Fleet Bank of Maine v. Prawer ( 1993 )


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  • USCA1 Opinion









    April 7, 1993 [NOT FOR PUBLICATION]


    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
    ____________________

    No. 92-1740

    FLEET BANK OF MAINE,

    Plaintiff, Appellee,

    v.

    HARVEY E. PRAWER and GILBERT PRAWER,

    Defendants, Counterclaim Plaintiffs, Appellants,

    and

    FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION,

    Counterclaim Defendant, Appellee.

    ____________________

    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

    FOR THE DISTRICT OF MAINE

    [Hon. Gene Carter, U.S. District Judge]
    ___________________

    ____________________

    Before

    Breyer, Chief Judge,
    ___________

    Campbell and Bownes, Senior Circuit Judges.
    _____________________

    ____________________

    Joseph J. Hahn with whom Bernstein, Shur, Sawyer & Nelson was on
    ______________ _________________________________
    brief for appellants.
    Alexandra L. Treadway with whom P. Benjamin Zuckerman and Verrill
    _____________________ _____________________ _______
    & Dana were on brief for appellees.
    ______

    ____________________


    ____________________

















    CAMPBELL, Senior Circuit Judge. Maine Savings Bank
    ____________________

    brought this action against appellants, Harvey E. Prawer and

    Gilbert Prawer, to collect money owed to it under two

    promissory notes the appellants had personally guaranteed.

    The bank alleged that Limehouse Corporation ("Limehouse"), of

    which Harvey Prawer was the president, defaulted on the notes

    when it stopped making monthly interest payments.1

    Appellants argued below, as the basis of their affirmative

    defenses and their counterclaims against the bank, that

    Limehouse stopped making payments because the bank had

    reneged on an agreement to provide even more financing for

    their real estate project. The United States District Court

    for the District of Maine granted summary judgment for the

    bank's successors in interest, appellees Fleet Bank of Maine

    and the FDIC, and we affirm.



    I.
    I.

    The district court found the following facts to be

    undisputed. In 1987 appellants Harvey and Gilbert Prawer, on

    behalf of Limehouse, of which Harvey Prawer was president,

    began negotiations with Maine Savings Bank ("the Bank") for

    the financing of the purchase and development of 122 acres of





    ____________________

    1. Limehouse Corporation is not a party to this action.
    The bank sued only Harvey E. Prawer and Gilbert Prawer in
    their individual capacities, as guarantors of one promissory
    note and co-makers of the other.















    land in Scarborough, Maine. Appellants planned to subdivide

    the property and market it as a planned residential community

    known as "Coulthard Farms." At the time of the negotiations,

    the total cost of the project was estimated to be $2,500,000,

    consisting of $1,000,000 for the purchase of the real estate

    and $1,500,000 for the construction of the infrastructure

    roads, sewers, water supply and other structures needed to

    transform the land into a residential community.

    On October 1, 1987, the Bank issued a commitment

    letter ("First Commitment Letter"), in which it offered to

    lend $1,000,000 to Limehouse for purchase of the Coulthard

    Farms property, for a term of "36 months, on demand

    thereafter," at an adjustable rate, initially 10.50%. The

    Letter specified that interest payments were to be made

    monthly. By signing the Letter, Harvey Prawer agreed on

    behalf of Limehouse to borrow the money "in accordance with

    the [] terms and conditions" of the Letter, including

    granting the Bank a mortgage on the property. One paragraph

    of the four-page letter of terms and conditions said, "This

    loan shall be repaid from the sale of the mortgaged property

    or its refinancing into a residential subdivision development

    loan."

    On October 15, 1987, Harvey Prawer, as president of

    Limehouse, executed a promissory note ("First Note") in the

    amount of $1,000,000 to the Bank. Both Harvey and Gilbert



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    Prawer, acting in their individual capacities, executed an

    unconditional guaranty of the First Note. The First Note

    obligated Limehouse to make monthly payments of the interest

    due and to repay the principal sum on demand after October 1,

    1990.2 A default provision defined "default" as including

    failure to pay any installment of the interest due and

    authorized the holder of the Note, in addition to the right

    to demand payment after October 1, 1990, to declare the Note

    immediately due and payable in full in the event of a

    default.3 The provisions of the First Note, while


    ____________________

    2. The First Note provided, in part:

    For Value Received, On Demand after
    October 1, 1990, the undersigned promises
    to pay to the order of Maine Savings
    Bank, a Maine banking corporation, the
    sum of One Million Dollars
    ($1,000,000.00), or so much thereof as
    may be advanced, together with interest
    upon the principal sum thereof from time
    to time advanced, . . . ; which interest
    at said rates shall be paid monthly in
    arrears on the first day of each
    succeeding month hereafter, with a final
    payment of interest when the indebtedness
    evidenced hereby is paid in full.

    3. The default provision of the First Note provided:

    In case of default in the payment of
    any installment of interest due hereon,
    including default in the payment of any
    applicable late charge, and such default
    is continued for a period of one (1)
    month, or in case of default in any term
    or condition of a Mortgage and Security
    Agreement of even date, given as security
    herefor, the holder hereof at its option
    may declare due and payable at once the

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    considerably more detailed, were consistent with the terms

    outlined in the First Commitment Letter; but the Note

    contained no reference to repayment from the sale of the

    mortgaged property or its refinancing.

    On the same date, the Bank and Limehouse entered

    into a Mortgage and Security Agreement whereby the property

    to be purchased by Limehouse for the Coulthard Farms project

    was mortgaged to the Bank. One provision of the Mortgage

    stated that, "Upon request of Grantor [Limehouse], Grantee

    [the Bank] may, at its sole option, from time to time make

    further advances to Grantor, provided, however, that the

    total principal secured hereby and remaining unpaid,

    including any such advances shall not at any time exceed the

    sum of Two Million Five Hundred Thousand Dollars

    ($2,500,000.00)."

    On September 7, 1988, the Bank issued a letter of

    intent to the Maine Department of Environmental Protection,

    vouching for the financial condition of Limehouse and

    appellants and stating that the Bank intended to finance the

    development of the Coulthard Farms project.

    On December 21, 1988, the Bank issued another

    commitment letter ("Second Commitment Letter") to Limehouse,


    ____________________

    unpaid principal balance hereof, accrued
    interest and late charges, as applicable.
    The foregoing rights shall be in addition
    to the demand right of the holder hereof
    after October 1, 1990.

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    offering to lend an additional $200,000 for a term of "12

    months with interest only to be repaid from the refinancing

    of the debt into a residential subdivision development loan."

    Appellants accepted the terms and conditions of the Second

    Commitment Letter by signing it in their individual

    capacities.

    On April 12, 1989, Harvey Prawer, as Limehouse

    president, executed a promissory note ("Second Note") in the

    amount of $200,000 "or so much thereof as may be advanced" to

    the Bank. Both Harvey and Gilbert, acting in their

    individual capacities, executed the Second Note as co-makers.

    Only $100,000 in funds was advanced by the Bank to Limehouse.

    The Second Note contained provisions for monthly interest

    payments and default substantially identical to those of the

    First Note. Like the First Note, the Second Note's terms

    were consistent with those outlined in the Second Commitment

    Letter, except there was no mention of repaying the interest

    from the refinancing of the debt.

    Sometime in 1990 Limehouse stopped making the

    monthly interest payments due under the First and Second

    Notes. The Bank notified Limehouse that it was in default,

    but Limehouse did not cure the default. On August 30, 1990,

    the Bank filed an action in Maine Superior Court against

    Harvey Prawer and Gilbert Prawer, as guarantors of the First

    Note and co-makers of the Second Note, seeking payment of the



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    principal and unpaid interest on both Notes. (Under the

    First Note the Bank alleged it was owed, as of August 9,

    1990, $1,000,000 in principal and approximately $32,900

    interest; under the Second Note, $100,000 in principal,

    $3,100 in interest.) On September 26, 1990, the Prawers

    answered the complaint, raised affirmative defenses, and made

    counterclaims against the Bank.

    Subsequently, Maine Savings Bank failed. The

    Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation ("FDIC"), the receiver

    of Maine Savings Bank, was substituted as the counterclaim

    defendant, and Fleet Bank of Maine ("Fleet"), the purchaser

    of the Bank's assets, was substituted as the plaintiff. The

    case was removed by the FDIC to the United States District

    Court for the District of Maine.

    In September 1991, plaintiff Fleet filed a motion

    for summary judgment. Counterclaim defendant FDIC filed its

    motion for summary judgment in February 1992. The district

    court granted both motions on April 3, 1992, finding that the

    Prawers' affirmative defenses and counterclaims turned on the

    same question: whether the two Commitment Letters issued by

    the Bank conditioned repayment of the Notes upon the Bank's

    ultimate refinancing of the debt. The district court held

    that the D'Oench, Duhme doctrine prevented the Prawers from
    ______________

    using the Commitment Letters to defend against the efforts by

    Fleet and the FDIC to collect on the facially unqualified



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    Notes. See D'Oench, Duhme & Co. v. FDIC, 315 U.S. 447
    ___ ______________________ ____

    (1942). The Prawers appeal from the district court's order.4

    II.
    II.

    We review the district court's grant of summary

    judgment de novo, looking at the record in the light most
    __ ____

    favorable to appellants. August v. Offices Unlimited, Inc.,
    ______ _______________________

    981 F.2d 576, 580 (1st Cir. 1992). The district court based

    summary judgment on the D'Oench, Duhme doctrine, but "we need
    ______________

    not limit ourselves to the exact grounds for decision

    utilized below. We are free, on appeal, to affirm a judgment

    on any independently sufficient ground." Aunyx Corp. v.
    ___________

    Canon U.S.A., Inc., 978 F.2d 3, 6 (1st Cir. 1992) (quoting
    ___________________ _______

    Polyplastics, Inc. v. Transconex, Inc., 827 F.2d 859, 860-61
    __________________ _________________

    (1st Cir. 1987)), cert. denied, 61 U.S.L.W. 3620 (U.S. Mar.
    ____________

    9, 1993) (No. 92-1205). We do not reach D'Oench, Duhme here
    _______________

    because we find that appellees were entitled to summary

    judgment as a matter of Maine contract law.5

    Appellants admit that Limehouse stopped making the

    monthly interest payments due under the First and Second

    Notes, but contend that its obligation to make monthly



    ____________________

    4. The district court had jurisdiction over this matter
    pursuant to 12 U.S.C. 1819(b)(2)(A) and 28 U.S.C. 1331.
    This court has jurisdiction over this appeal pursuant to 28
    U.S.C. 1291.

    5. The parties agree that Maine law governs their
    respective rights and obligations, outside of the question of
    application of the federal D'Oench, Duhme doctrine.
    ______________

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    interest payments and repay the principal of the First and

    Second Notes was conditioned upon a promise by the Bank to

    provide financing for the development. While no such promise

    is to be found in the provisions of either Note, appellants

    point to the Commitment Letters as establishing such a

    promise. Because the First Commitment Letter stated that,

    "This loan shall be repaid from the sale of the mortgaged

    property or its refinancing into a residential subdivision

    development loan," appellants say that the repayment

    obligations under the First Note were wholly contingent upon

    the Bank's providing new financing for development of the

    property. Because the Second Note described the loan term

    as, "12 months with interest only to be repaid from the

    refinancing of the debt into a residential subdivision

    development loan," appellants contend that Limehouse's

    obligations under the Second Note were likewise contingent

    upon the Bank's providing of refinancing. Appellants further

    insist that interpretation of the Notes is insulated from

    summary judgment disposition as it is a mixed question of law

    and fact.

    A major problem with appellants' approach is that,

    under Maine contract law, a court does not consider extrinsic

    evidence in interpreting a contract unless the language of

    the contract is ambiguous. Portland Valve, Inc. v. Rockwood
    ____________________ ________

    Systems Corp., 460 A.2d 1383, 1387 (Me. 1983).
    _____________



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    The issue of whether contract
    language is ambiguous is a question of
    law for the Court. The interpretation of
    an unambiguous written contract is a
    question of law for the Court; the
    interpretation of ambiguous language is a
    question for the factfinder. The
    interpretation of an unambiguous writing
    must be determined from the plain meaning
    of the language used and from the four
    corners of the instrument without resort
    to extrinsic evidence. Once an ambiguity
    is found then extrinsic evidence may be
    admitted and considered to show the
    intention of the parties. Contract
    language is ambiguous when it is
    reasonably susceptible of different
    interpretations.

    Id. (citations omitted); see also Triple-A Baseball Club
    ___ _________ _______________________

    Assoc. v. Northeastern Baseball, Inc., 832 F.2d 214, 220-21
    ______ ___________________________

    (1st Cir. 1987) (summarizing Maine law of contract

    interpretation), cert. denied, 485 U.S. 935 (1988). Here the
    ____________

    contract terms the repayment terms contained within the

    four corners of the Notes are not at all ambiguous. In no

    relevant way are they "reasonably susceptible of different

    interpretations." Portland Valve, 460 A.2d at 1387. The
    _______________

    repayment terms are clear and unconditional: the maker of the

    Note is obligated to make monthly interest payments; failure

    to make interest payments constitutes a default; if the

    grantor defaults, the grantee may demand full repayment of

    the principal sum and accrued interest. There is no hint in

    the Notes' language that the Bank's extension of refinancing

    is a condition to full repayment upon default. Because the

    Notes are unambiguous, appellants may not rely on the


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    Commitment Letters to show that the terms of the Notes

    differed from their plain meaning. Id.
    ___

    Appellants argue that the Commitment Letters were

    incorporated into the Notes and thus the Letters' terms,

    including the Letters' references to refinancing, should be

    considered as part and parcel of the parties' agreement. The

    Letters were entirely incorporated into the Notes, it is

    contended, because the Notes "referred to" the Mortgage and

    the Mortgage "referred to" the First Commitment Letter. This

    overlooks the limited nature of the cross-references. None

    of the documents in question, nor anything else in the

    record, suggests that the parties intended to incorporate

    everything said in the Commitment Letters as conditions of

    the Notes. The Notes provided that Limehouse would be in
    _________

    default of the Note if it defaulted on its obligations under
    ___

    the Mortgage and Security Agreement. The Mortgage and

    Security Agreement stated that Limehouse must perform
    _________

    whatever obligations it had under the terms of the First
    __

    Commitment Letter. Neither of these references says anything

    about the requirement of monthly interest payments, the

    provision of the Note as to which Limehouse defaulted.

    Nothing is anywhere said that a failure by the Bank to meet

    its purported refinancing assurances in the Commitment

    Letters will constitute a defense to the borrower's default

    upon the Notes.



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    The Notes are at least partially integrated

    agreements for purposes of the parol evidence rule. They

    appear on their face to express the parties' final agreement

    as to the terms for Limehouse's repayment of the funds

    advanced. See Interstate Indus. Uniform Rental Serv., Inc.
    ___ _____________________________________________

    v. Lepage Bakery, Inc., 413 A.2d 516, 519-20 (Me. 1980)
    ____________________

    (applying test for integrated agreements and stating that

    question of integration is determined by the court);

    Restatement (Second) of Contracts 209, 210 (1981). Signed

    by both parties, the Notes contain detailed terms and

    conditions for repayment of the interest and principal of the

    loans, specifying schedules for repayment, penalties for late

    payments, calculation of the interest rate, and processes for

    handling defaults. See Restatement (Second) of Contracts
    ___

    209(3) ("Where the parties reduce an agreement to a writing

    which in view of its completeness and specificity reasonably

    appears to be a complete agreement, it is taken to be an

    integrated agreement unless it is established by other

    evidence that the writing did not constitute a final

    expression.") The lack of specificity in the Commitment

    Letters in addition to the time delay between issuance of

    the Letters and execution of the Notes (two weeks between the

    First Letter and First Note, four months between the Second

    Letter and Note) strongly suggests that the parties





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    intended the Notes, not the Letters, to be the final

    expressions of the repayment terms.

    "A binding integrated agreement discharges prior

    agreements to the extent that it is inconsistent with them."

    Restatement (Second) of Contracts 213(1); Astor v. Boulos
    _____ ______

    Co., 451 A.2d 903, 905 (Me. 1982) (applying Restatement
    ___

    213). If the references in the Commitment Letters to

    "refinancing" mean what appellants claim they mean that

    the parties agreed to make Limehouse's obligation to repay

    the loans contingent on refinancing of the debt then to

    that extent the Letters are inconsistent, prior agreements

    which are discharged by the partially integrated agreements,

    i.e., the Notes. See Astor, 451 A.2d at 905-06.
    ___ _____

    In connection with their counterclaims, appellants

    have urged that the Bank breached the terms of a binding

    contract when it failed to provide development financing and

    so caused an unspecified amount of financial damage to

    appellants. In support of this contention, appellants assert

    that the Bank "knew" and the parties "understood" that the

    Bank would make a development loan in the future. "Mere

    allegations, or conjecture unsupported in the record, are

    insufficient to raise a genuine issue of material fact."

    August, 981 F.2d at 580. To avoid summary judgment, they
    ______

    "must be able to point to specific, competent evidence" in

    support of their claims. Id.
    ___



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    Appellants point to only a few isolated fragments

    of evidence to establish the existence of the contract they

    assert: (1) the sentences in the two Commitment Letters which

    refer to "refinancing"; (2) the Bank's statement in its

    letter to the Maine Department of Environmental Protection

    that it was the Bank's "intention to finance the development

    of this project, once all requisite approvals are in place.";

    (3) the Mortgage and Security Agreement's provision that the

    Bank could, "at its sole option," advance up to $2,500,000 to

    Limehouse upon its request; and (4) oral statements by Bank

    officials on May 22, 1990, indicating that the Bank had

    changed its plans and decided not to loan Limehouse any more

    than the $1,200,000 already extended.

    "For there to be a contract under Maine law, the

    parties must have manifested their mutual assent to all of

    the material terms of the agreement." Maine Surgical Supply
    _____________________

    Co. v. Intermedics Orthopedics, Inc., 756 F. Supp. 597, 602
    ___ _____________________________

    (D. Me. 1991); Ouellette v. Bolduc, 440 A.2d 1042, 1045 (Me.
    _________ ______

    1982). "The terms of the contract must be reasonably

    certain, such that they provide a basis for determining the

    existence of a breach and for giving an appropriate remedy."

    Maine Surgical Supply Co., 756 F. Supp. at 602; Roy v. Danis,
    _________________________ ___ _____

    553 A.2d 663, 664 (Me. 1989). The asserted facts appellants

    rely upon are wholly inadequate to show the existence of a

    legally binding contract by the Bank to provide financing



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    beyond the two loans made. Unlike the loans for $1,000,000

    and $200,000, there is no commitment letter in the record

    which bound the Bank to providing development financing to

    Limehouse. Nothing is offered by appellants to show the loan

    amount, interest rate, period of repayment, repayment terms,

    conditions, or other material terms of the alleged agreement

    for this financing. Mere declarations of intention to enter

    into a future agreement which is, at most, what the

    statements in the Commitment Letters and in the letter to the

    Maine Department of Environmental Protection are do not

    create a binding contract. Maine Surgical Supply Co., 756 F.
    _________________________

    Supp. at 602. Appellants failed to establish a genuine issue

    of material fact over the existence of a binding agreement

    obligating the Bank to provide financing beyond the two loans

    made.



    III.
    III.

    In sum, the record is without material facts which,

    viewed in the light most favorable to appellants, would

    create a genuine issue under Maine contract law as to whether

    Limehouse could justifiably refuse to pay the amounts due

    under the Notes because of the Bank's nonperformance of its

    claimed obligation, as a condition to collection of its







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    Notes, to have provided development financing.6 Without

    need to inquire into the application here of the D'Oench,
    ________

    Duhme doctrine, we rule as a matter of Maine contract law
    _____

    that appellees were entitled to summary judgment in their

    favor.

    Affirmed. Costs to appellees.
    ________ __________________




































    ____________________

    6. We have considered all of appellants' other arguments,
    mostly variations on the same theme, and find no merit in
    them.

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