United Virginia Factors Corporation v. The Aetna Casualty and Surety Company

624 F.2d 814, 1980 U.S. App. LEXIS 16458
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedJune 19, 1980
Docket79-1132
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 624 F.2d 814 (United Virginia Factors Corporation v. The Aetna Casualty and Surety Company) 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
United Virginia Factors Corporation v. The Aetna Casualty and Surety Company, 624 F.2d 814, 1980 U.S. App. LEXIS 16458 (4th Cir. 1980).

Opinion

FIELD, Senior Circuit Judge:

The question presented by this appeal is whether a loss suffered by United Virginia Factors Corporation (Factors) is covered by the blanket bond issued by The Aetna Casualty and Surety Company (Aetna). The district court found the loss to be compensa-ble and entered summary judgment against Aetna in the amount of $550,000 which was the stipulated amount of the loss. Aetna has appealed.

Factors is engaged in the business of factoring which includes the purchase of accounts receivable. Under established factoring practices, a company selling and assigning accounts to Factors is referred to as the client and the debtors on the accounts are referred to as the client’s customers. Time-Out Fashions, Inc., and Rumpeldress-kins Fashions, Inc., (jointly referred to as Clients) were engaged in the manufacture and sale of women’s apparel. Factors entered into a factoring agreement with Clients under which the latter sold and assigned to Factors certain “accounts, contract rights, documents, instruments, and other evidence of customer indebtedness.” Factors agreed to pay to Clients the face amount of the accounts on their maturity date less a charge of 1V4%. As a matter of practice, Factors, acting pursuant to the agreement, paid Clients an advance of up to 85% of the face amount of the accounts less the initial 1V4% charge. Under this arrangement, the remaining face amount of the accounts was to be paid on the maturity dates, and interest on the advance was to be deducted from this latter payment.

Factors purchased these accounts without recourse, and if the customers failed to pay an account Factors was required to bear the loss. Clients did, however, warrant to Factors that each account was a bona fide existing obligation, and if an account assigned to Factors was not paid because the account was not bona fide, Clients were obligated under the agreement to repay the amounts advanced, with interest. Clients agreed to provide Factors with a schedule of the receivables purchased by it, together with copies of customers’ invoices carrying the statement on their face that the accounts receivable represented by such invoices had been assigned and were payable only to Factors. In 1976, Clients sold and assigned to Factors certain accounts receivable which were wholly fictitious. The customers named on these accounts had not purchased the goods and thus had no obligation to pay Factors. Factors entered into the transactions believing that the accounts were valid receivables, and prior to discovering the fraud paid Clients an amount in excess of $832,000. The officers of Clients were later convicted of mail fraud and Factors recovered a portion of the advance payments by the sale of collateral.

Factors’ claim was made under Insuring Agreement (B) of the bond issued by Aetna which provides:

The Underwriter * * * agrees with the Insured * * * to indemnify and hold harmless the Insured for:
(B) Loss of Property * * * through * * * false pretenses * * *

Aetna denied coverage, contending that the claim is barred from coverage by Exclusions 2(e)(1) and (2) which provide in part as follows:

Section 2. THIS BOND DOES NOT COVER
******
(e) loss resulting from the complete or partial non-payment of, or default upon - (1) any loan or transaction in the nature of, or amounting to a loan made by or obtained from the Insured, or (2) any note, account, agreement or other evidence of debt assigned or sold to, or discounted or otherwise acquired *816 by, 'the Insured whether procured in good faith or through trick, artifice, fraud or false
pretenses unless such loss is covered under Insuring Agreement (A), (D) or (E) * * *

In granting Factors’ motion for summary judgment, the district court concluded that the transaction was not a loan, and for that reason the loss was not excluded from coverage by section 2(e)(1). In rejecting the “loan” exclusion the district judge observed that it was appropriate to call the transaction a sale but held that exclusion 2(e)(2) did not apply, stating “ * * * it would appear at first glance that 2(e)(2) would exclude coverage and yet I am persuaded that 2(e)(2) does not refer to this situation because, indeed, there was no account sold.” Aetna challenges both of these conclusions of the district court.

We agree with Factors and the district court that these transactions did not qualify as loans subject to exclusion from coverage under section 2(e)(1). The flaw in Aetna’s position on this point is that it would convert any fraudulent transaction into a loan, and the courts have consistently rejected such an argument. In First National Bank of Decatur v. Insurance Co. No. Am., 424 F.2d 312, 316 (7 Cir. 1970), the court observed:

Mildly stated, it does not comport with the usual understanding to say that every time one person wrongfully obtains property from another and thus becomes legally obligated to restore it, he has succeeded in obtaining a loan from his victim.

Nor does the fact that the agreement gave Factors an express right to recover from Clients the amounts paid on the spurious invoices change the nature of these transactions. While it is true that the invoices assigned to Factors carried a warranty from the Clients that they represented bona fide existing obligations, the right of Factors to recover for a breach of such warranty was merely a contingent contractual right incident to the purchase and could not convert the transaction into a loan.

The distinction between a purchase and a loan was aptly drawn by the Second Circuit in In re Grand Union Co., 219 F. 353, 356 (1914):

A sale is the transfer of property in a thing for a price in money. The transfer of the property in a thing sold from a buyer to a seller for a price is the essence of the transaction. And the transfer is a transfer of the general or absolute property as distinguished from a special property.
A loan of money is a contract by which one delivers a sum of money to another and the latter agrees to return at a future time a sum equivalent to that which he borrows.
In order to constitute a loan there must be a contract whereby, in substance one party transfers to the other a sum of money which that other agrees to repay absolutely, together with such additional sums as may be agreed upon for its use. If such be the intent of the parties, the transaction will be considered a loan without regard to its form. 39 Cyc. 926.

In our opinion the transactions in question lacked the essential elements of a loan as that term is ordinarily understood, and do not fall within the exclusion of section 2(e)(1).

Whether these transactions were excluded from coverage under section 2(e)(2) presents a more troublesome question. Aetna takes the position that since the loss resulted from the non-payment of the accounts which were sold and assigned to Factors, the plain reading of section 2(e)(2) excludes it from coverage.

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624 F.2d 814, 1980 U.S. App. LEXIS 16458, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-virginia-factors-corporation-v-the-aetna-casualty-and-surety-ca4-1980.