ARTHUR PEW CONSTRUCTION COMPANY, INC., Plаintiff-Appellant, v. Lurton E. LIPSCOMB, Defendant, First National Bank of Atlanta, Defendant-Appellee, William L. Cooney, L. Patrick Claiborne, Defendants.
No. 90-8008.
United States Court of Appeals, Eleventh Circuit.
July 15, 1992.
965 F.2d 1559
We hold the trial court did not err under these circumstances, and therefore reject Mr. Caro‘s contention.
H.
Cumulative Error
Finally, Mr. Caro claims that even if no single error cited warrants reversal, the cumulative effect of the trial court‘s actions were highly prejudicial and denied him a fair trial. After a careful review of the trial record in light of Mr. Caro‘s many contentions we acknowledged only two trial court errors. We held both those errors were harmless. Therefore, we conclude no cumulative error exists.
Mr. Caro‘s conviction is AFFIRMED on all counts.
Beverly B. Bates, Bates, Baum & Landey, Atlanta, Ga., for defendant-appellee.
Before TJOFLAT, Chief Judge, KRAVITCH, Circuit Judge, and GODBOLD, Senior Circuit Judge.
GODBOLD, Senior Circuit Judge:
Arthur Pew Construction Company, Inc. filed this action against the First National Bank of Atlanta (FNBA) and others, asserting liability under several legal theories.1 The district court granted summary judgment to all defendants. On appeal we reversed the summary judgment in favor of FNBA and remanded with respect to two claims against FNBA for promissory estoppel and negligence. See Arthur Pew Constr. Co. v. First Nat. Bank, 827 F.2d 1488 (11th Cir. 1987) (per curiam) (Pew I). After a trial the jury returned a verdict in favor of Pew on the negligence claim and in favor of FNBA on the promissory estoppel claim. FNBA then moved for judgment n.o.v. pursuant to
The order granting judgment n.o.v. adopted arguments made by FNBA and entered these findings and conclusions: (1) The evidence, and the jury verdict for FNBA on the promissory estoppel claim, “negatived” the existence of any duty owed by the bank to Pew.3 (2) “Probably” the jury returned a verdict for Pew on the negligence claim because it was not called on to determine separately the existence of a duty as an element of that claim. (3) In returning a verdict for the bank on the promissory estoppel claim the jury “appeared” to have agreed with the bank that if the bank made a commitment to Pew (out of which a duty could arise) the results of its violating that commitment were not foreseeable. (4) If a commitment was made it was “likely” that the jury determined that it was not reasonable for the plaintiff to rely on it. (5) The damages awarded for negligence were only remotely related to the alleged negligencе. (6) Pew‘s evidence of lost profits was speculative.
To review the order granting judgment n.o.v. we must examine the evidence of duty owed by the bank to Pew and of foreseeability and of reliance. The court‘s examination of the evidence went beyond what would have been a usual inquiry into sufficiency, i.e., whether the evidence was sufficient to submit to the jury on the issue of duty. See Boeing v. Shipman, 411 F.2d 365 (5th Cir. 1969). Instead, the court went much further and held that the evidence “negatived” the existence of a duty, which we take to mean that the evidence affirmatively established that there was no duty. We have examined the evidence in the light most favorable to Pew, as set out below. It clearly reveals that the court erred in finding that the evidence “negatived” the existence of a duty. Having reached that conclusion, we move to the traditional issue of sufficiency—though the court did not address the matter in that form—and hold that the evidence that tended to show a duty was sufficient to submit that issue to the jury. Also, the evidence of foreseeability and reliance was sufficient.
Having examined the evidence and found it sufficient, we turn to the holdings of the court drawn from the jury verdict in favor of the bank on the promissory estoppel claim. We hold that these holdings too were erroneous.
Finally, on the damages issues, we hold that the court erred in finding Pew‘s damages for lost profits, legal fees to recover lost funds, travel and telephone expenses to recover lost funds, and payments made on surety bonds remote and speculative. The court did not err in finding that the damages for interest were too remote.
Thus, Pew is entitled to have its jury verdict reinstated, with the exceptiоn of the award for interest.
I. The evidence
This case revolves around a business arrangement between Pew and Fenwick Associates, Inc. The Small Business Administration, through its § 8(a) program, enters into contracts with federal agencies and subcontracts the performance of these federal contracts to “socially and economically disadvantaged small business concerns.”
In 1982 Fenwick, through Lurton Lipscomb its president and sole stockholder, entered into an agreement with Pew, a general contractor that was not a socially and economically disadvantaged small business concern. The agreement was made in an emergency. Fenwick was about to lose several contracts within days because it had neither employees nor funds to begin work. Pew agreed to provide working capital and performance and payment bonds for Fenwick‘s projects, to advance Fenwick the funds it needed to bring its accounts payable current, and to manage the construction projects. All proceeds from jobs were to be deposited in Fenwick‘s bank account, from which all project expenses would be paid. Fenwick was to remain in control of all projects and was to be the point of control with the government. All employees were to be on Fenwick‘s pаyroll, and all debts were to be incurred in the name of Fenwick. Pew was to receive its expenses plus 40% of the profits generated by the contracts.5 The agreement also provided that Pew would receive interest at the prime rate on advances made to Fenwick.
Payment and performance bonds on the Fenwick projects were made in Pew‘s name and paid for by Pew. These bonds made Pew responsible for completing the projects even though the contracts were let to Fenwick. Hearn, president of Pew, explained at trial that Pew was obligated to the surety on these bonds for any losses the surety might sustain, a possible liability that ran into millions of dollars. This large exposure caused Pew to “hang on” with Fenwick and attempt to get the Fenwick jobs completed despite misrepresentations and improprieties committed by Lipscomb and discussed below.
Pew had done business with FNBA for more than 30 years and had been a profitable and highly regarded customer. Pew asked FNBA to lend $75,000 to Fenwick. The bank declined, so Pew borrowed $75,000 from the bank and had it put in the Fenwick account. Subsequently Pew borrowed more from the bank and eventually advanced to the Fenwick account $300,000 borrowed from the bank. Pew secured this borrowing with its equipment, notes, and accounts receivable, including the income to be generated from the Fenwick projects.6
Under the arrangement between Fenwick and Pew, Fenwick would pick up from the disbursing officer checks for work on its jobs and would turn them over to Pew for disbursement. Soon, however, Lipscomb, in violation of the agreement, deposited into his own bank account somе $90,000 of checks payable to Fenwick. Fenwick eventually disgorged $13,000; the balance never got to Pew for disbursement.
In their original negotiations Lipscomb told Hearn that Fenwick owed IRS some $50,000 for withholding and Social Security tax. Hearn worked with IRS to arrange monthly payments on this liability, to be paid out of funds from the Fenwick projects. IRS agreed to release tax liens on Fenwick‘s bank accounts. Fenwick had, however, misrepresented to Hearn the amounts that had to be paid, which exceeded $100,000. Lipscomb also concealed from Pew that previously, to secure a debt of some $80,000, Fenwick had assigned to a Tennessee bank the proceeds on one of the jobs included in the arrangements with Pew. Payments to this bank had to be made.
In February 1983, as a consequence of Lipscomb‘s diversion of the $90,000 of job proceeds, described above, Pew and Fenwick amended their agreement to eliminate the possibility of future diversions. They agreed that an account would be opened by
The bank sent each assignment document to the disbursing officer of the Corps of Engineers, accompanied by a letter from the bank giving notice of assignment. Each letter said:
This contract is assigned to The First National Bank of Atlanta, Buckhead branch, 3040 Peachtree Road NW, Atlanta, Georgia, 30305, account # 14 389 368.
The numbered account was the Fenwick account. Each letter also named a person who was authorized to personally pick up checks when due “to expedite deposit into this account.” The Corps of Engineers sent each assignment and the accompanying letter notice to the contracting officer, the disbursing officer, and the surety on the job. The bank retained copies of the assignments in its files.
Thereafter checks were sent to the bank (or picked up) and deposited by the bank into the Fenwick account bearing the number shown in the notice. Fenwick did not have access to the preprinted checks for the account. FNBA had in its files a copy of the full Pew-Fenwick agreement.
On September 6, 1983 Lipscomb set out to again divert funds from the projects that were the subject of the arrangements with Pew. He and his attorney, J. Patrick Claiborne, an Augusta, Georgia lawyer, went to the FNBA branch in Augusta. Lipscomb opened a new account in that branch. He told the manager, Don Metz, that he wished to transfer the Fenwick account from the Buckhead branch to the Augusta brаnch. He could, however, draw on the Buckhead account only with joint Pew and Fenwick signatures. He attempted to surmount this by submitting to Metz a new signature card for the Buckhead account, supported by a corporate resolution of Fenwick that authorized only Lipscomb as the designated signatory on the Buckhead account. Pursuant to this new card, which purported to give Lipscomb sole control of the Buckhead account, Lipscomb sought to strip that account of some $97,000, its balance as revealed on Metz‘s computer screen. He obtained a counter check at the Augusta branch, made the check out to cash, filled in the Atlanta account number, signed it, and deposited it in the newly opened Augusta account. Metz did not notify Pew officials or contact anyone at the Buckhead branch about whether it was appropriate under the circumstances to change control over the Buckhead account and make Lipscomb the sole signatory.
Lipscomb‘s scheme failed because, by the time the $97,000 check reached Buckhead, other checks drawn on the account had been paid and the account balance was less than $97,000. The check was returned for insufficient funds. Pew learned what was happening because payroll checks properly drawn on the Buckhead account also were returned for insufficient funds. The bank froze the Buckhead account while its legal department determined which checks to honor and which to return for insufficient funds. By September 9 Metz had spoken with Robert R. Derrick, the commercial loan officer at Buckhead who supervised the Pew account, concerning the problems with the Buckhead account. Metz testified that by September 12 he knew of Pew‘s interest in the Buckhead account and of controversy between Pew and Fenwick concerning Lipscomb‘s wrongful diversion of contract proceeds.
All checks on or after September 13, 1983, must have two signatures, one of Thomas A. Fuller [an independent public accountant], and one representative of Arthur Pew Construction Company.... The necessary signature cards and corporate resolutions to set forth such persons will be forwarded as soon as possible. As part of the agreement between Fenwick Associates, Inc. and Arthur Pew Construction Company, Fenwick Associates, Inc., has agreed not to change the signature cards and the corporate authorization other than the one to be submitted authorizing Thomas A. Fuller and a representative from Arthur Pew Construction Company to sign checks on the subject account.
The legal department of the bank had requested such a letter signed by Pew and Fenwick before it would “unfreeze” the Buckhead account. (Tr. 285-86.)
The parties at the meeting agreed that the account would remain in Fenwick‘s name but Fenwick would have no access to it. Pew would have complete control. Before the meeting concluded, Derrick was telephoned at the Buckhead branch. The ensuing conversation was put on a conference call so that all in the meeting could hear what was said. The letter was read to Derrick. He agreed that, based on the letter, the Buckhead account would be “unfrozen.” According to the testimony of Hearn, during the meeting Fenwick‘s counsel had made a point of saying that Fenwick could unilaterally release the assignments any time Lipscomb chose. Hearn testified that, as a consequence, in the telephone conversation he explained to Derrick that he was afraid Lipscomb would try to have the assignments released and then abscond with the contract proceeds:
I said, “Robert, during the discussion in getting this resolved, they [Fenwick representatives] brought up repeatedly that they can get these assignments cancelled and I think you need to contact somebody in Augusta and be sure that this is not done, because I don‘t trust them.” And they could hear what I was saying. Like I say, at this point, there were no punches pulled. Fenwick and Lurton Lipscomb and this attorney could hear this and I said it to Derrick.
(Tr. pp. 104-05.) According to Hearn, Derrick responded:
He said, “Don‘t worry about that.” He said, “I‘m not going to release them and nobody at First Atlanta Bank [FNBA] is going to release those assignments.”
* * * * * *
He said, “I‘m not going to release them for two reasons.” He said, “Arthur Pew would be put in jeopardy, and also the bank‘s depending on that money for you to repay the note [sums borrowed by Pew].”
(Tr. p. 105.)
Attorney Martin testified, verifying the conversation between Hearn and Derrick, which he had overheard. Martin stated that he was satisfied that the mechanism of the assignments in place would adequately protect Pew.
Hearn hand-сarried to the Buckhead office the joint letter that had been signed at the meeting and left it with Derrick‘s secretary. The next day he telephoned Derrick to make certain he had received the letter. Hearn described the conversation:
A. I called him the next morning and said, “Robert, I brought the letter up to the bank.” He said, “Yeah, I have got it and everything is fine, that I have got it.” And once again I said, “Robert, they were adamant about getting those assignments released and I really feel like you need to alert the people in Augusta.”
* * * * * *
Q. What was his response when you mentioned once again that maybe he should contact somebody in Augusta?
A. He said the same thing he had the day before. I think he said, “Hearn, you‘re upset and uptight.” And he
didn‘t say that, but that was the feeling I got, and he said, “Nobody is going to release these.” And I said, “Well, Robert, you know, this is our lifeblood and I just feel like you ought to call.” He assured me there was no problem.
(Tr. 107.) Hearn testified that after this conversation with Derrick he felt secure that the contract proceeds would be protected.
Derrick testified that he could not specifically recall what he told Hearn about releasing the assignments, but he did not believe he would have given an assurance such as Hearn described. He never sent a copy of the September 13 letter to Metz. Metz testified that he “guess[ed] in the rush of business and in that branch, it was a matter he [Derrick] hadn‘t communicated to me.” And, although Derrick and Metz discussed the Fenwick account over the next couple of weeks and, according to Metz, discussed the need to close Fenwick‘s accounts, Derrick never told Metz of Pew‘s concerns regarding the assignments, or of Fenwick‘s promise not to change the signature cards, or of any commitment to Hearn to give notice to Pew before releasing the assignments.
The signature card mentioned in the September 13 letter to Derrick, giving joint signatory authority to Pew and an accountant, was received at the Buckhead branch by September 21.7 Meanwhile, Metz had determined unilaterally that the Fenwick account at Buckhead was a “problem account” that should be closed. He contacted Lipscomb on September 19 and informed him that the bank wanted all of Fenwick‘s accounts closed.
Metz talked with Derrick about the bounced [$97,000] check, the difficulties between Fenwick and Pew, and the fact that he [Metz] had frozen the account. They discussed the relationship of Pew to the bank, and the bank‘s desire to retain its collateral position on its loans to Pew. The assignments were not mentioned. Derrick told Metz that Pew was an “interested party” in the Fenwick account and that there had been problems between Fenwick and Pew. Metz was told that representatives of Pew were joint signatories on the Fenwick account. Derrick told Metz that the bank didn‘t want to service the Fenwick accounts any more except the [Buckhead] account on which Fenwick and Pew were joint signatories “which we wanted to handle because the proceeds from the [Fenwick] contract work were boosting Pew‘s cash flow.”
Fenwick‘s attorney, Claiborne, called Metz and complained of Fenwick‘s accounts being frozen. He told Metz the accounts couldn‘t be closed out with deposits coming in from jobs, and he asked Metz if he would release the assignments. Metz assented.
On September 21 Lipscomb and Claiborne visited the Augusta branch with a set of releases of assignment for all projects subject to the Pew-Fenwick arrangements. Metz testified that he had never seen releases like these and was unaware of what their ramifications would be. The documents stated on their faces, and Metz recognized, that they concerned contract proceeds destined for the Buckhead account. It was obvious by reading them that they had nothing to do with Fenwick‘s Augusta account. Metz knew that Lipscomb had unsuccessfully attempted to obtain all funds in the Buckhead account by the transactions of September 6. At trial he described Lipscomb‘s dealings with the bank this way: “We‘d been dealing with this fellow over a year. He pulled all sort of shenanigans.” Despite all this knowledge Metz executed the releases after reading one and skimming the others, without contacting Derrick, the bank‘s legal department, or any other bank official. Metz testified that he thought the assignments were merely for convenience and did not realize that they were actually assignments of contracts. Metz considered re
With respect to power to release the assignments, Derrick considered that Fenwick could not by itself release them (Tr. 354), but this is what Metz assented to and carried out.
Lipscomb gave the releases to another of his attorneys, who presented them to the government contracting officers and picked up checks. In the course of three days Lipscomb collected checks amounting to more than $300,000.
Pew learned a few days later that the assignments had been canceled, when a Pew employee attempted to pick up a check from a federal contracting officer for one of the projects and was informed that someone from Fenwick had already obtained the check. On September 26 or 27 Hearn called Derrick, advised him that the assignments had been released, and sought to determine how this had been accomplished. Hearn testified that Derrick replied:
And Derrick said, “Hal, nobody at First Atlanta has released those assignments. I‘ll assure you that nobody at First Atlanta has released those assignments.”
* * * * * *
He was totally shocked. He said, “There is no way anybody at First Atlanta released those assignments.”
(Tr. 114-15.) Hearn found out from the disbursing officer that the assignments had been released by Metz in Augusta, and he passed this information on to Derrick. Derrick responded:
And Derrick said, “Well, I don‘t think Metz would release the assignments, but let me check into it.”
(Tr. 115.) Derrick then called Metz in Augusta and found, to his surprise, that Metz had released the assignments.
According to Claiborne, after Pew had protested to FNBA, Metz telephoned him [Claiborne] around September 26 about the release of the assignments. Claiborne described the conversation: “[Metz] was upset with the situation. He was mad at me. He was mad because he didn‘t check it out. He was mad at the bankers in Atlanta for not telling him what was going on and suddenly felt he had sort of stumbled into a hornet‘s nest.”
Thus, as a result of the release of the assignments, Lipscomb was able to intercept and convert to his own use more than $300,000 of government payments that otherwise would have been sent to FNBA and deposited in the Buckhead account.8 These funds were supposed to be applied to project expenses such as materials and labor and to repay advances made by Pew, and if there were any profits, these were to be divided between Pew and Fenwick. Lipscomb gave some of the money to his wife, used some to buy himself a car, and squandered most of the remainder on personal expenses. On September 30 Pew obtained a temporary restraining order from the Superior Court of Richmond County, Georgia, prohibiting Lipscomb from receiving, collecting, or disbursing any of the funds of the government projects. Fenwick, on October 13, commenced a bankruptcy proceeding in the Southern District of Georgia. The bankruptcy trustee was
Pew received none of the funds wrongfully diverted by Lipscomb. The remaining contract proceeds were paid by the Corps of Engineers to Fenwick‘s trustee in bankruptcy. Pew was required, however, under the terms of its performance bonds, to complete the projects at its own expense. Ultimately Pew‘s bonding company had to step in and complete the projects. Pew was required to reimburse the bonding company. Also Pew paid the bank in full on its loans. Pew subsequently lost its bonding capacity, without which it was unable to bid for new contracts. In October 1983 Pew filed for
In December 1983 Claiborne withdrew from representation of Fenwick, which he stated occurred because of untruthful representations made to him by Lipscomb.
In January 1985 Pew brought this suit against FNBA, Lipscomb, Claiborne, and Claiborne‘s employer, seeking damages under a variety of legal theories. Counts two through five presented claims against FNBA: common law negligence, breach of contract, failure to exercise a degree of care and diligence required by law, and breach of fiduciary duty. All of the claims were based on Pew‘s theory that FNBA had a duty, contractual or otherwise, to notify Pew if there were any attempts to release the assignments and that FNBA had acted improperly in releasing the assignments without giving Pew notice.
FNBA denied liability and cross-claimed against the other defendants, seeking damages equal to the amount of any judgment obtained by Pew against FNBA. After the parties completed discovery, FNBA, Claiborne, and Claiborne‘s employer filed motions for summary judgment, which the court granted. Thereafter the court entered final judgment for FNBA, Claiborne, and Claiborne‘s employer. Pew‘s claims against Lipscomb were still pending, so the district court entered a
We reversed the summary judgment on the two counts against FNBA that claimed promissory estoppel and negligence. See Pew I, 827 F.2d at 1488. We held: (1) that “[i]f FNBA officials did indeed promise to maintain the assignments [for the protection of Pew], the record contains sufficient evidence from which a jury could reasonably conclude that FNBA breached the alleged promise to protect Pew‘s interest and that Pew reasonably relied upon the bank‘s assurances to Pew‘s detriment,” id. at 1492; and (2) that if “FNBA officials voluntarily assumed the [duty] of maintaining the assignments for the protection of Pew and notifying Pew in the event that Fenwick officials attempted to secure a release.... [then the] evidence in the record is sufficient from which a jury could reasonably conclude that FNBA‘s care fell below that required by law to protect Pew from unreasonable risk of harm.” Id. We remanded these counts to the district court for trial.9
At trial the court instructed the jury that if it were to return a verdict for Pew on both the promissory estoppel claim and the negligence claim, Pew would have to elect which damages award to collect; it could not collect on both. The jury returned a verdict in favor of FNBA on the promissory estoppel claim and in favor of Pew on the negligence claim and awarded Pew in excess of $400,000.
FNBA filed a timely motion for judgment n.o.v. It raised sufficiency of the evidence, foreseeability, proximate cause and remote and speculative damages. Specifically, FNBA asserted that by its verdict for defendant on the promissory estoppel claim the jury had “rejected any contention that the bank officials promised to notify Pew in the event Fenwick officials attempted to secure a release.”
II. Negligence; the promissory estoppel verdict
The district court found that the existence of a duty from the bank to Pew was “negatived” by the evidence and by the verdict of the jury on the promissory estoppel claim.
First, with respect to the evidence. We have described the evidence that, viewed in the light most favorable to Pew, permitted the jury to find that the bank undertook a duty. Even if there had been a conflict in the evidence of whether Derrick made (and reiterated) promises to Hearn and his lawyer, the jury would have been entitled to accept the testimony of Hearn and attorney Martin. But there was no conflict. Derrick did not deny making the promises that Hearn and Martin described. Derrick testified only that he could not specifically recall what he said but that he did not believe he would have given such assurances. The permissible inference that the bank did undertake a duty to keep the assignments in effect is corroborated by Derrick‘s statements and actions after he learned, to his surprise, that the assignments had been released by Metz. It is supported further by Derrick‘s view that Fenwick could not by itself release the assignments.
Turning to the jury‘s verdict in favor of the bank on the promissory estoppel count, the judge gave a multiple effect to it. First, she held, “[p]robably, the jury returned a verdict for the Plaintiff on the negligence claim because it was not called upon to separately determine the existence10 of [a] duty as an element of that cause of action.”
The court had instructed the jury on negligence as follows:
All right, now I am going to turn to the plaintiff‘s negligence claim, and this claim is also premised on Pew‘s claim that the bank had undertaken to notify Pew before releasing the assignments in question. In order to recover on a negligence claim, the plaintiff must prove by a preponderance of the evidence each of the following: first, that the defendant was negligent; secondly, that such negligence was the proximate or legal cause of the damage sustained by the plaintiff; third, that the damage to the plaintiff was foreseeable to the defendant.
FNBA did not object to this instruction nor did it contend in its motion for judgment n.o.v. that the jury had not been properly charged.10 It was, therefore, too late, on motion for judgment n.o.v., to speculate that the jury may not have understood that it was called on to determine the existence of a duty as an element of negligence when it had not been instructed to do so.11
The second effect given to the promissory estoppel verdict concerned reliance. The court held: “[B]y its verdict on the promissory estoppel count, the jury implicitly indicated its rejection of reasonable reliance on a promise, which would be essential to the finding of a legal duty [to support the negligence claim],” and “the jury likely determined that Pew‘s reliance on the bank not to allow the assignment to be released was not reasonable under the cir
Don‘t worry about that.... Look, we froze the bank account, guys. Don‘t worry, we are not going to let these assignments out the back door.
(Tr. 402.)
Hearn described his efforts to get Buckhead to warn the Augusta branch about-a possible effort by Lipscomb to release the assignments. There was no reason for these requests, or for a warning, if Pew was not relying on the assignments.
Moreover, it would be anomalous to conclude that the evidence was not sufficient to support an inference that Pew relied upon promises to keep the assignments in effect when the bank itself acknowledged that it relied on the assignments to protect it in its role as creditor of Pew. Hearn testified that he told FNBA the assignments protected not only Pew but Pew‘s ability to pay its loan to FNBA as well (Tr. 91). The bank repeatedly asked Hearn for accounting on its own jobs and the Fenwick jobs to show what Pew‘s cash flow was from each source (Tr. 205). The bank acknowledged that its loans to Pew were secured by all of Pew‘s accounts receivable, including funds coming to Pew out of the Fenwick jobs (Tr. 340-41). Derrick wanted to keep the Buckhead account open because the Fenwick funds would boost Pew‘s cash flow. Attorney Martin related that Derrick assured him and Hearn that “obviously” the bank was not going to release the assignments, because it had made loans to Pew (Tr. 399).
There is no substantial evidence tending to show that Pew did not rely, or that its reliance was unreasonable.
The court‘s holdings on reliance seem to imply that the negligence and promissory estoppel verdicts had to be consistent, and that the negligence verdict failed because they were not.
The court also held that Pew‘s damages were not proximately caused by the release of the assignments, stating,
It appears that the jury agreed with the bank‘s argument that if any commitment was made by [FNBA‘s] officials, it did not extend to the unforeseen occurrence of the release of the assignments by the Augusta bank official who was not fully informed of events in Atlanta.
But, under the evidence, possible release of the assignments by the Augusta branch were not unforeseen. Derrick was twice asked to warn Augusta of this possibility, and he did not. Moreover, the undertaking of the bank to Pew was an undertaking of the bank, not of a single branch. Also, a bank witness acknowledged that Metz should not have acted without checking with Atlanta, and that his failure violatеd standard operating procedure. Metz was irate that Atlanta had failed to warn him of what it knew.
FNBA asserts that if it did breach a duty that it owed Pew, because of Lipscomb‘s intervening criminal act the breach was not the proximate cause of any damages suffered by Pew. If the criminal act is foreseeable the defendant may be liable. Bradley Center, Inc. v. Wessner, 250 Ga. 199, 296 S.E.2d 693, 696 (1982); see also Sutter v. Hutchings, 254 Ga. 194, 327 S.E.2d 716, 719 (1985). This is a paradigm case of a foreseeable intervening wrongful act. Lipscomb‘s wrongful diversion of contract proceeds was exactly the risk Pew sought to prevent by having the assignments in place, and the bank knew this.
III. Damages
The jury awarded Pew the following damages:
| Legal fees from September 27, 1983 through June 30, 1985 seeking to recover lost funds: | $ 22,400 |
| Payments due Fireman‘s Fund under bond including legal fees, for expenses incurred in completion of projects: | $ 45,600 |
| Additional telephone and travel expenses incurred in effort to recapture stolen funds and salvage projects: | $ 1,000 |
| Pew‘s share of profits on projects at issue: | $222,305 |
| Interest (9/21/83 through 11/15/88 at prime rate): | $156,903 |
| TOTAL | $448,208 |
The court held that the evidence on lost profits was speculative because Pew had relied on projections rather than actual data about “expenses incurred on the projects prior to the release of the assignments in order to compute expected profits had the projects been finished.” The district court found that the other damages were only remotely related to the bank‘s allegedly negligent act of releasing the assignments.12
The damages were, however, what Pew sought to prevent by the assignment mechanism. FNBA knew that Pew was depending on the contract proceeds to pay job expenses and ultimately generate a profit. The bank was aware of Hearn‘s fear of wrongful diversions, and it could foresee that legal help would be required to recover future wrongful diversions that might result from release of the assignments. Further, FNBA was intimately familiar with Pew‘s financial condition, and a jury could find that FNBA could reasonably anticipate that Pew might become liable to the surety if Pew‘s cash flow should be interrupted by another wrongful diversion by Lipscomb. We find that the damages for legal fees and additional travel and telephone expenses to recover the lost funds, lost profits for the Fenwick projects in progress, and payments to the bonding company were not too remote.
The district court also found Pew‘s evidence of damages concerning lost profits too speculative. Pew presented evidence on the profits it anticipated the projects would generate, based on estimated costs and the higher profit margin built into § 8(a) contracts. FNBA contends that Pew should have been required to present evidence of actual costs for the projects, since they were completed. Hearn testified that the actual costs of the project were, however, substantially higher than expected because of Lipscomb‘s wrongful diver
Georgia law does not require a claimant to prove an exact dollar figure when seeking lost profits; it is sufficient if the facts provide a reasonable basis for computation. McDermott v. Middle East Carpet Co., Assoc., 811 F.2d 1422, 1427 (11th Cir. 1987). Pew provided documentation that was submitted to the bank to obtain loans on the projects and testimony about the higher profit margin that is built into § 8(a) contracts. The jury also heard expert testimony on the economic climate of the construction industry at the time of these events, which argued well for Pew‘s economic recovery. The record contains sufficient facts from which the jury could ascertain the profits lost by Pew because of FNBA‘s negligence.13
The district court‘s finding that the damages were too remote swept in the award of interest along with everything else. On this one item of damages we agree with the district court. Pew does not dispute that the sole basis for the award of interest is a provision in the agreement between Pew and Fenwick which states, in part:
All funds advanced by Pew to this date and during the term of this contract will draw interest at the current prime rate of The First National Bank of Atlanta if not repaid within sixty (60) days. No retroactive interest is to be charged and repayment of advances shall be made as rapidly as possible to hold down interest expense. Repayment will be applied to the oldest outstanding balance and interest will be billed monthly beginning March 1 to March 31, 1983.
Pew asserts that it did not receive the interest payments because the bank wrongfully released the assignments which led to Lipscomb wrongfully diverting the contract proceeds, which ultimatеly led to Pew not being paid the interest Lipscomb owed it under its contract. Pew contends that because FNBA had a copy of the Pew-Fenwick agreement on file the bank could reasonably foresee this chain of events, and that there is sufficient evidence to support this award. The only evidence, however, is that the bank had a copy of the Pew-Fenwick contract.14
IV. Evidence of value as a going concern
Pew filed a motion for a new trial contending, among other things, that the trial court erred in refusing to allow the jury to consider evidence that declaring bankruptcy had reduced Pew‘s value as a “going concern.” The court denied Pew‘s motion. Georgia does not permit recovery for damages resulting from the destruction of a business as a “going concern.” Molly Pitcher Canning Co. v. Central of G.R. Co., 149 Ga.App. 5, 253 S.E.2d 392, 398 (1979). The court did not err in refusing to admit evidence or in denying a new trial on this issue.
V. The theory that as a matter of law no duty could arise
As we understand Chief Judge Tjoflat, he contends that, even if the bank undertook to maintain the assignments in effect, as a matter of law no duty to Pew could arise that would support an action for negligence. His analysis appears to run this way: (1) The only assignments of federal contract proceeds permitted by federal statutes are assignments to banks, and there were no assignments from Fenwick to FNBA. (2) Fenwick and the bank violated federal law by representing to the government thаt there were assignments when there were not, and this false representation was part of a scheme in which Pew was a participant. (3) Because of this violation of law, even if FNBA undertook to keep the assignments in effect, no duty could arise that would support an action in negligence brought by Pew against the bank.
In our view these issues are not properly addressed in this case, but, if they are to be considered, the court does not agree with Chief Judge Tjoflat‘s conclusions.
None of the matters in Chief Judge Tjoflat‘s analysis is before us. None was raised by the pleadings, by the request for or grant of summary judgment, or in the first appeal, or at the merits trial, or on motion for judgment n.o.v., or in briefs, argument and submission in this second appeal. Nearly nine months after oral argument and submission Chief Judge Tjoflat ex mero motu raised these matters for the first time and directed the parties to file supplemental briefs, which they did.
There are many reasons why the court cannot properly reach these issues.
(a) Untimeliness. The issues simply come too late.
(b) The issue of illegality was not raised by the bank.
(c) Consideration of these questions would violate the law of the case and, as a matter of judicial administration and of relationship between circuit and district courts, would be inappropriate. When the district court granted summary judgment it necessarily decided that there were no genuine issues of material fact and then, with respect to the negligence claim, held that as a matter of law the bank was entitled to judgment because there was no duty on which to base such a claim. In the first appeal this court held that there could be a duty because there was a genuine issue of fact of whether bank officials voluntarily assumed the tasks of maintaining the assignments for the protection of Pew and of notifying Pew in the event Fenwick officials attempted to secure a release. We held that if such a duty existed the evidence was sufficient from which a jury could reasonably conclude that the bank‘s care fell below that required by law to protect Pew from unreasonable risk of harm. Arthur Pew Construction Co., Inc. v. First National Bank of Atlanta, 827 F.2d 1488, 1492 (11th Cir. 1987).
This court, in the first appeal, was aware that assignments had been executed and of the relations between the parties. If, as a matter of law, no duty could arise although the bank undertook a duty, the court would have affirmed the summary judgment for the bank because there would have been no reason for a remand. Also, the court‘s examination of the evidence and its conclusion that the evidence was sufficient to support a breach of duty would have been an exercise in futility. The reversal for a trial of the facts concerning assumption by the bank of a duty necessarily rejected the possibility that, even if the duty were found to have been assumed, as a matter of law the bank could not be liable.
Apart from the formal structure of law of the case, it would be highly inappropriate for this court, after reversing a summary judgment and ordering a trial, to hold in a second appeal after the trial (especially on its own motion and in opposition to the position of the parties) that the trial was unnecessary.
(d) Chasing the rabbit of illegality ignores our innumerable decisions that we will not consider issues not raised below and/or not raised on appeal, and—in this particular instance—not raised in a prior appeal and now eschewed by the parties.
Assume, however, that we are to reach the issues raised by Chief Judge Tjoflat. There has been no violation of the assignment statutes. They permit assignments to a bank. Under the undisputed facts, the assignment to the bank was an assignment for collection. Pew, Fenwick, and the bank intended that the bank was named as assignee to collect Fenwick‘s money and deposit it in Fenwick‘s account. An assignment absolute in form can be shown to be for collection only. Corbin, Contracts § 882 at 543 and 546. See U.S. v. Lester, 235 F.Supp. 115 (S.D.N.Y. 1964) (summary judgment denied because there was a triable issue of material fact whether the assignment in issue was absolute or for collection only). An assignee for collection will hold the proceeds in trust for the assignor. Corbin, id. at 545. In this case the bank was obligated to deposit the collected funds in Fenwick‘s account, and it did so. Neither the face of the assignment statutes nor their policy forbids assignment to a bank for collection.
Assume additionally that the assignments were not permitted by the statutes, a jury could find that Pew and the bank did not have the intent necessary to violate the false statement statute,
The mechanical application of the assignment statutes to create a shield for the bank in this case is out of keeping with the caselaw concerning application of the statutes.
[I]t should be noted that although the language of the section is broad, many limitations have been engrafted upon it. It has never been applied blindly, but rather, in each case, the Court has looked to the ratio legis to see whether the assignment involved was ‘within the mischief which Congress intended to prevent.’ Freedman‘s Savings & Trust Co. v. Shepherd, 1888, 127 U.S. 494, 505, 8 S.Ct. 1250, 1255, 32 L.Ed. 163 [(1888)]. Thompson v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 205 F.2d 73, 75 (3d Cir. 1953). The assignments to the bank did not deprive the government of the attention and services of Fenwick, nor was there a speculative acquisition of a contract by Fenwick followed by a sale to a non-successful bidder. See Thompson, 205 F.2d at 76. Under the commonsense approach described in Thompson, the statutes have been held not to apply in a host of situations. See list in Thompson, id. at 76. “[I]t is clear that not every assignment comes within the prohibition of [the assignment statutes].” Id. at 77.
Moreover, despite the bar of
The assignment statutes are for the protection of the government. They do not regulate the rights of parties to an assignment. United Pacific Ins. Co. v. U.S., 358 F.2d 966, 970, 175 Ct.Cl. 118 (1966). Whether or not an assignment is valid as against the United States, it is effective and binding on the parties. Id. “The legislation [
Additionally, there is an untried issue of proximate cause. A plaintiff may be barred where alleged negligence consists of the joint performance with the defendant of an act that is prohibited by statute. But where the acts are separate and distinct, even if contemporaneous and in violation of statute, the person injured is not barred from recovery unless his own negligence was the cause of the injury. Georgia points out:
The theory upon which an injured party is debarred of a right to recover when
injured while engaged in the performance of an illegal or criminal act rests, not upon the ground that he is performing an illegal or criminal act, either alone or jointly with the defendant, but upon the ground that his conduct is negligent and is the proximate cause of his injury. Even though negligence might be shown as a matter of law, the question of proximate cause may still be one for the jury.
Gaines v. Wolcott, 119 Ga.App. 313, 167 S.E.2d 366 (1969), aff‘d, 225 Ga. 373, 169 S.E.2d 165 (1969). For example, in Georgia, as in a majority of the states, a woman who consents to an illegal abortion may recover for the negligence of the person performing the abortion. Id. The proximate cause of the injury is the act of the performer. In this case, assuming that Pew‘s participation in the overall assignment arrangements were not permitted by the statutes and the participants had the intent necessary for a violation, there remains at least a jury issue whether Pew‘s participation was a proximate cause of Pew‘s injury. A jury might find that the sole proximate cause was the breach by the bank of its promises to keep the assignments in effect.
AFFIRMED in part, REVERSED in part, and REMANDED with instructions to reinstate the verdict for plaintiff except for the award of interest.
GODBOLD
SENIOR CIRCUIT JUDGE
TJOFLAT, Chief Judge, dissenting:
Respectfully, I dissent. I would affirm the district court‘s judgment in favor of FNBA. As a matter of law, FNBA could not have owed Pew a duty to maintain the “assignments” at issue in this case since those “assignments” were conceived and executed as a means to defraud the federal government.
I.
Under Georgia law, “[o]ne who, by a gratuitous promise ... which he should realize will cause another reasonably to rely upon [him to] perform[, as the other‘s agent,] definite acts of service ... is subject to a duty to use care to perform such service or ... to give notice that he will not perform.” Mixon v. Dobbs Houses, Inc., 149 Ga.App. 481, 254 S.E.2d 864, 865-66 (1979) (quoting Restatement (Second) of Agency § 378 (1958)); see also Simmerson v. Blanks, 149 Ga.App. 478, 254 S.E.2d 716, 718 (1979). Pew, relying on this voluntary-agency principle, concludes that FNBA, through its promise or assurance to Pew, assumed a duty to protect Pew‘s interest in the “assignments” by not releasing them to Fenwick; Pew contends that FNBA‘s breach of this duty damaged it.
Pew ignores, however, that there were, in fact, no actual assignments to FNBA of the contract proceeds due Fenwick from the government.1
Rather, Fenwick and
The evidence is overwhelming that Fenwick and FNBA misrepresented to the government the nature of their transaction in order to induce the government to deposit the funds in Fenwick‘s Buckhead account which the government believed belonged to FNBA. Shortly after Pew entered into an arrangement with Fenwick to manage and complete several of Fenwick‘s construction projects in exchange for a share of the profits generated, Lurton Lipscomb, Fenwick‘s president, wrongfully diverted some of the proceeds earned on the government contracts, which the government had paid directly to Fenwick, for his personal use. Pew, therefore, in order to protect its investment, needed to ensure that such diversions did not occur in the future. One way in which Pew might have been expected to protect itself would have been to seek to amend the government contracts to reflect Pew and Fenwick‘s joint venture arrangement2 and, therefore, to become a joint payee on the checks. Pew did not do so, however. Steve Martin, Pew‘s attorney, testified that the Small Business Administration (SBA) would not permit Fenwick to enter into a joint venture;3 Harold Hearn, Pew‘s president, testified that the government will make payments for its contracts only to the firm originally awarded the contract.
As Hearn indicated in his testimony, however, the Assignment of Claims Act provides an exception to the general prohibition against assignments of government contracts: a party that contracts with the government may assign money due or about to become due from a government contract to a bank or other financing institution, such as FNBA.4 See
As required by this provision, Fenwick, with the assistance of FNBA, represented to the government—using government forms promulgated under the Assignment of Claims Act—that Fenwick had assigned the proceeds from its government contracts to FNBA. This obligated the government to send payment on Fenwick‘s contracts to the account specified by FNBA in the “instruments of assignment” it sent to the government, account number 14389368 at FNBA‘s Buckhead branch in Atlanta.5 This account, however, belonged to Fenwick, rather than FNBA; the documents Fenwick and FNBA sent to the government did not disclose this fact.6 Thus, Fenwick did not actually assign its interest in the proceeds from its government contracts to FNBA: FNBA did not have, or acquire, any right to the proceeds from Fenwick‘s government contracts. FNBA did not, for instance, lend money to Fenwick and take an assignment of the proceeds as collateral. Rather, Fenwick retained its right to these funds—which were deposited in an account in its name—and owed a portion of them to Pew pursuant to their contractual arrangement.
If Fenwick and FNBA knowingly misrepresented to the government the nature of their transaction to induce the government to deposit the funds in Fenwick‘s account—and there is no reason to suspect that these parties did not know the true nature of their arrangement—this would violate
It is clear, then, that FNBA owed Pew no duty to monitor Fenwick in order to ensure that Fenwick continued the scheme at issue—a scheme whose main ingredient involved deceiving the government. Since FNBA owed Pew no duty to continue the scheme at issue, there can be no liability in tort for FNBA‘s release of the “assignments” to Fenwick. Therefore, the jury‘s verdict in favor of Pew on its negligence claim cannot stand as a matter of law.8
II.
The majority insists that the court cannot properly reach the issue of illegality. I disagree. We need not be concerned that FNBA never pled the defense of illegality. Illegality in this case is not a distinct defense but rather is intertwined with the duty issue. FNBA has maintained from the beginning of this litigation that it did not have a duty to refrain from releasing the “assignments” in question. Further, when it moved for summаry judgment, and again when it moved for judgment n.o.v.,
Moreover, I do not find it problematic that the district court did not mention illegality in its ruling on FNBA‘s motion for judgment n.o.v. Although we disagree with the rationale given by a district court for its decision, nevertheless, we may properly affirm that decision on other grounds. Federal Deposit Ins. Corp. v. 232, Inc., 920 F.2d 815 (11th Cir. 1991).
The majority also argues that the prior panel‘s reversal of the district court‘s granting of summary judgment and remand for a trial of the facts necessarily rejected the possibility of nonliability as a matter of law; thus, the “law of the case doctrine” precludes us from upholding the trial court‘s judgment n.o.v. based upon the rationale that FNBA owed no duty as a matter of law. Again, I disagree. The law of the case doctrine is the principle that “findings of fact and conclusions of law by an appellate court are generally binding in all subsequent proceedings in the same case in the trial court or on a later appeal.” Dorsey v. Continental Casualty Co., 730 F.2d 675, 678 (11th Cir. 1984). The law of the case doctrine, however, does not preclude the district court on remand or the appellate court itself on a subsequent appeal from considering matters that the appellate court did not resolve in earlier proceedings. Luckey v. Miller, 929 F.2d 618, 621 (11th Cir. 1991). The prior panel did not address the issue of illegality or the issue of whether a court could find, based upon the facts adduced at a trial, that the defendant owed no duty to the plaintiff as a matter of law; thus, we are not precluded by the law of the case doctrine from addressing these issues as we see fit.
It is significant that the prior panel was addressing a summary judgment while we are faced with a full record following a trial. The application of the law of the case doctrine principle “will, in accord with the rule‘s purpose of promoting finality, depend considerably on the stage a case has reached when it goes up on appeal....” Barber v. International Brotherhood of Boilermakers, 841 F.2d 1067, 1071 (11th Cir. 1988). We should be wary of applying the law of the case doctrine in any mandatory fashion. Foster v. Tandy Corp., 828 F.2d 1052, 1058 (4th Cir. 1987). “This is particularly true where the previous ruling has been on pre-trial motion, and the subsequent ruling comes after the full development of the case.” Id. This court has recognized that an appellate court‘s reversal of a district court‘s grant of summary judgment and remand for a trial of the facts says nothing about how the evidence should be viewed after a trial. See, e.g., Shelkofsky v. Broughton, 388 F.2d 977 (5th Cir. 1968) (reversal of summary judgment for a trial by jury would not preclude the district court from later entering summary judgment or judgment n.o.v. if the evidence offered at trial was insufficient to warrant submission to the jury).
The prior panel held that, on the record before it, a question of fact arose as to whether FNBA owed Pew a duty to maintain the “assignments.” The prior panel did not say, however, how it would decide the duty issue after reviewing the record developed at trial. The panel‘s mandate ordered the district court to proceed further to discover the facts; the district court carried out that mandate. We are now presented with additional facts, adduced through а full trial, that bear on the issue of FNBA‘s duty. A review of the entire record leads me to conclude that much of the activity at issue in this case violated federal law and, thus, could not possibly have given rise to a duty owed by FNBA to Pew. Nothing in the prior panel‘s mandate precludes this conclusion.
Even if I were to concede arguendo that the prior panel intended by its mandate to preclude the district court and any subsequent panel of this court from holding that FNBA, as a matter of law, owed no duty to Pew, I would still conclude that we could find no duty as a matter of law without
In this case, the evidence on subsequent appeal after a full trial was substantially different from the evidence that the first panel had before it; thus, the law of the case doctrine does not preclude us from concluding that FNBA was under no duty to assist Pew in continuing its illegal behavior even if the prior panel did not so conclude. Moreover, if the prior panel‘s mandate must, for whatever reason, be interpreted to preclude a finding of no duty as a matter of law despite overwhelming evidence that the transactions from which this alleged duty arose violated federal law and were undertaken with intent to defraud the government, then I would conclude that the prior panel‘s decision is clearly erroneous and would work a manifest injustice. Pew and Fenwick, in violation of
For the foregoing reasons, I respectfully dissent.
