Trust Company of Louisiana v. N.N.P. Inc. L.C.E. International Incorporated Lawrence R. Leal William M. Moore Reliance Capital Associates David Lloyd Grant Curtis Johnson & Gibbs Daniel M. Matheson, III M. Sheppard Strong Dennis A. Jamieson James F. Crank, and Robert H. Wyshak Robert H. Wyshak & Associates

92 F.3d 341
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedAugust 23, 1996
Docket95-30493
StatusPublished

This text of 92 F.3d 341 (Trust Company of Louisiana v. N.N.P. Inc. L.C.E. International Incorporated Lawrence R. Leal William M. Moore Reliance Capital Associates David Lloyd Grant Curtis Johnson & Gibbs Daniel M. Matheson, III M. Sheppard Strong Dennis A. Jamieson James F. Crank, and Robert H. Wyshak Robert H. Wyshak & Associates) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Trust Company of Louisiana v. N.N.P. Inc. L.C.E. International Incorporated Lawrence R. Leal William M. Moore Reliance Capital Associates David Lloyd Grant Curtis Johnson & Gibbs Daniel M. Matheson, III M. Sheppard Strong Dennis A. Jamieson James F. Crank, and Robert H. Wyshak Robert H. Wyshak & Associates, 92 F.3d 341 (5th Cir. 1996).

Opinion

92 F.3d 341

65 USLW 2192, Fed. Sec. L. Rep. P 99,301,
36 Fed.R.Serv.3d 226

TRUST COMPANY OF LOUISIANA, Plaintiff-Appellee,
v.
N.N.P. INC.; L.C.E. International Incorporated; Lawrence
R. Leal; William M. Moore; Reliance Capital Associates;
David Lloyd; Grant Curtis; Johnson & Gibbs; Daniel M.
Matheson, III; M. Sheppard Strong; Dennis A. Jamieson;
James F. Crank, Defendants,
and
Robert H. Wyshak; Robert H. Wyshak & Associates,
Defendants-Appellants.

No. 95-30493.

United States Court of Appeals,
Fifth Circuit.

Aug. 23, 1996.

Pauline F. Hardin, Robert B. Bieck, Jr., Laura Leigh Blackston, Jones, Walker, Waechter, Poitevent, Carrere & Denegre, New Orleans, LA, for plaintiff-appellee.

Robert H. Wyshak, Wyshak & Associates, Beverly Hills, CA, pro se.

Appeals from the United States District Court for the Western District of Louisiana.

Before BENAVIDES, STEWART and DENNIS, Circuit Judges.

STEWART, Circuit Judge:

Robert H. Wyshak, individually and dba Robert H. Wyshak & Associates, appeals the district court's finding that he is liable to the Trust Company of Louisiana ("TCL") for negligent misrepresentation under Louisiana law and for securities fraud under 17 C.F.R. § 240.10b-5. Finding no error, we AFFIRM the district court's judgment.

FACTS

This civil litigation grew out of a complex scheme developed in Texas by several defendants not party to this appeal. The object of the scheme was to entice institutions like the plaintiff TCL into lending money they would not otherwise have lent. The perpetrators of the scheme (hereinafter collectively referred to as "Reliance,") represented to potential investors that they controlled certain Government National Mortgage Association Certificates ("GNMAs") and intended to use the GNMAs as collateral. When a potential investor agreed to invest in one of the perpetrators' various shell corporations, the investment was structured as a loan. Those loans were evidenced by several notes, and the notes themselves were purportedly secured by a security interest in certain listed GNMAs. The notes themselves, however, were mere paper, because a security interest in a GNMA cannot be created by means of the complex scheme developed by the defendants which included the filing of a UCC-1 statement.

The Government National Mortgage Association (the "Association") guarantees privately issued securities backed by pools of FHA or VA mortgages, and these securities are commonly referred to as GNMAs. According to the testimony of William D. Hawkland, former Chancellor and Professor of Law at Louisiana State University, the Association warrants the performance of the private issue, guaranteeing that investors in GNMAs will receive monthly "pass-through" of principal and interest payments due on the pooled mortgages, even if the original mortgagors on the underlying loans do not make their payments or the lenders on the underlying loans default. Chemical Bank [now merged with Chase Manhattan] is the Association's authorized transfer agent, and issues all GNMA certificates. Approximately 96% of the certificates are issued to Participants Trust Company ("PTC") and held by Chemical Bank in its capacity as custodian for that company. The few certificates not issued to PTC are registered by Chemical Bank in the name of individual buyers and the certificates themselves are physically delivered to these buyers. The PTC certificates are locked in Chemical Bank's vault and thereafter dealt with on an uncertificated basis. PTC employs a book entry system to effect transfer of the uncertificated GNMAs, and deals directly only with certain large financial intermediaries called "Participants." The Participants themselves deal with brokers and banks who in turn deal with individual customers. Going down the chain, each dealer records the transactions in its own books. Thus, ownership of uncertificated GNMAs is established by following the chain of book entries, and a security interest in an uncertificated GNMA can only be perfected where the pledge is registered on the books of a financial intermediary in the name of the secured party. In the case of a certificated GNMA, a PD-1832 form must accompany the actual certificate in order to endorse a GNMA, thus a security interest in a certificated GNMA cannot be created unless the note establishing that interest is accompanied by the certificate and its associated PD-1832.

In the case at bar, the trial court found that none of the defendants actually held any interest in any of the GNMAs listed in TCL's two notes, and thus the loans made were not backed up by any collateral. TCL loaned $2,500,000.00, thinking that it was investing in a long distance telephone company and that the investment was backed up by certain GNMA's. TCL only discovered the fraud when N.N.P. Inc. ("NNP") and L.C.E. International Inc. ("LCE"), the shell corporations to which it had loaned the money through Reliance, defaulted on the loan. Because the money TCL had loaned to the scheme came from seven ERISA plans managed by TCL and Ruston State Bank, pursuant to federal law, TCL restored those institutions to status quo ante by paying principal, attorneys' fees, and interest.

By the time the case came to trial, many of the original 20 defendants had already settled with TCL, and some had been convicted of various wire fraud charges connected with the scheme. The remaining defendants included Reliance Capital Associates, Lloyd, Jamieson, Wyshak, Eggleston, Wyshak & Associates, and Grant Curtis. Lloyd had become a fugitive from justice and did not appear for trial. Curtis also did not appear for trial. Jamieson appeared pursuant to a writ of habeas corpus ad testificandum, having agreed to testify as a witness for TCL in exchange for dismissal as a defendant in the instant civil litigation. Wyshak and Eggleston appeared for trial pro se, though they ignored the scheduling order and their failure to comply with discovery orders led to severe sanctions.

Jamison testified that he and another of the defendants approached Eggleston and asked if Wyshak's law firm would serve as custodian of the GNMA's for various investors in the scheme. Eggleston, a non-lawyer previously convicted of securities fraud, worked with Wyshak in the law firm. Reliance believed that a potential investor would be reassured and more willing to invest if he thought that he could get possession of the notes from Wyshak's law firm in the event of a default. Wyshak agreed to act as custodian in March, 1990.

At trial, Jamison presented evidence from which the trial court adduced that Wyshak knew the Reliance transactions were not backed up by interest in any GNMA's, and that he and Eggleston misrepresented what they held. While it was apparently Wyshak who carefully crafted letters to imply that the assets held in custody included the GNMA's themselves, Eggleston built the law firm's "due diligence" file which made it look as if the law firm had carefully made sure that the transactions were indeed backed by GNMAs. According to Jamieson, it was Eggleston who drafted or tailored a number of the supporting documents that lent credence to the scheme. Eggleston helped in fabricating a statement of account and a comfort letter from Johnson & Associates, purportedly an accounting firm.

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92 F.3d 341, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/trust-company-of-louisiana-v-nnp-inc-lce-international-incorporated-ca5-1996.