Butler Paper Company v. Business Forms, Ltd., and Maneke-Kinzie Printing Company

424 F.2d 247
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedApril 21, 1970
Docket181-69_1
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 424 F.2d 247 (Butler Paper Company v. Business Forms, Ltd., and Maneke-Kinzie Printing Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Butler Paper Company v. Business Forms, Ltd., and Maneke-Kinzie Printing Company, 424 F.2d 247 (10th Cir. 1970).

Opinion

*249 HILL, Circuit Judge.

This diversity action was instituted by Butler Paper against Maneke-Kinzie to recover on a guaranty in which Ma-neke-Kinzie agreed to guarantee payment for paper used by Business Forms and supplied by Butler Paper, and for recovery against Business Forms on its contracts of purchase. The district court concluded upon its own findings that Butler failed to tender sufficient evidence to sustain its burden of proof and accordingly held that Maneke-Kinzie was free from liability on its guaranty. This appeal followed with appellant Butler essentially arguing that the district court committed manifest error by construing the guaranty in favor of the guarantor. The finding that Business Forms is liable to Butler Paper is not appealed.

Because the case was before the trial court without a jury, the findings entered will be set aside only on a showing of clear error. 1 The burden is upon the appellant to definitely and firmly convince us that upon the basis of the entire record, a reversible mistake has been made. 2 We thus proceed to detail the facts. Butler is a Delaware corporation with offices in Wichita, Kansas, and Dallas, Texas. In mid-1965, Butler agreed to supply Business Forms’ predecessor, 3 a Bartlesville, Oklahoma, printing company, with their paper needs. The mechanics of the operation provided that Butler would ship paper to the Business Forms’ warehouse and send the invoices to the Bartlesville offices. Business Forms then signed security agreements confirming that the paper was Butler’s property until such time as it was used in a printing job. When Butler’s paper was used a job slip was made on which was recorded the amount of paper used and the customer’s name. Nothing on that slip served to correlate the paper used with the invoice under which it was delivered from Butler. Periodically a Butler employee collected the job slips from the Bartlesville plant. As the jobs were completed and the customer remitted to Business Forms, the proceeds were designated as trust funds until the appropriate accounting was made to Butler.

By November, 1965, Business Forms was in critical financial straits. A creditor’s committee attempted to rectify the situation by requesting Maneke-Kinzie, a Tulsa firm, to provide management supervision. The latter consented and covenanted to guarantee obligations which matured after November 1, 1965, and .which were authorized by their office. On November 12, by letter to Butler Paper 'Company, Maneke-Kinzie agreed to conditionally guarantee paper shipped to Business Forms, Limited. 4 Under this *250 arrangement Business Forms continued to order and Butler continued to ship paper to Bartlesville. Accompanying each purchase order was a Maneke-Kinzie specific letter guarantee which covered the paper shipped. After about twenty orders which conformed to the usual methods, Maneke-Kinzie changed the procedure. The new purchase orders designated Maneke-Kinzie as the purchaser and the shipping destination as the Business Forms’ warehouse. There were no specific letter guarantee letters with these later purchase orders but each order contained the notation “Confirming in addition to guarantee letter” or simply “Confirming.” The pithy contention of Maneke-Kinzie was that only the orders accompanied by a specific letter guarantee create liability under the November 12 guaranty and that their payments to Butler have exceeded the amounts so ordered. In concise form, Butler alleged that all the purchase orders were covered by the guaranty of November 12 and that the presence or absence of accompanying guaranty letters was of no consequence. In January, 1967, Business Forms went out of business and left Butler with an allegedly uncollectible debt of ovqr $37,000. Of that amount appellant claims that $26,-721.68 was subject to the November 12, 1965, Maneke-Kinzie guaranty.

The relevant findings of the court are these: Business Forms was liable to Butler for $37,040.30; the November 12, 1965, letter constituted a guaranty agreement; the agreement “specifically limited Maneke-Kinzie’s liability with reference to the collection of accounts and the payment of the collections of certain accounts to Butler Paper Company and specifically limited the liability to default after 10-day’s notice”; there was no evidence of a ten day notice; the guaranty contract obligated Butler to maintain records sufficient to indicate what was guaranteed and that Butler was required under the terms of that agreement to give Maneke-Kinzie notice of the aggregate amount owed under the guaranty. Upon these findings the trial court concluded that Butler Paper failed to sustain its burden of proof and decided that Maneke-Kinzie had not breached its contract.

The guaranty agreement does not require Butler to give a ten day notice and the trial court’s contrary construction is clearly erroneous. The “notice” language is unambiguous and only by an impermissible manipulation of the sentence could it be given the meaning attributed to it by the lower court. The plain, ordinary and obvious intention was to permit demand for payment only after expiration of a ten day grace period from the date of customer remittance. Since the facts tacitly admit of actual knowledge by Maneke-Kinzie regarding Business Forms’ default, and inasmuch as the record is devoid of evidence showing any Maneke-Kinzie injury between the time of default and notice of the suit, the guaranty provision has had sufficient compliance as has the Oklahoma statute on notice. 5

*251 The trial court’s supplemental finding that the guaranty contract imposed an obligation on Butler to maintain records indicating which jobs were guaranteed is likewise clearly erroneous. To sustain its burden upon this finding, Butler had to tender a ledger of job orders which indicated whether payment was received, and then compare it to Business Forms’ accounts receivable ledger and from that, determine the amounts guaranteed by Maneke-Kinzie. After having thoroughly perused the guaranty instrument, we conclude that it was wrong to say it required any of the aforementioned records. The agreement provided only for transmittal of security agreements, job slips and payment for the paper used. It is questionable whether good business practice would require more than a running total showing current indebtedness by Business Forms, but it is certain that the contract which governs the suit does not impose that obligation.

We have studied the exhibits introduced during the trial and have given careful scrutiny to plaintiff’s exhibits F-l through F-21 and G-l through G-36. Cumulatively these represent the purchases made from Butler between November 1, 1965, and January, 1967. There is no controversy over Maneke-Kinzie’s liability on the first twenty-one orders (the F series) which were accompanied by a letter guarantee. It is the G series, which is made up of purchase orders unaccompanied by letter guarantees, that is at the heart of this suit and to which we have given particular attention.

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Bluebook (online)
424 F.2d 247, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/butler-paper-company-v-business-forms-ltd-and-maneke-kinzie-printing-ca10-1970.