Finance Authority of Maine v. Martin Grimnes

2020 ME 76
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedMay 28, 2020
StatusPublished

This text of 2020 ME 76 (Finance Authority of Maine v. Martin Grimnes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Finance Authority of Maine v. Martin Grimnes, 2020 ME 76 (Me. 2020).

Opinion

MAINE SUPREME JUDICIAL COURT Reporter of Decisions Decision: 2020 ME 76 Docket: Cum-19-440 Submitted On Briefs: May 12, 2020 Decided: May 28, 2020

Panel: MEAD, GORMAN, JABAR, HORTON, and CONNORS, JJ.

FINANCE AUTHORITY OF MAINE

v.

MARTIN S. GRIMNES et al.

HORTON, J.

[¶1] Martin S. Grimnes, guarantor of a promissory note held by Finance

Authority of Maine (FAME), appeals from a judgment entered against him after

a bench trial in the Superior Court (Cumberland County, Mills, J.).1 Grimnes

does not dispute (1) the default of the principal debtor on the note, (2) the

amount outstanding on the note, or (3) his liability to FAME under the terms of

his unconditional personal guaranty. He also acknowledges that FAME has

taken no action to enforce its security interest in the collateral securing the

note, and concedes, consistent with the language of his guaranty, that it was not

1The principal debtor on the note, Harbor Technologies, LLC, was also a named defendant in this matter, but it is not a participant in this appeal. A default judgment was entered against it on January 24, 2019. At trial, Grimnes indicated that it no longer exists as a business entity. 2

obligated to do so before proceeding directly against him. Nevertheless, he

contends that two of the default provisions contained in Article 9 of

Maine’s Uniform Commercial Code (U.C.C.)—11 M.R.S. §§ 9-1607 and 9-1626

(2020)—imposed a burden on FAME to prove the commercial reasonableness

of its decision not to pursue the collateral before it could obtain a judgment

against him, and that FAME failed to meet this burden. We disagree in light of

the independent and unconditional nature of Grimnes’s guaranty and affirm the

judgment.

I. BACKGROUND

[¶2] The following undisputed facts are drawn from the court’s

judgment, the parties’ written stipulation of facts, and the parties’ stipulated

exhibits.

[¶3] In 2009, FAME extended a loan of $300,000 to Harbor Technologies,

LLC (Harbor), a Maine limited liability company. Harbor executed a promissory

note and a security agreement under which assets of the company, including

machinery, equipment, and intangible assets, were pledged as collateral to

secure the note. Grimnes executed a personal guaranty of Harbor’s obligations

to FAME. Grimnes’s guaranty included the following provisions:

[Grimnes] further agrees that each of its undertakings . . . constitutes an absolute, unconditional, present and continuing 3

guaranty of payment and not just of collection, and waives any right to require that any resort be had by [FAME] to . . . any security held by [FAME] . . . .

....

. . . Upon an Event of Default . . . [FAME] shall have the right to proceed first and directly against [Grimnes] under this Guaranty without proceeding against or exhausting any other remedies which it may have and without resorting to any security held by it.

[¶4] After Harbor defaulted on the loan, FAME accelerated the note and

made demand upon Harbor and Grimnes for payment of the balance due under

the note. When payment was not forthcoming, FAME sued Harbor on the note

and Grimnes on his guaranty for the entire amount due.

[¶5] FAME never took possession or otherwise proceeded against any of

the collateral in which it held a security interest.

II. DISCUSSION

[¶6] Although Grimnes concedes that the terms of his guaranty

permitted FAME to proceed against him without attempting to collect from the

collateral pledged as security on the note, he contends that the U.C.C. required

FAME to prove that its decision not to proceed against the collateral was 4

commercially reasonable. Because FAME did not do so, Grimnes argues, the

court erred by entering judgment in its favor.

[¶7] As the primary basis for his argument, Grimnes cites 11 M.R.S.

§ 9-1607(3)(a), which provides that “[a] secured party shall proceed in a

commercially reasonable manner if the secured party . . . [u]ndertakes to collect

from or enforce an obligation of an account debtor or other person obligated

on collateral.” Grimnes maintains that he is an “account debtor” or, as a

guarantor, at least an “other person obligated on collateral,” and that FAME’s

effort to collect from him is therefore subject to an obligation to act in a

commercially reasonable manner.

[¶8] Grimnes also contends that, because he is challenging FAME’s

compliance with its obligations under the U.C.C., section 9-1626 puts the

burden on FAME to prove that its decision to forego proceeding against the

collateral was commercially reasonable. See 11 M.R.S. § 9-1626(1)(b) (“If the

secured party’s compliance is placed in issue, the secured party has the burden

of establishing that the collection, enforcement, disposition or acceptance was

conducted in accordance with this part.”). 5

[¶9] FAME responds that Article 9 of the U.C.C. does not apply to its claim

against Grimnes because the claim arises from Grimnes’s independently

enforceable guaranty of Harbor’s obligation to FAME. We agree.2

[¶10] Grimnes is neither an “account debtor” nor an “other person

obligated on collateral” for purposes of section 9-1607. Section 9-1607 makes

it clear that an “account debtor or other person obligated on collateral” is a

person who owes an obligation to the debtor in a situation where the debtor

has pledged that obligation as collateral. See id. § 1607(1)(c) (“If so agreed, and

in any event after default, a secured party . . . [m]ay enforce the obligations of

an account debtor or other person obligated on collateral and exercise the

rights of the debtor with respect to the obligation of the account debtor or other

person obligated on collateral to make payment or otherwise render

performance to the debtor . . . .”); see also Timothy R. Zinnecker, The Default

Provisions of Revised Article 9 of the Uniform Commercial Code: Part 1,

2 Grimnes’s guaranty could have been drafted so that his obligation to pay was conditioned on FAME first seeking satisfaction from the collateral securing the note. See Restatement (Third) of Suretyship & Guaranty § 51 (Am. Law Inst. 1996) (stating that an “obligee need not enforce its security interest in collateral for the underlying obligation before enforcing the secondary obligation” unless, among other things, the “failure of efforts by the obligee to obtain satisfaction of the underlying obligation is a condition of the secondary obligor’s duty pursuant to the secondary obligation”). 6

54 Bus. Law. 1113, 1131-32 (1999) (providing illustrations of how this section

of the U.C.C. operates).

[¶11] In the context of this case, the terms “account debtor or other

person obligated on collateral” would refer to entities obligated to Harbor on

collateral pledged as security for FAME’s loan, such as a person indebted to

Harbor on an account. Section 9-1607(3)(a) does not impose any requirement

of commercial reasonableness upon FAME because it has not sought to collect

from persons who are obligated to Harbor.

[¶12] Moreover, the protections contained in the default provisions of

Article 9 apply only when a secured party opts to enforce its security interest

in collateral. See U.C.C. § 9-601 cmt. 2, included with 11 M.R.S.A. § 9-1601

(2014); see also Leighton v. Fleet Bank of Me., 634 A.2d 453, 456 (Me.

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Related

Leighton v. Fleet Bank of Maine
634 A.2d 453 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1993)

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