WFIC, LLC v. LaBarre

34 Pa. D. & C.5th 119
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Philadelphia County
DecidedNovember 13, 2013
DocketNo. 03183
StatusPublished

This text of 34 Pa. D. & C.5th 119 (WFIC, LLC v. LaBarre) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Philadelphia County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
WFIC, LLC v. LaBarre, 34 Pa. D. & C.5th 119 (Pa. Super. Ct. 2013).

Opinion

GLAZER, /.,

PROCEDURAL AND FACTUAL HISTORY

Plaintiff, WFIC, LLC, initiated the current action against multiple defendants alleging: (1) conversion1; (2) interference with contractual relations2; (3) breach of contract3; (4) unjust enrichment4; and (5) replevin5. This suit is grounded upon a series of events, dating back to the late 1990s. Between 1998 and 1999, Larry Martin (“Martin”) made three loans to defendant Polymer Dynamics, Inc. (“PDI”) totaling $1,400,000, on which PDI subsequently defaulted. In response to PDFs failure to pay, Martin’s attorney, Allen Turner (“Turner”) filed a confession of judgment. At that time, PDI was insolvent and claimed as its primary asset a lawsuit against Bayer Corporation (“Bayer”), which included claims of breach of contract and negligent misrepresentation.6 See brief of defendant William Anthony Hitschler on Bifurcated Issues to be Resolved by the Court, ex. 1. PDI believed all of its claims against Bayer would result in an award of at least $100 million. See WFIC complaint, ¶12. Upon [122]*122discovering PDFs insolvency and pending litigation, Martin agreed, based on Turner’s advice, to release the confessed judgment in exchange for entering into a settlement agreement containing a promissory note secured by a collateral assignment and security agreement (“Assignment”). The Assignment granted Martin a security interest in a portion of potential proceeds “for any claim in tort or contract which PDI has or may assert against Bayer Corporation arising from the contract for the sale and or lease of machinery....” See WFIC compl., Ex. B. The Assignment specifies that any proceeds from the Bayer litigation are first to be applied to attorneys fees, then to any payments owed to the government, and third to all amounts then due and unpaid to Martin. See id. Additionally, the Assignment states that:

Martin may cause the proper recordation of this Collateral Assignment and Security Interest and any Uniform Commercial Code filing to perfect Martin’s collateral assignment and security interest.

Id. Acting on the language of the Assignment, Turner filed a UCC-1 financing statement on October 26,2001 in order to perfect Martin’s security interest in the Bayer proceeds. However, this financing statement expired on October 26, 2006 when Turner failed to file the necessary UCC-3 continuation statement within the requisite five years.

On June 24,2005, PDI obtained a verdict against Bayer for $12.5 million. Unsatisfied with the outcome, both parties appealed the award, which was later affirmed-plus interest-by the Third Circuit Court of Appeals in 2009. During the appeal, PDI acquired investors in order to fund its legal fees by establishing the “Bayer Litigation [123]*123Fund” (“Litigation Fund”). The Litigation Fund attracted investors because they would receive their share of proceeds as a part of the attorney’s fees due to PDFs counsel.

Once the award was finalized, the funds were dispersed in October 2009 to June 2010 in the following order: (1) attorneys fees, which included the Litigation Fund investors, (2) amounts owed to the government, and (3) other secured creditors in order of priority. Martin did not receive any funds. PDI concluded that Martin’s security interest was unperfected due to his failure to file a UCC-3 financing statement after the expiration of the initial financing statement, and, therefore, disbursed the remaining funds to creditors with higher priority than Martin. In turn, Martin filed a malpractice case against his attorney, Turner, for causing his security interest to have lapsed. Martin ultimately reached a settlement with Turner, and Turner’s malpractice carrier West Chester Fire Insurance Company, for Turner’s policy limit of $1 million in 2011. The settlement required that Martin assign his claim from the Bayer litigation to his insurance company which established the entity WFIC (“plaintiff’) for the sole purpose of receiving the assignment. The assignment covered “any and all rights, claims and causes of action (based upon tort, contract, violation of statute, or otherwise) which Martin has or may have with regard to the PDI Loan Documents and the Bayer Lawsuit Proceeds, and against all persons and entities responsible for or involved in the distribution of the Bayer Lawsuit Proceeds and against all persons and entities who received any of the Bayer Lawsuit Proceeds (collectively, the “Assigned Claims”) all WITHOUT RECOURSE to [124]*124Assignor.” McKissock Brief for Bifurcated Trial, Ex. 2. WFIC has brought this suit in order to receive a portion of the Bayer proceeds WFIC alleges it is entitled to arising out of the Assignment and which were paid to the various defendants in this case.

Pursuant to a request by the court appointed special master, Peter F. Vaira, Esquire, the parties submitted additional briefs on three bifurcated issues: (1) whether Larry Martin (“Martin”) perfected a security interest in the proceeds of the Bayer litigation and if so, was that security interest superior to all other security interests in the proceeds of the Bayer litigation at the time it was perfected; (2) If the answer to question 1 is yes, whether that security interest thereafter continued to be superior to all other security interests in the proceeds of the Bayer litigation; and (3) whether, the assignment of Martin’s rights to the proceeds of the Bayer litigation from Martin to WFIC was a valid assignment capable of being enforced by the court. Court order (Aug, 19, 2013).

DISCUSSION

In order to determine the first issue — whether Martin had a perfected security interest in the proceeds of the Bayer litigation — the court must analyze whether Martin’s interest was automatically perfected in 2001. “Perfecting” a security interest is a vital step in collecting from a debtor because it has the effect of establishing and protecting the priority of the lender. See 13 Pa. C.S. §9322(a); see also Dollar Bank v. Swartz, 657 A.2d 1242, 1244 (Pa. 1995). In order to perfect a security interest one must file a financing statement, unless an exception applies. For example, a security interest may be able to avoid the filing [125]*125requirements if it: (1) falls within the category of “payment intangibles” and (2) it is automatically perfected, 13 Pa. C.S. §9309(2). In the case at hand, Martin’s attorney filed the UCC-1 financing statement in 2001, but failed to file the subsequent UCC-3 continuation statement in 2006. This failure caused the original UCC-1 financing statement to lapse, and left Martin with an unperfected security interest subordinate to other creditors. See 13 Pa.C.S.A. §9515(c). However, Martin’s security interest in the Bayer proceeds would have remained perfected if it met the exception of constituting as a “payment intangible” that was automatically perfected at the time of Martin’s 2001 UCC-1 filing.

As defined in 13 Pa. C.S. §9102, a “payment intangible” is a subset of “general intangible under which the account debtor’s principal obligation is a monetaiy obligation.”7 The importance of the debt being facially monetary is reiterated in the comments:

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Bluebook (online)
34 Pa. D. & C.5th 119, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wfic-llc-v-labarre-pactcomplphilad-2013.