Victor v. Vitols v. The Citizens Banking Company, Tucker Anthony Incorporated

10 F.3d 1227, 22 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. 2d (West) 259, 1993 U.S. App. LEXIS 30953, 1993 WL 485668
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedNovember 29, 1993
Docket92-3790
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 10 F.3d 1227 (Victor v. Vitols v. The Citizens Banking Company, Tucker Anthony Incorporated) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Victor v. Vitols v. The Citizens Banking Company, Tucker Anthony Incorporated, 10 F.3d 1227, 22 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. 2d (West) 259, 1993 U.S. App. LEXIS 30953, 1993 WL 485668 (6th Cir. 1993).

Opinion

*1229 DAVID A. NELSON, Circuit Judge.

This is a securities fraud case brought by investors in a now-defunct real estate partnership. The partnership accepted negotiable promissory notes from the plaintiffs in partial payment for limited partnership interests, and the notes were ultimately transferred to the defendant bank.

The bank sought and obtained a summary judgment declaring that it had become a holder of the notes for value, in good faith, without notice of any defenses, and was thus a holder in due course. As a holder in due course, the district court held, the bank took the notes free of whatever defenses the plaintiffs would otherwise have had against the holder.

The plaintiffs contend on appeal that summary .judgment ought not to have been granted in this case because there are genuine issues of material fact with respect to the following questions: (1) whether the bank had “dealt” with the plaintiffs, thereby subjecting itself to the plaintiffs’ defenses by reason of a proviso in § 3-305(2) of the Uniform Commercial Code that limits the benefits of holder in due course status to a holder who has not “dealt” with the party asserting the defense; (2) whether there was a sufficiently close connection between the bank and the partnership to deprive the bank of the rights of a holder in due course under the “close-connectedness” doctrine; and (3) whether the endorsements by which the bank took the notes conveyed less than the entirety of the instruments, thereby depriving the bank of holder in due course status under U.C.C. 3-202.

Concluding, on de novo review, that the relevant facts are not in dispute and that the bank is entitled to judgment as a matter of law, we shall affirm the judgment entered by the district court.

I

Defendant Citizens Banking Company is a federally chartered bank based in Ohio. In 1984, after participating with another financial institution in the purchase of promissory notes executed by investors in limited partnerships, the bank consulted a large New York securities firm about expanding this line of business. That firm referred the bank to Intercontinental Monetary Corporation (“IMC”), a successful dealer in “investor notes,” as they are known in the trade.

The bank soon began taking such notes from IMC and, somewhat later, from an IMC affiliate known as U.S. Note Corporation. The business proved lucrative, and the bank engaged in similar transactions with other brokers as well. All of the notes at issue in the case at bar, however, were brought to the bank by U.S. Note Corporation.

These particular notes were executed by purchasers of interests in a Michigan limited partnership known as Certified Historic Income Properties VI (“CHIP VI”). The general partners were Schneider Twenty-Four, Inc., a Michigan corporation, and Herbert M. Schneider, its president and sole stockholder.

Schneider organized CHIP VI in April of 1988 with a view to having the partnership purchase a YMCA building in Louisville, Kentucky, for conversion into an office condominium complex. Defendant Tucker Anthony, a securities dealer, was engaged to offer limited partnership interests to qualified investors. Each such investor was given the option of paying entirely in cash or executing a promissory note for a portion of the purchase price. U.S. Note planned to buy such notes and resell them, assuming the investors proved to be creditworthy. The record indicates that the investors who executed notes furnished personal financial statements and tax returns (to Tucker Anthony, we assume) before acquiring their limited partnership interests.

Citizens Banking ultimately acquired all of the CHIP VI investor notes. The note executed by the lead plaintiff, Victor V. Vitols, came into the bank’s hands through a series of transactions that replicates the path taken by most of the others; we shall use the Vitols note to illustrate how the process worked.

On December 29, 1988, Mr. Vitols, a resident of Massachusetts, signed an instrument captioned “negotiable promissory note.” He has never contended that the note was anything other than a negotiable instrument. It recited that for value received Mr. Vitols *1230 promised to pay to the order of CHIP VI the principal sum of $21,250. The money was payable in three annual installments, beginning January 15, 1990, with 11% interest on the unpaid balance. As collateral for the note Mr. Vitols granted a security interest in his limited partnership investment.

On the same day he signed the note Mr. Vitols executed an “estoppel letter.” In the letter Mr. Vitols agreed, among other things, that the note could be assigned.

On February 17, 1989, CHIP VI transferred Mr. Vitols’ note, along with those of other investors, to U.S. Note Corporation. An indorsement on the back of the Vitols instrument, executed by Schneider on behalf of CHIP VI, said this: “Pay to the order of U.S. Note Corporation.” There is evidence that U.S. Note planned to reassign the note, directly or indirectly, to Citizens Banking; “it wasn’t for sure,” Mr. Schneider subsequently testified, “[b]ut that was the plan.”

U.S. Note. Corporation took the Vitols note and those of other investors as collateral on a $402,800 loan to CHIP VI. Under date of February 17, 1989, CHIP VI signed a nonre-course promissory note in that amount; the instrument (sometimes referred to as a “master note”) stated that the payee, U.S. Note, would look for payment only to the collateral, and not to the assets of CHIP VI or any general partner thereof. The aggregate principal amount of the collateral in question (i.e. the notes executed by Vitols and other individual investors) was $425,000.

The master note and the individual investor notes securing it were transferred by U.S. Note to IMC, which on May 26, 1989, transferred the notes to Fleet National Bank, a financial institution based in Providence, Rhode Island. The record shows that Fleet — which was a holder in due course, as far as we know — promptly transferred all of the notes in this package, plus additional investor notes, to defendant Citizens Banking Co. 1 Each of the last three transfers of the Vitols note was effected under a signed in-dorsement on the back of the note reading as follows: “Pay to the order of [the transferee] without recourse to us.” (It is undisputed that Citizens Banking took delivery of all the notes with indorsements in this form.) The consideration paid by Citizens Banking to Fleet was $520,000. The aggregate principal amount of the individual investor notes transferred by Fleet appears to have been $552,-500.

Although Citizens Banking paid the $520,-000 to Fleet, the deposition testimony of Citizens Banking officer Frank Layman described the transaction as a “warehousing loan” to IMC. The record contains a $520,-000 promissory note dated May 30, 1989, payable to the order of Citizens Banking, executed by IMC and personally guaranteed *1231 by IMC’s president and another IMC principal.

Mr. Layman’s testimony indicates that Citizens Banking had not received full documentation on all of the individual investor transactions at this point.

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Bluebook (online)
10 F.3d 1227, 22 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. 2d (West) 259, 1993 U.S. App. LEXIS 30953, 1993 WL 485668, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/victor-v-vitols-v-the-citizens-banking-company-tucker-anthony-ca6-1993.