OPINION AND ORDER
Plaintiff Regions Bank d/b/a Regions Funding (“Regions”) commenced this action against defendants Wieder & Mas-troianni, P.C. and Peter Mastroianni (collectively “defendants” or “W & M”) alleging conversion and breach of fiduciary duty. W & M in turn filed a Third-Party Complaint against The Provident Bank, Inc. d/b/a Provident Consumer Financial Services, Inc. (“Provident”) and Morning Star Mortgage Bankers, Inc. and Angela Daidone (collectively “Morning Star”). 1 W & M now moves for summary judgment on the grounds that: (1) Regions’ claims are barred because *267 they are inconsistent with Article 4A of the Uniform Commercial Code (“UCC”); and (2) there is no issue of material fact with respect to the claims for conversion and breach of fiduciary duty. Regions cross-moves for partial summary judgment on the conversion claim. Provident seeks dismissal of the Third-Party Complaint pursuant to fed. R. Crv. P. 12(b)(6) or, in the alternative, summary judgment pursuant to fed. R. Civ. P. 56 based on collateral estoppel. For the reasons stated herein, W & M’s motion is granted with respect to the conversion and breach of fiduciary duty claims, Regions’ motion is denied and Provident’s motion for dismissal is granted.
BACKGROUND
I. Factual Allegations
The facts of this case are set forth extensively in our previous opinion, familiarity with which is presumed.
See Regions Bank v. Wieder & Mastroianni, P.C.,
II. Procedural History
On June 30, 2000, Regions filed a complaint in United States District Court for the Northern District of Georgia, Atlanta Division, (the “Georgia action”) against Provident and Morning Star alleging,
inter alia,
unjust enrichment, conversion and receipt of stolen property by Provident, and breach of contract, breach of legal duty, conversion and fraud by Morning Star.
See Regions Bank v. Provident Bank, Inc.,
On August 15, 2001, Provident filed a motion to dismiss the Third-Party Complaint arguing,
inter alia,
that this Court should stay or dismiss the entire present action pending decision of the Georgia action under the first-filed rule.
See Regions Bank,
DISCUSSION
I. Standard of Review
Under fed. R. Civ. P. 56, summary judgment may be granted where there are no genuine issues of material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.
See
fed. R. Civ. P. 56(c);
Anderson v. Liberty Lobby,
II. UCC Article 4A
UCC Article 4A governs fund transfers or wholesale wire transfers.
See
U.C.C. § 4A-102. This provision was enacted to “respond!] to the growing use of funds transactions and the absence of a ‘comprehensive body of law — statutory or judicial — that defined the jurisdictional nature of a funds transfer or the rights and obligations flowing from payment orders.’”
Sheerbonnet, Ltd. v. Am. Exp. Bank, Ltd.,
Regions’ claims are based on a series of transactions in which they transferred funds to an escrow account, set up and managed by W
&
M, acting as Morning Star’s settlement agent pursuant to a Warehouse Security Agreement and warehouse line of credit between Regions and Morning Star.
See Regions Bank,
III. Conversion
“In New York, ‘[conversion occurs when a defendant exercises unauthorized dominion over personal property in interference with a plaintiffs legal title or superior right of possession.’ ”
Newbro v. Freed,
W
&
M was a mortgage banker retained by Morning Star to close mortgage loans. (Defs. Rule 56.1 Stmt. ¶ 1; PI. Rule 56.1 Stmt. ¶ 1.) Mortgage banking clients, including Morning Star, would have loan funds deposited, often by wire transfer, into W
&
M’s attorney trust account maintained by W
&
M at Fleet Bank. (Mastroianni Aff. ¶¶ 2, 3.) It is undisputed that “[o]n any given day, multiple deposits were made into the W & M Trust Account for multiple loan transactions that W
&
M was retained to close on behalf of Morning Star and its other mortgage banking clients.”
(Id.
¶ 4;
see
Defs. Rule 56.1 Stmt.H.4; PI. Rule 56.1 Stmt. ¶ 4.) The money from Regions was deposited into W & M’s escrow account at the direction of and for the benefit of Morning Star. As the Eleventh Circuit ruled in
Regions Bank,
IV. Breach of Fiduciary Duty
W & M argues that no fiduciary duty arose between it and Regions because: (1) *270 the deposit was a unilateral, arm-length business transaction; (2) there was no agreement between W & M and Regions; (3) it was never specified that the funds were to be held in escrow; (4) W & M was acting as Morning Star’s agent and owed no duty to Regions to check with them before wiring the funds to Provident; and (5) the proximate cause of Regions’ loss was the criminal and fraudulent conduct of Morning Star and its president. (Defs. Mem. Supp. Mot. Summ. J. at 11-12.) In response, Regions argues that W & M owed a duty to Regions to return the funds when the closing did not take place or, at the least, W & M assumed such a duty when it attempted to recover the funds for Regions. (PL Mem. Opp. Mot. Summ. J. at 19-23.) In the Complaint, Regions alleges that defendants owed it a fiduciary duty as an escrow agent. (Compitió 25-27.)
In order to prove breach of a fiduciary duty in New York, plaintiff must demonstrate: (1) that a fiduciary duty existed between plaintiff and defendant; and (2) that defendant breached that duty.
Thermal Imaging, Inc. v. Sandgrain Sec., Inc.,
Although Regions may have reposed trust or confidence in W & M by transferring the money into the account, this does not give rise to a fiduciary duty because W & M never accepted a relationship of trust or confidence with respect to Regions. W & M was unaware that the funds came from Regions and received them to be held at the direction of Morning Star. When Morning Star told W & M that the realty transactions would not be consummated and that the escrowed funds should be wired to Morning Star’s account at Provident, W & M was obligated to comply. W & M was not a party to nor even aware of the Warehouse Security Agreement between Regions and Morning Star and it certainly was not a guarantor of Regions’ loans to Morning Star.
There was no agreement of any kind, express or implied, between Regions and W & M. Any subjective, uncommunicated intent that Regions may have had to form an escrow agreement did not bind W & M in a fiduciary relationship with the unknown source of the deposited funds. W & M did not breach any fiduciary duty it owed to Regions. Therefore, summary judgment is granted for the defendants on the breach of fiduciary duty claim.
V. Third-Party Complaint Against Provident
As this Court has granted summary judgment for W & M on the conversion and fiduciary claims, there is no longer any basis for the contribution claims of W & M against Provident. Therefore, the motion of Provident is granted and the Third-Party Complaint is dismissed without prejudice.
CONCLUSION
For all of the foregoing reasons, the motion of defendants Wieder & Mastroian-ni, P.C. and Peter Mastroianni for summary judgment is granted, the motion of plaintiff Regions Bank for partial summary *271 judgment as to the conversion claim is denied, and the motion of Provident Bank to dismiss, without prejudice, the Third-Party Complaint is granted. The claims against third-party defendants Morning Star Mortgage Bankers, Inc. and Angela Daidone are dismissed as moot.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. Morning Star, although served, has never appeared in this action.
. In its opinion, the Eleventh Circuit reasoned:
Regions’s claims are based on Mornings-tar’s direction to Fleet Bank to transfer funds, illegally obtained from Regions, to Morningstar’s DDA at Provident. Because the wire transfers at issue here occurred via the Federal Reserve Wire Transfer Network, or "Fedwire,” which is owned and operated by the Federal Reserve Banks, Subpart B of Federal Reserve Regulation J ("Regulation J”), 12 C.F.R. §§ 210.25-210.32, applies. Moreover, Regulation J "incorporates the provisions of Article 4A” of the U.C.C. as set forth in the Regulation and "governs the rights and obligations of,” inter alia, "parties to a funds transfer any part of which is carried out through Fed-wire .... ” Accordingly, the provisions of Article 4A, as incorporated to funds transfers using Fedwire via Regulation J, apply to the circumstances before us.
Regions Bank,
§ 4A-104. Here, Regions, "the originator,” made three payments by wire transfer to Morning Star, "the beneficiary.” W & M, as Morning Star's agent, received these funds into its escrow account at Fleet Bank.
. Plaintiff relies on
Newbro v. Freed
for the proposition that an unauthorized wire transfer from one bank account to another constitutes conversion.
