Burns v. Ferguson
This text of 576 P.2d 784 (Burns v. Ferguson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
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The issue presented in this lawsuit against two alleged guarantors of a note is whether the guaranty instrument they executed was complete when they signed it or merely an offer which was never accepted by the guarantee? The trial court held that it was complete upon execution and the executor appeals. We reverse.
I
The guaranty in question came about as an incident to the construction funding of a million and a half dollar office building in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. Plaintiff, Justice Mortgage Investors, a trust, made a $1,700,000 construction loan to Cavalier Construction Company in April 1972 and as security took a first mortgage on the new facility. Eventually, the loan balance was reduced to $100,000 and, to facilitate consummation of permanent financing, Cava[785]*785lier asked Justice to release its first mortgage and to accept instead — as security for the unpaid balance — assignment of a note executed by Uniworld Management Corporation to Great Plains Realty and Development Company, secured by a mortgage on certain property in Lawton, Oklahoma. It was to assure payment of this note that the controversial guaranty in question was executed by several people including the defending Fergusons.
It came to pass, of course, that Uniworld defaulted on its note precipitating this action to foreclose a securing mortgage (without, incidentally, designating which one) and to obtain a deficiency judgment against the executors of the guaranty instrument.
II
As defenses, the Fergusons — who admitted signing the guaranty agreement — alleged in their answer that there was no consideration given for their signatures, and then later, during post-trial argument in support of their demurrer to Justice’s evidence, contended that what they signed was merely an offer which, for want of an acceptance by Justice, never ripened into an “absolute” or completed contract.
At trial Justice placed the executed guaranty contract in evidence which recited in pertinent part:
“THEREFORE, to induce you to release the Justice Mortgage [securing the Cavalier note], the undersigned guaranty the payment of the [Uniworld] Note . in consideration thereof, and in consideration of the benefits to accrue to the undersigned therefrom, the undersigned hereby jointly and severally guarantee to you the prompt payment at maturity . of said indebtedness .
“This is an absolute and continuing guaranty of payment in any event and shall not terminate until you have been paid in full . . ..” (emphasis added)
and after proving default of the Uniworld obligation, rested.
The Fergusons demurred to Justice’s evidence as being insufficient to warrant recovery against them because of, among other things, a failure to prove that it accepted the Fergusons’ guaranty offer by releasing the Justice mortgage. In rejecting the Fer-gusons’ demurrer the trial court held that the guaranty was complete and it was unnecessary for Justice to prove release of its Cavalier mortgage.
Ill
The Fergusons rely upon the holding of T. & H. Smith & Co. v. Thesmann, 20 Okl. 133, 93 P. 977 (1908) as a foundation for their contention that the high tribunal of this state has determined the legal effect of the “to induce” recital in the foregoing quote to be that it bestows on the guaranty instrument the status of “an offer or proposal [of guaranty],” which, until appropriately accepted by the offeree, remains unenforceable against the offeror. An appropriate acceptance in this case, continue the Fergusons, would have been accomplished by releasing the Justice mortgage. Therefore, they conclude, since Justice did not prove such acceptance, its evidence disclosed only an offer of guaranty which was insufficient for any recovery.
According to Justice, however, the Fergu-sons’ argument is refuted by certain definitive language that follows the “to induce” statement, viz., “This is an absolute and continuing guaranty . . ..” Moreover, says Justice, if the instrument is ambiguous then the “to induce” words should be construed as promissory in nature as distinguished from words of condition, and, in any event, construed against the guarantors. Furthermore, with regard to Thes-mann, Justice says that case is factually distinguishable in that, unlike here, “any liability which might have been incurred” by the prospective'guarantor “in executing the guaranty agreement was totally and completely contingent in nature [because] there was no certainty whatsoever that the purchase order would ever be accepted by the [potential promissee].” Nor, concludes Justice, was there an exchange of promises in Thesmann like there was between the parties to this action.
[786]*786The trouble with the Justice thesis is that neither the material facts of Thesmann nor of this case will accommodate the distinctions proposed.
The language crucial to the Thesmann result seems even more strongly positive (going so far as to recite “For value received”) than what we have here and reads:
“For value received and for the purpose of inducing T. & H. Smith Co. to approve of this contract, I hereby guarantee to said T. & H. Smith Co., the payment in lawful money of all claims arising and of any notes taken under within contract
Justice’s first suggested distinction — that Thesmann in fact involves the making of an offer in that the guaranty there was of a nonexisting contract because of a pre-con-tract contingency, namely, home office approval of an order while here the Fergu-sons’ guaranty was based upon an exchange of promises which created an existing contract — is not only untenable, but, we think, demonstrates dramatically a flagrant flaw in Justice’s proof. In Thesmann the express motivation for the guaranty agreement was a request for T. & H. Smith & Co. to approve the sales contract which was to form the foundation for the guaranty. Similarly here the express motivation for the guaranty agreement was a desire for Justice’s release of its first mortgage which, for all we know, may very well have also been the catalystic consideration for an agreement between Justice and Cavalier out of which arose need for the Ferguson guaranty. Although under the particular facts of Thesmann it happened that there was nothing for the guaranty to operate on until fulfillment of the inducing act— whereas here there was an existing mortgage upon which the guaranty could operate — we do not consider this the basis for the Thesmann result and therefore not a material distinction. In Thesmann the guaranty was executed with naught but hope that the sales contract would be approved (which, incidentally, it was six days later). And paralleling that feature the guaranty here was also signed with merely a hope that the first mortgage would be released (which, by the way, was apparently never done). Contrary to what Justice says, there is no evidence in the record of an exchange of promises between the Fer-gusons and Justice. As we mentioned earlier, we think it significant that while Justice refers to both the Cavalier and Uniworld mortgages in the body of its petition filed in this case, its prayer for mortgage foreclosure does not specify which mortgage it seeks to foreclose.
We might point out that, under all the circumstances, it appears to us that regardless of how tenuous the interpretive efforts of Thesmann
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576 P.2d 784, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burns-v-ferguson-oklacivapp-1978.