First Citizens Bank v. Patrick Sull

2008 MT 428
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 16, 2008
Docket06-0719
StatusPublished

This text of 2008 MT 428 (First Citizens Bank v. Patrick Sull) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
First Citizens Bank v. Patrick Sull, 2008 MT 428 (Mo. 2008).

Opinion

December 16 2008

DA 06-0719

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF MONTANA

2008 MT 428

FIRST CITIZENS BANK,

Plaintiff and Appellant,

v.

PATRICK J. SULLIVAN and GREG J. EIDE,

Defendants and Appellees.

APPEAL FROM: District Court of the Second Judicial District, In and For the County of Silver Bow, Cause No. DV 2003-236 Honorable John W. Whelan, Presiding Judge

COUNSEL OF RECORD:

For Appellant:

Patrick T. Fleming, Fleming & O’Leary, PLLP, Butte, Montana

For Appellee:

Gregory C. Black, Sean E. Johnson, Corette Pohlman & Kebe, Butte, Montana

Submitted on Briefs: January 4, 2008

Decided: December 16, 2008

Filed:

__________________________________________ Clerk Justice James C. Nelson delivered the Opinion of the Court.

¶1 First Citizens Bank (the Bank) brought this action to recover a deficiency due on a

loan to Glacier Apparel Company, Ltd. (Glacier Apparel), which Patrick J. Sullivan and

Greg J. Eide had guaranteed. Sullivan and Eide denied liability and filed counterclaims,

including claims that Eide’s guaranty had been exonerated and he had suffered damages

as a result of the Bank’s refusal to release a second mortgage on his home, and that

Sullivan suffered damages as a result of the Bank’s failure to liquidate collateral in a

commercially reasonable manner. A jury in the Second Judicial District Court, Silver

Bow County, found the Bank had not liquidated Glacier Apparel’s collateral in a

commercially reasonable manner, Eide’s guaranty had been exonerated and he had been

damaged by the Bank’s refusal to release his guaranty, and Sullivan had established that a

surplus would have been generated if the Bank would have liquidated the collateral in a

commercially reasonable manner. The District Court then entered judgment awarding

Sullivan and Eide their costs, expenses and attorney fees, resulting in a total judgment

against the Bank of $260,111.25. The Bank appeals. We affirm.

¶2 The issues are:

¶3 1. Did the District Court abuse its discretion in prohibiting the Bank from

disclosing to the jury that Sullivan had pled guilty to a felony in an unrelated matter and

had invoked his Fifth Amendment rights during a deposition in a Minnesota civil case?

¶4 2. Did the District Court abuse its discretion in refusing to allow attorney

J. Richard Orizotti to offer expert opinions?

2 ¶5 3. Was sufficient evidence presented to support the jury’s verdict that Eide was

exonerated from his personal guaranty to the Bank?

¶6 4. Did the District Court abuse its discretion in awarding Sullivan and Eide

$9,600 in legal fees for trial time of attorney Sean Johnson?

¶7 5. Did the District Court err in awarding expert witness fees and costs to Sullivan

and Eide?

BACKGROUND

¶8 In September 1997, the Bank agreed to provide a $15,000 revolving line of credit

to Glacier Apparel for operation of a retail store in Whitefish, Montana. The line of

credit was secured by the business’s inventory, accounts, equipment and general

intangibles. In addition, Sullivan provided a personal guaranty as the business’s sole

shareholder.

¶9 In January 2000, Sullivan sold a portion of the stock in Glacier Apparel to Eide.

The two men decided to expand the company by opening additional stores in both

Montana and Minnesota. For purposes of the expansion, the Bank agreed to increase

Glacier Apparel’s revolving line of credit to $75,000, and Eide and Sullivan each signed

personal guaranties for that amount. As additional collateral, the Bank took a second

mortgage on Eide’s Fargo, North Dakota, home.

¶10 In April 2001, Sullivan re-purchased Eide’s stock in Glacier Apparel, and Eide’s

association with the business ended. Then, on June 19, 2001, Sullivan and the Bank

signed a Change of Terms Agreement under which Glacier Apparel’s revolving line of

credit was converted to a term loan repayable at $590.08 per month for five years, at

3 which time a balloon payment of $72,356.32 would become due. Sullivan signed the

Change of Terms Agreement as both a guarantor of the loan and an officer of Glacier

Apparel. The Bank did not seek Eide’s signature or his consent to the Change of Terms

Agreement. After June 2001, the Bank refused to provide Glacier Apparel an operating

line of credit.

¶11 By letter dated July 6, 2001, Eide asked the Bank to cancel his guaranty and

release the mortgage on his North Dakota home. The Bank refused to do so. Eide’s

attorney revoked his guaranty in a letter dated August 24, 2001, but the Bank refused to

recognize that revocation.

¶12 In early 2002, Sullivan proposed to the Bank that he undertake a liquidation of

some or all of the inventory collateral of the Glacier Apparel stores, for which purpose he

requested an additional $20,000 loan to pay delinquent store rents. The Bank refused to

complete the loan transaction without a personal guaranty of all of Glacier Apparel’s

obligations from Sullivan’s son, which Sullivan was not willing to obtain. Sullivan then

submitted a liquidation plan, to which the Bank did not agree. In April 2002, Glacier

Apparel surrendered possession of the inventory collateral of its two Whitefish, Montana,

stores and its two Missoula, Montana, stores to the Bank by having its attorney deliver to

the Bank the keys to those stores.

¶13 Bank representatives took possession of the inventory and fixtures in the four

Whitefish and Missoula stores, boxed that collateral and transported it to Butte, Montana,

for storage at Christie’s Warehouse. The Bank then solicited bids for the repossessed

4 collateral by advertising a bulk sale in the legal sections of the Sunday classified ads in

newspapers in Missoula, Great Falls, Helena, Butte, Bozeman and Billings.

¶14 The advertised sale of Glacier Apparel’s collateral received only two bids: one

from a retail clothing vendor in Butte for $7,000 and another from two Bank customers

for $13,750. The Bank rejected both bids as insufficient. Sullivan again offered to

liquidate the collateral, but the Bank refused his offer. Sullivan then hired RGIS

Inventory Specialists to conduct an inventory of the collateral in the Bank’s possession.

RGIS identified over 7,000 items of collateral with a cost basis of $239,290.34.

Subsequently, the Bank rejected yet another offer by Sullivan to liquidate the collateral.

¶15 In late January 2003, the Bank gave Eide and Sullivan notice that it intended to

sell the collateral in a private sale, which it did, for $15,000. After applying the sale

proceeds against Glacier Apparel’s debt, and adding to that debt repossession and

liquidation expenses of over $26,000, the Bank determined Sullivan and Eide owed it

over $11,000 more than Glacier Apparel had owed when it surrendered the collateral.

¶16 The Bank then filed this action against Sullivan and Eide to recover the balance

due on Glacier Apparel’s indebtedness. Sullivan counterclaimed that the Bank had failed

to liquidate the collateral in a commercially reasonable manner. Eide joined that

counterclaim, and also alleged the Bank improperly had refused to release the second

mortgage on his home and that he was exonerated from his personal guaranty because the

Bank had made a material change in the terms of the guaranteed obligation without his

consent or knowledge.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Nicholson v. United Pacific Insurance
710 P.2d 1342 (Montana Supreme Court, 1985)
Cooper v. Rosston
756 P.2d 1125 (Montana Supreme Court, 1988)
Lewistown Propane Co. v. Moncur
2002 MT 349 (Montana Supreme Court, 2002)
Superior Enterprises, LLC v. Montana Power Co.
2002 MT 139 (Montana Supreme Court, 2002)
Plath v. Schonrock
2003 MT 21 (Montana Supreme Court, 2003)
McDermott v. CARIE, LLC
2005 MT 293 (Montana Supreme Court, 2005)
Nelson v. Nelson
2005 MT 263 (Montana Supreme Court, 2005)
Upky v. Marshall Mountain, LLC
2008 MT 90 (Montana Supreme Court, 2008)
State v. McWilliams
2008 MT 59 (Montana Supreme Court, 2008)
Story v. City of Bozeman
791 P.2d 767 (Montana Supreme Court, 1990)
Hourani v. Benson Hospital
122 P.3d 6 (Court of Appeals of Arizona, 2005)
First Citizens Bank v. Sullivan
2008 MT 428 (Montana Supreme Court, 2009)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2008 MT 428, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-citizens-bank-v-patrick-sull-mont-2008.