First Interstate Bank v. Bergendahl

723 P.2d 1005, 80 Or. App. 479
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedAugust 6, 1986
DocketA8107-04330; CA A30857
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 723 P.2d 1005 (First Interstate Bank v. Bergendahl) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
First Interstate Bank v. Bergendahl, 723 P.2d 1005, 80 Or. App. 479 (Or. Ct. App. 1986).

Opinion

BUTTLER, P. J.

First Interstate Bank seeks to enforce unlimited and continuing personal guarantees that were allegedly authorized by Bergendahl, Craig and B.C. Farming, Inc. (defendants), relating to loans made by First Interstate to Sunriver Farms, Inc., of Oregon (SunOre) for the farming of Sabre Farm in northeastern Oregon and Three Wells Farm in southeastern Washington. Defendants appeal from a judgment holding them to the guarantees. We reverse as to B.C. Farming and otherwise affirm.

The veritable mountain of facts1 can be distilled considerably, because the legal question on which the case turns is narrow: whether defendants authorized or ratified the signing, on their behalf, of personal guarantees for the bank loans.2 The guarantees were purportedly signed for defendants by Jones, treasurer of Sunriver Farms, Inc., of California (SunCal), and were allegedly authorized by separate agricultural management agreements signed by each defendant and a subsequent partnership agreement entered into by Bergendahl and Craig.3

Defendants invested in Sabre Farm primarily for tax reasons.4 The identical agricultural management agreements, signed by each of them as “owners,” required SunCal to manage their farming businesses and authorized SunCal, as agent and “attorney-in-fact,”5 to carry out the budget and [482]*482farming plan attached to each agreement as “Exhibit A.” SunCal’s express authorization included the power to

“enter into agreements, and restricted power to arrange loans, credit and borrow money, sign Bill of Sale drafts on behalf of Owner * * * and to sign or endorse any documents on behalf of Owner in pursuance of the foregoing. * * *”

The Farming Plan and Budget for the 1979-80 crop year stated that each “owner” (each defendant) agreed to a budget for that crop year which provided that a specified amount of capital would be contributed by each “owner” and that a recourse loan of approximately three times that amount would be assumed by each of them.6 In the main body of each agreement, each defendant agreed to be liable for the loan. SunCal was not expressly authorized to sign defendants’ names to guarantees for loans made to third parties. The management agreements, signed by each defendant and by Behrens, as president of SunCal, did not refer to any specific property or farming enterprise.

In a subsequent partnership agreement, Bergendahl, Craig and others became limited partners in a business organized expressly for the purpose of farming Sabre Farm. B.C. Farming did not become a limited partner, but it did invest in the venture. The general partners, including SunOre, which is a wholly owned subsidiary of SunCal, were given “full, exclusive and complete discretion in the management and control of the business of the partnership * * *.” They were authorized:

[483]*483“(a) To borrow money in such amounts, on such terms and conditions and at such rates as the General Partners deems [sic] appropriate * * *
“* * * * *
“(d) To execute, on behalf of the partnership, any and all documents or instruments of any kind which the General Partners may deem appropriate in carrying out the purposes of the partnership, including, without limitation, powers of attorney, sale contracts or other documents or instruments of any kind or character or amendments thereto. * * *”

They were also granted a “special and limited” power of attorney authorizing them to sign certain documents for the limited partners. The power of attorney provision included examples of documents relating to the continued existence and termination of the partnership.7 The agreement further provided that each partner was to be liable for the repayment of partnership loans in an amount up to three times his capital investment.8 At each limited partner’s signature line was [484]*484shown the amount of capital to be contributed by that partner and the amount of the recourse loan to be assumed, which was the same amount as each partner’s personal liability to the partnership. The agreement did not expressly authorize the general partners to sign personal guarantees for the limited partners for loans made to SunOre for partnership purposes. Behrens signed the partnership agreement for each limited partner, as president of SunCal, their agent.

First Interstate lent money to SunOre, in its corporate capacity, for the farming of Sabre Farm. In negotiations leading up to the loan, the bank’s final proposal had conditioned the loan on its obtaining personal guarantees of Bergendahl, Craig and others. Jones signed guarantees for each defendant as their sub-agent through SunCal.9 He never sent copies to defendants. The guarantees were for the same amounts for which each defendant had agreed to be personally liable in the management agreements and the limited partnership agreement. Much of the bean crop was lost, and SunOre defaulted on its loan.

The parties’ first dispute concerns whether the management agreements were superseded by the partnership agreement. There is substantial evidence to support the trial court’s finding that the parties intended the two documents to operate simultaneously. The management agreements, executed on October 15, 1979, between defendants and Sun-Cal, expressly provided that they were to remain in effect until January 15, 1985, unless terminated earlier by written notice. The partnership agreement, executed on November 26, 1979, [485]*485between defendants Bergendahl and Craig as limited partners and SunOre, among others, does not expressly supersede the management agreements, and there is no other writing terminating them. The partnership agreement was signed for defendants by Behrens, president of SunCal. Defendants do not challenge his authority to bind them to the partnership agreement. There is also evidence that, after the execution of the partnership agreement with SunOre, Bergendahl and Craig regarded SunCal as their agent. There is no evidence that they regarded the management agreements as having been terminated or superseded. Those agreements were between different parties and concerned different subject matters. They are not inconsistent with the partnership agreement, were not superseded by it and will be construed with it. See Nicholson v. Hardwick, 49 Or App 169, 619 P2d 925 (1980), rev den 290 Or 653 (1981).

In a meticulous and thoughtful opinion, the trial court concluded, from its interpretation of the agricultural management agreements, the limited partnership agreement and extrinsic evidence, that Jones, through SunCal and as defendants’ agent, was authorized to sign defendants’ names to personal loan guarantees for loans First Interstate made to SunOre for the purposes of farming Sabre Farm and Three Wells. Although we disagree with that conclusion, we agree with the court’s alternative conclusion that defendants Bergendahl and Craig ratified the execution of the guarantee by Jones.

SunCal had no express authority to sign personal guarantees on behalf of defendants.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
723 P.2d 1005, 80 Or. App. 479, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-interstate-bank-v-bergendahl-orctapp-1986.