosure proceedings against the property based on losses suffered by the bank as a result of Tidwell's actions while he was an officer of the bank.

The bank alleged the following amounts were due by Tidwell and were encompassed within the coverage of the aforementioned dragnet clause:

(A) A promissory note executed by B.E. Tidwell dated January 23, 1976, in the principal sum of $33,000 with $27,217.18 due and owing.
(B) An overdraft to the personal checking account of B.E. Tidwell in the sum of $1,505.76 as of August 1, 1979.
(C) A promissory note executed by T.R. Byrd dated November 21, 1975, in the principal amount of $6515, the proceeds of which were deposited directly to the account of B.E. Tidwell. As of August 1, 1979, $7,125.67 was owed on this note.
(D) A promissory note executed by Tim Tucker dated May 26, 1976, in the principal sum of $6500, the proceeds of which were diverted to the use of B.E. *788 Tidwell. $8,570.56 was the balance due on this note as of August 1, 1979.
(E) A promissory note executed by B.E. Tidwell and his wife, Frankie Tidwell, on February 7, 1975, in the principal sum of $12,755. This loan was secured by real property as well as a 1974 MGB automobile. After the Tidwells defaulted upon the note, the bank instituted foreclosure proceedings against the real property. The bank purchased the property at the foreclosure sale for $10,347.98 and also obtained a default judgment against the Tidwells in the amount of $3400 when it sought to replevy the automobile.
(F) A loss to FMBC in the amount of $16,900 resulting from the issuance of a credit life insurance policy on the life of B.C. Garrett by Merit Life Insurance Company in connection with a promissory note showing B.C. Garrett as the borrower, dated February 24, 1976, in the principal amount of $19,597.50. The proceeds of the loan were deposited to the account of Cross Town Package Store, a business in which B.E. Tidwell had an interest.
(G) Two promissory notes executed by Carol P. Bonds dated November 15, 1974, and November 18, 1974, in the respective amounts of $2,883.76 and $2448, the proceeds of which were diverted into B.E. Tidwell's personal checking account. As of August 1, 1979, $5,331.76 remained owing on these notes.
(H) A promissory note executed by Carol P. Bonds dated July 9, 1975, in the principal amount of $32,445.04. This loan was made as a result of a fraudulent financial statement and the proceeds were actually received by M.M. Bartlett who was in extreme financial difficulty as well as beyond his legal lending limits at the bank. All of this was known by B.E. Tidwell.
(I) A promissory note executed by Robert F. Gates dated March 21, 1975, in the principal sum of $31,000, the proceeds of which were diverted to the use of M.M. Bartlett to evade the legal lending limit of the bank. This loan was likewise secured by non-existent collateral of which B.E. Tidwell had full knowledge.
(J) A promissory note executed by Frankie Tidwell dated March 24, 1976, in the principal amount of $8,002.50 and secured by a 1976 Oldsmobile automobile. The security interest in the automobile was never perfected. When B.E. Tidwell was notified about the defective security interest, he did nothing to correct the same. Tidwell and his wife subsequently succeeded in obtaining a lost certificate of title and thereafter pledged the automobile as collateral for a loan at another bank. $10,024.48 remained owing on this note as of August 1, 1979.

B.E. Tidwell was subsequently indicted in federal court for various counts of false pretense, embezzlement and misappropriation of bank funds.

At the conclusion of the lengthy hearing, encompassing voluminous exhibits and testimony, the learned chancellor, construing the dragnet clause most strongly against the drawer (FMBC), found that only those debts which arose by way of contract were encompassed within the dragnet clause, and stated in part as follows:

It will be necessary for the Court to consider each one of the claims separately and to make an individual determination.
Perhaps the most critical issue before the court is the determination of the extent and coverage of the dragnet clause in the deed of trust. This is important because the value of the mortgaged property is much greater than the original debt. It has been estimated that the value of the mortgaged property may be in the approximate amount of $120,000.00, while the balance on the original note as of August 1, 1979 was $27,217.18.
The claims by the Bank against B.E. Tidwell arise primarily out of actions by Tidwell while he was an employee and officer of the Bank.

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Bluebook (online)
418 So. 2d 786, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/trapp-v-tidwell-miss-1982.