Ent Credit v. Sayre
24CA0002
Colo. Ct. App.Aug 1, 2024Check TreatmentOpinion Summary
Facts
- Richard Walsh was injured after slipping on ice in the exterior loading bay of his workplace, owned by defendant Steel O-III, LLC [lines="23-24"].
- The premises were leased to Walsh's employer, Old Dominion Freight Lines Inc., which contracted Broadway Maintenance, LLC for snow and ice removal services [lines="24-25"].
- Walsh initiated separate actions against both Steel and Broadway, which were later consolidated [lines="25-26"].
- Steel argued it was an out-of-possession landlord and had no duty to remove snow and ice, while Broadway contended it owed no duty to Walsh [lines="27-28"].
- The Supreme Court granted summary judgment to both defendants, dismissing the case against them [lines="29-30"].
Issues
- Whether Steel O-III, LLC, as an out-of-possession landlord, had a duty to remove snow and ice from the premises leading to Walsh's injury [lines="27-28"].
- Whether Broadway Maintenance, LLC, had a contractual duty to Walsh that could establish liability for his injuries [lines="39-40"].
Holdings
- The court held that Steel O-III, LLC, did not have a liability as an out-of-possession landlord and was not obligated to remove snow and ice from the premises [lines="31-34"].
- The court affirmed that Broadway Maintenance, LLC, did not assume a duty of care towards Walsh as he was not a party to the snow removal contract and failed to demonstrate the applicability of any exceptions to its contractual obligations [lines="41-42"].
OPINION
24CA0002 Ent Credit v Sayre 08-01-2024
COLORADO COURT OF APPEALS
Court of Appeals No. 24CA0002
Mesa County District Court No. 23CV30168
Honorable Brian J. Flynn, Judge
Ent Credit Union,
Plaintiff-Appellee,
v.
Sayre & Harris Law, P.L.L.C., a dissolved Colorado limited liability company,
Defendant-Appellant.
JUDGMENT AFFIRMED
Division II
Opinion by JUDGE FOX
Grove and Sullivan, JJ., concur
NOT PUBLISHED PURSUANT TO C.A.R. 35(e)
Announced August 1, 2024
Brown Dunning Walker Fein Drusch PC, Neal K. Dunning, Greenwood Village,
Colorado, for Plaintiff-Appellee
Coleman, Quigley & Foster, LLC, Joseph Coleman, Isaiah Quigley, Stuart R.
Foster, Grand Junction, Colorado, for Defendant-Appellant
1
¶ 1 Defendant, Sayre & Harris Law, P.L.L.C. (Sayre & Harris),
appeals the district court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of
plaintiff, Ent Credit Union (Ent). We affirm.
I. Background
¶ 2 Ent is a state-wide credit union based in El Paso County.
Sayre & Harris, a dissolved limited liability company, was formerly
a law firm in Grand Junction. This case concerns Ent’s efforts to
collect an overdraft from Sayre & Harris’ COLTAF
1
business
checking account.
¶ 3 Sayre & Harris opened a COLTAF account with Ent in March
2021. That December, Sayre & Harris fell victim to an email scam.
The firm was contacted by a prospective “client” seeking counsel to
draft a purchase and sale agreement with a hospital for the sale of
respiratory ventilators. Given the national importance of
respiratory ventilators during the COVID-19 pandemic, Sayre &
Harris treated the transaction with great urgency. The client wrote
1
The Colorado Lawyer Trust Account Foundation (COLTAF)
administers Colorado’s Interest on Lawyers’ Trust Accounts
program, whereby interest on lawyers’ trust accounts holding
nominal funds or funds expected to be held for a short time is used
to support charitable causes. See Colo. RPC 1.15B.
2
Sayre & Harris a cashier’s check for $153,550 with instructions
that the firm wire $115,750 of the funds to an “inspection
company” so the ventilators could be inspected before the sale.
¶ 4 Sayre & Harris deposited the cashier’s check into its COLTAF
account with Ent. Ent granted provisional credit of $153,550 to the
account the next business day. Believing that Ent’s provisional
credit meant that the cashier’s check cleared, Sayre & Harris
directed Ent to issue a wire transfer of $115,750 from its COLTAF
account to a bank account in New York (which supposedly belonged
to the ventilator inspection company). The cashier’s check was
later deemed fraudulent, but not before Sayre & Harris’ wire
transfer was deposited to a bank account in Nigeria where it could
not be recovered.
¶ 5 Before initiating the wire transfer, a Sayre & Harris partner
called the bank that purportedly issued the cashier’s check to verify
its legitimacy. But by the time the issuing bank returned the
partner’s call to inform him that the cashier’s check was fraudulent,
he had already initiated the wire transfer from Ent to the New York
account. By the time the partner notified Ent that the cashier’s
check was a counterfeit, the fraudsters had wired the funds from
3
the New York account to the Nigerian account. An Ent employee
described doing “everything we could” to recall Sayre & Harris’ wire,
but the Nigerian bank did not answer.
¶ 6 When the bank that purportedly issued the cashier’s check
formally dishonored it, Ent alerted the partner, though he already
knew the check was fraudulent. The scam left Sayre & Harris with
a $114,540.14 overdraft in its COLTAF account. Unable to pay the
negative balance, the firm closed its account and was later
dissolved.
¶ 7 Ent sued Sayre & Harris for breach of contract, unjust
enrichment, and breach of transfer warranties under section 4-4-
207(a), C.R.S. 2023. It sought the overdraft amount of $114,540.14
plus interest and attorney fees and costs. Sayre & Harris asserted
several affirmative defenses, including failure to mitigate damages.
¶ 8 Ent moved for summary judgment, arguing that Sayre &
Harris’ membership agreement with Ent placed the risk of loss of
provisional credit on the firm, so it owed the credit union for the
overdraft. Sayre & Harris argued that two factual disputes
precluded summary judgment: (1) whether Ent acted reasonably
and with ordinary care in processing the cashier’s check, as is
4
required by the membership agreement; and (2) whether Ent timely
discovered and alerted Sayre & Harris to the counterfeit check.
Citing nonbinding authority, Sayre & Harris argued that Ent was
required to have reasonable procedures in place to detect a
counterfeit check.
¶ 9 Adopting a proposed summary judgment order drafted by Ent,
the district court granted its motion for summary judgment.
II. Discussion
A. Standard of Review
¶ 10 Summary judgment is appropriate when the pleadings and
supporting documents demonstrate there is “no genuine issue as to
any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to a
judgment as a matter of law.” C.R.C.P. 56(c); see also Nat. Energy
Res. Co. v. Upper Gunnison River Water Conservancy Dist., 142 P.3d
1265, 1276 (Colo. 2006). A material fact is one that affects the
outcome of the case. Han Ye Lee v. Colo. Times, Inc., 222 P.3d 957,
960 (Colo. App. 2009). “In determining the existence of an issue of
material fact, a court must view the evidence in the light most
favorable to the nonmoving party.” Id.
5
¶ 11 “The moving party bears the initial burden of showing no
genuine issue of material fact exists; the burden then shifts to the
nonmoving party to establish a triable issue of fact.” Westin
Operator, LLC v. Groh, 2015 CO 25, ¶ 20. The nonmoving party
may not rest on the allegations made in the pleadings and must
provide facts “by affidavit or otherwise” to show there is a triable
issue. Han Ye Lee, 222 P.3d at 960; see C.R.C.P. 56(e).
¶ 12 Summary judgment is a “drastic” remedy and may only be
granted where there is a “clear showing that the controlling
standards have been met.” Westin, ¶ 21 (citation omitted). We
review a district court’s grant of summary judgment de novo. Id. at
¶ 19.
B. Applicable Law and Ent’s Membership Agreement
¶ 13 “[A] deposit of money becomes available for withdrawal as of
right at the opening of the bank’s next banking day after receipt of
the deposit.” § 4-4-215(f), C.R.S. 2023. But a check’s depositor
remains the “owner” of the check until final settlement (as here,
when the check clears). § 4-4-201(a), C.R.S. 2023. The collecting
bank acts as the depositor’s agent until the payor bank settles the
check; thus, the risk of loss remains with the depositor until the
6
531 P.2d 966, 969 (1975); Mercantile Bank & Tr. Co. v. Hunter, 31
Colo. App. 200, 202, 501 P.2d 486, 487 (1972).
¶ 14 Until final settlement from the payor bank, any credit given
from the collecting bank to the depositor is provisional. § 4-4-201.
A collecting bank retains a security interest in the value of the
deposited item for which it grants provisional credit, which is
realized when the collecting bank receives final settlement from the
payor bank. § 4-4-210(a), (c), C.R.S. 2023. When a collecting bank
makes a provisional settlement for an item for its depositor, but it
fails to receive final settlement from the payor bank, the collecting
bank may revoke the provisional settlement and obtain a refund
¶ 15 A collecting bank must exercise ordinary care in sending
notice of dishonor from a payor bank. § 4-4-202(a)(2), C.R.S. 2023.
It does so by giving notice of dishonor to the depositor before its
midnight deadline following its receipt. § 4-4-202(b).
¶ 16 If a collecting bank has given provisional credit to its customer
for a deposited check, but the payor bank dishonors the check, the
collecting bank may
7
revoke the settlement given by it, charge-back
the amount of any credit given for the item to
its customer’s account, or obtain refund from
its customer . . . if, by its midnight deadline or
within a longer reasonable time after it learns
the facts, it . . . sends notification of the facts.
§ 4-4-214(a), C.R.S. 2023; see also Flatiron Linen, Inc. v. First Am.
State Bank, 1 P.3d 244, 250 (Colo. App. 1999), rev’d on other
grounds, 23 P.3d 1209 (Colo. 2001). If the collecting bank delays
giving its customer the requisite notice beyond its midnight
deadline or a longer reasonable time, the bank may “revoke the
settlement, charge back the credit, or obtain refund from its
customer, but it is liable for any loss resulting from the delay.” § 4-
4-214(a).
¶ 17 While a financial institution cannot disclaim its duty of good
faith and ordinary care, parties may, by contract, set the standards
by which the bank’s responsibility is to be measured, so long as
those standards are not manifestly unreasonable. § 4-4-103(a),
C.R.S. 2023.
¶ 18 Ent’s membership agreement, which Sayre & Harris signed,
mirrored the foregoing legal principles. It provided:
8
• “We act only as your agent in handling your deposits and
assume no responsibility beyond the exercise of ordinary
care.”
• “All items . . . credited to your account are provisional
and subject to our receipt of final payment.”
• “If final payment is not received, we reserve the right to
charge your account for the amount of such items.”
• “We shall have the right to charge back against your
account all previously deposited items . . . endorsed by
you that are returned to us unpaid, regardless of whether
the amount of the item has been available for your use.”
• “Amounts may be provisionally credited to your account
until we receive final payment.”
• “You waive any notice of nonpayment, dishonor or
protest regarding any items purchased or received by us
for credit to your account.”
• “We will not be liable if . . . your loss is caused by your
negligence.”
9
The agreement also provided that Ent may only allow a withdrawal
when the customer has “sufficient funds in [its] available balance to
cover the entire amount of the withdrawal.”
¶ 19 As to stop payment orders, the agreement stated that a
customer may ask Ent to “stop payment on any check” drawn upon
its account, but the stop payment order is only effective if received
in time for Ent to act upon it. It further provided, “If the stop
payment order is not received in time for us to act upon the order,
we will not be liable for failing to stop payment on the check.”
¶ 20 As to wire transfers, the agreement provided,
We may provisionally credit your account for [a
wire] transfer before we receive final settlement
for the transfer. You understand and agree
that if we do not receive final settlement for [a
wire] transfer, we may reverse the provisional
credit to your account or you will refund the
amount to us.
C. Summary Judgment was Proper
¶ 21 Sayre & Harris argues that genuine disputes of material fact
existed as to whether (1) Ent acted reasonably and with ordinary
care in processing the cashier’s check; (2) Ent timely discovered and
alerted Sayre & Harris to the counterfeit check, thus mitigating
damages; and (3) Ent complied with the procedural requirements of
10
its alternative breach of transfer warranties claim. We address and
reject each argument in turn.
¶ 22 First, Sayre & Harris argues that a genuine dispute of material
fact existed as to whether Ent acted reasonably and with ordinary
care in processing the cashier’s check and detecting fraud. But
Sayre & Harris fail to direct us to any binding authority or
contractual provision imposing that duty on Ent. Sayre & Harris
cites section 4-4-214(a), which provides that banks are liable for
losses resulting from their delay in notifying a customer of a
dishonored check. But Sayre & Harris knew the cashier’s check
was fraudulent and informed Ent of the fraud even before it was
formally dishonored. Sayre & Harris fails to explain how, given this
advance knowledge and that it informed Ent of the fraudulent
check, its “loss result[ed] from” Ent’s alleged delay in notifying it
once the payor bank formally dishonored the cashier’s check. § 4-
4-214(a).
¶ 23 Sayre & Harris also invokes the portion of the membership
agreement providing that Ent would only permit withdrawals if the
firm had sufficient funds in its account. But the firm ignores
provisions in the same contract notifying it that Ent would grant
11
provisional credit for deposited checks, which created a sufficient
balance to support the withdrawal. The risk of loss of that
provisional credit stayed with the firm until the check cleared.
Lamson, 531 P.2d at 969; Mercantile, 501 P.2d at 487. Because no
legal or contractual provision imposed upon Ent the duty that Sayre
& Harris claims it violated, its asserted genuine dispute of material
fact did not preclude summary judgment. See Sarrouf L. LLP v.
First Republic Bank, 148 N.E.3d 1243, 1253 (Mass. App. Ct. 2020)
(law firm victimized by an identical email scam was unsuccessful in
presenting a genuine dispute of material fact as to the bank’s
failure to detect that the check was counterfeit because the bank
had no legal or contractual duty to do so).
¶ 24 Second, Sayre & Harris argues that a genuine dispute of
material fact existed as to whether Ent timely discovered and
alerted the firm to the counterfeit check. Again, the firm fails to
establish that Ent had such a duty. Even so, the undisputed facts
establish that a partner at the firm learned that the cashier’s check
was a counterfeit one day after initiating the wire transfer and
immediately contacted Ent to inform it of the fraudulent cashier’s
check. But the partner’s efforts were too little too late; Ent was
12
unable to recall the wire despite doing “everything [it] could.” Ent
again contacted the partner when it learned that the issuing bank
formally dishonored the cashier’s check, though he was already
aware that the check was fraudulent.
¶ 25 To support its timing argument, Sayre & Harris claims that
the affidavit attached to its opposition to Ent’s summary judgment
motion created a genuine dispute of material fact as to Ent’s failure
to mitigate damages. We disagree. In the affidavit, the partner
claimed that Ent did not notify him that something “went wrong
with the wire” until “21 days after the wire had been initiated,”
preventing him from stopping it in time. But the affidavit itself
contradicts that assertion. Elsewhere, the partner admitted that he
contacted Ent the day after the wire transfer to inform it that the
check was counterfeit. Thus, we are unpersuaded that the affidavit
created a genuine dispute of material fact as to Ent’s failure to
mitigate damages. See Markus v. Brohl, 2014 COA 146, ¶ 50 (To
avoid summary judgment, the evidence presented must be
“sufficient to demonstrate that a reasonable jury could return a
verdict for the non-moving party.”) (citation omitted); see also
13
Raygor v. Bd. of Cnty. Comm’rs, 21 P.3d 432, 437 (Colo. App. 2000)
(conclusory affidavits do not create genuine issues of material fact).
¶ 26 Third, Sayre & Harris contends — with respect to Ent’s
alternative claim for breach of transfer warranties claim — that Ent
was required and failed to put Sayre & Harris on notice of the claim
within thirty days of discovering the breach. § 4-4-207(d). Because
Ent was entitled to the relief it sought under its breach of contract
theory, the district court was not required to address the alternative
theory for relief, and whether the procedural requirements
underpinning that claim were satisfied.
¶ 27 Because there was no genuine dispute of material fact, the
district court properly granted Ent’s motion for summary judgment.
See C.R.C.P. 56(c).
III. Disposition
¶ 28 The judgment is affirmed.
JUDGE GROVE and JUDGE SULLIVAN concur.
