Caterpillar Fin. Services Corp. v. Wells

651 A.2d 507, 278 N.J. Super. 481
CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedJuly 26, 1994
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 651 A.2d 507 (Caterpillar Fin. Services Corp. v. Wells) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Caterpillar Fin. Services Corp. v. Wells, 651 A.2d 507, 278 N.J. Super. 481 (N.J. Ct. App. 1994).

Opinion

278 N.J. Super. 481 (1994)
651 A.2d 507

CATERPILLAR FINANCIAL SERVICES CORPORATION, PLAINTIFF,
v.
SCOTT WELLS, JANET WELLS, RICHARD WELLS AND ROBERTA WELLS, DEFENDANTS.

Superior Court of New Jersey, Law Division Bergen County.

July 26, 1994.

*485 Michael Kahme, for plaintiff (Hill Wallack, attorneys).

Jared M. Lans, for defendants.

KOLE, J.A.D., Retired and Temporarily Assigned on Recall.

This is an action by Caterpillar Financial Services Corp. (CATF) for a deficiency against four guarantors of a lease of two pieces of heavy construction equipment in which CATF was the lessor and Wells Excavating, Inc. (the Wells Corporation) was the lessee. Given as collateral by the lessee under the lease was a third piece of heavy construction equipment owned by it that was subject to a security agreement assigned to CATF.

*486 The fact pattern in this case is somewhat unusual. Based on what I consider to be the credible evidence, I make the findings of fact and conclusions of law that follow.

The persons involved in the significant events include Richard Wells, Jr. He is not a guarantor and is thus not being sued for the deficiency. In or about August, 1988, he owned and operated Rigale Construction Co. (Rigale). He also was involved in the business of Wells Excavating, Inc. with his brother, Scott Wells. Scott and his wife, Janet, and Richard Wells, Sr. and his wife, Roberta, are the individual guarantors of the lease.

Caterpillar, Inc. (Caterpillar), the manufacturer of the Caterpillar heavy equipment involved herein, is the parent of CATF, its wholly owned subsidiary and financing entity. Caterpillar sells its equipment generally through a network of dealers, one of which is Foley Machinery (Foley), the selling dealer in the area covering New Jersey. It also has a dealer, Carter Machinery Co. (Carter), in which it has an ownership interest, the exact nature of which was not disclosed at trial by CATF. I find that it has a sufficiently substantial interest in Carter to justify a reasonable inference that a sale of equipment to Carter eventually benefits Caterpillar financially if Carter makes a profit thereon.

In 1988, Rigale purchased from Foley a 1987 excavator for $165,000. It entered into an installment sale and security agreement with Foley to finance the net amount of $136,430 (after deduction of various items, including a $92,000 trade-in). The total time balance was $160,812, to be paid in 36 monthly installments of $4,467, commencing February 10, 1988 and ending January 10, 1991. This installment sales contract and security agreement, with the underlying Rigale promissory note, were assigned by Foley, together with contracts and security agreements of other Foley customers, as a group, to CATF on August 3, 1988.

In October 1990, Rigale transferred its rights under the 1987 excavator contract to the Wells Corporation. At that time the *487 installments thereunder were almost paid in full, there being only three payments left, totalling $13,848.20, or approximately $14,000.

Some time prior to October 30, 1990, Foley, as lessor, entered into two equipment leases with the Wells Corporation, as lessee: (1) On March 29, 1990, for the wheel loader (valued at $90,000), at a rental of $4,875 per month, apparently on a month-to-month basis. (2) On December 13, 1989, for the 1989 excavator, (valued at $171,000), at a rental of $7,495 per month, apparently on a month-to-month basis. Neither lease provides for an option to buy by the lessee; but instead, requires that at the expiration of the lease term, the equipment must be returned to the lessor, Foley. The leases provide that at all times title to the equipment is in the lessor. The total monthly payments on both leases were thus $12,370. Foley filed UCC financing statements with respect to both pieces of leased equipment.

The Wells Corporation found these payments to be onerous. After discussing the matter with Foley's representative, the latter arranged for a conversion of the two leases into the present CATF lease, under which both pieces of equipment were leased from CATF at lower rental amounts by reason of a purchase option allowable to the lessee and a fixed term of 36 months. The conversion documents on Foley's invoices, dated October 31, 1990, show the following:

         Wheel loader
         Selling Price                        $ 90,000.00
         Rentals Paid                           13,500.00
                                              ___________
                                              $ 76,500.00
         Sales Tax                               5,355.00
         Interest                                6,645.77
                                              ___________
         (apparently on past-due rents)
                               Total:         $ 88,500.77
         1989 Excavator
         Selling Price                        $171,000.00
         Rentals Paid                           39,000.00
                                              ___________
                                              $132,000.00
         Sales Tax                               9,240.00
*488         Interest                               18,651.40
                                              ___________
         (apparently on past-due rents)
                               Total:         $159,891.40

The purchase option amounts at the end of the 36 months CATF lease term reduced the monthly rental payments on these two pieces of equipment. The reduced rentals resulted in a total saving to the Wells Corporation in excess of $6,500 per month. The option price at which the Wells Corporation could buy the wheel loader was $23,750; the option price for the 1989 excavator was $44,000. The options would have to be exercised not less than 60 days before the end of the lease term, but the price would be paid at the end of the term. The CATF lease, dated January 31, 1991 ("utilization date" in the lease), but executed on or about October 30, 1990, would terminate on January 31, 1994.

It should be noted that, although the Wells Corporation made only one rental payment under the lease with CATF, on November 29, 1990, covering each piece of equipment, in fact, there had been earlier rental payments thereon that were made to Foley under its leases.

The lease between CATF and the Wells Corporation required the latter to give additional collateral to CATF by way of granting CATF a "continuing security interest" in the 1987 excavator that Rigale had purchased from Foley and had transferred to the Wells Corporation; that equipment was subject to the security interest of Foley. In August 1988, as indicated, as part of a group of unrelated security agreements, Foley had already assigned its rights in the security agreement and the note it secured to CATF. The value of the 1987 excavator, when it was given as additional collateral to CATF, obviously was substantially more than approximately $14,000, the remaining balance under the installment sale and security agreement with Foley.

The CATF lease also required the guarantees of the Wells individuals and their wives, with the exception of Richard Jr. and his wife. Those guarantees, like the CATF lease itself, are in small and somewhat light type — all very difficult to read.

*489 There are various values, in the proofs, placed on the wheel loader and the 1989 excavator.

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Bluebook (online)
651 A.2d 507, 278 N.J. Super. 481, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/caterpillar-fin-services-corp-v-wells-njsuperctappdiv-1994.