WebBank v. American General Annuity Service Corp.

2002 UT 88, 54 P.3d 1139, 454 Utah Adv. Rep. 48, 2002 Utah LEXIS 115, 2002 WL 1880295
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 16, 2002
Docket20010253, 20010256, 20010259
StatusPublished
Cited by137 cases

This text of 2002 UT 88 (WebBank v. American General Annuity Service Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
WebBank v. American General Annuity Service Corp., 2002 UT 88, 54 P.3d 1139, 454 Utah Adv. Rep. 48, 2002 Utah LEXIS 115, 2002 WL 1880295 (Utah 2002).

Opinion

RUSSON, Justice:

T1 American General Annuity Service Corporation ("American General") appeals *1141 the trial court's grant of summary judgment in favor of WebBank. 1 We reverse and remand.

BACKGROUND

¶ 2 The instant case arises in connection with a financial transaction centered around a structured settlement agreement, specifically, the transfer of payments of money owing under the structured settlement agreement. A structured settlement agreement is a method for compensating an injured person. Under a structured settlement, a plaintiff becomes entitled to and receives an amount of money payable over time in the form of monthly and periodic payments ("structured settlement payments") as compensation for personal injury from a defendant or its insurer.

¶ 3 Structured settlements first came into common usage in the 1960s and 1970s and subsequently gained favorable tax status with a 1982 amendment to the federal Internal Revenue Code. At that time, Congress recognized that many personal injury victims were dissipating the settlements received as compensation for their tort claims, leaving them without means of support. In response to this concern, Congress amended the Internal Revenue Code to provide, among other things, tax benefits to personal injury victims and insurers that settle claims through the steady payment of settlement funds over an extended period of time. See 26 U.S.C. § 104(a)(2) (2002) (exeluding such payments from the calculation of an individual's gross income for federal income tax purposes); 26 U.S.C. § 130 (2002) (providing tax benefits to certain personal injury liability assignments and qualified funding assets). Consequently, structured settlements have become a common and familiar means of settling lawsuits.

¶ 4 In the unrelated, yet predicate, action to this case, Susan Soliz ("Soliz"), a personal injury victim, commenced a lawsuit arising out of an injury she suffered. To resolve the lawsuit, Soliz entered into a structured settlement agreement with the defendant in that action and/or the defendant's lability insurer under which she received monthly settlement payments. As part of the settlement agreement, Soliz agreed, among other things, that the payments to which she was entitled under the structured settlement agreement would not be accelerated or assigned. The structured settlement agreement, however, did provide that American General would assume the obligation to make future settlement payments to Soliz pursuant to the structured settlement agreement. Under this arrangement, structured settlement payments were made to Soliz without incident.

¶ 5 At some point after the initiation of the structured settlement payments, Soliz, for reasons irrelevant to this appeal, was in need of an immediate, lump-sum payment of money instead of the periodic payments she had been receiving under her structured settlement agreement. To this end, Soliz entered into a financial transaction with WebBank, an industrial loan corporation organized under the laws of this state. Under their Loan and Security Agreement ("security agreement") and attendant promissory note, 2 Soliz agreed to transfer her interest in her future structured settlement payments to WebBank in *1142 exchange for a purported loan. 3 In other words, Soliz sought to exchange her structured settlement payments over a period of time for an immediate, lump-sum payment from WebBank, and WebBank offered to lend her a present sum of money and required her to secure the repayment of the purported loan with her future stream of structured settlement payments as collateral. In addition, as a condition precedent to the execution of the purported loan and the immediate payment of a lump sum to Soliz, WebBank required the receipt of a final, non-appealable court order determining that WebBank had a security interest in the structured settlement payments as collateral for the purported loan. It also required that payments on the purported loan be made directly from American General to WebBank, thus by-passing Soliz. That financial transaction and its underlying security agreement are the subject of this appeal.

PROCEDURAL HISTORY

¶ 6 Sometime between November 1999 and April 2000, WebBank, for itself and on behalf of Soliz, commenced a declaratory judgment action seeking a judicial determination pursuant to the conditions precedent required in the security agreement.

¶ 7 WebBank and American General filed cross-motions for summary judgment. On August 18, 2000, the trial court granted partial summary judgment in favor of WebBank, denied American General's motion for summary judgment, and permitted further discovery focused on the discrete and, in the trial court's view, dispositive issue of whether the financial transaction between WebBank and Soliz was a loan or a sale. After further discovery, WebBank and American General renewed and re-briefed their motions for summary judgment. On November 13, 2000, the trial court granted summary judgment in favor of WebBank on the remaining issue of whether the financial transaction between WebBank and Soliz should be considered a loan or a sale, concluding that there were no genuine issues of material fact and that the transaction or transfer was as a matter of law a loan instead of a sale or an assignment. American General timely appealed.

¶ 8 On appeal, American General argues that the trial court erred in concluding as a matter of law that the financial transaction between WebBank and Soliz was a loan and not a sale because the question of whether the parties to a particular transaction, such as the one in this case, intended to create a loan or a sale is a question of fact to be resolved by the trier of fact, therefore precluding the grant of summary judgment. In addition, American General asserts that, despite the lack of any ambiguity in the terms and provisions of the security agreement and promissory note, the nature and character of the transaction as a whole is ambiguous, and that the existence of such an ambiguity as to WebBank's and Soliz's true intent regarding the nature or character of the transaction should have precluded the trial court's grant of summary judgment. 4 Alternatively, *1143 American General argues that, even if the trial court did not err in concluding that the transaction in question was a loan, it did err by concluding that Article 9 of the UCC governed the transaction and that the "tort exemption" and/or the "insurance and annuity exemption" of Article 9 of the UCC, codified at Utah Code Ann. § 70A-9-104(k) and -104(g) (1997) respectively, did not apply to the transfer of Soliz's structured settlement payments to WebBank.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2002 UT 88, 54 P.3d 1139, 454 Utah Adv. Rep. 48, 2002 Utah LEXIS 115, 2002 WL 1880295, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/webbank-v-american-general-annuity-service-corp-utah-2002.