Court Opinion

ID: 9348809
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-12-20 14:17:02.12496+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:43:46.413555
License: Public Domain

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF NORTH CAROLINA

                                      2022-NCCOA-53

                                      No. COA21-118

                                   Filed 1 February 2022

     Guilford County, No. 19 CVS 1115

     GUY M. TURNER INCORPORATED, Plaintiff,

                 v.

     KLO ACQUISITION LLC, separately and doing business as KL Outdoor LLC,
     Defendant,

     and

     JPMORGAN CHASE BANK, N.A., Garnishee.

           Appeal by garnishee from judgment entered 10 November 2020 by Judge John

     O. Craig, III in Guilford County Superior Court. Heard in the Court of Appeals 17

     November 2021.

           Keziah Gates, LLP, by Andrew S. Lasine, for Plaintiff-Appellee.

           Womble Bond Dickinson (US) LLP, by Jonathon D. Townsend, for Garnishee-
           Appellant.

           CARPENTER, Judge.

¶1         Garnishee JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A. (“Chase Bank”) appeals from the trial

     court’s entry of summary judgment (the “Order”) in favor of Plaintiff Guy M. Turner

     Incorporated (“GMT”) as to GMT’s right to recover from Chase Bank as garnishee.

     After careful review, we reverse and remand the Order.
                           GUY M. TURNER INC. V. KLO ACQUISITION LLC

                                             2022-NCCOA-53

                                           Opinion of the Court

                            I.   Factual & Procedural Background

¶2         In January 2019, GMT and Defendant KLO Acquisition, LLC (“KLO”) 1 entered

     into a contract pursuant to which GMT would “provide labor, equipment, and

     materials to rig or remove KLO’s manufacturing equipment from a KLO facility in

     Georgia, transport the equipment to KLO’s vendor in Michigan for repairs, and then

     transport the equipment back to KLO’s facility in Georgia and reinstall it in KLO’s

     manufacturing line.” On 16 October 2019, GMT filed suit against KLO in Guilford

     County Superior Court for breach of contract and quantum meruit. A few days later,

     on 29 October 2019, GMT served an order of attachment, summons to garnishee, and

     notice of levy on Chase Bank, with which KLO maintained two deposit accounts: the

     “Cash Collateral Account,” and the “Operating Account” (together, the “Deposit

     Accounts”). Prior to the institution of GMT’s suit, Chase Bank made substantial

     loans to KLO on which KLO defaulted, owing Chase Bank over twelve million dollars.

     That same day, Chase Bank exercised its right of setoff against the funds in the

     garnished accounts and debited the entire balance of the Cash Collateral Account, a

     total of $328,243.14.       However, Chase Bank did not debit any funds from the

     garnished Operating Account and continued to allow KLO to actively draw upon the

           1   KLO is not a party to this appeal.
                        GUY M. TURNER INC. V. KLO ACQUISITION LLC

                                         2022-NCCOA-53

                                        Opinion of the Court

     account after Chase Bank’s receipt of the garnishment summons and notice of levy.

     By 28 February 2020, the Operating Account had a balance of $115,897.60, with

     significant activity by KLO during February 2020, including an opening balance of

     $8,357.73, deposits and credits of $1,163,724.90, and withdrawals and debits of

     $1,056,185.03.

¶3         On 12 October 2020, GMT moved for entry of default against KLO, which the

     clerk entered the same day. GMT also moved for summary judgment against KLO

     as the defendant in the contract action and against Chase Bank as garnishee.

¶4         GMT’s motion for summary judgment came on for hearing on 2 November 2020

     before the Honorable John O. Craig, III in Guilford County Superior Court. On 3

     November 2020, Chase Bank moved for leave to amend its answer to the garnishment

     summons and notice of levy in order to assert that it had a perfected security interest

     in both of the Deposit Accounts.

¶5         On 10 November 2020, the trial court entered its summary judgment Order

     granting, inter alia, Chase Bank’s motion for leave to amend its answer, GMT’s

     motion for summary judgment as to GMT’s right to recovery from Chase Bank

     pursuant to the garnishment summons and notice of levy, and GMT’s motion for

     summary judgment as to its breach of contract claim against KLO. The trial court

     entered judgment against KLO in the amount of $168,712.59 plus interest and

     attorneys’ fees, and it entered judgment against Chase Bank in the amount of
                        GUY M. TURNER INC. V. KLO ACQUISITION LLC

                                             2022-NCCOA-53

                                            Opinion of the Court

     $209,614.47 to satisfy GMT’s demand as of the date of issuance of the garnishment

     summons and notice of levy directed to Chase Bank. Chase Bank gave timely notice

     of appeal.

                                      II.      Jurisdiction

¶6         This Court has jurisdiction to address Chase Bank’s appeal from the order of

     summary judgment as a final judgment pursuant to N.C. Gen. Stat. § 7A-27(b)(1)

     (2019).

                                            III.   Issues

¶7         The issues before this Court are whether: (1) Chase Bank waived or

     undermined its security interest by allowing KLO access to its deposit accounts held

     at Chase Bank, and (2) the trial court erred by granting summary judgment in favor

     of GMT and against Chase Bank.

                                IV.    Standard of Review

¶8         “Our standard of review of an appeal from summary judgment is de novo; such

     judgment is appropriate only when the record shows that there is no genuine issue

     as to any material fact and that any party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of

     law.” In re Will of Jones, 362 N.C. 569, 573, 669 S.E.2d 572, 576 (2008) (citation and

     internal quotation marks omitted) (emphasis added).

                           V.   Order of Summary Judgment

¶9         On appeal, Chase Bank argues the trial court erred in granting summary
                           GUY M. TURNER INC. V. KLO ACQUISITION LLC

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                                           Opinion of the Court

       judgment for GMT because: (1) Chase Bank’s perfected security interest in the

       Deposit Accounts shielded the funds from garnishment, and (2) Chase Bank did not

       waive or undermine its security interest by allowing KLO access to the Deposit

       Accounts. We agree.

       A. Security Interest

¶ 10          Chase Bank argues it had a perfected security interest in KLO’s deposit

       account before 29 October 2019, the date on which the garnishment summons was

       served on Chase Bank, and interest superseded any interest held by GMT. GMT does

       not dispute Chase Bank had a security interest in the Deposit Accounts. For the

       reasons set forth below, we agree Chase Bank had a perfected security interest in

       KLO’s Deposit Accounts.

¶ 11          Since the parties do not dispute Chase Bank had an enforceable security

       interest in KLO’s Deposit Accounts, we need not consider whether Chase Bank’s

       security interest attached. Therefore, we discuss perfection and priority of Chase

       Bank’s security interest in the Deposit Accounts.

¶ 12          Section 25-9-304(a) of the North Carolina Uniform Commercial Code provides

       that “[t]he local law of a bank’s jurisdiction governs perfection, the effect of perfection

       or nonperfection, and the priority of a security interest in a deposit account

       maintained with that bank.” N.C. Gen. Stat. § 25-9-304(a) (2019). A bank and its
                           GUY M. TURNER INC. V. KLO ACQUISITION LLC

                                           2022-NCCOA-53

                                         Opinion of the Court

       customer may dictate by agreement which jurisdiction’s law will govern. N.C. Gen.

       Stat. § 25-9-304(b)(1).

¶ 13            Chase Bank argues that “[b]ecause [Chase Bank and KLO’s Amended and

       Restated] Credit Agreement specifies that New York law governs, New York is the

       ‘local law’ for purposes of determining the perfection of Chase’s security interest in

       the deposit accounts.” GMT makes no argument with respect to which law governs

       perfection, the effect of perfection or nonperfection, nor the priority of Chase Bank’s

       security interests in the Deposit Accounts maintained by Chase Bank. There is no

       other evidence in the record to indicate the law of a state other than New York

       governs. Because the Amended and Restated Credit Agreement (the “Agreement”)

       between KLO and Chase Bank indicates that New York is the “bank’s jurisdiction,”

       we turn to New York law to determine whether Chase Bank has a perfected security

       interest in the Deposit Accounts and the priority of such interest.

¶ 14            Under New York’s version of the Uniform Commercial Code, “a security

       interest in a deposit account may be perfected only by control . . . .” N.Y. U.C.C. Law

       § 9-312(b)(1) (McKinney 2021); see N.Y. U.C.C. Law § 9-314 (McKinney 2021). A

       secured party may exercise control over a deposit account as “the bank with which

       the deposit account is maintained . . . .” N.Y. U.C.C. Law § 9-104(a)(1) (McKinney

       2021).
                           GUY M. TURNER INC. V. KLO ACQUISITION LLC

                                            2022-NCCOA-53

                                          Opinion of the Court

¶ 15         Here, Chase is a secured party with respect to KLO as evidenced by the

       Agreement, and Chase Bank exercised control over KLO’s Deposit Accounts as “the

       bank with which the [Deposit Accounts are] maintained.” See N.Y. U.C.C. Law § 9-

       104(a)(1). Thus, Chase Bank had a perfected security interest in KLO’s Deposit

       Accounts pursuant to N.Y. U.C.C. Law § 9-312.

¶ 16         We next consider the priority dispute between Chase Bank and GMT with

       respect to the funds in KLO’s Deposit Accounts. New York’s Uniform Commercial

       Code provides: “[a] security interest held by a secured party having control of the

       deposit account under Section 9-104 has priority over a conflicting security interest

       held by a secured party that does not have control.” N.Y. U.C.C. Law § 9-327(a)

       (McKinney 2021). Additionally, a lien creditor would only have superior rights over

       a secured party if the lien creditor acquired its lien before the security interest of the

       secured party was perfected. N.Y. U.C.C. Law § 9-317(a)(2)(A) (McKinney 2021). “A

       security interest in deposit accounts . . . is perfected by control under Section [9-104]

       when the secured party obtains control and remains perfected by control only while

       the secured party retains control.” N.Y. U.C.C. Law § 9-314(b). Upon default, a

       secured party may enforce the obligations of an account debtor by “apply[ing] the

       balance of the deposit account to the obligation secured by the deposit account” if the

       secured party “holds a security interest in a deposit account perfected by control

       under Section 9-104(a)(1).” N.Y. U.C.C. Law § 9-607(a)(4) (McKinney 2021).
                          GUY M. TURNER INC. V. KLO ACQUISITION LLC

                                          2022-NCCOA-53

                                        Opinion of the Court

¶ 17         In addition, Chase Bank and KLO’s Agreement expressly contemplated that

       Chase Bank would have the right of setoff of mutual debts:

                   SECTION 9.08. Right of Setoff. If an Event of Default shall
                   have occurred and be continuing, each Lender and each of
                   its Affiliates is hereby authorized at any time and from
                   time to time, to the fullest extent permitted by law, to set
                   off and apply any and all deposits (general or special, time
                   or demand, provisional or final) . . . at any time held and
                   other obligations at any time owing by such Lender or
                   Affiliate to or for the credit or the account of any Loan
                   Party against any of and all the due and payable Secured
                   Obligations held by such Lender. The applicable Lender
                   shall notify the Borrower Representative and the
                   Administrative Agent of such set-off or application,
                   provided that any failure to give or any delay in giving such
                   notice shall not affect the validity of any such set-off or
                   application under this Section. The rights of each Lender
                   under this Section are in addition to other rights and
                   remedies (including other rights of setoff) which such
                   Lender may have.

¶ 18         In the instant case, it is undisputed that Chase Bank held a perfected security

       interest in KLO’s Deposit Accounts before it was served with the garnishment

       summons and notice of levy by GMT. There is no evidence to suggest Chase Bank’s

       control over the Deposit Accounts was not continuous. See N.Y. U.C.C. Law § 9-

       314(b). Because GMT cannot show that it became a lien creditor before Chase Bank’s

       security interest was perfected, we conclude any claim of GMT with respect to the

       Deposit Accounts is subordinate to Chase Bank’s perfected security interest obtained

       by control. See N.Y. U.C.C. Law § 9-317(a)(2)(A). Chase Bank, as a secured party
                          GUY M. TURNER INC. V. KLO ACQUISITION LLC

                                           2022-NCCOA-53

                                         Opinion of the Court

       that holds a perfected security interest in the Deposit Accounts, is allowed to “apply

       the balance of the [D]eposit [A]ccount[s] to the obligation secured by the [D]eposit

       [A]ccount[s].” See N.Y. U.C.C. Law § 9-607(a)(4). Moreover, the express terms of the

       Agreement gave Chase Bank a right of setoff against KLO’s deposits.

       B. Garnishment

¶ 19         We now determine the effect of Chase Bank’s perfected security interest as it

       pertains to the rights that GMT obtained under North Carolina’s garnishment

       statute.   Chase Bank argues that under North Carolina law, the right of setoff

       asserted by Chase Bank “supersede[d] any interest accrued by GMT[,]” and therefore

       precluded GMT from “us[ing] the garnishment statute to force Chase [Bank] to

       surrender possession of the funds in the [D]eposit [A]ccounts.” On the other hand,

       GMT contends it “stood in KLO’s shoes and should have enjoyed the same right to

       the funds in the Operating Account as KLO.” GMT further maintains that “[s]ince

       KLO accessed and used millions from the account over a period of months following

       service of the garnishment summons on Chase, GMT’s garnishment summons

       attached to sufficient funds to satisfy GMT’s claim because Chase never exercised its

       rights as secured creditor by exercising the right of setoff.” We conclude Chase Bank

       asserted its right to setoff and asserted its security interest in the Deposit Accounts

       as statutorily allowed.
                          GUY M. TURNER INC. V. KLO ACQUISITION LLC

                                           2022-NCCOA-53

                                         Opinion of the Court

¶ 20          “Garnishment is not an independent action but is a proceeding ancillary to

       attachment and is the remedy for discovering and subjecting to attachment . . . [a]ny

       indebtedness to the defendant and any other intangible personal property belonging

       to him.” N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1-440.21(a)(2) (2019).

¶ 21         N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1-440.28 provides in pertinent part:

                    (f) [i]n answer to a summons to garnishee, a garnishee may
                    assert any right of setoff which he may have with respect to
                    the defendant in the principal action.

                    (g) [w]ith respect to any property of the defendant which
                    the garnishee has in his possession, a garnishee, in answer
                    to a summons to garnishee, may assert any lien or other
                    valid claim amounting to an interest therein. No garnishee
                    shall be compelled to surrender the possession of any
                    property of the defendant upon which the garnishee
                    establishes a lien or other valid claim amount to an interest
                    therein, which lien or interest attached or was acquired
                    prior to service of the summons to garnishee, and such
                    property only may be sold subject to the garnishee’s lien or
                    interest.

       N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1-440.28(f)–(g) (2019) (emphasis added).

¶ 22         “Under our canons of statutory interpretation, where the language of a statute

       is clear, the courts must give the statute its plain meaning. However, where [a]

       statute is ambiguous or unclear as to its meaning, the courts must interpret the

       statute to give effect to the legislative intent.” N.C. State Bar v. Brewer, 183 N.C.

       App. 229, 236, 644 S.E.2d 573, 577, disc. rev. denied, 361 N.C. 695, 652 S.E.2d 649

       (2007) (citations and internal quotation marks omitted).
                           GUY M. TURNER INC. V. KLO ACQUISITION LLC

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                                         Opinion of the Court

¶ 23          We find the language of N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1-440.28 to be “clear”; hence, we do

       not need to go any further than giving the statute its plain meaning. See N.C. State

       Bar, 183 N.C. App. at 236, 644 S.E.2d at 577. In this case, Chase Bank answered

       GMT’s garnishment summons and notice of levy addressed to it by stating,

       “JPMORGAN CHASE BANK NA HAS TAKEN THE RIGHT OF SETOFF. FUNDS

       NOT AVAILABLE.” On 3 November 2020, Chase Bank moved to amend its answer

       in response to the garnishment summons and notice of levy to assert it had a

       perfected security interest in KLO’s Deposit Accounts at Chase Bank prior to Chase

       Bank being served with the summons.          In the trial court’s 10 November 2020

       summary judgment Order, it granted Chase Bank’s motion for leave to amend its

       answer and granted GMT’s motion for summary judgment in GMT’s favor. Thus,

       Chase Bank both “assert[ed its] right of setoff” and “assert[ed a] lien or other valid

       claim amounting to an interest” in its answer and amended answer. See N.C. Gen.

       Stat. § 1-440.28(f)–(g).

       C. Exercise and Waiver of Right of Setoff

¶ 24          In its next argument, Chase Bank contends it protected its interest in the

       Operating Account by claiming the right of setoff in answer to GMT’s garnishment

       summons and notice of levy, and that it “did not waive or undermine its security

       interest by allowing KLO access” to the Operating Account after claiming its right of

       setoff. GMT argues Chase Bank’s security interest does not defeat GMT’s claim
                          GUY M. TURNER INC. V. KLO ACQUISITION LLC

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                                           Opinion of the Court

       where Chase Bank never enforced its security interest through setoff and allowed

       KLO to operate using the funds in its Operating Account. As discussed below, we

       hold Chase Bank neither waived its right to setoff nor undermined its security

       interest in the Deposit Accounts.

¶ 25          In the instant case, as the bank with which KLO maintained the Deposit

       Accounts, Chase Bank could have exercised its right of setoff against all of the funds

       in the Cash Collateral Account and the Operating Account, despite the garnishment.

       See N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1-440.28(f); see also N.Y. U.C.C. Law § 9-607(a)(4). As GMT

       concedes, Chase Bank promptly exercised its right of setoff regarding the Cash

       Collateral Account; after receiving GMT’s garnishment summons and notice of levy

       on 29 October 2019, Chase Bank debited the entire Cash Collateral Account,

       acquiring $328,243.14 from the account on 6 November 2019 and notifying GMT of

       the setoff the same day.

¶ 26         The only evidence of Chase Bank’s assertion of its right to setoff against the

       Operating Account is its statement, in response to GMT’s garnishment summons and

       notice of levy, that “JPMORGAN CHASE BANK NA HAS TAKEN THE RIGHT TO

       SETOFF. FUNDS NOT AVAILABLE.” In fact, the Operating Account statements

       reveal the funds in that account remained untouched by Chase Bank for months after

       it was served with GMT’s garnishment summons and notice of levy, and the account

       had a balance of $115,897.60 on 28 February 2020.
                           GUY M. TURNER INC. V. KLO ACQUISITION LLC

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                                          Opinion of the Court

¶ 27         Relying on this Court’s decision in Killette v. Raemell’s Sewing Apparel for

       support, Chase Bank nonetheless argues it did not waive its right of setoff by failing

       to take any action regarding the Operating Account. 93 N.C. App. 162, 377 S.E.2d 73

       (1989). In Killette, this Court determined that a “waiver,” in the context of the right

       of setoff against a garnished account, “is an intentional and permanent

       relinquishment of a known right that usually must be manifested in a clear and

       unequivocal manner.” 93 N.C. App. at 164, 377 S.E.2d at 74 (citations omitted). The

       Killette Court concluded the garnishee-bank did not “waive its setoff right by honoring

       some of the company’s checks after the note became due.” Id. at 164, 377 S.E.2d at

       74.

¶ 28         We acknowledge the facts of Killette are distinguishable from the instant case.

       Rather than “honoring some of the company’s checks after the note became due[,]” see

       id. at 164, 377 S.E.2d at 74, here, Chase Bank did not exercise its right of setoff

       against the garnished Operating Account by debiting the account after KLO defaulted

       on its loan obligations and after Chase Bank’s service with garnishment summons

       and notice of levy.    Nevertheless, our Court’s reasoning in Killette is similarly

       applicable to the case at bar. The North Carolina garnishment statute does not set

       out the time period by which Chase Bank was required to exercise its right to setoff.

       But see Normand Josef Enters. v. Connecticut Nat’l Bank, 230 Conn. 486, 507, 646

       A.2d 1289, 1300 (1994) (holding a garnishee-bank failed to effectuate its right of setoff
                   GUY M. TURNER INC. V. KLO ACQUISITION LLC

                                   2022-NCCOA-53

                                  Opinion of the Court

within the applicable, statutorily set midnight deadline). To the contrary, Chase

Bank as a garnishee was not “compelled to surrender the possession of any property

of the defendant upon which [Chase Bank] establishe[d] a lien or other valid claim

amounting to an interest” because Chase Bank established its perfected security

interest in KLO’s accounts held at Chase Bank in its amended answer. See N.C. Gen.

Stat. § 1-440.28(g). The North Carolina garnishment statute and case law neither

required Chase Bank to claim the full amount on deposit in KLO’s Operating Account

while the garnishment action was pending nor to act with respect to the Operating

Account. Such actions would have surely been detrimental to KLO’s ability to pay

back its debts owed to its creditors, including Chase Bank and GMT. See Killette,

N.C. App. at 164, 377 S.E.2d at 74–75. (“The law does not discourage leniency to

one’s debtors, and in our opinion the mere honoring of a depositor’s checks after its

note is due manifests only an intention by the bank to accommodate the depositor at

that time; it does not indicate an intent to continue doing so in the future. If such

indulgences were held to be a permanent waiver of the right of setoff it could only

encourage banks to immediately offset their matured notes against the checking

account balances of their depositor-debtors, a practice bound to embarrass if not ruin

many hard pressed debtors.”). Therefore, we conclude Chase Bank did not waive its

right to setoff or undermine its perfected security interest in the Deposit Accounts.

Other jurisdictions have also declined to find waiver of the right to setoff under
                           GUY M. TURNER INC. V. KLO ACQUISITION LLC

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                                         Opinion of the Court

       similar factual circumstances, based in part on the language of the respective

       garnishment statutes. See Ladd v. Motor City Plastics Co., 303 Mich. App. 83, 102,

       842 N.W.2d 388, 399 (2013) (declining to find waiver of right to setoff where the

       garnishee-bank properly “declare[d] the right to a setoff that it would have,” although

       it was not required to “actually exercise that right” under the applicable garnishment

       statute); Myers v. Christensen, 278 Neb. 989, 996–97, 775 N.W.2d 201, 207 (2009)

       (holding a bank’s perfected security interest in a debtor’s deposit account was

       superior to that of a bankruptcy trustee’s claim by garnishment, and the bank did not

       waive its security interest in the account by making a “calculated business decision

       to honor certain checks drawn” on the account). Accordingly, we hold the trial court

       erred in granting summary judgment as to GMT’s right to recovery from Chase Bank

       pursuant to the garnishment summons and notice of levy. Therefore, we reverse and

       remand the Order.

                                       VI.     Conclusion

¶ 29         Chase Bank had a perfected security interest in KLO’s Deposit Accounts,

       which had priority over GMT’s claim by garnishment to the account funds. Chase

       Bank asserted its right to setoff and asserted its security interest in KLO’s bank

       account as allowed by the garnishment statute. The language of N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1-

       440.28 did not require Chase Bank to exercise its right to setoff; thus, Chase Bank

       did not waive its right to setoff or undermine its security interest in KLO’s accounts
                   GUY M. TURNER INC. V. KLO ACQUISITION LLC

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                                 Opinion of the Court

by allowing KLO to continue to use its Operating Account after receipt of the

garnishment summons.       Accordingly, we reverse the Order granting summary

judgment in favor of garnishor GMT and remand the matter to the superior court for

further proceedings if needed, and the entry of any necessary orders.

      REVERSED AND REMANDED.

      Judge GRIFFIN concurs.

      Judge ZACHARY dissents by separate opinion.
        No. COA21-118 – Guy M. Turner, Inc. v. KLO Acquisition LLC

              ZACHARY, Judge, dissenting.

¶ 30          Chase Bank, the bank with which the judgment-debtor KLO maintained its

       accounts, could have exercised the right of setoff against both the Operating Account

       and the Cash Collateral Account, thereby insulating the Deposit Accounts from

       garnishment. Indeed, on 6 November 2019, Chase Bank responded in defense to

       GMT’s garnishment summons and notice of levy regarding the Deposit Accounts that

       “JPMORGAN CHASE BANK NA HAS TAKEN THE RIGHT TO SETOFF. FUNDS

       NOT AVAILABLE.” That same day, Chase Bank exercised its right of setoff against

       the funds in the garnished Cash Collateral Account, debiting the entire account, a

       total of $328,243.14. However, Chase Bank did not exercise its right of setoff against

       the funds in the garnished Operating Account, debiting no funds from that account.

       Instead, Chase Bank continued to allow KLO to actively draw upon the account for

       months, to the tune of millions of dollars, after Chase Bank’s receipt of the

       garnishment summons and notice of levy.

¶ 31          The majority concludes that Chase Bank was not required, under N.C. Gen.

       Stat. § 1-440.28, to exercise its right to setoff after asserting its right to setoff against

       the Deposit Accounts. I respectfully disagree. By failing to take any affirmative action

       in furtherance of its right of setoff against the garnished Operating Account, Chase

       Bank waived its right to do so. Thus, under North Carolina law, Chase Bank rendered

       itself liable to GMT for the garnished amount. Accordingly, I would affirm the trial

       court’s entry of summary judgment in favor of GMT, and I respectfully dissent.
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                                            2022-NCCOA-53

                                        ZACHARY, J., dissenting

                                             Discussion

          I.       Security Interest and Garnishment

¶ 32            Chase Bank asserts that its perfected security interest in the garnished

       Deposit Accounts “supersede[d] any interest accrued by GMT[,]” and therefore

       precluded GMT from “us[ing] the garnishment statute to force Chase [Bank] to

       surrender possession of the funds in the [D]eposit [A]ccounts.”

¶ 33            Section 25-9-304(a) of the North Carolina Uniform Commercial Code (“UCC”)

       provides that “[t]he local law of a bank’s jurisdiction governs perfection, the effect of

       perfection or nonperfection, and the priority of a security interest in a deposit account

       maintained with that bank.” N.C. Gen. Stat. § 25-9-304(a) (2019). Parties may dictate

       by agreement which jurisdiction’s law will govern. Id. § 25-9-304(b)(1). Because the

       Amended and Restated Credit Agreement (the “Agreement”) between KLO and

       Chase Bank specifies that New York law governs, New York law determines whether

       Chase Bank has a perfected security interest in the Deposit Accounts.

¶ 34            Under New York’s version of the UCC, a secured party may exercise control

       over a deposit account as “the bank with which the deposit account is maintained[.]”

       N.Y. U.C.C. Law § 9-104(a)(1) (McKinney 2021). In addition, the parties’ Agreement

       expressly contemplated that Chase Bank would have the right of setoff of mutual

       debts:

                      SECTION 9.08. Right of Setoff. If an Event of Default shall
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                                       ZACHARY, J., dissenting

                    have occurred and be continuing, each Lender and each of
                    its Affiliates is hereby authorized . . . to set off and apply
                    any and all deposits (general or special, time or demand,
                    provisional or final) . . . at any time held and other
                    obligations at any time owing by such Lender or Affiliate
                    to or for the credit or the account of any Loan Party against
                    any of and all the due and payable Secured Obligations
                    held by such Lender. The applicable Lender shall notify the
                    Borrower Representative and the Administrative Agent of
                    such set-off or application, provided that any failure to give
                    or any delay in giving such notice shall not affect the
                    validity of any such set-off or application under this
                    Section. The rights of each Lender under this Section are
                    in addition to other rights and remedies (including other
                    rights of setoff) which such Lender may have.

¶ 35         Accordingly, after KLO defaulted on its loan obligations, by the express terms

       of the Agreement, Chase Bank could have applied the proceeds of both of the Deposit

       Accounts to KLO’s loan obligations.

¶ 36         Chase Bank’s security interest would have shielded the Deposit Accounts from

       garnishment under North Carolina law, had Chase Bank exercised its right of setoff.

¶ 37         “Garnishment is not an independent action but is a proceeding ancillary to

       attachment and is the remedy for discovering and subjecting to attachment . . . [a]ny

       indebtedness to the defendant and any other intangible personal property belonging

       to him.” N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1-440.21(a)(2).

¶ 38         “In answer to a summons to garnishee, a garnishee may assert any right of

       setoff which he may have with respect to the defendant in the principal action.” Id.

       § 1-440.28(f). “As debtors of their general depositors[,] banks have long had the right
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       to setoff against the deposits any matured debts the depositors owe them,” including

       “the right to assert the setoff ‘in answer to a summons to garnishee’ . . . .” Killette v.

       Raemell’s Sewing Apparel, 93 N.C. App. 162, 163–64, 377 S.E.2d 73, 74 (1989)

       (quoting N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1-440.28(f)).

¶ 39          A bank’s right of setoff is a defense to a garnishment action in which it is served

       as garnishee. See, e.g., Moore v. Greenville Banking & Tr. Co., 173 N.C. 227, 231, 91

       S.E. 793, 795 (1917) (holding that the garnishee-bank was “entitled to have its

       defense [of setoff] considered” in a garnishment proceeding). If, after service with a

       garnishment summons and notice of levy, a garnishee-bank does not exercise its right

       of setoff against a depositor’s account, the trial court shall enter judgment against

       the garnishee-bank for the lesser of the following amounts: “(1) [a]n amount equal to

       the value of the property in question, or (2) [t]he full amount for which the plaintiff

       has prayed judgment against the defendant, together with such amount as in the

       opinion of the clerk will be sufficient to cover the plaintiff’s costs.” N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1-

       440.28(d)(1)–(2).

¶ 40          In the present case, Chase Bank plainly had the right of setoff against the

       garnished Deposit Accounts, as it claimed upon service with the garnishment

       summons and notice of levy. Indeed, its exercise of the right of setoff against the Cash

       Collateral Account after receiving GMT’s garnishment summons and notice of levy

       was clearly appropriate. See id. § 1-440.28(f). However, Chase Bank’s interest in the
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                                         ZACHARY, J., dissenting

       Operating Account did not, in and of itself, secure the account from garnishment;

       rather, Chase Bank could protect its interest in the garnished Operating Account by

       exercising its right of setoff, as outlined in N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1-440.28(f).

          II.      Exercise and Waiver of Right of Setoff

¶ 41            Chase Bank further contends that it protected its interest in the Operating

       Account by claiming the right of setoff in answer to GMT’s garnishment summons

       and notice of levy, and that it “did not waive or undermine its security interest by

       allowing KLO access” to the Operating Account after claiming its right of setoff. I

       disagree, and would conclude that by failing to take any action in exercise of its right

       of setoff against the Operating Account, Chase Bank waived the right of setoff as to

       that garnished account.

¶ 42            As the bank with which KLO maintained the Deposit Accounts, Chase Bank

       could have exercised its right of setoff against all of the funds in the Cash Collateral

       Account and the Operating Account, despite the garnishment. See id. As GMT

       concedes, Chase Bank promptly exercised its right of setoff with regard to the Cash

       Collateral Account; after receiving GMT’s garnishment summons and notice of levy

       on 22 October 2019, Chase Bank debited the entire Cash Collateral Account,

       acquiring $328,243.14 from the account on 6 November 2019 and notifying GMT of

       the setoff that day.
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¶ 43         By contrast, the only evidence of Chase Bank’s assertion of its right to setoff

       against the Operating Account is its statement, in response to GMT’s garnishment

       summons and notice of levy, that “JPMORGAN CHASE BANK NA HAS TAKEN

       THE RIGHT TO SETOFF. FUNDS NOT AVAILABLE.” In fact, the Operating

       Account statements reveal that the funds in that account remained untouched by

       Chase Bank for months after it was served with GMT’s garnishment summons and

       notice of levy; by the end of February 2020, the Operating Account had a balance of

       $115,897.60, with significant activity by KLO during that month, including an

       opening balance of $8,357.73, deposits and credits of $1,163,724.90, and withdrawals

       and debits of $1,056,185.03.

¶ 44         Relying heavily on this Court’s decision in Killette for support, Chase Bank

       nonetheless argues that it did not waive its right of setoff by failing to take any action

       regarding the Operating Account. In Killette, this Court determined that a “waiver,”

       in the context of the right of setoff against a garnished account, “is an intentional and

       permanent relinquishment of a known right that usually must be manifested in a

       clear and unequivocal manner.” 93 N.C. App. at 164, 377 S.E.2d at 74 (citation

       omitted). The Killette Court concluded that the garnishee-bank did not “waive its

       setoff right by honoring some of the company’s checks after the note became due,”

       reasoning that “the mere honoring of a depositor’s checks after its note is due
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       manifests only an intention by the bank to accommodate the depositor at that time;

       it does not indicate an intent to continue doing so in the future.” Id.

¶ 45          Killette presents a very different factual scenario than that at bar. Rather than

       “honoring some of the company’s checks after the note became due[,]” id. (emphasis

       added), here, Chase Bank failed to exercise its right of setoff against the garnished

       Operating Account indefinitely, both after KLO defaulted on its loan obligations and

       after Chase Bank’s service with garnishment summons and notice of levy. Despite

       Chase Bank’s claim of the right of setoff against the Operating Account as a defense

       to the garnishment, Chase Bank permitted KLO to have access to millions of dollars

       passing through the Operating Account, while simultaneously taking no action in

       furtherance of its right of setoff.

¶ 46          The parties have not presented any reported North Carolina case law

       specifically on point in this regard; however, other jurisdictions have addressed the

       issue of waiver of the right of setoff against a garnished account. In Normand Josef

       Enterprises, Inc. v. Connecticut National Bank, the Connecticut Supreme Court

       concluded that “the act of setoff is not complete until three steps have been taken: (1)

       the decision to exercise the right; (2) some action which accomplishes the setoff; and

       (3) some record which evidences that the right of setoff has been exercised.” 646 A.2d

       1289, 1299 (Conn. 1994) (citation omitted). The Court ultimately held that “as a

       matter of law, a bank effectuates its right of setoff only after it has performed some
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       binding overt act and has made a record to evidence that action.” Id. Such an act

       “must be unequivocal, objectively ascertainable and final in order to be overt and

       binding.” Id.

¶ 47         The Ohio Court of Appeals has explicitly delineated what a bank must do to

       avoid waiver of the right of setoff against a garnished account:

                       [W]hen a garnishment action is pending, the bank must
                       either release the amount on deposit to the garnishor or it
                       must take the full amount on deposit (assuming that the
                       full amount on deposit does not exceed the amount owed to
                       the bank by the depositor) as setoff. The failure to exercise
                       setoff by claiming the full amount on deposit when a
                       garnishment action is pending can be construed as waiver.

       Maines Paper & Food Serv.-Midwest, Inc. v. Regal Foods, Inc., 654 N.E.2d 355, 359

       (Ohio Ct. App. 1995) (emphasis added).

¶ 48         I find the reasoning of these courts persuasive and applicable to the present

       case: to avoid waiver of its right of setoff against a garnished account, a bank must

       take some overt action, beyond a mere assertion of the right of setoff in defense of

       garnishment, evidencing the actual exercise of the right of setoff against the

       garnished account.

¶ 49         In the present case, although Chase Bank may have made “the decision to

       exercise the right” of setoff against the garnished Operating Account, it cannot

       demonstrate that it took “some action which accomplishe[d] the setoff[.]” Normand

       Josef, 646 A.2d at 1299. Indeed, the Operating Account records establish that KLO
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       had uninterrupted control over the garnished account from October 2019 through

       February 2020. Chase Bank also failed to provide “some record which evidences that

       the right of setoff ha[d] been exercised[,]” as it admitted during discovery. Id.

¶ 50         Additionally, Chase Bank did not “release the amount on deposit [in the

       Operating Account] to the garnishor or . . . take the full amount on deposit[.]” Maines

       Paper, 654 N.E.2d at 359. Instead, Chase Bank allowed KLO unfettered access to the

       Operating Account and processed millions of dollars through the account. This stands

       in stark contrast to Chase Bank’s handling of the Cash Collateral Account, from

       which Chase Bank debited all funds on the same day that it notified GMT that it had

       exercised the right of setoff. Chase Bank’s “failure to exercise setoff by claiming the

       full amount on deposit when a garnishment action [wa]s pending[,]” therefore, “can

       be construed as waiver.” Id.

¶ 51         Finally, Chase Bank’s inaction with regard to the Operating Account meets the

       definition of “waiver” propounded by this Court in Killette: “an intentional and

       permanent relinquishment of a known right, . . . manifested in a clear and

       unequivocal manner.” 93 N.C. App. at 164, 377 S.E.2d at 74 (citation omitted). Chase

       Bank was aware that it had the right of setoff in defense to the garnishment action;

       indeed, it claimed the right of setoff in its answer to GMT on 6 November 2019, and

       it exercised the right of setoff against the Cash Collateral Account that same day.

       Nonetheless, Chase Bank allowed KLO to continue to use and access the Operating
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       Account for months after claiming its right of setoff. During this period, KLO not only

       withdrew funds from the account on the date on which Chase Bank was served with

       GMT’s garnishment process, but also subsequently deposited millions of dollars into

       that account. Chase Bank’s inaction with regard to the Operating Account was

       manifestly inconsistent with its claimed setoff.

¶ 52         The act of setoff against a garnished account is not complete until some action

       is taken to accomplish the setoff. Absent any corresponding action, Chase Bank’s

       mere claim of a setoff against the Operating Account was insufficient to support its

       claim and to defeat GMT’s ability to recover through garnishment. In light of these

       facts, Chase Bank’s failure to take any affirmative actions in furtherance of its right

       of setoff against the Operating Account in defense of garnishment was “an intentional

       and permanent relinquishment of a known right” that was “manifested in a clear and

       unequivocal manner.” Id. Where Chase Bank allowed KLO continued access to and

       use of the funds in the Operating Account despite the garnishment, Chase Bank

       waived the right of setoff with regard to that account, and Chase Bank is therefore

       liable to GMT as garnishee.

¶ 53         For the reasons stated herein, I would affirm the trial court’s entry of summary

       judgment in favor of GMT’s right to recover from Chase Bank as garnishee.

       Accordingly, I respectfully dissent.