Farmers State Bank, Grafton v. Huebner

475 N.W.2d 640, 16 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. 2d (West) 426, 1991 Iowa App. LEXIS 314, 1991 WL 194288
CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedJune 25, 1991
Docket90-202
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 475 N.W.2d 640 (Farmers State Bank, Grafton v. Huebner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Farmers State Bank, Grafton v. Huebner, 475 N.W.2d 640, 16 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. 2d (West) 426, 1991 Iowa App. LEXIS 314, 1991 WL 194288 (iowactapp 1991).

Opinion

SCHLEGEL, Judge.

Defendant Glen Huebner appeals the judgment of the district court, sitting without a jury, finding him liable as a cosigner of a note to plaintiff Farmers State Bank of Grafton. Plaintiff sued to collect $70,-620.30 plus interest and attorney fees for a note signed by Glen E. Walk and cosigned by defendant. We affirm.

(1)

The record shows that defendant Glen Huebner and Glen Walk had known each other since 1953 and were friends who farmed in the same area. At one time they had owned farm machinery together. Walk owned a small acreage and farmed 160 acres which he rented from Art Schultz. Farmers State Bank had filed a financing statement with the secretary of state on February 28, 1977, covering all of Walk’s equipment and farm products located on the Schultz 160 acres. In January 1982 Walk had outstanding loans from Farmers State Bank totaling $41,500.

Aloise D. Bowers, president of the bank, informed Walk that the loans could not be renewed unless Walk provided additional security or a cosigner. On January 12, 1982, Walk executed a one-year promissory note (number 123.01) that renewed and consolidated the loans of $41,500 at an interest rate of 17.5 percent per year. Huebner eosigned the note, and both parties agree that Huebner was an accommodation party. 1 The note contained a pledge of securi *642 ty substantially similar to that in the 1977 financing statement: “All equipment, all farm products, including but not limited to crops, livestock, supplies used of produce [sic] in farming operations, and contract rights and accounts and all proceeds.” There was nothing in this promissory note referring to the location of the secured property. The parties dispute whether there was a discussion between Bowers and Huebner about security for the note, but Huebner admits that he did not read the note before signing it.

The note came due in January 1983 and remained unpaid, but the Farmers State Bank took no action on it until December 1983. The bank continued to make smaller loans to Walk that eventually totaled $21,-100 by the end of 1983. During this time, however, Walk made a number of payments totaling approximately $13,600 which were applied to the other notes. By December 1983 his total debt to the bank stood at $49,000. The entire principal and interest of the January 1982 note remained outstanding until December 30, 1983. The bank did not inform Huebner of these transactions, and Huebner did not inquire of either Walk or the bank about Walk’s financial position or the status of the note.

In December 1983 Walk made arrangements to renew the January 1982 note. Again, the bank demanded additional security or a cosigner. On December 30, 1983, Walk executed a one-year $41,500 promissory note (again numbered 123.01) to the bank, this time at 14.5 percent per year. Huebner cosigned the renewal note, again as an accommodation party. This is the note on which the bank now seeks recovery against Huebner.

As with the previous execution, the parties dispute whether there was a discussion between Bowers and Huebner about security for the note, but Huebner admits that he did not read the note before signing it. Bowers testified that the form he used for the renewal note was different than the original consolidation note. Unlike the January 1982 form, the December 1983 form provides six options which the scrivener may check to customize the form. Section (e) of the security agreement grants an interest in the first five: inventory, equipment, farm products, accounts and other rights to payment, and general intangibles. The sixth option under section (e) is also checked, and that option states: “In addition to any property generally described above, the following Collateral [is pledged]: 160 acres in SW V) Section 32 Barton Twp. Worth County, Iowa.” The description is of the land rented by Walk from Schultz. Bowers testified, without objection, that the description was inserted by mistake and was meant to describe the location of the personal property pledged.

On December 30 Walk also paid the $14,-266.34 interest accumulated on the January 1982 note. This appears to have been accomplished by two additional notes for $16,000 and $7,000 given by Walk to the bank on December 30. These two loans were secured by a mortgage on Walk’s acreage. This brought Walk's total indebtedness to the bank to $72,000.

From the end of December 1983 through mid-June 1985, bank ledgers reveal that Walk gave another note for $6,200 and made payments of $14,468.99. Of those payments, only $1,600 interest and $500 principal were credited to the December 1983 renewed note. In June 1985 Walk *643 sold the secured property located on the rented 160 acres for $13,999.71. Of those proceeds, $4,016.52 was applied to the principal of the renewed consolidation loan. There is no evidence in the record to show who (the bank or Walk) determined how the proceeds from the sale of the secured property — or any other payments — were to be applied to Walk’s various obligations.

On the date of trial, November 21, 1989, the unpaid balance due on the note was $70,620.30 ($36,983.48 principal and $33,-636.82 interest). In April 1987 Walk gave a deed to the acreage in lieu of foreclosure, and apparently the bank canceled the two additional notes given on December 30. At some time not reflected in the record, Walk was discharged in bankruptcy.

Farmers State Bank sued Huebner for the principal and interest due on the renewed, consolidated note dated December 30, 1983. Huebner charged that he had been induced to sign the note through fraudulent representations that the note was fully secured and that the security included the 160 acres mentioned in the note. Huebner further charged that the bank had allowed the wasting of assets and had waived its entitlement to his guarantee. The district court rejected the defenses and found Huebner liable for $70,620.30 accumulated interest and principal and interest of $14.69 per day.

The ease was tried in law; therefore, we review for the correction of errors at law. Iowa R.App.P. 4. The matter was tried to the court sitting without a jury, and the findings of fact have the effect of a special verdict. Iowa R.App. P. 4. We are bound by these findings of fact if supported by substantial evidence. Iowa R.App.P. 14(f)(1).

(2)

Huebner first challenges the trial court’s consideration of parol evidence concerning Bowers’ mistake in noting that the bank took a security interest in the rented 160 acres. The Iowa Supreme Court has stated:

The parol evidence rule is not a rule of evidence, but a rule of substantive law. Although extrinsic evidence may be admissible to explain the real meaning of the parties by the language used in a contract, the parol evidence rule forbids the use of extrinsic evidence to vary, add to, or subtract from a written agreement. The principle behind the rule is that
when the parties have discussed and agreed upon their obligations to each other and reduced those terms to writing, the writing, if clear and unambiguous, furnishes better and more definite evidence of what was undertaken by each party than the memory of man_ The rule rests upon a rational foundation of experience and policy and is essential to certainty and stability of written obligations. * *

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Bluebook (online)
475 N.W.2d 640, 16 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. 2d (West) 426, 1991 Iowa App. LEXIS 314, 1991 WL 194288, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/farmers-state-bank-grafton-v-huebner-iowactapp-1991.