1st Summit Bank v. Samuelson

1998 ND 113, 580 N.W.2d 132, 1998 N.D. LEXIS 130, 1998 WL 286779
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedJune 4, 1998
DocketCivil 970383
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 1998 ND 113 (1st Summit Bank v. Samuelson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
1st Summit Bank v. Samuelson, 1998 ND 113, 580 N.W.2d 132, 1998 N.D. LEXIS 130, 1998 WL 286779 (N.D. 1998).

Opinion

VANDE WALLE, Chief Justice.

[¶ 1] Edward 0. Samuelson and Carol M. Samuelson, husband and wife, appealed from the Amended Order and Order of the Cass County District Court denying their motion to set aside a foreign judgment. The foreign judgment was originally entered as a confessed judgment in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. We conclude the Pennsylvania confession of judgment procedure is not unconstitutional as applied in this case, and the foreign judgment is entitled to full faith and credit in North Dakota. We affirm.

I

[¶2] Edward Samuelson entered into a turkey farming venture in Christine, North Dakota. Samuelson was among a group of five investors headed by a business promoter. The group formed Dakota Turkey Farms, with each investor receiving a fixed percentage of the business. Samuelson initially owned eleven percent of the shares and, later, became a fifteen percent shareholder. Samuelson claims this increase in ownership interest was given to him without his consent.

[¶ 3] The group of investors included Barry Alberter, a director of 1st Summit Bank (then known as Summit Bank), a financial institution located in Pennsylvania. Alberter used his relationship with 1st Summit Bank to arrange for a loan in the amount of $290,-000.00.

[¶ 4] In order to obtain the loan, Edward and Carol Samuelson were asked to sign a document entitled “GUARANTY AGREEMENT with POWER TO CONFESS JUDGMENT.” The Samuelsons signed the guaranty agreement on October 11, 1991. The agreement was not signed under oath. Compare Pa.R.C.P. No. 2951(a)(2) (providing for the filing of “the instrument” in support of the entry of judgment by confession with no requirement the “instrument” be signed under oath); with N.D. R. Civ. P. 68(c)(2) (requiring a statement signed by defendant under oath for a confession of judgment in North Dakota). As the title of the guaranty agreement indicates, the document included a confession of judgment clause:

“5. In the event Borrower shall at any time fail to pay Bank, when the same shall be due, the principal of, or interest on, any indebtedness or obligation, the undersigned promises to pay such amount to Bank forthwith. The undersigned hereby further authorizes and empowers any attorney of any court of record within the United States of America, or elsewhere, to .appear for the undersigned, and, with or without declaration filed confess judgment against the undersigned, in favor of Bank, or its successors and assigns, for the unpaid balance or balances of any such indebtedness or obligation of the Borrower to it, if not paid when due, whether by acceleration or otherwise, with costs of suit and attorney’s commission of fifteen per centum (15%) or $300.00, whichever is greater, for collection, with release of errors, without stay of execution, or right of appeal, waiving all laws exempting real or personal property from execution, and inquisition and extension upon any levy on real estate are hereby waived and condemnation agreed to, and no benefit of exemption law now in force or which may hereafter be passed. No single exercise of the foregoing power to confess judgment shall be deemed to exhaust the power, whether or not any such exercise shall be held by any court to be valid, voidable or void, but the power shall continue undiminished and it may be exercised from time to time as often as Bank, its successors and assigns, shall elect, until such timé as Bank, its successors and assigns, shall have received payment in full of such indebtedness of Borrower, together with interest thereon and costs.”

[¶ 5] On October 31,1991, Edward Samuelson, along with the members of the Dakota Turkey Farms investment group, executed a commercial promissory note payable to 1st Summit Bank in the principal amount of *134 $290,000.00. 1 The commercial note was not signed by Carol Samuelson. Edward Samuelson and the other investors also signed a “LOAN TRANSACTIONS AND REPAYMENT AGREEMENT” which provided a payment schedule for the loan.

’ [¶ 6] Shortly after commencing operations, Dakota Turkey Farms defaulted on its loan. 1st Summit pursued the guarantors of the loan, including Edward and Carol Samuelson. An attorney representing 1st Summit filed a Complaint dated May 12, 1992, in the Court of Common Pleas of Cambria County, Pennsylvania. A confessed judgment was entered against the Samuelsons on May 20, 1992. Edward Samuelson claims he was not notified that a complaint had been filed, nor was he given the chance to answer. The Samuel-sons were provided notice of the entry of the confessed Pennsylvania judgment in May 1992.

[¶ 7] Subsequently, 1st Summit Bank purportedly negotiated a “WORK-OUT AGREEMENT” with the makers of the commercial note to restructure and settle the debt. The agreement is not signed by 1st Summit or any of the indebted investors. Nevertheless, it appears the indebted investors have attempted to follow the agreement’s repayment plan.

[¶ 8] In the ‘WORK-OUT AGREEMENT” Samuelson agreed to be liable for $60,414.68, an amount based on his percentage of ownership in the Dakota Turkey Farm. Despite this apparent apportionment of the debt, the agreement specifically provided that each of the parties remained “jointly and severally liable for the entire amounts due under the Note.”

[¶ 9] The Samuelsons claim the previously confessed judgment was supposed to be canceled by 1st Summit as part of the agreement. However, language in the Agreement appears to continue “[t]he [n]ote and other loan documentation” in full force and effect.

[¶ 10] On March 19, 1997, the confessed judgment was renewed in Pennsylvania. The Pennsylvania judgment in the amount of $285,666.30 was filed in the Cass County District Court of North Dakota on April 18, 1997, with notice of filing served upon the Samuelsons that same day. See N.D.C.C. Ch. 28-20.1 (providing for enforcement of foreign judgments). When 1st Summit sought to enforce the judgment in North Dakota the Samuelsons filed a “Motion to Set Aside Foreign Judgment and Stay All Further Proceedings.”

[¶ 11] The district court denied the Samu-elsons’ motion in an Order dated August 28, 1997. The Samuelsons moved for reconsideration of the court’s Order. The court again denied the Samuelsons’ motion, but filed an Amended Order on October 28,1997, for the purpose of correcting a statutory citation. The court further ordered 1st Summit to enter a partial satisfaction of judgment to reflect the portion of the debt paid since 1992, when the original judgment was entered in Pennsylvania.

II

[¶ 12] We are asked to consider whether a foreign judgment, entered upon a confession in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, is entitled to full faith and credit in the State of North Dakota. The Full Faith and Credit Clause of the United States Constitution provides:

*135 “Full Faith and Credit shall be given in each State to the public Acts, Records, and judicial Proceedings of every other State. And the Congress may by general Laws prescribe the Manner in which such Acts, Records and Proceedings shall be proved, and the Effect thereof.”

U.S. Const. Art. IV, § l. 2

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Brossart v. Janke
2020 ND 98 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 2020)
Interest of C.B.
2018 ND 27 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 2018)
F/S Manufacturing v. Kensmoe
2011 ND 113 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 2011)
State v. Rogers
2011 ND 104 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 2011)
Harris v. Harris
2010 ND 45 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 2010)
Gray v. North Dakota Game and Fish Dept.
2005 ND 204 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 2005)
Reed v. University of North Dakota
1999 ND 25 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1999)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1998 ND 113, 580 N.W.2d 132, 1998 N.D. LEXIS 130, 1998 WL 286779, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/1st-summit-bank-v-samuelson-nd-1998.