Atlantic Leasing & Financial, Inc., a Corporation v. Ipm Technology, Inc.

885 F.2d 188, 1989 WL 105157
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedOctober 23, 1989
Docket88-1793
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 885 F.2d 188 (Atlantic Leasing & Financial, Inc., a Corporation v. Ipm Technology, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Atlantic Leasing & Financial, Inc., a Corporation v. Ipm Technology, Inc., 885 F.2d 188, 1989 WL 105157 (4th Cir. 1989).

Opinion

HARRISON L. WINTER, Circuit Judge:

Plaintiff, Atlantic Leasing & Financial, Inc. (Atlantic), obtained a confessed judgment in the amount of $72,434.26 against defendant, IPM Technology, Inc. (IPM), as the guarantor of an equipment lease. IPM appeals the district court’s refusal to vacate the confessed judgment asserting federal constitutional and state law error. We affirm.

I.

IPM is the guarantor of Workman Electronic Products (“Workman”), a previously wholly-owned subsidiary of IPM, with respect to a lease of computer equipment by Workman from Atlantic, a subsidiary of The Bank of Baltimore. The computer equipment was manufactured and sold by the Burroughs Corporation. Atlantic provided financing for the equipment through a sale and lease-back transaction with Workman.

An “Equipment Lease Guaranty” (Guaranty), dated December 3, 1986, provides that IPM:

unconditionally guarantees (a) to pay Lessor [Atlantic] ... all rents and other sums reserved in the Lease ... in the amounts, at the times and in the manner set forth in said Lease; and (b) to perform, at the time and in the manner set forth in the Lease, all of the terms, con-venants and conditions therein required to be kept, observed or performed by Lessee [Workman].

The Guaranty also contains waiver-of-defenses and confessed-judgment provisions which are central to this dispute. The waiver-of-defenses provision states:

Guarantor waives any right to require Lessor to: (a) proceed against Lessee; (b) proceed against Lessee or the leased equipment or any other security held from Lessee; (c) pursue any other reme *191 dy in Lessor’s power whatsoever; or (d) notify Guarantor of any default by Lessee in the payment of any rent or other sums reserved in the Lease or in the performance of any term, covenant or condition therein required to be kept, observed or performed by Lessee. Guarantor waives any defense arising by reason of any disability or any counterclaim or right of set-off or other defense of Lessee, ...; provided, however, that Guarantor does not waive any defense arising from the due performance by Lessee of the terms and conditions of the Lease.

The confessed-judgment provision states:

Upon a default under this Guaranty, the Lessor may, at its option and without notice or demand, declare an amount equal to the then unpaid balance of the Lessee’s obligations under the Lease (the “Unpaid Balance”) to be immediately due and payable by the Guarantor.... At any time thereafter, the Guarantor hereby authorizes and empowers any attorney of any Court of Record within the United States to appear for the Guarantor in any Court in one or more proceedings or before any clerk thereof, and confess judgment against the Guarantor, without prior written notice, or opportunity for prior hearing, in favor of Lessor for the Unpaid Balance plus costs of suit and an attorney’s fee of 15% of the Unpaid Balance, hereby waiving and releasing, to the extent permitted by Law, all errors and all rights of exemption, appeal, stay of execution, inquisition and extension upon any levy or real estate or personal property to which the Guarantor may otherwise be entitled under the laws of the United States or of any state or possession of the United States now in force or which may hereafter be passed.

In June 1988, Workman stopped making lease payments due to the alleged failure of the computer equipment to function properly or as promised. According to Workman, Burroughs’ service personnel considered the computer system beyond repair. Layne F. Huttenberger, an Atlantic employee, telephoned Seymour Kahn, President of IPM, to inform him of lessee’s default and demand payment. Kahn asserts that Huttenberger subsequently agreed to make arrangements for Burroughs to take back the equipment and thereafter to terminate the obligations of Workman and IPM under the Lease and the Guaranty. Huttenberger counters that no such representation was made, but that he did offer to reduce the debt owed under the lease by the then-undetermined value of the equipment in exchange for prompt payment under the Guaranty by IPM.

On June 20, 1988, the district court entered a judgment by confession against IPM in favor of Atlantic in the amount of $62,986.32 plus interest, costs, and $9,447.94 in attorneys’ fees. Atlantic was represented before the court by an attorney from the Baltimore law firm of Piper & Marbury. A second attorney from Piper & Marbury appeared on behalf of IPM pursuant to the confessed-judgment provision which authorizes such an appearance by “any attorney” of the “Court of Record.” Notification of the judgment and of IPM’s right to file a written motion seeking to open, modify, or vacate it was sent to IPM by the court clerk pursuant to statute. Notification of the judgment was also sent to IPM by Atlantic.

IPM moved to vacate the judgment on the grounds that it was uninformed as to the consequences of the contract terms to which it had agreed and that the confessed-judgment provision as applied constituted an impermissible deprivation of its due process rights under the Fourteenth Amendment. Officers of IPM stated in affidavits that it had relied on the good faith of its contractors and that it would not have agreed to the Guaranty if it had been specifically apprised of the confessed-judgment provision. IPM also claimed to have been misled by Burroughs or Atlantic, or both, as to their relationship, the legal effects of the Guaranty, and the quality of Burroughs’ equipment and service. Finally, IPM challenged the claimed attorneys’ fees as “inherently unreasonable.”

II.

A.

IPM raises several due process challenges on appeal. The first of these is that *192 there was no valid waiver of its rights to notice and a hearing; in other words, that at least a portion of the contract should be deemed unenforceable. Both parties recognize D.H. Overmyer Co., Inc. of Ohio v. Frick Co., 405 U.S. 174, 92 S.Ct. 775, 31 L.Ed.2d 124 (1972), as the seminal case regarding the constitutionality of confessed-judgment contract provisions. IPM argues that Overmyer establishes a rarely met threshold for finding these provisions consistent with “current notions of the Fourteenth Amendment due process.” 405 U.S. at 178, 92 S.Ct. at 779.

In Overmyer, the Court first noted that “due process rights to notice and hearing prior to a civil judgment are subject to waiver.” 405 U.S. at 185, 92 S.Ct. at 782. The Court then assumed, without explicitly deciding, that the standard for assessing the validity of such waiver in a corporate property-right case was the same as that in a criminal proceeding: i.e., “that it be voluntary, knowing, and intelligently made, or ‘an intentional relinquishment or abandonment of a known right or privilege’ .... ” 405 U.S. at 185-86, 92 S.Ct. at 782 (citations omitted). The Court then reviewed the particular facts of the case and concluded that the waiver had, in fact, been voluntarily, knowingly, and intelligently made.

The Court in Overmyer closed with three “concluding comments”:

1.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
885 F.2d 188, 1989 WL 105157, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/atlantic-leasing-financial-inc-a-corporation-v-ipm-technology-inc-ca4-1989.