William M. Freeman v. JPMorgan Chase Bank N.A.

675 F. App'x 926
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedJanuary 13, 2017
Docket15-14944
StatusUnpublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 675 F. App'x 926 (William M. Freeman v. JPMorgan Chase Bank N.A.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
William M. Freeman v. JPMorgan Chase Bank N.A., 675 F. App'x 926 (11th Cir. 2017).

Opinion

PER CURIAM:

This case requires us to consider whether the district court properly applied the summary judgment standard to plaintiff William Freeman’s negligence and aiding and abetting claims against defendant JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A., after fraudster Charles' Gordon stole money that Freeman had deposited in an account owned by Gordon’s company, OPT Title & Escrow, Inc. Because Freeman met his burden of coming forward with evidence showing that OPT Title owed him a fiduciary duty, the Bank knew or should have known that OPT Title was holding Freeman’s money in escrow, and the Bank knew Gordon was stealing money from OPT Title’s account, the district court should have denied the Bank’s summary *928 judgment motion. Accordingly, we reverse and remand for further proceedings.

I. BACKGROUND

A. Factual Background

This case arises out of Gordon’s fraudulent scheme, which we described in Chang v. JPMorgan Chase Bank, 845 F.3d 1087 (11th Cir. 2017). Briefly stated, Gordon owned and operated OPT Title, a Florida corporation, and Ziggurat (Panama), S.A., a Panamanian corporation. Ziggurat’s purported business was to secure for its clients multi-million dollar loans from global banking institutions and underwriters. 1 Gordon told Ziggurat’s clients that because the lenders required proof of their liquidity to obtain financing, the clients needed to deposit a percentage of the total amount to be financed in an escrow account OPT Title maintained with the Bank. Gordon had clients transfer the escrow funds into an account at the Bank titled “OPT Title & Escrow Inc Escrow Account” (the “OPT Escrow Account”). Instead of holding the funds in escrow, however, Gordon diverted the money to pay Ziggurat’s operating expenses and his personal expenses. Under this scheme, Gordon stole more than $3 million.

Roland Larsen, an acquaintance of Freeman, wanted Ziggurat to secure $100 million in financing so that he could develop a project mining coal and drilling for natural gas in West Virginia. He asked Freeman to provide $1 million to fund the escrow deposit for his company, Sharpe Resources, Inc. In September 2011, Freeman and Larsen, on behalf of Sharpe Resources, entered into a written agreement in which Freeman would provide $1 million in escrow funds that would be paid back if Ziggurat failed to obtain the financing. If Ziggurat obtained the financing, Freeman would receive his money back plus $1 million in interest. The day after signing the agreement, Freeman wired $1 million to the OPT Escrow Account.

A few days later, Larsen decided that he needed Ziggurat to finance an additional $30 million. To increase the financed amount, Larsen needed to deposit an additional $300,000 in the OPT Escrow Account. Freeman agreed to provide the money. Freeman and Larsen, on behalf of Sharpe Resources, amended their agreement to reflect the additional money Freeman had provided and that Freeman would receive an additional $300,000 if Zig-gurat successfully obtained the financing. The next day, Freeman wired $300,000 to the OPT Escrow Account.

After Freeman sent the money, Larsen decided to use a different company he controlled, Standard Energy Company, as the party to the transaction with Ziggurat. The day after Freeman sent the second wire, Larsen, on behalf of Standard Energy, and Ziggurat entered into a Memorandum of Understanding in which Ziggurat promised to work to secure funding for Standard Energy and Standard Energy agreed to place 1% of the requested loan amount in escrow with OPT Title.

Larsen, on behalf of Standard Energy, also entered into an escrow agreement with OPT Title. OPT Title promised not to use the money for any purpose other than as set forth in the Memorandum of Understanding between Ziggurat and Standard Energy. OPT Title further agreed that “[i]n all instances, the Escrow, or part thereof, will be returned to the same account of origination.” Escrow Agreement *929 ¶ 2.1.6 (Doc. 95-26). 2 Because OPT Title had received the money directly from Freeman, it in effect pledged to return the $1.3 million to Freeman, even though he was not a party to the escrow agreement. Despite these promises, OPT Title did not hold Freeman’s money in escrow. Instead, Gordon stole the money.

Gordon was able to steal money OPT Title was holding in escrow at least in part because of knowing assistance he received from Olga Padgett-Perdomo, a Bank vice president beginning in 2009. She helped him by opening the OPT Escrow Account, persuading potential targets that their money would be safe in the OPT Escrow Account, and trying to keep other Bank employees from investigating OPT Title’s accounts.

First, she assisted Gordon in 2009 by opening OPT Title’s accounts with the Bank. She allowed Gordon to name one of the accounts an escrow account, even though she and Gordon failed to comply with the Bank’s procedures for opening escrow accounts.

Second, she helped Gordon thereafter by reassuring potential victims that the money they sent to the OPT Escrow Account would be safe and lying to them to cover up that Gordon had stolen their money. When investor Hsi Chang was considering whether to fund a $750,000 liquidity deposit for another project Ziggurat was financing, Padgett-Perdomo met with Chris Lim and William Lin, who were working with Chang. She assured them that OPT Title had an excellent relationship with the Bank and praised OPT Title’s business. When they showed her a copy of Chang’s escrow agreement with OPT Title, which reflected that OPT Title would hold Chang’s money in escrow at the Bank, Padgett-Perdomo reassured them that OPT Title held money in escrow for others who were obtaining financing with Ziggu-rat. After Chang sent the money, Lim and Lin would occasionally call Padgett-Perdo-mo to check whether OPT Title was continuing to hold Chang’s money in escrow. She continued to assure them that Chang’s money was safe, even though Gordon had already stolen it. 3

Padgett-Perdomo assisted Gordon by making other representations about OPT Title. Almost immediately after OPT Title opened its accounts at the Bank, Padgett-Perdomo wrote letters vouching for OPT Title. In these letters, she stated that OPT Title maintained excellent relationships with the Bank, without mentioning that OPT Title had been a Bank customer only for a few days. Padgett-Perdomo also wrote another letter, in October 2010, on the Bank’s letterhead (the “Seven-digit Letter”) representing that OPT Title’s “[ejscrow account currently has deposits ... in the seven digit amounts” when in fact the total balance in all OPT Title’s accounts with the Bank at that time was less than $100,000. Seven-digit Letter (Doc. No. 85-3).

Third, Padgett-Perdomo assisted Gordon in 2010 by trying to keep other Bank employees from investigating the OPT Escrow Account. When a customer brought the Seven-digit Letter to another Bank branch and asked whether the information in the letter was accurate, a Bank employee recognized the inaccuracy of Padgett-Perdomo’s statement in the letter that the

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Bluebook (online)
675 F. App'x 926, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/william-m-freeman-v-jpmorgan-chase-bank-na-ca11-2017.