Fischer v. Curtis State Bank

419 N.W.2d 860, 227 Neb. 722, 1988 Neb. LEXIS 61
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 4, 1988
Docket86-157
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 419 N.W.2d 860 (Fischer v. Curtis State Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fischer v. Curtis State Bank, 419 N.W.2d 860, 227 Neb. 722, 1988 Neb. LEXIS 61 (Neb. 1988).

Opinion

*723 Shanahan, J.

In November of 1976, Pamela Gay Hazen entered an agreement with the Curtis State Bank to obtain an extension of credit for the operating expenses of “The Flower Basket,” a floral and gift shop which was Pamela’s sole proprietorship. In conjunction with that agreement, Pamela signed a security agreement, granting the bank a security interest in the assets of the Flower Basket. According to an officer and director of the bank, in the summer of 1977 the bank made a loan “[i]n the neighborhood of $10,000.00” which was “credit extended to Pam Hazen doing business as The Flower Basket, for operating expenses.” On September 23, 1977, Richard E. Fischer, Pamela’s father, signed a guaranty of $16,000 in favor of the bank “to give and continue to give credit to Pamela Gay Hazen DBA: FLOWER BASKET.”

Subsequently, in June 1978, Pamela and her husband, Dennis, signed a security agreement, granting the bank a security interest in their 1978 Chevrolet van and securing some unspecified indebtedness of Pamela and Dennis Hazen. On February 20, 1980, Pamela’s parents, Richard E. Fischer and Elane L. Fischer, signed a guaranty of $25,000 to the bank “to give and continue to give credit to Pamela Gay Hazen.” That guaranty contained no reference to the Flower Basket or Dennis Hazen. The exact amount of the indebtedness owed by Pamela Gay Hazen to the bank on February 20, 1980, is undisclosed in the record.

On October 21, 1983, Richard and Elane Fischer signed another guaranty in a preprinted form containing:

I hereby request CURTIS STATE BANK of Curtis, NE 69025 hereinafter called the “Bank” to give and continue to give credit to Pam and Dennis Hazen and in consideration of all and any such credit given, I hereby unconditionally guarantee prompt payment to the Bank when due, of any and all notes at any time made by said debtor to said Bank and any renewal or renewals thereof, together with any other indebtedness (now existing or hereafter incurred) of said debtor to said Bank arising from borrowings, overdrafts, notes discounted or otherwise.

*724 That guaranty also limited the liability of Richard and Elane Fischer to $40,000 and contained a further provision:

This Guaranty shall continue indefinitely and nothing shall affect my liability except receipt by the Bank of written notice from me of the discontinuance thereof, or notice of my death, but termination shall not affect then existing obligations, and in the event of my death, my obligations shall continue in full force and effect against my estate; and my liability in respect thereto shall continue although such notes, indebtedness or liability may, from time to time, be extended or renewed.

Richard E. Fischer died in January 1984, a fact which the bank learned in January 1984. The record does not disclose the following, if extant at Richard E. Fischer’s death: Terms and the amount of any indebtedness owed by Pamela Hazen or Dennis Hazen to the bank; whether any Hazen debt was a joint obligation of Pamela and Dennis or whether such debt was the individual obligation of Pamela or Dennis; and whether any Hazen debt was evidenced by a promissory note made jointly by Pamela and Dennis or made solely by either of them. Nevertheless, in the light of events after Richard E. Fischer’s death, it becomes readily apparent that Pamela Hazen must have owed approximately $41,700 to the bank at the date of her father’s death. Approximately 2 months after the death of Richard E. Fischer, that is, on February 27, 1984, Pamela Hazen signed a preprinted promissory note, denominated a “FLOATING RATE PROMISSORY NOTE,” in favor of the bank and in the principal amount of $41,700. In reference to the promissory note of February 27, 1984, a bank officer explained:

This was the loan that [the bank] renewed on February 27, 1984, for Pam Hazen doing business as The Flower Basket. The proceeds were advanced to renew a $39,000. debt plus $2,077.39 accrued interest, plus $22.61 new cash. It was agreed to at that time that the sale and/or auction of The Flower Basket would be made for reduction by the notes maturity on April 1,1984.

The note specified that principal and interest were due in a single payment on April 1, 1984. At the signature line for the *725 promissory note there appears:

FLOWER BASKET, Curtis, NE 69025
_/s/Pam Hazen_Owner

The promissory note of February 27,1984, does not refer to any debt which Dennis Hazen may have owed to the bank, and the note was not signed by Dennis Hazen or otherwise acknowledged by him as evidence of indebtedness to the bank.

In April 1984 Pamela Hazen defaulted on her $41,700 note. However, by a payment made at the bank’s drive-in window on June 25, Pamela paid $160.08 as interest on the February 27, 1984, promissory note to the bank.

On August 21, 1984, the attorney for the bank wrote to “Dennis Hazen or Pamela G. Hazen dba Flower Basket” and informed the Hazens about a prospective private sale of their 1978 Chevrolet van on August 27, 1984, pursuant to their security agreement signed on June 27, 1978. Also, on August 21, 1984, that same attorney for the bank wrote to “Pamela Gay Hazen dba Flower Basket” and stated that the physical assets of the Flower Basket would be sold at private sale on August 27, 1984. The bank never notified the personal representative of the Richard E. Fischer estate concerning the sale of the Flower Basket assets. As indicated in the letters from the bank’s attorney, the private sales did take place. From the sale of the Flower Basket assets, the bank received $9,500 for which Pamela Hazen was given credit on her $41,700 promissory note to the bank. Part of the proceeds from the sale of Hazens’ van was applied to the debt on the van, and the balance of the sale proceeds was then applied on the $41,700 note signed by Pamela (Pam) Hazen on February 27, 1984. Because no further payments were made on the $41,700 promissory note, the bank filed its guaranty-based claim against the Richard E. Fischer estate. The personal representative for the estate gave “Notice of Disallowance” concerning the bank’s claim. On the bank’s “Petition for Allowance of Claim” filed in the estate of Richard E. Fischer, deceased, the county court for Frontier County entered judgment in favor of the bank for $27,000, an amount remaining after credits applied to Pamela Hazen’s promissory note of February 27, 1984. The personal representative *726 appealed to the district court, which affirmed the county court’s judgment.

In his brief, the personal representative of the Richard E. Fischer estate contends that the estate is not liable on the guaranty because the bank failed to notify the personal representative about the private sale of the Flower Basket’s assets. As the premise for his contention, the personal representative relies on the notice requirement in Neb. U.C.C. § 9-504(3) (Reissue 1980). However, there is a more fundamental flaw in the county court’s judgment for the bank.

Regarding an appeal in a civil case, Neb. Rev. Stat. § 25-1919

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Bluebook (online)
419 N.W.2d 860, 227 Neb. 722, 1988 Neb. LEXIS 61, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fischer-v-curtis-state-bank-neb-1988.