First Security Bank of Idaho, N.A. v. Gaige

765 P.2d 683, 115 Idaho 172, 1988 Ida. LEXIS 151
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 5, 1988
Docket17156
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 765 P.2d 683 (First Security Bank of Idaho, N.A. v. Gaige) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
First Security Bank of Idaho, N.A. v. Gaige, 765 P.2d 683, 115 Idaho 172, 1988 Ida. LEXIS 151 (Idaho 1988).

Opinion

BAKES, Justice.

First Security Bank of Idaho (First Security) seeks to collect from a guarantor, A. John Gaige (Gaige), and his wife, Neta E. Gaige (Mrs. Gaige), the amount due on promissory notes executed by a corporate debtor, A.J. Gaige & Associates, Inc. (the company), a metal fabricating business. The district court resolved all issues by granting summary judgment in favor of First Security and by dismissing the Gaig-es’ counterclaim. We affirm.

I

In 1978, the company sought and obtained a $250,000 line of credit from First Security. The company’s inventory and accounts receivable were used as collateral to secure the line of credit. Gaige, president and controlling shareholder of the company, also signed a personal guaranty for payments on the company’s debt, not to exceed $250,000 plus accrued interest. Financial statements submitted to the bank disclosed Gaige’s personal net worth in excess of $1 million.

On March 27, 1980, First Security loaned the company an additional $233,000 to construct a building. The loan was secured by a first deed of trust on the building. Gaige signed a personal guaranty on this loan also.

During its borrowing relationship with First Security, the company’s credit line fluctuated. Gaige signed numerous personal guaranties varying in amount according to the fluctuations. The last guaranty he signed, dated July 18, 1983, was for $500,000 plus interest.

The company, although initially profitable, sustained losses in 1982 and 1983. On July 24, 1984, Gaige advised First Security that he was going to liquidate the company by the end of the year. By August 6,1984, the line of credit was due and payable in full, yet was unpaid. Still unpaid by August 22, 1984, the principal outstanding on the line of credit was $450,000, as evidenced by a promissory note signed by Gaige as the company’s president. To secure the line of credit, the company also gave First Security a second deed of trust on its building. In addition, Gaige signed an affirmation of the July 18,1983, guaranty for $500,000 as part of a “loan workout agreement” between First Security, the company and Gaige. The loan workout agreement was negotiated between the bank and Gaige and his attorney and was a mechanism which gave the company until January 1, 1985, to have a more orderly liquidation of its assets in order to meet its debt obligation to the bank. Absent this agreement, the bank would have immediately foreclosed on the deed of trust or acted upon the guaranty sooner than it did. The four-month liquidation effort by the company did not produce amounts sufficient to satisfy all the indebtedness by January 1, 1985. As a result, First Security foreclosed non-judicially on the first deed of trust. On May 20, 1988, the company building was sold by the trustee, Title & Trust Company. First Security was the highest bidder, bidding $300,000. After crediting the amount bid to the notes and accrued interest, a principal balance remained on the August 24, 1984, note of $351,104.37. First Security later sold the building for $310,000, netting, after sale costs, approximately $280,000.

First Security chose not to repossess or foreclose upon any remaining collateral or attempt collection of any remaining accounts receivable. No deficiency judgment was sought against the company. Instead, First Security sued Gaige and his wife on the personal guaranties for the balance owing.

In defense of the action on the guaranties, Gaige asserted that the deed of trust anti-deficiency statute, I.C. § 45-1512, precluded First Security from bringing the action on the guaranties. The district court granted partial summary judgment to First Security, holding that the anti-defi *174 ciency statute, I.C. § 45-1512, did not apply to guarantors. Additionally, the district court held that, “By terms of the guaranty, A. John Gaige effectively waived defenses available to the principal debtor under the Idaho deed of trust anti-deficiency statute, § 45-1512, Idaho Code.”

Later, the district court granted summary judgment for First Security on the remaining issues and dismissed the Gaiges’ counterclaim for failure to state a claim upon which relief may be granted. The counterclaim alleged (1) fraud; (2) breaches of contract, fiduciary duty and the implied terms of good faith and fair dealing; (3) negligence; and (4) rescission. The district court held that (1) the July 18, 1983, guaranty is clear, unambiguous and enforceable; (2) it is neither bad faith nor obligatory that First Security first proceed against the company’s inventory and accounts or bid the alleged fair market value of the building; (3) the alleged representations by bank loan officers are inadmissible as parol evidence since these oral statements would vary and contradict the written guaranty; (4) even if admissible, the statements are promises of future events and not misrepresentations of existing fact which is the basis of a fraud action; and (5) even if Gaige had been fraudulently induced to sign the July 18, 1983, guaranty, he expressly ratified or reaffirmed the guaranty in the loan workout agreement of August 22, 1984, with full knowledge of all the facts constituting the alleged fraud, based on the advice of his own attorney. First Security was awarded judgment against Gaige on the guaranty in the amount of $390,253.65, the stipulated principal, plus interest, together with $1,670.10 costs and $44,315.78 attorney fees.

II

The first issue we address is whether our anti-deficiency statute, I.C. § 45-1512, 1 applies to Gaige as a guarantor. Resolution of this issue had been reserved previously in Valley Bank v. Larson, 104 Idaho 772, 663 P.2d 653 (1983). We decide it today, and we hold that it does not.

I.C. § 45-1512 applies to claims by a creditor secured by a deed of trust for the balance due after a deed of trust sale. The protection in I.C. § 45-1512 is given to the borrower-grantor who gives the security interest described in the deed of trust. However, Gaige was not the borrower-grantor who gave the security interest covered by the deed of trust. The corporation, A.J. Gaige & Associates, Inc., was the borrower and grantor of the security. John Gaige merely guaranteed that debt.

Gaige argues that I.C. § 45-1512 protection should extend by implication to guarantors on public policy grounds because guarantors and deed of trust debtors alike share a need for protection from creditors who desire to recover their indebtedness secured by the deed of trust. While there may be arguments for extending anti-deficiency protection to guarantors, that action is for the legislature to do, not the court. In some states, such as Alaska, the legislature saw fit to extend protection to guarantors, AS § 34.20.100 (1985); at present ours has not. Although the Nevada court is apparently “convinced that it is unsound to deny guarantors the benefits of [anti-deficiency] legislation,” First Interstate Bank of Nevada v. Shields, 730 P.2d 429, 431 (Nev.1986), a majority of state courts considering the issue have declined to expand *175 the coverage of the statute to those not covered by the statute.

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Bluebook (online)
765 P.2d 683, 115 Idaho 172, 1988 Ida. LEXIS 151, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-security-bank-of-idaho-na-v-gaige-idaho-1988.