EQUITABLE SAVINGS & LOAN ASSOCIATION v. Jones

522 P.2d 217, 268 Or. 487, 1974 Ore. LEXIS 480
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedMay 2, 1974
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 522 P.2d 217 (EQUITABLE SAVINGS & LOAN ASSOCIATION v. Jones) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
EQUITABLE SAVINGS & LOAN ASSOCIATION v. Jones, 522 P.2d 217, 268 Or. 487, 1974 Ore. LEXIS 480 (Or. 1974).

Opinion

HOLMAN, J.

Plaintiff sought a judgment on the note of the defendants Kocsis and O’Neill upon which the unpaid balance was approximately $121,000, as well as the foreclosure of a mortgage on the real property of Mr. and Mrs. Jones (Jones) and Mr. and Mrs. Whittle (Whittle) which was security for the payment of the note. No personal judgment was requested against Kocsis and O’Neill for any deficiency that remained on the note after the application of the proceeds from the sale of the mortgaged property. Defendants Jones and Whittle appealed from a decree foreclosing the mortgage upon the real property.

Jones and Whittle were the owners of real property which they leased for a long term to a corporation called Imperial ‘400’ National, Inc. The corporation built a motel upon the leased property with borrowed money to which obligation Jones and Whittle subordinated their fee. The corporation subsequently went into reorganization under Chapter X of the Bankruptcy Act. The federal court appointed the defendant O’Neill as the trustee to manage the affairs of the corporation during reorganization. O’Neill entered into a partnership agreement with Kocsis under which Kocsis was to manage the motel .in return for a.partial *490 interest in the motel. New financing was necessary to secure working capital and plaintiff loaned $135,000 to O’Neill and Kocsis on their note. O’Neill, Kocsis, Jones and Whittle all signed the mortgage on the motel property to secure the payment of the loan. Jones and Whittle did not sign the note. The balance on the original note by which money was raised to build the motel was paid off and the remainder of the funds secured from plaintiff was used as operating capital by O’Neill and Kocsis.

The operation of the motel again fell upon evil days and plaintiff sought to foreclose its mortgage. It petitioned the federal court for permission to foreclose the mortgage, offering not to ask for a judgment against O’Neill or Kocsis in excess of the amount the mortgaged property brought on foreclosure. The federal court granted permission, to foreclose, but only on the basis that plaintiff seek no judgment against O’Neill or Kocsis in excess of the amount the mortgaged property would bring. No notice of the proceeding before the federal court to secure permission to foreclose the mortgage was given to Jones or Whittle.

I.

The defendants Jones and Whittle contend that when they mortgaged their property to secure the obligation of O’Neill and Kocsis they became sureties, not primary obligors. Plaintiff does not contest this premise.

Defendants also contend that their property was released from the lien of the mortgage and their obli *491 gation as sureties was discharged because the promise of the debtors (the principals) was modified by plaintiff (the creditor) without defendants’ (the sureties’) consent in that plaintiff agreed with the federal court that O’Neill and Kocsis would be relieved of the payment of that part of their note over and above the sum which the mortgaged property would bring upon foreclosure. Plaintiff’s position, on the other hand, is that defendants were not discharged by their agreement not to seek a deficiency because Jones and Whittle were sureties only to the extent of the value of their property, and the part of the debt that was forgiven was that part which was in excess of the value of that property, and which excess they had not promised to pay. Therefore, plaintiff claims, defendants suffered no detriment or change in circumstances by the modification of the obligation of O’Neill and Kocsis.

Jones and Whittle rely on the rule of strictissimi juris which provides that a surety is discharged by any alteration of the contract between the principal and the creditor whom he assures whether the change is material or not. The modern rule requires that the alteration be material. What constitutes a material alteration is probably best cast in the following statement:

“* * * Probably what is meant is that an unauthorized alteration in the contract will release the surety where it changes the nature of the con *492 tract, thus changing the real meaning and legal import of the surety’s obligation and placing him in a position different from that which he occupied before it was made * * (Footnotes omitted.)

However, even this rule is generally further qualified in the case of a compensated surety. Presently, a compensated surety is usually not discharged unless the change is detrimental to the surety, either actually or potentially. Between a compensated surety and a gratuitous surety lie many situations in which the surety is not compensated but neither is he acting as such for the sole purpose of helping another. The present situation is one of this hybrid nature in which the defendants originally subordinated their property to induce a loan which would make possible increased rental from the developed land. Having once subordinated their property they were in a position where it was necessary to refinance or lose their property. In a situation where a surety’s self-interest is of this proportion, it does not seem reasonable or equitable to release the surety from his obligation because of an unconsented-to change in the principal’s obligation, even though material, unless the change is actually or potentially detrimental to the surety.

*493 II.

Before examining the present circumstances for the purpose of determining whether the release of the principals, O’Neill and Kocsis, from any deficiency was actually or potentially detrimental to the defendants’ position as sureties, another aspect of the law of suretyship must be considered. This aspect of the law is encompassed within the Restatement of the Law of Security, as follows:

“Where the creditor releases a principal, the surety is discharged, unless
ÍÍ# =£ * * *
“(b) the creditor in the release reserves his rights against the surety.”

The rationale of this rule is stated in the Restatement, as follows:

“Where the creditor releases the principal but reserves his rights against the surety, this is construed as a covenant not to sue the principal. Historically, the covenant not to sue did not prevent a suit in violation of the covenant, although a liability might be incurred by such a suit. The creditor, by a release with reservation of rights against the surety, was in effect notifying the principal that, in spite of the release, the surety might pay as the result of compulsion or voluntarily and that the principal would then be liable to rehnburse the surety.

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Bluebook (online)
522 P.2d 217, 268 Or. 487, 1974 Ore. LEXIS 480, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/equitable-savings-loan-association-v-jones-or-1974.