A group of fleeced investors filed this suit more than 13 years ago. William Tully and some associates created a series of partnerships known as the Mid-America Energy Oil and Gas Program. Promoters pitched the program in hotels’ meeting rooms; no underwriter, dealer, or other financial intermediary looked out for these unsophisticated investors’ interests. The offering circulars said that funds would be held in escrow accounts at Purdue National Bank (now Bank One, Lafayette), which would safeguard the money until each partnership reached a minimum capitalization. Tully and his associates did not honor their promises. The Bank did not act as escrow agent, and the promoters didn’t wait for full capitalization (or, for that matter, invest the proceeds as the circulars promised). Ever since, the investors have been searching for deep pockets to make good the losses. The promoters settled with the investors in 1986. Other aspects of the case, such as the claims against the attorneys who prepared the offering circulars, also have been wrapped up, although not without some collateral litigation.
Insurance Corp. of America v. Dillon, Hardamon & Cohen,
The Bank was not a promoter or underwriter of the partnerships; it did not sign the offering circulars or have a financial interest in the ventures. (Although the parties call the offering documents “prospectuses,” this is misleading because the securities were not registered. See
Gustafson v. Alloyd Co.,
Indiana treats delivery of the property to the depository agent as an essential element of an escrow.
Nation v. Green,
Which bank the promisee uses for its checking account is irrelevant. Requiring a bank to restrict all deposits until satisfying itself that the depositor is entitled to the money would pour molasses on the gears of commerce — and with little benefit to people like the plaintiffs, for malefactors would just make sure that they did not maintain their accounts at the banks that were supposed to be escrow agents. Plaintiffs’ brief says that, when they saw that their checks had been paid through the Bank, they “were pulled [sic] into believing that their subscription cheeks were accepted by the partnership and that their monies were safe in an ‘escrow account’ under the protection of with [sic] Purdue National Bank.” Suppose a review of the canceled checks or some other event lulled the investors; so what? By then it was too late for them to stop payment on the checks; the promoters had the money under their control. Just so with plaintiffs’ contention that Gary Porro, former chief of the Bank’s Trust Department, told some of their number that funds were being held in escrow. Plaintiffs have not cited any case, in or out of Indiana, supporting the proposition that a promisor’s payment to the promisee, who maintains a checking account at a bank, can expose a bank to liability for a breach of a supposed fiduciary duty to the promisor. Our own research has not turned up such a case, and although no ease rejects such a duty either, so novel is the plaintiffs’ argument, we do not think that Indiana would endorse it. For reasons we have explained, plaintiffs’ position would create costs for all bank depositors without corresponding benefits. If plaintiffs wanted to urge such an original position, they should have filed the case against the Bank in state court, which could have resolved both the RICO claim and the state-law theory.
Tafflin v. Levitt,
AFFIRMED.
