BayBank v. Vermont National

USCA1 Opinion





















No. 96-2200

BAYBANK,

Plaintiff, Appellant,

v.

VERMONT NATIONAL BANK,

Defendant, Appellee.

____________________

APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS

[Hon. Douglas P. Woodlock, U.S. District Judge]

____________________

Before

Torruella, Chief Judge,
Bownes, Senior Circuit Judge,
and Stahl, Circuit Judge.

____________________

John J. Kuzinevich with whom Is aac H. Peres and Kuzinevich & Miller,
P.C. were on brief for appellant.
Robert W. Mahoney with whom Joseph L. Stanganelli, Hale and Dorr,
LLP, and Potter Stewart, Jr. were on brief for appellee.


____________________

July 7, 1997
____________________






STAHL, Circuit Judge.

Plaintiff-appellant Baybank filed a seven count

complaint against defendant-appellee Vermont National Bank for

damages arising out of a failed loan in which Baybank had

purchased a participation.1 The district court granted summary

judgment in favor of Vermont National, and Baybank now appeals.

Finding no error, we affirm.

Background

In 1986 Vermont National made a $1,750,000 loan due

to mature on June 5, 1988, to Liftline Lodge, Inc., a ski

operation. In early 1988, Vermont National and Baybank began

negotiating Baybank's potential participation in the loan. In

April, Baybank consummated the purchase of an interest equal to

90% of the outstanding principal balance of the Liftline loan.

The parties executed a participation agreement and a

participation certificate to memorialize the arrangement.

The participation agreement contained several

inaccuracies. The agreement reflected a loan in the amount of

$1,417,500 with an origination date of October 3, 1986, to

mature on October 3, 1996. In fact, $1,417,500 represented

only the amount of Baybank's participation, the loan originated

on June 5, 1986 and was to mature on June 5, 1988. The




1. Baybank alleged breach of the participation agreement
(two counts), breach of trust, breach of fiduciary duty and
conversion. Baybank also sought declaratory and injunctive
relief against Vermont National.

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agreement made no mention of renewal of the loan upon maturity.

On June 5, 1988, six weeks after Baybank's purchase

of the participation and upon the maturity date, Vermont

National renewed the Liftline loan for a five year period to

mature on June 5, 1993. Vermont National continued to remit

and Baybank continued to accept without comment its 90%

interest in Liftline's payments on the loan. By February,

1991, however, due to a series of poor ski seasons, Liftline

defaulted on the loan and filed for bankruptcy.

Upon Liftline's default, Baybank cooperated with

Vermont National in trying to resolve the Liftline situation

favorably. Baybank neither demanded payment in full of its 90%

share of the loan nor asserted that it had never agreed to

participate in the 1988 renewal. It was not until 1993 that

Baybank first alleged that it never intended to participate in

the renewal and filed this complaint.

In its complaint, Baybank sought damages arising from

Vermont National's alleged breach of the participation

agreement. Baybank claimed that the participation agreement

did not extend to the renewal and, therefore, Vermont National

owed Baybank its 90% share of the loan at maturity on June 5,

1988. Baybank based its claims for conversion, breach of trust

and breach of fiduciary duty on this same allegation.

Alternatively, Baybank contended that, even if the

participation agreement extended to the renewal, Vermont



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National breached the agreement by failing to provide Baybank

with items of financial information as the agreement required.

The district court granted summary judgment against Baybank on

all counts. This appeal followed.

Standard of Review

We review the award of summary judgment de novo. See

Ortiz-Pinero v. Rivera-Arroyo, 84 F.3d 7, 11 (1st Cir. 1996).

Summary judgment is appropriate in the absence of a genuine

issue of material fact, when the moving party is entitled to

judgment as a matter of law. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(c). A

fact is material when it has the potential to affect the

outcome of the suit. See J. Geils Band Employee Benefit Plan

v. Smith Barney Shearson, Inc., 76 F.3d 1245, 1250-51 (1st

Cir.), cert. denied, 117 S. Ct. 81 (1996). Neither party may

rely on conclusory allegations or unsubstantiated denials, but

must identify specific facts derived from the pleadings,

depositions, answers to interrogatories, admissions and

affidavits to demonstrate either the existence or absence of an

issue of fact. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(c) & (e).

Discussion

The central issue this case raises is whether the

participation agreement contemplated Baybank's participation in

the renewal. Finding the agreement ambiguous, the district

court admitted extrinsic evidence of the parties' intent as an

aid in its construction of the agreement. The court concluded



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that Baybank had agreed to participate in the renewal. On

al Baybank contends that the contract was not ambiguous,

and that even if it was, the evidence at a minimum precluded

summary judgment on its claims. We examine each of Baybank's

arguments in turn.

A. Was the Participation Agreement Ambiguous?

T appe he parties agree that pursuant to the participation

agreement, Vermont law governs this dispute. See Miniter Ins.

Agency, Inc. v. Ohio Indemnity Co., 112 F.3d 1240, 1245 (1st

Cir. 1997) (indicating that where parties agree as to what law

governs, federal court sitting in diversity is free to forego

an independent analysis and may accept the parties' agreement).

The parties also agree that the participation agreement

misidentified several terms of the actual agreement,

specifically, the amount of the loan and the origination and

maturity dates. Baybank characterizes these as "scrivener's

errors" and contends that under Vermont law the participation

agreement reflects no substantive ambiguity.

In Vermont, whether a contract is ambiguous is a

question of law.2 See Breslauer v. Fayston Sch. Dist., 659




2. The parties agree that we should construe the
participation agreement under general contract principles.
See, e.g., Den Norske Bank v. First Nat'l Bank of Boston, 75
F.3d 49, 52 (1st Cir. 1996) (applying general contract
principles under Massachusetts law to analyze disputed
participation agreement). Neither our research nor that of
the parties has uncovered any Vermont authority suggesting a
more appropriate analytical approach.

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A.2d 1129, 1135 (Vt. 1995); Isbrandtsen v. North Branch Corp.,

556 A.2d 81, 83 (Vt. 1988). Vermont law, however, does not

restrict courts making that inquiry to the four corners of a

written agreement. Instead, courts may consider extrinsic

evidence of "the circumstances surrounding the making of the

agreement as well as the object, nature and subject matter of

the writing," Breslauer, 659 A.2d at 1135 (internal quotation

omitted), and will find ambiguity in the event that a writing

in itself supports a different interpretation than that which

appears when read in light of the surrounding circumstances,

See Isbrandtsen, 556 A.2d at 84. Both interpretations,

however, must be reasonable in order to establish ambiguity.

See id.

On its face the participation agreement seems

unambiguous. The parties, however, agree that the amounts and

dates in the agreement do not reflect their actual

understanding , and each party directs us to extrinsic evidence

suggesting competing interpretations of the agreement. That we

must resort to extrinsic evidence to determine the intent of

the parties renders the contract necessarily ambiguous.3



3. Without regard to the legal strategy of either party, we
note that neither of the litigants sought rescission and
reformation on the basis of mistake. In Vermont,
"[r]eformation is appropriate when an agreement has been
made, or a transaction has been entered into or determined
upon, . . . , but in reducing such agreement or transaction
in writing, the written instrument fails to express the real
agreement or transaction." LaRock v. Hill, 310 A.2d 124, 126
(Vt. 1973) (internal citations and quotations omitted).

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Baybank argues unpersuasively that consideration of

the participation certificate in conjunction with the

participation agreement renders the latter unambiguous in

Baybank's favor. We recognize that the participation

certificate, executed on the same date as the participation

agreement, correctly states the amount of Baybank's

participation and explicitly refers to the June 5, 1986 note

which had a maturity date of June 5, 1988. The participation

certificate, however, neither references the participation

agreement nor explicitly sets any parameters on Baybank's

participation. The certificate, in other words, does not

definitively resolve the agreement's ambiguity.

Even if we assume that consideration of these two

documents together results in one reasonable interpretation of

the participation agreement, a host of extrinsic evidence in

the record supports an alternative but equally reasonable

interpretation. Much of this evidence also bears on the

substance of Baybank's breach of contract claim and we discuss

it fully in our analysis of that claim. We note only that

Vermont law directs us to consider the circumstances



Reformation of this agreement would require a consideration
of any extrinsic evidence of the terms of the actual
agreement which the writing in question failed to record.
See Paradise Restaurant, Inc. v. Somerset Enters., Inc., 671
A.2d 1258, 1262 (Vt. 1995). Whether through reformation or
through a finding of ambiguity, therefore, we would need to
construe the agreement through relevant extrinsic evidence.
As the parties have chosen the route of ambiguity, we let
that doctrine frame our analysis.

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surrounding the agreement; it does not direct us to select a

single circumstance which if considered in a vacuum might

resolve the ambiguity. See Breslauer, 659 A.2d at 1135

(directing courts to consider evidence on the circumstances

surrounding the making of the agreement as well as the object,

nature and subject matter of the agreement itself).

B. Does the Participation Agreement Contemplate the Renewal?

Courts faced with ambiguity in a contract resort to

"subordinate rules of construction," see Isbrandtsen, 556 A.2d

at 85, including consideration of extrinsic evidence, see

Abbiati v. Bu ttura & Sons, Inc., 639 A.2d 988, 991 (Vt. 1994),

to determine the proper construction of the contract. The

proper construction is that which reflects or effectuates the

intent of the parties. See Abbiati, 639 A.2d at 991. In any

given case relevance guides the use of extrinsic evidence.

Some of the same evidence that may bear on whether a written

contract is ambiguous may also cast light on the proper

interpretation of the language upon a finding of ambiguity.

See, e.g., id. at 991 (indicating that circumstances under

which the contract arose are relevant in determining intent of

parties).

Generally, the construction of a contract is a

question of law. See Morriseau v. Fayette, 670 A.2d 820, 826

(Vt. 1995). "[W]here the meaning of a contract is uncertain,"

however, "the intent of the parties becomes a question of



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fact." Housi ng Vt. v. Goldsmith & Morris, 685 A.2d 1086, 1088

(Vt. 1996). In this case, therefore, we must determine whether

the record contains sufficient evidence from which a reasonable

jury could conclude that Baybank did not intend to participate

in the renewal. We conclude that the record in this case

allows for no such dispute. Instead it reflects that the

parties intended the participation agreement to extend to the

renewal, and, therefore, the district court appropriately

granted summary judgment in favor of Vermont National.

From Baybank's negotiations with Vermont National

prior to June 5, 1988, the date that Baybank now claims marked

the end of its participation period, until September of 1993,

when Baybank filed its complaint, Baybank repeatedly reaffirmed

its understanding that its participation extended to the

renewal. George Todd Marchant, Vice President in Baybank's

commercial loan department and member of Baybank's loan

committee, negotiated the initial participation agreement with

Louis Dunham, Executive Vice President of Vermont National.4

Marchant testified that he and Dunham discussed the anticipated

renewal of the Liftline loan scheduled to occur six weeks after

Baybank purchased its participation, and that the loan

committee's approval of participation in the Liftline loan






4. The loan committee at Baybank had final authority to
approve loans in which Baybank sought to participate.

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included participation in the renewal.5 Marchant further

testified that a handwritten note in the top corner of one of

the loan documents produced from Baybank's file read "per Lou,

this note will be renewed on the same terms."6

From September 1991 to spring 1993, David Hobert,

then an account officer with Baybank, served as the

participating agent in the loan. In this capacity, Hobert

oversaw the relationship between Baybank and Vermont National

pertinent to the Liftline loan and worked with officials at

Vermont National "in administering the direction of the loan

and foreclosure." Hobert testified that when he assumed

oversight of the loan, nearly two years after the maturity date

to which Baybank now clings, "it was understood that [Baybank]

had a 90% participation."

On behalf of Baybank, Hobert worked closely with

Vermont National as the two banks considered their options and

planned their workout strategies.7 Hobert visited the Liftline



5. Marchant testified that he recalled a three year renewal
rather than the five year renewal Vermont National asserts.
To the extent that fact is in dispute, it is not material to
Baybank's claim; Baybank does not dispute the length of time
of any renewal to which it agreed. Instead, Baybank argues,
it never agreed to any renewal at all.

6. The testimony of Louis Dunham, Executive Vice President
of Vermont National, corroborates Marchant's understanding of
the scope of the participation.

7. Interestingly, rather than immediately file the present
complaint against Vermont National, shortly after default
Baybank filed suit in state court in Massachusetts against
guarantors of the loan.

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lodge in 1992, nearly four years after the maturity date

Baybank claims, to examine the collateral and participate in

negotiations with the lodge owners on clearing the debt.

Hobert testified that he made this trip because Baybank "was a

90% participant in the loan," and he was invited to inspect the

property with the lead bank. On behalf of Baybank, Hobert also

proposed a settlement with Liftline's guarantors and proposed

that Baybank and Vermont National form a corporation of which

Baybank would own 90% and Vermont National would own 10%, for

the purpose of taking title to the property and other assets of

Liftline.

Documentary evidence from Baybank's files throughout

the life of the loan further undermines Baybank's renewal

claim. In October 1988 and again in 1989, Baybank sent Vermont

National "audit confirmation" notices requesting Vermont

National to submit information regarding Baybank's interest in

the Liftline loan. Both of the notices reflect a due date or

maturity date of June 5, 1993, which corresponds with the

maturity date of the renewed loan. Watch List Reports, in

which Baybank lists "troubled" loans requiring additional

monitoring, listed the Liftline loan and specifically indicated

an origination date of April 25, 1988 and a maturity date of

June 5, 1993.

As indicated, the question of the intent of the

parties to an ambiguous agreement is one of fact. See Housing



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Vt., 685 A.2d at 1088. In this case Baybank has failed t

any evidence that would place its intent t

n the renewal in dispute. Instead, the record in o identify o participate i

this case establishes beyond question that Baybank intended to

and did participate in the renewal of the Liftline loan.

Accordingly, the district court correctly granted summary

judgment in favor of Vermont National.8


C. Did Vermont National Commit Other Breaches of the
Participation Agreement?

Baybank contends that even if the participation

agreement did extend to the renewal, Vermont National breached

the agreement by failing to provide it with certain information

the agreement required. Baybank also claims that Vermont

National settled a claim against the individual guarantors over




8. Our conclusion that Baybank intended to participate in
the renewal also forecloses Baybank's claims for conversion,
breach of trust, and breach of fiduciary duty, all of which
Baybank premises on its argument that the participation
agreement required Vermont National to remit Baybank's 90%
participation on June 5, 1988 rather than roll the funds into
the renewal. With respect to conversion and breach of trust,
Baybank fails to establish that Vermont National did anything
impermissible with Baybank's participation interest. If we
accept Baybank's assertion that Vermont National had a
fiduciary duty to Baybank at least with respect to paying
Baybank its share of the Liftline loan proceeds, Baybank
fails to establish any conduct by Vermont National that
constitutes a breach of that duty. Vermont National
continued paying Baybank its participation share of the
monthly payments until the default, and Baybank continued to
accept those payments. After the bankruptcy court provided
Vermont National with adequate protection payments on the
Liftline loan, Vermont National forwarded Baybank 90% of each
monthly payment.

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Baybank's objection in contravention of the participation

agreement.9 We find neither of these arguments persuasive.

The participation agreement provides:

As long as the Participating
Bank continues to have an
ownership interest in the Loan,
the Originating Bank agrees to
regularly provide the
Participating Bank with complete
and current credit related and
other information concerning the
Borrower, the Loan and the
collateral securing the Loan . .
. .

Baybank points us to the deposition testimony of Kathleen

Mullin and David Hobert, Baybank employees who oversaw the loan

at different points during its existence. The district court

reviewed both of these sources and determined that they failed

to establish even a dispute of fact as to whether Vermont

National breached the participation in this way.

We need not revisit this evidence in detail. Mullin

testified that she could not remember specifically what Vermont

National had failed to provide and what she had or had not

received. Hobert professed no knowledge as to why Baybank had




9. Baybank insists that it adduced "strong evidence" that
Vermont National and Liftline did not actually execute the
original loan on June 5, 1986, but rather backdated the note
to reflect that date. According to Baybank, but for the
backdating, the note was actually in default, and the
participation agreement required Vermont National to inform
Baybank of any default. Baybank's brief, one-paragraph
discussion of this argument offers us no compelling reason to
repeat the district court's thorough analysis or to disturb
the court's legal conclusions.

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not received certain documents, specifically, whether it was

due to Vermont National's delinquency or that of the debtors or

guarantors. Mullin and Hobert simply could not recollect

exactly what information Baybank had in its possession, what

information Baybank sought and what information Vermont

National failed to produce. In short, we agree with the

district court that their testimony fails to raise any genuine

issue of material fact on this claim.

Finally, Baybank argues that Vermont National

breached the participation agreement by settling a claim

against the individual guarantors of the Liftline loan. The

participation agreement prohibited Vermont National from

"waiv[ing] or releas[ing] any claim against any Borrower and/or

against any co-maker, guarantor or endorser under the Loan."

Baybank directs us to the affidavit of Richard Butler, Senior

Vice President of Baybank, who claims that Vermont National

settled against the guarantors in contravention of Baybank's

instructions. This conclusory assertion simply

mischaracterizes the record.

The record reveals that on April 15, 1993, Mark

LaPointe of Vermont National and David Hobert met with

attorneys for the guarantors. Hobert, not LaPointe, proposed

a settlement but failed to reach an agreement with the

guarantors. A memorandum dated April 20, 1993, the veracity of

which Baybank does not dispute, memorializes this meeting. The



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guarantors then moved to enforce a settlement agreement in

bankruptcy court despite the fact that none of the parties had

agreed to final terms of settlement. Vermont National and

Baybank both opposed the motion. The bankruptcy court,

however, granted the motion, effectively forcing settlement

upon the banks. Butler's conclusory allegations fail to raise

a genuine issue of material fact.

Conclusion

Having found no error, we conclude that the district

court appropriately granted summary judgment in favor of

Vermont National on all counts.

Affirmed. Costs to appellee.





























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