OPINION
Plaintiff Lauren M. Pavlovich invested a small fortune in Rx Remedy, Inc. (“Rx Remedy”), a privately-held health care company, with a dubious financial record. A half-decade and a million-and-a-half dollars in losses later, Ms. Pavlovich now is trying to blame defendant National City Bank (“the Bank”) for following her investment instructions and those of her unscrupulous investment advisor, Cashel Management Company (“Cashel”). The District Court granted summary judgment in favor of the Bank as to all claims and denied Ms. Pavlovich’s motion for partial summary judgment. For the reasons sеt forth below, we affirm.
I.
In 1992, the Mooney family sold its business, Mooney Chemical. Plaintiff Lauren (Mooney) Pavlovich received approximately $2.5 million after taxes from selling her
Since the Cashel Contract precluded Cashel from having custody of her funds, Ms. Pavlovich simultaneously signed a Custody Agreement with the Bank that generally required the Bank to follow her written instructions regarding investment of the funds entrusted to the Bank. Also in 1992, a Trading Letter apparently executed by her grantеd Cashel “sole trading authority” over her “Fixed Income Account” and directed the Bank “to accept all trades from [Cashel] unless notified to the contrary....” 1
Pursuant to these three documents, in 1995, Cashel began directing the Bank to disburse some of her funds in Rx Remedy. This privately-held company sold health care information from its large database, published a magazine, and, starting in 1997, provided personalized consumer health news on the internet. Ms. Pavlo-vich’s initial disbursement purchased stock in Rx Remedy. As the millennium approаched, Rx Remedy became increasingly starved for cash. The company’s net losses compounded each year, and its owners’ equity decreased over seventy-five-fold in five years to a whopping —$37.8 million by the spring of 1999. Cashel heeded Rx Remedy’s calls for cash by, between 1998 until well into 2000, investing the money of Ms. Pavlovich and other clients each month in Rx Remedy promissory notes bearing 12% interest with warrants to buy Rx Remedy stock. 2 As she later testified, Ms. Pavlovich understood that this was a risky strategy; but it was one with the potential for а big payoff: by the summer of 1999, the company’s management propagated the prospect of an initial public offering (IPO) to capitalize on the booming demand for internet IPOs. That same summer Ms. Pavlovich and her husband agreed with Tom Durkin to increase her investments in Rx Remedy to generate more income.
To prop up Rx Remedy and conceal the true state of Ms. Pavlovich’s investment funds, Cashel devised a scheme of “rollover transactions” that eventually depleted her account:
Typically, аt the beginning of each month, Cashel requested money to be wired from the Account to Rx Remedy’s account; then on the last day of the month, a Cashel representative would hand deliver to NCB a check in the amount of the earlier wire transfer plus “interest” for deposit into the Account. This pattern of transactions would begin again on the first day of the next month. The net effect of these repeated transactions was that even before the fundsrepresented by the checks had been deposited into the Account, those same funds had already been wired back to Rx Remédy.
Pavlovich v. Nat'l City Bank,
On April 12, 2001, Ms. Pavlovich sued the Bank in state court in Ohio, alleging various claims under state and federal law. The Bank timely removed the case to federal court on the basis of federal question jurisdiction. She subsequently amended her complaint to assert diversity jurisdiction. Approximately a year after that amendment, she again amended her complaint to withdraw those counts presenting federal questions. Ms. Pavlоvich now appeals the District Court’s grant of the Bank’s motion for summary judgment on all claims, and denial of Ms. Pavlovich’s motion for partial summary judgment on Counts I and III.
II.
A. Jurisdiction
The District Court had diversity jurisdiction over this case pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1332(a)(1) because, when the suit was initiated, Ms. Pavlovich was domiciled in Florida and the Bank was a citizen of Ohio.
3
See Grupo Dataflux v. Atlas Global Group, L.P.,
B. Standard of Review
We review a district court’s grant of summary judgment
de novo. Nat'l Enters., Inc. v. Smith,
III.
A. Breach of Contract (Count I)
Ms. Pavlovich argues that the Bank breached the Custody Agreement by following Cashel’s purportedly unauthorized instructions to direct money to Rx Remedy. This claim is without merit because
Under Ohio law, contract interpretation is a matter of law when a contract’s terms are clear and unambiguous.
See Long Beach Ass’n, Inc. v. Jones,
The Custody Agreement required the Bank to “be responsible for the safekeeping of’ Ms. Pavlovich’s investment assets entrusted to the Bank. Paragraph nine of the Custody Agreement further provided:
The Custodian may safely rely and act upon any written direction delivered to it as provided herein, if purported to have been signed by me or by any one or more persons specifically authorized in writing by me and reasonably believed by the Custodian to be genuine. The Custodian may rely upon the continuance of any such authorization until notified in writing to the contrary....
In paragraph five, the Custody Agreement also limited the Bank’s obligations with respect to investment recommendations:
The Custodian shall have no duty to and shall not review or make investment recommendations with respect to any property held hereunder. The Custodian shall sell, exchange, invest, and otherwise deal with the property only as I may direct in writing.
As noted above, the concurrently executed Trading Letter gave Cashel “sole trading authority” over her “Fixed Income Account” and required the Bank “to accept all trades from [Cashel] unless notified to the contrary....”
The now disputed transactions involving Rx Remedy fell wholly within the framework of the Custody Agreement and the Trading Letter and persisted for several years without written objection. The Trading Letter provided written authorize tion, as required by the Custody Agreement, for Cashel to direct the investment of Ms. Pavlovich’s funds. Cashel exercised that authority by directing investments in Rx Remedy. The Bank had no reason to doubt the genuineness of Cashel’s authorization; after all, she had granted Cashel in the Cashel Contract “complete discretion” to invest her money.
See Yochim v. First of Am. Bank-Michigan,
No. 91-76283,
Even if the transactions were somehow outside the scope of the Custody Agreement and Trading Letter, Ms. Pavlo-vich ratified the Bank’s disbursements pursuant to Cashel’s directives, in the words of the District Court, “by accepting its actions and their consequences over the course of several years.”
Pavlovich v. Nat’l City Bank,
Ms. Pavlovich further argues that she did not ratify transactions occurring after a phone call from her husband to the Bank in January of 2000. In that conversation, Mr. Pavlovich recalled telling a Bank representative that “these transfers are not supposed to happen.” Even assuming that this instruction contained sufficient content to defeat ratification, the Custody Agreement prevented the Bank from heeding this direction because Mr. Pavlovich was not a party to the Custody Agreement and because the communication was not in writing as required by the Custody Agreement.
B. Breach of Fiduciary Duties (Count II)
Ms. Pavlovich claims that the Bank breached a variety of fiduciary duties
An agency relationship between the Bank and Ms. Pavlovich was created through execution of the Custody Agreement. Under Ohio law, there are four elements of an agency relationship: “Agency is the fiduciary relation which results from [1] the manifestation of consent by one person to another that the other shall [2] act on his behalf and [3] subject to his control, and [4] consent by the other so to act.”
Berge v. Columbus Cmty. Cable Access,
An agency relationship gives rise to those fiduciary duties within the scope of the agency.
See Miles v. Perpetual Savs. & Loan Co.,
In addition, having concluded that no breach of contract occurred, we cannot now find a breach of a fiduciary duty where Ms. Pavlovich has identified no applicable fiduciary duty separate from, and in addition to, that imposed on the Bank by the Custody Agreement and Trading Letter. It is well established in Ohio that “[t]he duties of an agent to his principal are dependent upon the agreement be
C. Unauthorized Wire Transfers (Count III)
Ms. Pavlovich’s unauthorized wire transfers claim also has no merit because Cashel had actual and apparent authority to direct disbursements from the custody account and because Ms. Pavlovich ratified Cashel’s directives. Under Ohio’s adoption of Uniform Commercial Code provisions pertaining to wire transfers, a bank must refund its customers the amount of any unauthorized transfers. See Ohio Rev. Code Ann. § 1304.59(A) (West 2005). A payment order is authorized if the person identified as the sender “authorized the order or is otherwise bound by it under the law of agency.” 4 Ohio Rev.Code Ann. § 1304.57(A) (West 2005). The official comments сonfirm that “[t]he issue is one of actual or apparent authority of the person who caused the order to be issued in the name of the customer.” Ohio Rev. Code Ann. § 1304.58 cmt. 1 (West 2005).
Cashel had actual authority in directing the disbursements. Actual authority is the authority that the principal intentionally grants to an agent.
See Nat’l City Bank v. Rhoades,
In addition, Cashel had apparent authority to direct the Bank’s disbursements. Apparent authority is “the power to affect the legal relations of another person by transactions with third persons ... arising from ... the other’s manifestations to such third persons.”
Master Consol. Corp. v. BancOhio Nat’l Bank,
Under Ohio’s agency law, a principal may ratify the conduct of her agent even if that conduct was initially unauthorized so that the conduct becomes binding
D. Negligence (Count IV) and Ohio’s Economic-Loss Rule
Ms. Pavlovich claims that the Bank was negligent in failing to administer her account with ordinary care and to safe-keep her investment assets. This negligence claim is barred by Ohio’s economic-loss rule in that, although there is privity of contract between her and the Bank, recovery for purely economic loss is not based upon a tort duty independent of contractually created duties.
Under Ohio law, “[t]hе economic-loss rule generally prevents recovery in tort of damages for purely economic loss.”
Corporex Dev. & Const. Mgmt., Inc. v. Shook, Inc.,
Ohio law prevents the recovery of purely economic losses in a negligence action either.where there is no “privity or a sufficient nexus that could serve as- a substitute for privity” or where recovery of such damages is not based upon a tort duty independent of contractually created duties.
See Corporex Dev. & Const. Mgmt., Inc.;
E. Aiding and Abetting Tortious Conduct (Count VII)
Ms. Pavlovich’s final allegation is that the Bank aided and abetted the tor-tious conduct of Cashel and others generally by executing Cashel’s instructions to transfer money from her custodial account. This claim also must fail because Ohio law is unsettled whether this cause of action exists and, regardless, Ms. Pavlovich cannоt establish a prima facie case.
It is unclear whether Ohio recognizes a common law cause of action for aiding and abetting tortious conduct.
5
Compare Aetna Cas. & Sur. Co. v. Leahey Const Co.,
Even if the Supreme Court of Ohio would recognize this claim, Ms. Pavlovich would not prevail. Section 876(b) of the Second Restаtement of Torts provides the basis for “modern application of civil aiding and abetting” and requires two elements: “(1) knowledge that the primary party’s conduct is a breach of duty and (2) substantial assistance or encouragement to the primary party in carrying out the tor-tious act.”
Aetna Cas. & Sur. Co.,
NCB had no duty to review the investment recommendations made by Cashel. Furthermore, Mrs. Pavlovich never shared her investment goals with NCB so as to make NCB aware that Cashel was perhaps overstepping its discretion ... and she never objected to NCB after receiving and reading her monthly statements. Additionally, neither NCB employee responsible for administering Mrs. Pavlovich’s Account saw anything to raise a concern of possible fraud on the part of Cashel. Finally ... Mr. Pavlovich’s January 2000 phone call was too vague to put NCB on notice of Cash-el’s tortious conduct.
In rather conclusory fashion, Plaintiff argues that NCB should have had a general awareness of the tortuous conduct after having observed the rollovertransactions, the rise and fall of the available cash balance in the Pavlovich Account, and the institution of the five-day rule in January 2000. However, this evidence, without more, does not give rise to a genuine issue of material fact. Plaintiff has not offered any evidence that these events were either caused by or the result of Defendant’s knowledge of tortuous conduct on the part of Cashel.
Pavlovich,
IV.
Since none of Ms. Pavlovich’s claims present triable issues, we do not address whether the Uniform Fiduciary Act, Ohio Rev.Code Ann. § 1339.03-.13 (West 2005), as adopted in Ohio protects the Bank from liability. For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the District Court’s grant of summary judgmеnt in favor of the Bank, and denial of Ms. Pavlovich’s motion for partial summary judgment.
Notes
. There is some dispute as to whether Ms. Pavlovich actually signed the Trading Letter. The copy of the letter in the record does not bear her signature, and she does not recall signing it. However, she maintains on appeal that she executed the Trading Letter, and, in any event, the document would have been required in order to have opened the custodial account in the first place. Taking the facts in the light most favorable tо Ms. Pavlovich, see Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(c), Ms. Pavlovich executed the Trading Letter.
; As discussed below, Ms. Pavlovich strenuously disputes this characterization, claiming instead that the Bank simply transferred money to Rx Remedy without a stated purpose at Cashel’s request.
. The District Court improperly cited federal question jurisdiction as the basis of its subject-matter jurisdiction. As noted earlier and discussed below in footnote 5, Ms. Pavlovich amended her complaint to remove all claims arising under federal law.
. A bank may also avoid responsibility for improper transfers if the transfer is 'Verified” pursuant to a statutory provision not applicable here. See Ohio Rev.Code Ann. § 1304.57(B) (West 2005).
. A cause of action for aiding and abetting tortious conduct is created, if at all, by Ohio law. Although the Bank argues that this claim raises a federal question, the Bank has fallen far short of convincing us not to apply Justice Holmes' statement, as more recently interpreted by the Supreme Court, that, in the “vast majority’’ of cases, a “suit arises under the law that creates the cause of action."
See Merrell Dow Pharms. Inc. v. Thompson,
