CYNTHIA M. RUFE, District Judge.
Plaintiff, Apple Alley Associates II, LP sues M & T Bank. The Amended Complaint alleges three counts of negligence (Counts I, III, and IV) and one count of conversion of a financial instrument (Count II). Before the Court is M & T Bank's Motion to Dismiss all claims set forth in the Amended Complaint. For the reasons set forth below, the motion is granted in part and denied in part.
Apple Alley was engaged in the construction of a three-story student housing facility in Pennsylvania. Apple Alley is a limited partnership for which Coach Partners II, LLC is the general partner, and which has a number of limited partners. Coach Partners was responsible for making all decisions and conducting all business operations for the project, and for communicating about financial matters with the investors. The sole managing member of Coach Partners was Dennis Dunn. He was solely responsible for making business decisions and conducting operations for, and communicating financial information about, both Coach Partners and Apple Alley. Both the limited partners of Apple Alley and the limited partners of Coach Partners were passive investors, not involved in the operations, decisions, or business of Apple Alley and Coach Partners.
To finance the construction project, Apple Alley solicited investments from limited partners in April 2011 through August 2011. Investors collectively provided nine checks made payable to Apple Alley, in amounts ranging from $20,000 to $112,500, and totaling $425,000. These checks should have been deposited into Apple Alley's account at Keystone Community Bank, and used to fund the construction project.
In March 2013, an Apple Alley limited partner, William Larkin, who is also a certified public accountant, and who had many of the limited partners as accounting-tax clients, noted that the K-1 tax forms provided to the limited partners indicated a small profit in 2012, whereas Larkin believed the forms should have indicated a substantial tax loss. He then asked Dunn if he could review Apple Alley's books and records. Dunn authorized Apple Alley to release the financial records to Larkin in April 2013, and in May and June 2013, Larkin discovered that the investment checks from the limited partners had never been deposited into Apple Alley's bank account at Keystone Community Bank. He then asked the investors to request copies of the front and back of their checks from their banks. Upon inspection of those copies, Lakin learned that Dunn had signed the checks as "Managing Partner" of Apple Alley, then endorsed the checks over to Higher Education Solutions, LLC, an unrelated entity of which Dunn is the sole owner, and then endorsed the checks as the managing member of that company and deposited them into Higher Education Solutions, LLC's account at M & T Bank. These checks were deposited by mailing them to an M & T Bank employee. Apple Alley alleges that this employee knew that depositing these checks into the Higher Education Solutions, LLC account violated the bank's internal operating procedures, as well as the Pennsylvania Commercial Code ("PCC"), and that this employee knowingly facilitated the unauthorized deposits.
In June 2013, after this information came to light, Dunn was removed as the sole managing member of Coach Partners, and Larkin was elected to replace him as the sole managing member of Coach Partners.
Apple Alley now sues M & T Bank, contending that it is liable for negligently accepting the checks for deposit into the Higher Education Solutions, LLC account, and for conversion of financial instruments.
Dismissal of a complaint pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6) for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted is appropriate where a plaintiff's `plain statement' does not possess enough substance to show that plaintiff is entitled to relief.
M & T Bank moves to dismiss Apple Alley's PCC claim for conversion of financial instruments, arguing that under Pennsylvania's Uniform Fiduciaries Act, because Apple Alley's fiduciary, Dunn, endorsed the checks deposited, M & T Bank is not liable to Apple Alley as a matter of law.
Pennsylvania's Uniform Fiduciaries Act reads:
Based on the allegations in this case, Dunn owed Apple Alley a fiduciary duty, as the managing member of Coach Partners, which was the general partner of Apple Alley. Apple Alley pled that Dunn had exclusive control and authority over the financial decisions of Apple Alley, and the limited partners of Apple Alley had empowered Dunn to endorse and deposit checks on its behalf. In endorsing the checks payable to Apple Alley as "Managing Partner" of Apple Alley, he indicated to the bank that he was acting in a fiduciary role, and not an individual one.
Apple Alley argues that the dual endorsement of the checks by Dunn, the number of checks (nine), the amounts of the checks, the absence of a banking relationship between Apple Alley and M & T Bank, and the lack of a corporate resolution, were sufficient to trigger a duty to inquire as to whether Dunn was violating his fiduciary duty to Apple Alley in endorsing the checks, signing them over to another entity, and depositing the checks in another entity's bank account. However, under the statute, "the Bank has no duty of inquiry as to the existence of a restriction even if suspicious circumstances exist. . ."
The Amended Complaint also alleges that Dunn deliberately sent the checks, by mail, to a particular employee of M & T Bank for deposit. Before working for M & T Bank, this unnamed employee worked for a bank in which Dunn was an officer or equity holder, and that bank was acquired by M & T Bank prior to the transactions at issue. Because these allegations are sufficient to suggest that an agent of M & T Bank may have accepted the deposits with actual knowledge that Dunn was depositing them in breach of his fiduciary duties, the Court will not dismiss Apple Alley's claims as barred by the Uniform Fiduciaries Act at this stage in the litigation.
M & T Bank's motion to dismiss sets forth three additional grounds for dismissing Apple Alley's claims based in negligence
Under Pennsylvania's economic loss doctrine, "no cause of action exists for negligence that results solely in economic damages unaccompanied by physical injury or property damage."
For the reasons set forth herein, M & T Bank's motion to dismiss the Amended Complaint will be granted as to the negligence claims, and denied as to the PCC claim. An appropriate order follows.