| Page 411 873 F.2d 411
Fed. Sec. L. Rep. P 94,361
Louis V. JACKVONY, Jr., Plaintiff,
Appellant,
v.
RIHT FINANCIAL CORPORATION, etc., et al.,
Defendants, Appellees.
John R. CIOCI, et al., Plaintiffs,
Appellees,
v.
RIHT FINANCIAL CORPORATION, etc., et al.,
Defendants, Appellants. Nos. 88-1446, 88-1600. United States Court of Appeals,
First Circuit. Heard Dec. 6, 1988.
Decided March 30, 1989.
Page 412
John R. Fornaciari, P.C., with
whom Robert M. Disch and Steele &
Fornaciari, Washington, D.C., were on brief,
for plaintiff, appellant.
Paul B. Galvani with whom Harvey
J. Wolkoff and Ropes & Gray, Boston, Mass.,
were on brief, for defendants, appellees.
Before COFFIN, BREYER and
TORRUELLA, Circuit Judges.
BREYER, Circuit Judge.
In September 1982 the Rhode
Island Hospital Trust Bank bought the
Columbus National Bank by purchasing its
shares. It agreed to give the Columbus
shareholders their choice of $25 cash or $25
worth of Hospital Trust stock for each
Columbus share (five Hospital Trust shares
for six Columbus shares). In November 1983
the Bank of Boston entered into an agreement
to acquire Hospital Trust; the final
acquisition price was $73 per share. The
appellant, Louis Jackvony, was a major
Columbus shareholder. He sued Hospital Trust
Page 413 (and related entities) claiming that
Hospital Trust "defrauded" him in 1982 by
(1) making certain misleading statements
about Hospital Trust, and (2) omitting to
disclose certain material facts about
Hospital Trust, which misleading statements
and important omissions led him to choose
(in exchange for his Columbus shares) fewer
Hospital Trust shares (and far more cash)
than he would otherwise have done. Jackvony
added that Hospital Trust again defrauded
him in 1983 by omitting to tell him certain
important information (about the upcoming
Bank of Boston acquisition), an omission
that led Jackvony to sell the comparatively
few shares of Hospital Trust stock that he
owned (and had pledged) at a price lower
than what Bank of Boston paid for Hospital
Trust shares when the merger was completed.
Jackvony claimed that this "fraud" violated
the federal securities laws, 15 U.S.C. Sec.
78j(b) (1982); Rule 10b-5, 17 C.F.R. Sec.
240.10b-5, and constituted common law fraud.
He made several other, less significant,
state law claims.
After Jackvony presented his case
to the jury, the defendant moved for a
directed verdict. The district court granted
the defendant's motion. The court concluded
that no reasonable juror could find that
Jackvony's evidence showed fraud or any
other violation of law. Jackvony appeals.
After reviewing the evidence in the record,
we conclude that the district court was
correct. In our view, the evidence (insofar
as counsel specifically and clearly calls
our attention to that evidence in his brief)
does not show any violation of law, and we
do not believe any reasonable juror could
find to the contrary.
Goldstein v. Kelleher, 728 F.2d 32, 39
(1st Cir.) ("In order to uphold grant of
directed verdict we must find that, viewing
the evidence in the light most favorable to
the non-moving party, reasonable jurors
could come but to one conclusion."), cert.
denied, 469 U.S. 852, 105 S.Ct. 172, 83
L.Ed.2d 107 (1984). Consequently, we affirm
the district court's judgment.
I.
The 1982 "Fraud"
Jackvony rests his 1982 "fraud"
claims on (1) the failure of Hospital Trust,
during 1980--1982, to disclose various
events related to a possible acquisition of
Hospital Trust by another corporation
("acquisition-related events"), and (2)
Hospital Trust's specific misrepresentation
that it would operate Columbus as an
"independent entity" after acquiring it.
Jackvony says that if Hospital Trust had
told him about the "acquisition-related
events," he would have exchanged more of his
Columbus stock for Hospital Trust stock,
rather than for cash; he says that if
Hospital Trust had told him the truth about
its plans not to run Columbus as an
independent entity, he would not have sold
Hospital Trust his Columbus stock. We shall
consider each of these claims in turn.
A. The "Acquisition-Related
Events".
The specific facts that Jackvony
believes that Hospital Trust should have
disclosed, and virtually all the favorable
evidence in the 1,000 page record in respect
to those facts, consist of the following:
1. In 1980 Hospital Trust's
President told the bank's Planning Committee
that the bank was "an attractive takeover
candidate by a foreign bank."
2. A Hospital Trust Vice
President, in late 1980, referred in a memo
to Hospital Trust's "growth/restraint,
acquire/be acquired, bank/non-bank options."
3. Hospital Trust's President
testified that "[t]here had been two or
three contacts made to me in a very vague
sense of the word ... starting in 1979 of
whether we would have any interest in a
voluntary way of affiliating with other
banks." These contacts, in the President's
view, did not amount to "discussions." And,
he denied that "these offers of interest
[were] of any significance."
4. Hospital Trust's President, at
a meeting in April 1981, made some remarks
about "being acquired" and "being an
acquiror ... both were considerations" for
the bank.
Page 414
5. In September 1981, the bank's
Planning Committee was "considering" whether
to take some "protective policies against
takeovers."
6. Hospital Trust's executive
committee's minutes for December 2, 1981,
state: "Expressions of interest for
affiliation continue from two banks, one in
Connecticut and one in Massachusetts."
7. Hospital Trust's president
said that Hartford National contacted him
about a potential "affiliation" in 1981.
8. Hospital Trust's Planning
Committee minutes say that its President
referred to it as an "attractive target" for
a takeover (Dec. 10, 1981), that its General
Counsel had prepared "a position paper"
assessing "the realities of any offers
seeking to buy" the bank (Jan. 14, 1982),
and that he made "a broad review ... of the
legal considerations" if the bank "should
... become a takeover target," and made a
recommendation about acquiring outside
services "relating to mergers and
acquisitions" (May 5, 1982).
9. Hospital Trust officials, on
various occasions, expressed the view that
it had to be a $6 billion bank to survive.
(It said so publicly.) Its assets then
amounted to about $1.5 billion (presumably a
matter of public information). It was having
some difficultly raising the capital needed
to grow.
In our view, this evidence, taken
in the context of this case, could not show
any violation of federal Rule 10b-5, or
common law fraud. Irrespective of the
evidence, Jackvony would not prevail in his
Rule 10b-5 claim because Rule 10b-5
prohibits false or misleading statements or
omissions only "in connection with the
purchase or sale of any security." 15 U.S.C.
78j(b);
Blue Chip Stamps v. Manor Drug Stores, 421
U.S. 723, 95 S.Ct. 1917, 44 L.Ed.2d 539
(1975) (emphasis added). Jackvony did
not buy or sell Hospital Trust shares in
1982; rather he decided not to "buy" (i.e.,
he decided to turn in his Columbus shares
for cash rather than for Hospital Trust
stock). The Supreme Court, in Blue Chip
Stamps, makes clear that a potential
purchaser of shares, who decides not to
purchase, does not have a Rule 10b-5 claim.
Blue Chip Stamps, 421 U.S. at 737-38, 95
S.Ct. at 1926-27. Of course, for purposes of
Rule 10b-5, a "purchase" includes "any
contract ... to purchase." See 15 U.S.C.
Sec. 78c(a) ("the terms 'buy' and 'purchase'
each include any contract to buy, purchase,
or otherwise acquire"); Blue Chip Stamps,
421 U.S. at 750-51, 95 S.Ct. at 1932-33; L.
Loss, Fundamentals of Securities Regulations
800-801 (2d ed. 1988); and Jackvony did
enter into a "contract to buy" Hospital
Trust shares: the Hospital Trust/Columbus
merger agreement was itself a "contract" in
connection with the purchase or sale or
securities.
Marsh v. Armada, 533 F.2d 978, 981-82 (6th
Cir.1976) (exchange of shares in a
merger qualifies as purchase or sale under
Rule 10b-5), cert. denied, 430 U.S. 954, 97
S.Ct. 1598, 51 L.Ed.2d 803 (1977);
Knauff v. Utah Construction & Mining Co.,
408 F.2d 958, 961 (10th Cir.), cert.
denied, 396 U.S. 831, 90 S.Ct. 83, 24
L.Ed.2d 81 (1969) (same);
Brooks v. Land Drilling Co., 564 F.Supp.
1518, 1523 (D.Co.1983) (same). But,
insofar as Jackvony's claim concerns his (or
other Columbus shareholders') decision to
enter into that basic contract, the failures
to disclose of which he complains helped
him; they could not have hurt him. That is
to say, full disclosure that Hospital Trust
might have expected to be acquired could
only have made Hospital Trust stock seem
more valuable, not less valuable, and it
could therefore only have led to an
agreement that offered Columbus shareholders
fewer Hospital Trust shares, not more.
Jackvony could not have suffered damages in
respect to the terms of the Hospital
Trust/Columbus merger contract itself.
Jackvony still could have
suffered harm in respect to his decision to
exercise the option the contract gave him.
But we are aware of no authority holding
that an option holder's failure to exercise
an option to buy falls within the critical
language: "purchase," or "contract to buy,
purchase, or otherwise acquire." Blue Chip
Stamps,
Page 415 in our view, suggests the contrary. See
Marsh, supra (shareholders who retained
their shares rather than sell or tender them
during merger negotiations did not have
standing to sue given Blue Chip Stamps ).
We need not decide the Blue Chip
Stamps point definitively, however, for,
when we return to the evidence, we find that
Jackvony cannot prevail under either state
or federal "anti-fraud" law. He cannot show
that Hospital Trust failed to disclose
information that was "material." The Supreme
Court has indicated that the materiality of
"information concerning the existence and
status of preliminary merger discussions"
turns on whether "there is a substantial
likelihood that a reasonable" investor
"would have considered" it "significant" (by
which the court means "important") at the
time.
Basic, Inc. v. Levinson, 485 U.S. 224, 108
S.Ct. 978, 983, 99 L.Ed.2d 194 (1988),
adopting the standard set forth
TSC Industries, Inc. v. Northway, Inc., 426
U.S. 438, 449, 96 S.Ct. 2126, 2132, 48
L.Ed.2d 757 (1976). The evidence that
Jackvony presented cannot meet this
standard.
For one thing, the evidence shows
no more than the type of concern about
possible acquisition that many large
companies frequently express; it reveals no
concrete offers, specific discussions, or
anything more than vague expressions of
interest. It provides no reason to believe
in the existence of any preliminary
negotiations of the sort mentioned in Basic,
a case in which the Supreme Court found that
specific "meetings and telephone
conversations" among "officers and
directors" of the relevant firms "concerning
the possibility of a merger" might, or might
not, prove material, depending upon the
"probability that the transaction will be
consummated." Basic, 108 S.Ct. at 993. Any
reasonably sophisticated investor in
securities buying shares in a large
corporation would expect that, from time to
time, other corporations might express an
interest in buying, or that the large
corporation's directors might discuss what
it should do if it obtains such offers. For
large corporations to make public
announcements every time directors discuss
any such matter in terms as vague as those
presented in this evidence or receive
"tentative feelers" of the general sort
revealed by this evidence, see pp. 413-14,
supra, would more likely confuse, than
inform, the marketplace.
For another thing, the record
contains other evidence making clear that in
1982 the banking community believed that the
banking laws would soon change; that
previously forbidden interstate bank
expansion would soon become permissible;
that many regional banks were considering
expansion; and that consequently some New
England banks might acquire others. Given
this general knowledge, the release of the
information Jackvony cites, pp. 413-414,
supra, could have added nothing significant.
Finally, the documents and the
full testimony, from which come the excerpts
on pp. 413-14, supra, confirm that the
excerpts had no special significance. That
is to say, the full record shows that
Hospital Trust placed no special
significance upon the general and occasional
expressions of interest in acquisition that
it received from time to time; it shows that
Hospital Trust's own thinking about being
acquired took place within a context in
which it surveyed various general options
for the future.
B. The "Independent Entity"
Statement.
Jackvony points to another set of
statements he claims were materially
misleading. He says that Hospital Trust
promised to operate Columbus as an
"independent entity," either for "five
years" after it acquired Columbus, or
perhaps "forever." But, he adds, two years
after it acquired Columbus, Hospital Trust
merged it into the parent company (though it
did so for business reasons). Jackvony says
that Hospital Trust's statements that it
would keep Columbus independent for "five
years" or "forever" were misleading, for at
the very time it made these statements, in
early 1982, before the acquisition, Hospital
Trust's executive committee adopted a
recommendation to "run" Columbus "as a
separate entity over the next several
years,"
Page 416 and "then merge [it] into " Hospital Trust
(emphasis added).
The fatal difficulty for Jackvony
is that we cannot find in the record any
significant evidence of a statement, by
Hospital Trust officials, that they would
operate Columbus independently for five
years or more, upon which Jackvony could
reasonably have relied. At various points
during the trial, Jackvony testified that
Hospital Trust officials said such things
as, for example,
Columbus would remain a separate entity,
independent, that its staff would be
maintained for at least five years, that the
relationship between the two would be a
basis of subsidiaries of Hospital Trust
Corporation.
But, subsequent to making any
such statements, Hospital Trust and Columbus
entered into a written Agreement and Plan of
Reorganization. That Agreement (which says
that it "constitutes the entire agreement
and supersedes all prior agreements and
understandings, both written and oral ...
with respect to the subject matter ... "),
mentions nothing about keeping Columbus
independent. Hospital Trust also circulated
a proxy statement and prospectus, which
says,
No person has been authorized to give any
information or make any representation not
contained in the accompanying
Prospectus/Proxy statement and, if given or
made, any such information or representation
should not be relied upon.
The proxy statement does say that
Hospital Trust intends to carry on the
"business of" Columbus
as a subsidiary of [Hospital Trust] ...
under the management supervision of
[Hospital Trust] ... in the manner similar
to the way in which [Hospital Trust]
supervises the business operations of its
other subsidiaries.
But, the proxy statement does not
say that it will do so for "five years" or
"forever," or that it will do so even if
business considerations dictate the
contrary.
Insofar as Jackvony argues that
Hospital Trust's pre-Agreement statements
constitute a contractually binding promise,
his argument fails in light of the later
written contract, with its explicit
statement that it contains the parties'
entire bargain. Insofar as Jackvony argues
that pre-Agreement statements that Hospital
Trust would keep Columbus separate for five
years or more were materially misleading,
his claim fails because in light of the
later Agreement and Prospectus, he could not
reasonably have relied upon them.
Kennedy v. Josephthal & Co., Inc.,
814 F.2d 798, 803-05 (1st Cir.1987) (investors
failed to establish justifiable reliance on
alleged misrepresentation of broker's
employee, where representations were
completely at odds with offering
memorandum);
Zobrist v. Coal-X, Inc., 708 F.2d 1511,
1518-19 (10th Cir.1983) (buyer's
reliance on oral representations as to
profitability of venture were unjustifiable
in view of information contained in private
placement memorandum which would be imputed
to the investor). See also Teamsters Local
282
Pension Trust Fund v. Angelos, 762 F.2d 522,
529 (7th Cir.1985) (same).
Indeed in Kennedy, we listed the
following factors as relevant to deciding
whether an investor's reliance was
reasonable.
(1) The sophistication and expertise of
the plaintiff in financial and securities
matters; (2) the existence of long standing
business or personal relationships; (3)
access to the relevant information; (4) the
existence of a fiduciary relationship; (5)
concealment of the fraud; (6) the
opportunity to detect the fraud; (7) whether
the plaintiff initiated the stock
transaction or sought to expedite the
transaction; and (8) the generality or
specificity of the misrepresentations.
Kennedy, 814 F.2d at 804. Any
Hospital Trust "independent forever" type
statements (as reported by Jackvony) seem to
have been vague; Jackvony was a
sophisticated investor; the written proxy
statement tells Jackvony not to rely upon
any such statements; Jackvony (and the other
Columbus shareholders) seemed anxious to
expedite the transaction (perhaps because of
Columbus's shaky financial condition); and
Jackvony helped draft the written
acquisition documents. These factors
militate against any reliance being
"reasonable,"
Page 417 to the point where no reasonable juror could
have found the contrary. See also Willco
Kuwait (Trading) S.A.K. v. deSavary, 843
F.2d 618, 623 (1st Cir.1988); Zobrist, 708
F.2d at 1516.
Of course Hospital Trust did say
in its prospectus that it would operate
Columbus as an independent entity. (It made
similar statements in other documents.) But
those statements are not materially
misleading. They do say that Hospital Trust
intends to operate Columbus independently,
but not forever or for five years or for any
given amount of time or even if business
circumstances dictate the contrary. The only
significant evidence to which Jackvony
points as indicating that Hospital Trust did
not intend to operate Columbus independently
is an executive committee memo which states
that Hospital Trust will run Columbus as "a
separate entity over the next several years,
then merge" it into Hospital Trust. This
memo, however, foresees at least several
years of independent operation; thus, we
cannot find, nor do we see how a jury could
find, a sufficient contradiction between
this document and written statements such as
the prospectus as to make of the latter a
materially misleading statement.
II.
The 1983 "Fraud"
Although Jackvony took cash for
most of his Columbus shares, he nonetheless
received about 2,600 Hospital Trust shares
in exchange for some of his Columbus stock.
He pledged those shares with the Columbus
Bank, as collateral for an outstanding loan
(to replace Columbus shares previously held
as collateral). Jackvony did not repay that
loan. Instead, he permitted Columbus, in
mid-1983, to obtain a judgment against him,
and to liquidate his collateral. He later
regretted this decision, for when
liquidated, the shares were worth only about
$40 each. A few months later, in November
1983, Bank of Boston announced it had
reached an agreement to acquire Hospital
Trust, paying $59 per share. The merger was
finalized in 1985, and Bank of Boston paid
$73 per Hospital Trust share. Jackvony says
that Hospital Trust "defrauded" him by
failing to tell him about various pre-merger
events taking place prior to mid-1983 when
Jackvony sold his shares.
Madison Consultants v. Federal Deposit
Insurance Corp., 710 F.2d 57, 61 (2d
Cir.1983) (pledgor of stock sold at
direction of pledgee has standing to sue as
seller under Rule 10b-5).
The most serious problem with
Jackvony's claim is that he points to no
"pre-merger events" other than those we
discussed in Part I above, see pp. 413-14,
supra. (At the same time Hospital Trust
points to considerable, uncontradicted
evidence that, in the deregulatory
environment of mid-1983, the informed public
was fully aware, as a general matter, that
mergers were possible, and that there were
no significant "special events," such as
offers or specific negotiations with the
Bank of Boston, or any of the other factors
considered in Basic v. Levinson ). As we
wrote in Part I, the "events" related there
were not material in respect to the exchange
of Columbus stock in 1982; they were no more
material in respect to Jackvony's decision
not to redeem his pledged shares. Moreover,
in respect to the later "sale," Jackvony
brings a 10b-5 action simply as an ordinary,
selling member of the public; he did not
sell to, or buy from, an "insider," and
Hospital Trust had no "duty to disclose" the
"pre-merger" information at issue.
Roeder v. Alpha Industries, Inc., 814 F.2d
22, 26-27 (1st Cir.1987) (corporation
has no affirmative duty to disclose even
material information if there is no insider
trading, no statute or regulation requiring
disclosure, and no inaccurate, incomplete,
or misleading prior disclosure). See Basic,
108 S.Ct. at 987 (silence absent a duty to
disclose is not misleading under Rule
10b-5);
Taylor v. First Union Corp. of South
Carolina, 857 F.2d 240, 243 (4th Cir.1988)
(same);
Jordan v. Duff & Phelps, Inc.,
815 F.2d 429
(7th Cir.1987), cert. dismissed, ---
U.S. ----, 108 S.Ct. 1067, 99 L.Ed.2d 229
(1988); see also L. Loss, supra, at 737.
Page 418
III.
Other Claims
A. Jackvony says that the
district court erred in excluding testimony
by his expert, who wanted to describe in
detail (1) that the move toward banking
deregulation and permission to branch across
state lines led many banks to consider
mergers in the early 1980's and (2) that
Hospital Trust's need for capital was such
that it probably could not expand
successfully on its own. The decision
whether to admit or to reject expert
testimony--the weighing of its potential
relevance against its potential for
unnecessarily consuming time or confusing
the jury--lies primarily in the hands of the
district court, not this court. E.g.,
United States v. Fosher, 590 F.2d 381, 382
(1st Cir.1979). Given the fairly
obvious, virtually conceded, nature of the
expert's first point, and the rather great
distance, in terms of relevance, between the
second point and the issues in this case, we
cannot say that the district court, in
refusing to admit the testimony, exceeded
its lawful powers. See Allied International
v. International Longshoremen's Association,
814 F.2d 32, 40 (1st Cir.), cert. denied,
--- U.S. ----, 108 S.Ct. 79, 98 L.Ed.2d 41
(1987).
B. Jackvony says that Hospital
Trust improperly withheld about $3,300 in
registration fees for the 2,600 Hospital
Trust shares that it gave him (along with
considerable cash) in exchange for his
Columbus stock in 1982. A document in the
record called "stock option agreement,"
which Jackvony signed, specifically says,
however, that
each seller hereby agrees that it will
pay pro rata to the extent that it receives
[Hospital Trust] ... Common Stock the costs
and expenses ... covering the shares of
Common Stock of [Hospital Trust] ... to be
issued in the merger or pursuant hereto.
In addition, the prospectus says
that the
selling [Columbus] ... shareholders who
executed the stock option agreement have
agreed to pay on a pro rata basis all costs
and expenses ... covering the issuance of
the shares of [Hospital Trust] ... Common
Stock in the merger.
No one denies that the $3,300
fits within this language.
Jackvony argues that the language
in the "stock option agreement" does not
bind him because Hospital Trust did not
exercise the option that it contained.
(Hospital Trust evidently obtained the
Columbus shares in a different way.) But,
the particular clause of the agreement we
have quoted does not say that the promise it
contains binds Jackvony only if Hospital
Trust exercises the option that the document
elsewhere describes. To the contrary, the
clause specifically says that the shares for
which Jackvony must pay the issuing expenses
are the shares "to be issued in the merger
or pursuant hereto." In using the word "or,"
the clause certainly seems to impose an
obligation independent of the exercise of
the option; the fact that the prospectus
repeats the promise certainly supports its
freestanding nature; and Jackvony provided
the trial court with no evidence at all to
the contrary. (He testified simply that the
"stock option agreement says" that the
expenses are payable only if "the stock
options were used by the bank;" but that is
not what the agreement says.) Jackvony also
testified that Hospital Trust did not make
others pay registration expenses. Of course,
this statement was controverted, but it is
also beside the point. Jackvony had the
burden of proving that he was entitled to
the $3,300. He did not do so.
C. Jackvony claims that Hospital
Trust (in fact, Columbus, which Hospital
Trust acquired) owes him about $35,000 in
interest that it charged him in respect to
loans that he obtained from Columbus in the
early 1980's. The very brief portion of
relevant testimony on this subject suggests
that Jackvony had taken large loans from the
Columbus Bank; that he gave that bank
someone else's promissory notes for $130,000
as collateral for $130,000 of his loan; that
he had discussions in the Fall of 1982 about
"the payoff on these [promissory] notes;"
that a bank official told him in September
1982 "that he had returned the
Page 419 notes to the maker and had taken real estate
from the maker worth $130,000 in the name of
Columbus National Bank;" that Jackvony told
the official that "since" the maker had
"paid off" the notes, it should deduct
$130,000 from "the debt" Jackvony "owed the
bank;" and that the bank official "said no,"
and continued to charge Jackvony interest.
Presumably, the bank official viewed the
bank's exchange of note for real estate as a
simple substitution of collateral, not as a
payoff of a loan. Obviously, if collateral
was substituted and the loan was not paid
off, the bank could continue to charge
Jackvony interest. In any event, Jackvony
bears the burden of proving that the bank
somehow acted improperly, and his brief
testimony on the matter, virtually all of
which we have quoted, fails to do so.
IV.
Attorneys' Fees
In a cross-appeal, Hospital Trust
asks us to require the district court to
assess costs and attorneys' fees against
Jackvony under Fed.R.Civ.P. 11, or in the
alternative, as "costs of collection" under
a promissory note that is the subject of
state litigation between the parties. The
decision about whether to assess Rule 11
sanctions, however, is one primarily for the
district court to make, because the
"district court 'has tasted the flavor of
the litigation and is in the best position
to make these determinations.' "
Muthig v. Brant Point Nantucket, Inc., 838
F.2d 600, 603 (1st Cir.1988) (citing
Westmoreland v. CBS, Inc., 770 F.2d 1168,
1174 (D.C.Cir.1985)). Although some of
Jackvony's claims can be considered somewhat
frivolous (those discussed in Part III
above), we cannot say the same about his
federal claims. And, we therefore cannot say
that the law required the district court to
impose Rule 11 sanctions, or that the court
abused its discretion. Stevens v. Lawyers
Mutual Liability Insurance Co. of N.C., 789
F.2d 1056, 1060 (4th Cir.1986).
Similarly, we cannot say that
Hospital Trust is entitled to attorneys'
fees as part of the collection costs
included in the promissory note that is the
subject of a state lawsuit. This action by
Jackvony was not an integral part of the
enforcement and collection of the note, nor
was it shown to have been a claim directed
to prevent the collection of the note.
Exchange National Bank v. Daniels, 763 F.2d
286 (7th Cir.1985) (counterclaims were
integral to the enforcement of claim based
on note);
Duryea v. Third Northwestern National Bank,
606 F.2d 823 (8th Cir.1979)
(counterclaim brought to prevent collection
of loan, and directly related to the
collection).
V.
We have not discussed every piece
of evidence in the record. We are satisfied,
however, after examining the record in full,
and those portions cited by counsel in
detail, that there is no evidence not here
discussed that could lead to a different
legal conclusion.
The judgment of the district
court is
Affirmed. |