Farmers & Merchants State Bank of Krum v. Reece Supply Company

79 S.W.3d 615, 2002 Tex. App. LEXIS 3644, 2002 WL 1026978
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 23, 2002
Docket11-01-00345-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 79 S.W.3d 615 (Farmers & Merchants State Bank of Krum v. Reece Supply Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Farmers & Merchants State Bank of Krum v. Reece Supply Company, 79 S.W.3d 615, 2002 Tex. App. LEXIS 3644, 2002 WL 1026978 (Tex. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

*616 Opinion

AUSTIN McCLOUD, Senior Justice.

The issue in this summary judgment case is whether the guaranty agreement is an unconditional payment guaranty or a collateral conditional guaranty. Reece Supply Company (Reece) sued Farmers & Merchants State Bank of Krum (Farmers) on a guaranty agreement signed by Farmers. The trial court granted Reece’s motion for summary judgment. Farmers appeals. We affirm.

The summary judgment proof reveals the following information. David White, sales manager for Reece, stated in an affidavit that G.R.A.V.I.T.Y. Enterprises, Inc. (Gravity) contacted Reece concerning a contract Gravity had with U.S. Tobacco Company. Reece agreed to provide Gravity transformers to be used by Gravity in its contract with U.S. Tobacco. The sale of the transformers was conditioned upon Gravity’s bank presenting to Reece a letter of credit or other acceptable assurance of payment for the cost of transformers ordered by Gravity. Farmers provided Reece with a written agreement to pay the amount due for transformers shipped to Gravity in connection with the U.S. Tobacco contract. Reece shipped 2,250 transformers to Gravity. The cost of the transformers sold to Gravity was $82,552.50, Neither Gravity nor Farmers paid Reece for the transformers shipped by Reece to Gravity.

Jim Chambers, president of Gravity, stated in an affidavit that it was clear in conversations between the representatives of Gravity and Reece that the transformers purchased from Reece would be used by Gravity in connection with Gravity’s contract with U.S. Tobacco and that the transformers would need to be operable, safe, and fit for that purpose. Chambers stated that he contacted Farmers and asked Farmers if it would assure Reece that Gravity could pay for working transformers shipped by Reece pursuant to the agreement between Gravity and Reece. Chambers stated that the transformers shipped by Reece were unsafe. The transformers would overheat and posed a serious fire hazard, and Gravity could not use the transformers shipped by Reece. Because the transformers were faulty, Gravity refused to pay Reece. Gravity informed Farmers that the transformers were faulty and instructed Farmers to make no payment to Reece until the problem was solved. Chambers stated that, thereafter, Reece came to Gravity’s headquarters and retrieved the transformers Reece shipped. The transformers were never returned to Gravity.

Vaughn Andrus, president of Farmers, stated in an affidavit that Farmers agreed to send Reece a letter for the purpose of assuring Reece that, if Reece would ship working transformers to Gravity according to all of the terms of the agreement negotiated between Reece and Gravity, Reece would be paid. Andrus stated that the November 4, 1997, letter to Reece was assuring payment if, and only if, Reece performed according to the agreement between Reece and Gravity. The agreement called for the shipment of working, nonhazardous transformers that Gravity could use in connection with its contract with U.S. Tobacco. Andrus stated that Farmers received a letter from Chambers detailing certain safety-related problems with the transformers. Farmers learned that Reece had retaken possession of the faulty transformers shipped to Gravity.

The November 4, 1997, letter, signed by Andrus, provided in part:

Reece Supply Company
*617 Attn: David White
PO Box 565545
Dallas, TX 75356
Dear Mr. White:
G.R.A.V.I.T.Y., Inc. of 803 North 5th Street, Sanger, Texas, has a Line of Credit with us for the purpose of buying supplies to be sold to U.S. Tobacco. It is our understanding that G.R.A.V.I.T.Y, Inc. will purchase from you approximately 3,000 transformers over the next few months. That order will amount to approximately $121,255.
Our bank will guarantee that each order placed by G.R.A.V.I.T.Y, Inc. will be paid as agreed, seven (7) days after shipment, FOB, Sanger, TX. (Emphasis added)

Farmers does not contend that the guaranty agreement is ambiguous. Farmers asserts that the affidavits of Chambers and Andrus are admissible not to vary or alter the terms of the letter but to show that a fact question exists as to whether or not the conditions of the guaranty and of the underlying contract between Reece and Gravity had been fulfilled.

Reece cites Universal Metals and Machinery, Inc. v. Bohart, 539 S.W.2d 874, 877 (Tex.1976), and argues that Farmers may not rely upon the underlying contract between Reece and Gravity because the guaranty agreement signed by Farmers was an unconditional payment guaranty. We agree. The supreme court in Bohart, stated:

A number of judicial precedents have held that guaranties, like the one in this case, are absolute rather than conditional, primary rather than secondary, and guarantees of payment rather than guarantees of collection. A discussion of many of those cases may be found in the dissenting opinion of the court of civil appeals and need not here be repeated. 523 S.W.2d 279, at 288-291. The guarantor, who contracted as a primary, absolute, unconditional obligor, is not freed from liability because of the forged signature of the maker. Ganado Land Co. v. Smith, 290 S.W. 920 (Tex.Civ.App. 1927, writ ref' d); El Paso Bank & Trust Co. v. First State Bank, 202 S.W. 522 (Tex.Civ.App.1918, no writ).

Justice Guittard, in his dissenting opinion in Bohart v. Universal Metals and Machinery, Inc., 523 S.W.2d 279, 288-90 (Tex.Civ.App.-Dallas 1975), rev’d, Universal Metals and Machinery, Inc. v. Bohart, supra, discussed the obligations of “primary” and “secondary” guarantors:

A “guaranty” is a species of indemnity contract. It is a promise to stand responsible for occurrence of an event that may not be directly within the control of the immediate parties to the contract. The problem of interpretation is to identify the event for which responsibility is assumed. If that event is a third person’s discharge of his legal obligation, no liability arises unless the third person is legally bound. Accordingly, the guarantor’s obligation is termed “secondary.” If that event is a third person’s performance of a specified act, the guarantor’s liability arises when the third person has failed to perform as specified, irrespective of his legal obligation. In this situation the guarantor’s obligation may properly be termed “primary.”

Justice Guittard stated further:

Texas authority, also, supports an interpretation of “guarantee” as consistent with a primary obligation. In El Paso Bank & Trust Co. v. First State Bank, 202 S.W.

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79 S.W.3d 615, 2002 Tex. App. LEXIS 3644, 2002 WL 1026978, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/farmers-merchants-state-bank-of-krum-v-reece-supply-company-texapp-2002.