Eustis v. Park-O-Lator Corp.

437 P.2d 734, 435 P.2d 802, 249 Or. 194, 1967 Ore. LEXIS 659
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 20, 1967
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 437 P.2d 734 (Eustis v. Park-O-Lator Corp.) 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
Eustis v. Park-O-Lator Corp., 437 P.2d 734, 435 P.2d 802, 249 Or. 194, 1967 Ore. LEXIS 659 (Or. 1967).

Opinion

*196 DENECKE, J.

The defendant Park-O-Lator Corporation was formed to exploit a conveyor system for vehicle parking invented by the defendant Abe Zaha. The plaintiff Enstis paid $4,000 for 50 shares of stock in the defendant corporation; the plaintiffs Slavich did likewise. Ensti-s, in addition, advanced the corporation $1,100 and the Slaviches advanced $350. Corporate notes were delivered to plaintiffs evidencing the debts created by the making of these advances. The individual parties entered into agreements providing that the corporation would deliver notes for $4,000 each to plaintiffs and that the Zahas, under certain conditions, would be personally liable for the corporate notes issued to plaintiffs.

Plaintiffs brought this proceeding as a suit in equity, asldng that the corporation be declared insolvent, that a receiver be appointed and that a personal judgment be entered against the Zahas for the amounts owed plaintiffs by the corporation. The trial court refused to grant plaintiffs the relief prayed for and 'they appeal.

The corporate notes for advances were dated September 1, 1956, payable one year after date. This suit was filed in December 1964. Under both the Uniform Commercial Code and theprior Negotiable Instruments Act, the statute of limitations commenced running September 1, 1957, and expired against the corporate maker six years thereafter, September 1, 1963, a date prior to the filing of this suit.

The defendants alleged the defense of the statute of limitations in their answer. The trial court held that the statute of limitations had run against these notes, that the plaintiffs were guilty of laches and, therefore, *197 the obligations of both the corporation and the Zahas were discharged. The plaintiffs contend the ruling was erroneous as it applied to the Zahas.

The agreement of the individual parties was in part as follows:

“ ‘All right, title and/or other interest of the corporation in the inventions, patent applications and patents of Abe Zaha and Sarah A. Zaha shall terminate and full right, title and interest shall revert to and vest in Abe Zaha and Sarah A. Zaha, and the right, title and/or interest of the corporation in all other inventions, patent applications and patents relating to the Zaha parking apparatus and system shall vest in Abe and Sarah A. Zaha, in the event that the corporation shall file a petition in bankruptcy or shall be adjudicated a bankrupt, or make a general assignment, or take the benefit of any insolvent act, or debtor’s relief act, or if a receiver or trustee shall be appointed for the corporation’s property; or if the corporation shall become insolvent.
“ ‘In such event, and only in such event, Abe Zaha and Sarah A. Zaha shall then become personally liable to Orville B. Eustis, Michael Slavich, and Jeanne it. Slavich upon any promissory notes executed to them by the corporation pursuant to the pre-incorporation agreements and the agreement for subscription to the capital stock of the corporation.’ ”

The parties stipulated that the corporation was insolvent as of January 1965. The parties also, in effect, concede that it was insolvent at the time the lawsuit was filed. There is no evidence how long it had been insolvent prior to that time. The plaintiffs’ theory is that inasmuch as the Zahas had agreed they would be personally liable upon the notes for advances, only in the event the corporation became insolvent, the cause *198 of action against the Zahas only accrued at the time of the corporate insolvency and, therefore, the statute of limitations had not run against the Zahas.

This is somewhat analogous to a guaranty or suretyship contract. However, it appears to be sui generis. In the usual contract in which the guarantor guarantees the payment of a note, the cause of action against the guarantor accrues upon the maturity of the note and the statute of limitations runs on the guaranty at the same time it runs on the note. For example, see Michelin Tire Co. v. Fisher, 116 Or 217, 219, 240 P 895 (1925).

Here, however, by contract, no cause of action accrued against the Zahas, personally, until such time as the corporation became insolvent and there is no evidence of insolvency prior to January 1965. If guaranty is conditioned upon some event, no cause of action accrues against the guarantor until the event occurs.

In Michelin Tire Co. v. Fisher, supra, the guaranty was not of payment, but, rather, against loss. We held that the guarantor “is not liable to the guarantee unless and until he has exercised reasonable effort to collect from the principal debtor, — that is, the person whose performance was guaranteed: * * 116 Or at 219-220.

In this particular case the Zaha’s obligation to pay did not commence until the corporation was insolvent ; therefore, the statute of limitations did not commence running prior to the filing of this lawsuit.

The statute of limitations has run against the corporation’s liability on the notes and this raises the *199 question: Can an action be maintained against Zaha when it cannot be maintained against the corporation which was initially liable.

In the case of an agreement construed as a guaranty, the majority of jurisdictions holds that the guarantor is not discharged because the statute of limitations has run against the principal. Annotation, 58 ALR2d 1272 (1958). If the agreement is construed as one of suretyship, a majority of the jurisdictions similarly holds that the surety is not discharged because the statute of limitations has run against the principal. Arant, Suretyship, 181, 313 (1931); Annotation, 122 ALR 204 (1939). In this proceeding in which the plaintiffs could not maintain a cause of action against Zaha until after the statute of limitations had run against the corporation, there is no reason to hold that the running of the statute against the corporation is a bar to a suit against Zaha.

The trial court reasoned that the plaintiffs were barred from suing Zahas because they could have brought an action against the corporation upon the maturity of the notes. The editor of the Annotation at 122 ALR 204 states at 205: “Accordingly the majority doctrine is that mere passiveness on the part of the creditor, even when continued until the statute has run in favor of 'the principal, does not operate to discharge a surety from liability.”

In this case it might well have been to the best interests of both the plaintiffs and the Zahas that the corporation be kept viable in the hope that it could accomplish the job for which it was formed, i.e., to successfully exploit the invention. It would be inconsistent with this likely motivation of the parties to hold that the plaintiffs had an obligation to sue the *200 corporation before tibe statute of limitations expired or lose tibe benefit of the Zaha’s individual liability.

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Bluebook (online)
437 P.2d 734, 435 P.2d 802, 249 Or. 194, 1967 Ore. LEXIS 659, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eustis-v-park-o-lator-corp-or-1967.