Walther v. Indiana Lawrence Bank

579 N.E.2d 643, 1991 Ind. App. LEXIS 1674, 1991 WL 204584
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 15, 1991
Docket43A05-9103-CV-89
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 579 N.E.2d 643 (Walther v. Indiana Lawrence Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Walther v. Indiana Lawrence Bank, 579 N.E.2d 643, 1991 Ind. App. LEXIS 1674, 1991 WL 204584 (Ind. Ct. App. 1991).

Opinion

BARTEAU, Judge.

This is an appeal from a grant of summary judgment in favor of the Indiana Lawrence Bank (ILB). Three issues are raised, which we consolidate as one:

Whether the grant of summary judgment was error.

FACTS

Donald and Joyce Walther owned and farmed several parcels of land in Kosciusko County. In September, 1986, the Indiana Lawrence Bank (ILB) brought a foreclosure action against the Walthers on various promissory notes, mortgages and guarantees. The foreclosure action was stayed by the bankruptcy court when the Walth-ers filed a Chapter 11 bankruptcy action. The Chapter 11 action was followed by a Chapter 7 action and the Walthers' debts were discharged in bankruptey on Oct. 2, 1989. The bankruptcy stay was modified on Nov. 15, 1989 and the bankruptcy trust *645 ee intervened in the foreclosure action, filing an answer and several counterclaims against ILB. The counterclaims were later amended. The Walthers also filed an amended answer and counterclaims. (The Walthers and the Trustee will hereinafter be jointly referred to as the Walthers.) The trial court granted summary judgment in favor of ILB on the foreclosure and against the Walthers on their counterclaims.

The counterclaims concern a loan from ILB to the Walthers under a program called the Treasurer's Farm. Program ("TFP"). In 1985 the State Treasurer's Office instituted the TFP, a program designed to assist farmers in acquiring low interest loans for 1985 erop production. The State provided a fund of $50 million. The essence of the program was that for each qualified loan a bank made to a farmer, the State would deposit matching funds with that bank in the form of a certificate of deposit. Eligibility for the TFP program was stated as follows:

Loans made under this program to support agricultural production are subject to the following limitation or as may be determined by the Treasurer of State:
1. Maximum loan of $50,000 to a single borrower.
2. Funds must be expended for the following:
a. The purchase of seed, feed, fertilizer, chemicals, crop insurance, livestock and production-related energy;
b. Labor;
c. Veterinarian fees.
3. No loan may be made to an officer or director of the financial institution.

The State in no way guaranteed the loan. Rather, the entire risk fell upon the bank, which was obligated to repay the principal and interest on the certificate of deposit to the State at maturity. The purpose of the program was to make funds available to the banks at a low interest rate in exchange for the bank making the funds available to farmers for 1985 crop production at a slightly higher rate.

ILB advised the Walthers of the TFP program and suggested that they could benefit from the reduced interest rate. The Walthers filled out an ILB loan application, which ILB forwarded to the TFP along with a letter addressing the Walth-ers' qualifications for a loan under the TFP program. The letter stated:

We feel the above-named borrower [Donald W. Walther] will benefit from the Treasurer's Farm Program and will appreciate the interest savings in his operating cost. He does comply with your requirements of having more than 75% of his income from farm operation and has a net worth of less than $250,000. His debt-tonet worth ratio is greater than 1.25.
Moneys borrowed under this program will be used for 1985 operating expense. We accept the data on his financial statement as correct and complete and so state to the best of our knowledge. His interest earned for last year was less than 10% of interest paid, and funds borrowed under this program will not be used for refinancing existing debt.
The loan application of Donald D. Walther conforms to the intent of the Treasurer's Farm Program. The Certificate of Deposit is in no way pledged to the financial institution in event of loan default. [emphasis added]

The letter was signed by the President and CEO of ILB. The TFP approved the Walthers for the program. Upon approval, ILB suggested the Walthers notify their suppliers that the funds would be forth coming. Relying on ILB's representations, the Walthers committed the loan proceeds to their suppliers in exchange for credit purchase of seed and other necessities for 1985 crop production. When the Walthers were called to ILB to receive the loan proceeds, they were given a deposit slip showing that $50,000.00 had been deposited to their account. At that time they were told they needed to write ILB a check for $50,-000.00 to be applied to their pre-existing indebtedness with ILB. Joyce Walther wrote the $50,000.00 check to ILB as re«quested. Several other farmers were also solicited to apply for a loan under the TFP *646 program and received essentially the same treatment from ILB.

The essence of the counterclaims is that ILB enticed the Walthers to apply for a loan to help them with their 1985 crop expenses, informed the TFP that the loan would be for operating expenses and would not be used to refinance existing debt, but upon approval by TFP insisted the funds be applied to existing debt. The counterclaims allege a cause of action for breach of the statute enabling the TFP, breach of a third party contract, breach of contract, breach of good faith, breach of a specially incurred duty, fraud, promissory estoppel and RICO violations. 1 Following the filing of the answers, affirmative defenses and counterclaims, and in the midst of discovery, the court entered an order entitled "ORDER STATING ISSUES AS UPON MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT" wherein the Court essentially made its own motion for summary judgment and ordered briefing and hearing on the following:

[Thhe Court, at this time, cannot identify a legal standard under which the Plaintiff owed a duty to the defendants, Walther for violation of which those defendants incurred damage.
In resolving the question and determining whether or not there did, in fact, exist a duty on the part of the bank to dispurse [sic] the funds to the defendants, Walther for the purpose of cultivating a new crop rather than applying to pre-existing loans, it is necessary to determine:
A. What legal effect or standing did the Treasurer's Farm Program have?
B. What obligation did the plaintiff have as a participant in the Treasurer's Farm Program have to dispurse [sic] loans in accordance with the standards or guidelines established by the office of the Treasurer of the State?
C. What duty did the plaintiff have to the defendants, Walther to dispurse [sic] the funds for the new crop cultivation as opposed to requiring them to apply it to the discharge of pre-exist-ing indebtedness?

ILB subsequently filed its own Motion for Summary Judgment on August 9, 1990 asserting that all of the counterclaims sounded in either conversion or RICO and therefore were not filed within the applicable two year statute of limitations. 2

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Bluebook (online)
579 N.E.2d 643, 1991 Ind. App. LEXIS 1674, 1991 WL 204584, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walther-v-indiana-lawrence-bank-indctapp-1991.