DEE D. DRELL, District Judge.
Before the court are cross-motions for summary judgment filed by the Plaintiff, DeAnn Collins-Durham ("Plaintiff" or "Collins-Durham") and Defendant, JP Morgan Chase Bank, N.A. ("Defendant" or "Chase"). (Docs. 31, 35). For the reasons explained below, the court finds that Defendant's motion should be granted and that summary judgment should be entered in favor of Chase, dismissing all claims by Plaintiff against it in this matter.
Plaintiff and her daughter, third party defendant Brooke V. Fontenot ("Fontenot"), opened a joint checking account at Chase on or about June 2, 2011.
On or about September 28, 2016, Plaintiff received two (2) cashier's checks drawn on Red River Bank and made payable to "DeAnn Elise Collins-Durham." Check number 193430 was made in the amount of $150,000 and check number 193562 was made in the amount of $249,221.91.
In addition, Fontenot made a cash withdrawal on January 6, 2017 in the amount on $5,000.
Plaintiff filed the instant suit naming Chase as the sole defendant and asserting a claim for conversion against Chase in the amount of the two cashier's checks, plus legal interest and costs, as well as other equitable relief as may be justified. (Doc. 1-2 at ¶5). Chase answered the suit, denying liability in this matter and naming Fontenot as a third-party defendant, asserting a claim against her in the event it is found liable for any amount based upon Plaintiffs allegations herein. (Doc. 3 at pp. 6-7).
Prior to filing the instant summary judgment motion, Fontenot filed a motion to dismiss all third-party claims against her in this matter pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(b)(6). (Doc. 10). By adoption of the Report and Recommendation issued by the Magistrate Judge in this case, this court denied Fontenot's motion, finding that Chase's answer and third-party demand did state a claim against Fontenot as to which relief could be granted and, for that reason, dismissal was not appropriate. Specifically, the court agreed with Chase's contention that any liability that may be imposed upon Chase may form the basis for indemnity liability by Fontenot if Chase is able to demonstrate culpable conduct by Fontenot in furtherance of the alleged conversion in this case. (Doc. 26).
The instant motions were filed shortly after the court denied Fontenot's motion to dismiss.
A court "shall grant summary judgment if the movant shows that 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). A dispute of material fact is genuine if the evidence is such that a reasonable jury could return a verdict for the nonmoving party.
Plaintiff and Chase filed opposing motions for summary judgment, each seeking judgment in their favor as to Plaintiff's claim for conversion of the negotiable instruments at issue in this case. Plaintiff's motion asserts that Fontenot was never a "holder" of the cashier's checks under the U.C.C., Louisiana's law of negotiable instruments, and, for that reason, Chase's deposit of the checks without Plaintiff's endorsement constituted conversion. (Doc. 35 at pp. 10-11). Conversely, Chase asserts that no conversion occurred because both Plaintiff and Fontenot were bank customers and, under the deposit agreement in effect at the time, Chase was permitted to deposit the two cashier's checks into their joint account. Moreover, Chase points out that Plaintiff was in receipt of the funds from the checks, as they were deposited into an account that she co-owned and had access to at and during the time of the deposit. Thus, argues Chase, Plaintiff has no valid claim for conversion against it the bank. (Doc. 31).
Two important facts of this case are uncontroverted. Plaintiff admits that she and Fontenot were co-owners of the joint checking account at Chase into which Fontenot deposited the cashier's check proceeds.
Under the deposit agreement existing between the parties at the time of the events in question, Chase was permitted to allow either Fontenot or Plaintiff to remit an instrument for deposit into the account on behalf of the other as the instrument's payee. Additionally and specifically, Fontenot was appointed by Plaintiff as her "agent and attorney in fact with power to endorse and deposit items payable to . . . her in the joint account."
Although it is unclear who supplied the handwritten "for deposit only" endorsement to the back of the checks, it is inconsequential in this instance. The deposit agreement clearly permits Chase to deposit an instrument without an endorsement or to consider an endorsement by a joint account holder as an endorsement on the absent payee's behalf.
Finally, there is no evidence to suggest that the proceeds of the cashier's checks were not deposited into the joint checking account and, thus, were not paid to Plaintiff. Conversion could not have occurred under La. R.S. 3-420, which provides, inter alia,
Plaintiff's motion is premised, for the most part, on the underlying notion that Fontenot's taking of the checks, likely via Gage, without Plaintiff's consent, corrupted Fontenot's deposit of the checks into the joint account in a manner that creates liability on the part of Chase. Yet, Plaintiff's motion overlooks the deposit agreement as a contract among the parties that, by their mutual consent, governs their relationship with respect to the joint account at issue.
If, as Plaintiff suggests, her daughter and her former roommate conspired to steal funds from her, any claims likely should have been brought against Fontenot and Gage. Plaintiff's decision not to name these individuals as parties to this suit is puzzling, given her deposition testimony clearly detailing criminal conduct.
Having reviewed both motions, all attendant briefs and evidence, as well as applicable law and jurisprudence, the court finds no genuine dispute of material fact outstanding that would entitle Plaintiff to judgment in her favor. In contrast, we conclude that the uncontroverted facts before the court demonstrate that Chase is entitled to judgment in its favor dismissing all claims against it by Plaintiff in this suit with prejudice. Additionally, we find it appropriate to dismiss all third-party claims by Chase against Fontenot as moot.
The court will issue a judgment in conformity with these findings.