Crompton-Richmond Company, Inc., Factors v. James S. Briggs

560 F.2d 1195, 2 Fed. R. Serv. 493, 1977 U.S. App. LEXIS 11232
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedOctober 11, 1977
Docket75-2658
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 560 F.2d 1195 (Crompton-Richmond Company, Inc., Factors v. James S. Briggs) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Crompton-Richmond Company, Inc., Factors v. James S. Briggs, 560 F.2d 1195, 2 Fed. R. Serv. 493, 1977 U.S. App. LEXIS 11232 (5th Cir. 1977).

Opinion

BROWN, Chief Judge:

In the world of corporate finance, the amount of credit one is able to obtain often represents the difference between the success or failure of an enterprise. This case is one in which a skilled and knowledgeable businessman formulated a plan to attempt to bring Grosse Pointe Mills, Inc. (Grosse Pointe), a Rome, Georgia carpet manufacturer, from a losing operation into the capitalist haven of profitability. The plan was to increase sales dramatically in hopes of reversing the nonprofit trend. To do so, Grosse Pointe had to acquire significantly increased inventories of production materials which required obtaining correspondingly greater amounts of credit. The pivotal aspect of this plan for Grosse Pointe, as with all financially weak companies, was how to secure additional credit. How this credit was obtained and how a guarantor seeks to avoid his guaranty obligation is the essence of this diversity based enforcement action which we affirm.

Under the direction of James S. Briggs, chief financial officer and a director of Grosse Pointe, and his hand-picked president for Grosse Pointe’s operations, the strategy to get this increased credit for Grosse Pointe was developed and implemented. Briggs knew that Grosse Pointe’s ability to obtain ready cash by factoring 1 its own accounts receivable had been extended as far as possible. Thus, any credit for the purchase of increased production inventories had to be procured via credit purchases from the suppliers. One of the earliest suppliers under this scheme was Integrated Products, Inc. which obtained a large yarn contract from Grosse Pointe.

Since Integrated Products did not desire to extend credit directly to Grosse Pointe, it factored the account receivable from the Grosse Pointe purchase. However, before Crompton-Richmond as factor for Integrated, and later for seven other suppliers, would grant credit at Crompton-Richmond’s risk for Grosse Pointe purchases, Crompton-Richmond 2 sought and obtained on January 14,1970, the personal guaranty of James S. Briggs. Thus, the entire scheme as devel *1198 oped and executed by Briggs was to gain credit for the expansion of Grosse Pointe’s business by having suppliers factor the accounts receivable created by Grosse Pointe’s purchases 3 — at least for those suppliers unwilling to extend credit directly to Grosse Pointe.

At the time James Briggs executed the guaranty agreement to ensure that Grosse Pointe obtained its inventory purchases- on credit, only an initial purchase of approximately $50,000 from Integrated was involved. However, Briggs did not sign a limited guaranty. The agreement covered “any concern for which [Crompton-Rich-mond] may now or in the future act as factors to extend credit to Grosse Pointe Mills, Inc.” Essentially Briggs was personally guarantying present and future contracts, obligations, and indebtedness of Grosse Pointe which Crompton-Riehmond factored. Also included in the guaranty agreement was a waiver of any notice requirements and any basis for Briggs’ discharge except for full payment of Grosse Pointe’s liabilities to Crompton-Riehmond. 4 *1199 The agreement is by its very terms “. . . an absolute, continuing, unconditional and unlimited guaranty of payment . . .. ”

Unfortunately, the Briggs rescue plan failed and Grosse Pointe was declared bankrupt in September 1972. At that time, despite some concern over Grosse Pointe’s financial position, Crompton-Richmond had, on the basis of the Briggs guaranty, factored approximately $645,040.23 for Cromp-ton-Richmond clients who had been suppliers to Grosse Pointe.

In refusing to pay Crompton-Richmond for the Grosse Pointe liabilities covered by the guaranty agreement, Briggs has presented before both this Court and the trial court two arguments contesting the fact of liability, (i) The $645,040.23 exceeds by far any reasonable amount contemplated by the parties at the execution of the guaranty agreement and, thus, requires his discharge for at least part of this figure, (ii) Crompton-Richmond’s failure to observe a duty of good faith and due diligence or commercial reasonableness owed to Briggs as a guarantor necessitates his total discharge from liability under the guaranty. Appended to these defenses, Briggs contends that Crompton-Richmond failed to sufficiently prove the exact dollar extent of his liability under the guaranty agreement. Lastly, Briggs argues that the Trial Judge’s denial of a -¡ontinuance two days before trial was an anase of discretion.

Erie Choices

In evaluating the diversity claims presented, a federal court’s normal procedure is to evaluate the Eñe-Klaxon 5 mandated choice of law decision. However, by calling for application of the law of New York, the Briggs-Crompton-Richmond guaranty agreement relieves us of determining whether the trial court made the appropriate choice of law selection. 6 See Ideal Structures Corp. v. Levine Huntsville Development Corp., 5 Cir., 1968, 396 F.2d 917, 925; Restatement (Second) of Conflicts of Laws §§ 186, 187. On oral argument the applicability of New York law was conceded by Briggs’ counsel. Consequently, our review of the substantive liability challenges to the Trial Judge’s findings under the clearly erroneous rule, F.R.Civ.P. 52(a), is framed in the context of New York guaranty law.

*1200 The Unbuckled Facts

As formulated by Briggs, the due diligence and reasonable contemplation arguments amount to a request to be discharged from liability based on the concept that a guarantor or surety is a “favorite of the law” deserving protections from changes in the risks assumed by the guarantor. 7 Despite these protests, we find that the District Court’s findings of fact are sufficiently supported under the protection of the Buckler and Shield of F.R.Civ.P. 52(a).

The record before this Court adequately demonstrates that this creditor-debtor-guarantor situation was one in which a highly educated and skilled businessman with extensive experience in factoring developed and executed a plan to finance Grosse Pointe’s expansion program. During this period while acting as Grosse Pointe’s chief financial officer, it is an unfathomable assertion that Briggs did not know that the very credit transactions he had contemplated were transpiring. How else would Grosse Pointe achieve its expansionary goal? And as each new purchase was procured from materials suppliers, which were not paid directly by Grosse Pointe, Briggs of all people knew of it. An additionally important point exists. Because the controlling ownership of Grosse Pointe was in his wife’s name, Briggs’ interest in the company extended further than that of a mere officer. 8

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Bluebook (online)
560 F.2d 1195, 2 Fed. R. Serv. 493, 1977 U.S. App. LEXIS 11232, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crompton-richmond-company-inc-factors-v-james-s-briggs-ca5-1977.