Barclays Bank PLC v. Poynter , 710 F.3d 16 ( 2013 )


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  •              United States Court of Appeals
    For the First Circuit
    No. 11-2289
    BARCLAYS BANK PLC,
    Plaintiff, Appellee,
    v.
    THOMAS A. POYNTER, individually and as
    Trustee of the Leningrad Cowboys Trust,
    Defendant, Appellant,
    SIMPLY INTERACTIVE, INC.; THE TRANSITIONS GROUP, INC.;
    TRANSITIONS CAPITAL, INC.; TRANSITIONS INTERNATIONAL, INC.;
    TRANSITIONS CAPITAL INVESTORS, LLC; TRANSITIONS CAPITAL
    MANAGEMENT LLC; WAINWRIGHT BANK AND TRUST COMPANY; BANK OF
    AMERICA, N. A.; FIDELITY BROKERAGE SERVICES, LLC; CITIBANK, NA;
    BOSTON PRIVATE BANK AND TRUST COMPANY,
    Defendants.
    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
    FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS
    [Hon. Rya W. Zobel, U.S. District Judge]
    Before
    Boudin,* Hawkins,** and Thompson, Circuit Judges.
    Edmund Polubinski, Jr., with whom Lyne, Woodworth & Evarts
    LLP was on brief, for appellant.
    *
    Judge Boudin heard oral argument in this matter and
    participated in the semble, but he did not participate in the
    issuance of the panel's opinion. The remaining two panelists issue
    this opinion pursuant to 
    28 U.S.C. § 46
    (d).
    **
    Of the Ninth Circuit, sitting by designation.
    Michael D. Vhay, with whom Lauren Ann H. Pond and DLA PIPER
    LLP were on brief, for appellee.
    March 13, 2013
    -2-
    THOMPSON, Circuit Judge. With the help of a loan from
    Barclays Bank, PLC ("Barclays"), Dr. Thomas Poynter bought a
    custom-made yacht.           When he stopped making payments on the loan,
    Barclays repossessed the yacht and sold it. Barclays got less than
    what Poynter owed and so it sued him for the deficiency.                         Poynter
    moved for summary judgment arguing that Barclays was not entitled
    to collect because it had not provided him with proper notice of
    the   sale.         The   district   court       was    not    convinced;   it    denied
    Poynter's motion and sua sponte granted summary judgment in favor
    of Barclays.         Poynter now appeals.              Discerning no merit to his
    argument, we affirm.
    BACKGROUND
    We    state    the   facts   in     the    light    most    favorable    to
    Poynter,      the    party    contesting     summary          judgment,   drawing     all
    reasonable inferences in his favor. Pagano v. Frank, 
    983 F.2d 343
    ,
    347 (1st Cir. 1993).
    In November 2005, Barclays loaned Poynter 1.4 million
    Euros toward the purchase of a 2005 Oyster 62 Yacht called the Blue
    Beach. Poynter granted Barclays a first preferred ship mortgage on
    the vessel (the "mortgage"), which provided that Poynter would pay
    only interest for the first twenty-four months of the loan and
    installments of principal plus interest after that. Poynter signed
    the mortgage in Massachusetts, his place of residence and the
    location of the yacht.
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    A few years later, in 2008, Poynter sought to renegotiate
    the loan terms to allow him to continue paying only interest.
    Barclays agreed that Poynter could make interest-only payments for
    September through November of that year but said that was it.    But
    when his first principal/interest payment came due in December,
    Poynter failed to pay.    He was issued a formal notice of default
    sometime around March of 2009.
    Rather than repossess the yacht, Barclays decided to work
    with Poynter to sell it and, hoping to fetch a good price, they
    moved the Blue Beach from Boston, Massachusetts to Newport, Rhode
    Island.     But, after several months without a successful sale,
    Barclays repossessed the yacht.    Barclays moved it to Florida and
    listed it for sale with National Liquidators, a boat liquidation
    company.
    On February 5, 2010, Barclays sent Poynter a "Notice of
    Our Plan to Sell Property." Citing provisions of Florida's Uniform
    Commercial Code ("UCC")1 that relate to a secured party's rights
    after a debtor's default, the notice stated: "Further to the
    repossession of your 2005 Oyster 62, Hull ID #OYM0160KL505 in
    November this year, we herby [sic] provide notice of our intention
    to sell the vessel pursuant to Florida Statues [sic]: F.S. 679.609;
    679.610; 679.612, and 679.613.     The vessel . . . will be sold by
    way of private sale sometime after the date of this letter."     The
    1
    See 
    Fla. Stat. Ann. § 671.101
     et seq.
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    notice did not include a date, time, or place of sale.                   The notice,
    which indicated what Poynter still owed in principal and interest,
    went       on    to   state    that    any   remaining   balance   was    Poynter's
    responsibility.          It also said that Poynter had the right to settle
    up his debts and if he did, the Blue Beach would be released.
    Poynter responded the same day by email to Barclays's
    Marine Risk and Recoveries Co-ordinator, stating: "thank you for
    your note."           Just about two months later, on March 31, 2010,
    Barclays sold the yacht for 986,019 Euros.                 On April 22, Barclays
    informed Poynter of the sale and that the residual balance Poynter
    owed       was   683,297      Euros.     Poynter   ignored   Barclays's     balance
    request.
    And so, a short time later, Barclays sued Poynter in
    Massachusetts          federal    district     court.2     Barclays   filed    suit
    pursuant to the Commercial Instruments and Maritime Liens Act (the
    "Ship Mortgage Act"), 
    46 U.S.C. § 31301
     et seq., which provides a
    means for enforcing preferred mortgages in admiralty.                        Citing
    Poynter's default, Barclays sought to recover the deficiency.
    Poynter, after answering the complaint, moved for summary judgment.
    He claimed that Barclays was barred from recovering the deficiency
    because, in violation of the mortgage's terms, it did not provide
    Poynter with proper notice of the sale.                  Barclays, focusing on a
    2
    Barclays also sued several reach and apply defendants, a
    practice allowed under Massachusetts law, 
    Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 214, § 3
    (6), who are not parties to this appeal.
    -5-
    different mortgage provision than Poynter (more on who was relying
    on what to come), asserted that it did provide proper notice.    The
    district court sided with Barclays.      The court denied Poynter's
    motion and sua sponte granted Barclays summary judgment on the
    issue of liability.     Poynter now appeals the grant of summary
    judgment.
    STANDARD OF REVIEW
    We review orders for summary judgment de novo, assessing
    the record "in the light most favorable to the nonmovant and
    resolving all reasonable inferences in that party's favor."
    Landrau-Romero v. Banco Popular De P.R., 
    212 F.3d 607
    , 611 (1st
    Cir. 2000); Houlton Citizens' Coal. v. Town of Houlton, 
    175 F.3d 178
    , 184 (1st Cir. 1999).      A district court may grant summary
    judgment where "there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact
    and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law."     Fed.
    R. Civ. P. 56(a).
    ANALYSIS
    As we alluded to, Poynter and Barclays have different
    ideas about what kind of notice of sale Barclays was required to
    give under the mortgage.   To remind the reader of the more salient
    facts: Barclays sold the yacht pursuant to the Florida UCC; the
    February 5th notice of intent to sell was the only advance notice
    Poynter received of the sale; this notice did not specify where and
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    when the sale would be; the yacht was sold about two months after
    the notice issued.   We proceed to the arguments.
    To support his stance, Poynter relies on Section 4.05 of
    the mortgage, which provides in pertinent part that in the event of
    default Barclays may repossess the yacht and then sell it "at any
    place and at such time as Mortgagee may specify and in such manner
    as Mortgagee may deem advisable . . . after first giving Owner
    notice thereof ten (10) days in advance of the time and place of
    sale."3   Poynter reads this language to mean that ten days notice
    as to the time and date of a sale is required in all sales deemed
    advisable by Barclays including sales conducted under a UCC.4   Thus
    Poynter claims that the February 5th notice of intent to sell,
    which lacked a time and place, was insufficient.    The second half
    3
    In its entirety, Section 4.05 indicates that Barclays may in
    the event of default: "Take and enter into possession of the Vessel
    subject to this Mortgage, at any time, wherever the same may be,
    without legal process, and if it seems desirable to Mortgagee and
    without being responsible for loss or damage, sell the Vessel, at
    any place and at such time as Mortgagee may specify and in such
    manner as Mortgagee may deem advisable, free from any claim by
    Owner in admiralty, at law or by statute, after first giving Owner
    notice thereof ten (10) days in advance of the time and place of
    sale."
    4
    Poynter does not dispute (though he took a different
    position below) that Barclays was allowed to sell the yacht using
    the self-help repossession and sale remedies of Florida's UCC. Nor
    would such an argument be sound. Following a circuit split, the
    Ship Mortgage Act was amended in 1996 to provide that federal
    courts were not the exclusive means for enforcing a preferred ship
    mortgage and instead, the mortgagee could use state law self-help
    remedies (such as UCC remedies) to enforce the mortgage. See 
    46 U.S.C. § 31325
    (b)(3).
    -7-
    of Poynter's argument is that because the notice was substandard,
    Barclays should not be allowed to collect the deficiency.               For
    support Poynter relies on what he calls "the analogous area of real
    estate mortgages," claiming that Massachusetts law prohibits a real
    estate   mortgagee   that   does   not    comply   with   statutory   notice
    requirements from collecting a deficiency.           Poynter thinks this
    rule should apply to Barclays.
    Barclays counters that it was not in fact required to
    comply with Section 4.05's notice proviso.5          Barclays claims that
    it sold the yacht under Section 4.06 of the mortgage, which
    provides that Barclays may exercise any "rights, privileges and
    remedies granted by applicable law" - the applicable law here being
    the Florida UCC.6     Barclays argues that Sections 4.05's notice
    5
    Poynter professes that Barclays should be estopped from
    taking this position.      He argues that paragraph 28 of the
    complaint, which stated that Barclays repossessed the yacht "having
    given Poynter ten (10) days notice as required under the Preferred
    Mortgage," constituted an admission on Barclays's part that the
    requirements of Section 4.05 applied. We can make quick work of
    this argument and so dispose of it now. Barclays did not reference
    Section 4.05 anywhere in the complaint. Further nothing in the
    complaint contradicts Barclays's assertion to this court that
    paragraph 28 referred to notice as required under the Florida UCC,
    which states that notification of disposition sent ten days or more
    before the earliest time of disposition is reasonable. See 
    Fla. Stat. Ann. § 679.612
    (2).
    6
    As a whole, 4.06 indicates that in the case of default
    Barclays may: "Exercise all rights, privileges and remedies in
    foreclosure or otherwise given the Mortgagee by this Mortgage, or
    by any other instrument evidencing the indebtedness or the
    Obligations or securing performance thereof, as well as such other
    rights, privileges and remedies granted by applicable law."
    -8-
    requirements, according to the mortgage's plain language, do not
    apply to every sale as Poynter says, including 4.06 sales.
    Barclays also throws about a few alternative arguments should we
    disagree about 4.05's applicability, such as: Poynter's actual
    notice of the sale waives any procedural defaults and there is no
    basis for extending Massachusetts statutory real estate law to this
    case.
    In the end, we are tasked with answering one central
    question: does Section 4.05 impose an umbrella notice requirement
    on all post-default sale procedures as Poynter argues, or does
    Section 4.06 provide a stand-alone remedy free of Section 4.05's
    procedural dictates as Barclays contends?        We think, based on the
    clear language of the mortgage, that Barclays has it right.           We
    explain,    starting   with   some    general   contract   interpretation
    principles.
    To start with, we forgo embarking on a choice of law
    analysis.   Instead we simply elect to interpret the mortgage under
    Massachusetts law because both parties agree that it applies and
    because there is at least a reasonable relationship between this
    dispute and Massachusetts. See Merchants Inc. Co. of N.H., Inc. v.
    U.S. Fid. & Guar. Co., 
    143 F.3d 5
    , 8 (1st Cir. 1998) (taking the
    same approach in a diversity case).
    When interpreting a contract, courts must assess whether
    the contract at issue (here the mortgage) is ambiguous, Bank v.
    -9-
    Thermo Elemental Inc., 
    888 N.E.2d 897
    , 907 (Mass. 2008), a question
    of law in Massachusetts, Lass v. Bank of Am., N.A., 
    695 F.3d 129
    ,
    134 (1st Cir. 2012).     To answer the ambiguity question, we examine
    "the language of the contract by itself, independent of extrinsic
    evidence concerning the drafting history or intention of the
    parties."    Bank, 888 N.E.2d at 907.       Language is only ambiguous "if
    it   is   susceptible    of   more   than   one    meaning   and    reasonably
    intelligent persons would differ as to which meaning is the proper
    one."     Lass, 695 F.3d at 134 (internal quotation marks omitted).
    Ambiguity,    however,   is   not    created    just   because     the   parties
    disagree about the contract's meaning.            Farmers Ins. Exch. v. RNK,
    Inc., 
    632 F.3d 777
    , 783 (1st Cir. 2011).
    Contracts   found free     from ambiguity       are   interpreted
    according to their plain terms; we construe all words according to
    "their usual and ordinary sense." Gen. Convention on New Jerusalem
    in the U.S., Inc. v. MacKenzie, 
    874 N.E.2d 1084
    , 1087 (Mass. 2007);
    Farmers Ins. Exch., 
    632 F.3d at 784
    .           We take the words within the
    context of the contract as a whole, rather than in isolation.              Gen.
    Convention on New Jerusalem in the U.S., Inc., 874 N.E.2d at 1087.
    Summary judgment is appropriate when the contract's plain terms
    unambiguously favor either side.         Farmers Ins. Exch., 
    632 F.3d at
    784 (citing Bank v. Int'l Bus. Machs. Corp., 
    145 F.3d 420
    , 424 (1st
    Cir. 1998)).
    -10-
    Here there is no ambiguity in the mortgage's language; it
    is only susceptible to one meaning.            And, taking this language at
    face value, the mortgage's plain terms favor Barclays's reading of
    things. We start with Section 4.00 of the mortgage, titled "RIGHTS
    AND REMEDIES ON DEFAULT," which spells out how Barclays may proceed
    upon a debtor's default.          It states: "If any such Event or Default
    occurs and is continuing, Mortgagee may, at its option, do any one
    or more of the following:" (emphasis added).                   Seven different
    rights and remedies then follow in subsections 4.01 through 4.07,
    including the all important sections 4.05 and 4.06.                 Each of these
    subsections contains an independent, complete thought and each ends
    with a period for punctuation.            The language "any one or more of
    the following" is not ambiguous.             To the contrary its meaning is
    quite plain.     Barclays had seven distinct options and could elect
    to employ a single one of those options or a combination thereof.
    Poynter's argument asks us to give no effect to the critical phrase
    "any one or more of the following" and we will not do this.                    See
    Farmers Ins. Exch., 
    632 F.3d at 785
     (cautioning that no part of the
    contract    is     to   be    disregarded);      J.A.      Sullivan    Corp.    v.
    Commonwealth, 
    494 N.E.2d 374
    , 378 (Mass. 1986) (holding that
    "[e]very phrase and clause must be presumed to have been designedly
    employed,    and    must     be   given    meaning   and     effect,    whenever
    practicable,     when   construed      with    all   the    other     phraseology
    contained in the instrument") (internal quotation marks omitted).
    -11-
    Furthermore, nothing in the mortgage indicates that these
    seven distinct subsections under 4.00 are interconnected. The fact
    that each remedy is a separate subsection and is a complete
    thought, ending with a period and not a comma or a semicolon in
    fact compels the opposite conclusion. Lunt v. Aetna Life Ins. Co.,
    
    149 N.E. 660
    , 662 (Mass. 1925) (holding, in the analogous insurance
    policy-interpretation context, that "[p]unctuation may be resorted
    to as an aid in construction when it tends to throw light on the
    meaning") (internal quotation marks omitted).
    Also significant, Section 4.05 does not reference any
    other subsection within Section 4.00, nor does Section 4.05 state
    that it applies to all sales pursuant to the mortgage.            No other
    remedy within Section 4.00, including Section 4.06, makes reference
    to Section 4.05.     This is unsurprising given that Section 4.05 and
    Section    4.06   serve   different   purposes.       Section   4.05   is   a
    contractual self-help remedy, whereas Section 4.06 allows the
    lender to use statutory remedies, which typically have their own
    notice    and   procedural   requirements,   making    it   unnecessary     to
    restate them in the contract itself.
    Had Barclays in fact intended to incorporate Section
    4.05's notice requirements into other mortgage provisions, it could
    have done so just as it incorporated certain provisions into others
    elsewhere in the mortgage.        For instance, Section 1.03 of the
    mortgage, which dictates that other liens cannot be placed on the
    -12-
    vessel,   specifically      references       Section   2.04   and    its    minimum
    insurance limitations.          Similarly, Section 3.09 (contained in the
    "EVENTS OF DEFAULT" portion of the mortgage) incorporates other
    parts of the mortgage.            It provides: "Any Guarantor or other
    Obligor under the Obligations accured [sic] hereby shall take any
    action    as    outlined   in    Paragraph    (3.07)   above   or    shall     have
    instituted against such person any action as outlined in Paragraph
    (3.08) above."7
    Further undermining Poynter's position is the following.
    Section 5.00, named "OTHER AGREEMENTS ON DEFAULT OR OTHERWISE,"
    contains ten subsections which further describe the parties' rights
    and   responsibilities.          Subsection    5.09,   "Powers      and    Remedies
    Cumulative," explains the breadth of remedial rights the mortgage
    confers on Barclays. It states: "Each power or remedy herein given
    to the Mortgagee . . . shall be cumulative and in addition to every
    other power or remedy specifically given in this Mortgage or
    existing in admiralty, in equity, at law, or by statute."                     Thus,
    according to Section 5.09, Barclays had at its disposal all rights
    afforded to it by law, whatever the source, which it could exercise
    singularly or in conjunction with its other rights.
    Here all roads lead to the same conclusion.                 Sections
    4.01 through 4.07 gave Barclays multiple stand-alone options upon
    7
    Section 3.07 relates to the yacht owner being required to
    apply for bankruptcy. Section 3.08 explains when an involuntary
    bankruptcy case will be filed against the owner.
    -13-
    default and, given these choices, it opted to conduct a sale under
    the Florida UCC pursuant to Section 4.06.       The mortgage's plain,
    unambiguous   terms    make   clear   that   4.05's   specific   notice
    requirements do not extend to such sales under 4.06.8     To interpret
    the mortgage otherwise would be to interpret it "in a way contrary
    to the plain and obvious meaning of its terms," which is something
    courts may not do.    John Hancock Life Ins. Co. v. Abbott Labs., 
    478 F.3d 1
    , 7 (1st Cir. 2006) (internal quotation marks omitted).
    CONCLUSION
    Since we find no merit to Poynter's claim that Barclays
    was required to comply with Section 4.05's notice proviso, we have
    no need to decide his follow-up contention that Barclays's failure
    to provide such notice should render it unable to collect the
    deficiency.   For the above reasons, we affirm the district court's
    grant of summary judgment.
    8
    Our finding that Barclays did not have to comply with
    Section 4.05's dictate brings our notice analysis to a close. We
    do not need to get into whether Barclays's sale, or specifically
    the notice it provided, complied with Florida's UCC.        Poynter
    specifies in his brief that he does not question the mechanics of
    the actual sale but only contests Barclays's failure to give notice
    under 4.05. Though Poynter says he reserves the right to challenge
    the propriety of the sale, we are not sure where or when he is
    reserving it for since the district court granted summary judgment
    on liability and this is his appeal from that grant.         But it
    suffices to note that Poynter has not raised the issue here and
    therefore we will not address it.
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