Founders Bank and Trust Co. v. Upsher

1992 OK 35, 830 P.2d 1355, 63 O.B.A.J. 1048, 1992 Okla. LEXIS 61, 1992 WL 62136
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMarch 17, 1992
Docket68660
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 1992 OK 35 (Founders Bank and Trust Co. v. Upsher) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Founders Bank and Trust Co. v. Upsher, 1992 OK 35, 830 P.2d 1355, 63 O.B.A.J. 1048, 1992 Okla. LEXIS 61, 1992 WL 62136 (Okla. 1992).

Opinion

OPALA, Chief Justice.

Two questions are presented on certiora-ri: (1) Were the guarantors entitled to credit on the Bank’s judgment against them for the fair market value of the property sold at sheriff’s sale rather than for the amount of the sale’s confirmed proceeds? and (2) Did the trial court correctly allot the amount realized from the security’s sale to that portion of the judgment that is unaffected by the guaranty agreement? We answer the first question in the negative and the second question in the affirmative.

I.

THE ANATOMY OF LITIGATION

Founders Bank and Trust Co. [Bank] lent money to a limited partnership. Evidenced by a promissory note, the obligation was secured by a mortgage on real property and by five guarantors in separate agreements, 1 identical except that a typed provision specified a fixed percentage of the *1358 total unpaid obligation each guarantor would bear. The two general partners each guaranteed payment of one hundred percent of the note’s unpaid balance, with interest and expenses; one limited partner guaranteed twenty-five percent and two others each guaranteed twelve and one-half percent of the same amount. The principal defaulted and the Bank sued (1) on the promissory note, (2) to enforce the guaranty agreements and (3) to foreclose the mortgage.

The trial court gave the Bank an agreed judgment against the principal and each guarantor, jointly and severally; The property was to be sold with the proceeds to be applied toward the judgment’s satisfaction unless the obligation were paid immediately. 2 No money was paid and the Bank proceeded with execution. It also initiated collection efforts against the guarantors. One day before the sheriff’s sale, the three guarantors who were limited partners, Betty Lee Upsher, Sidney P. Upsher and Philip Boyle, Jr. [collectively referred to as the guarantors], brought a postjudgment plea for credit on the guaranty-debt judgment. 3 They contended our anti-deficiency statute, 12 O.S.1981 § 686, entitled them to an offset in the full amount of the mortgaged *1359 property’s fair market value. 4

The Bank purchased the property at sheriffs sale while the guarantors’ post-judgment motion was pending. The sale stood confirmed when no objections to confirmation were lodged. In a postconfir-mation order the nisi prius court denied the guarantors credit for the property’s fair market value. Although it ordered the Bank’s judgment reduced by the proceeds of the then confirmed sheriffs sale, the court permitted the Bank to apply the sale proceeds first to that portion of the judgment which is unaffected by the guaranty agreement. 5 A second postcon-firmation order set the amount of the guarantors’ supersedeas bonds. 6

*1360 On appeal the guarantors contended their liability was limited to a fixed percentage of the unpaid judgment whose amount must be computed by deducting the sold property’s fair market value and then determining the portion of the debt for which the affected guarantor stands as security. The appellate court reversed the nisi prius orders on the grounds that the anti-deficiency statute, 12 O.S.1981 § 686, entitles the guarantors to set off the mortgaged property’s fair market value. It resolved in guarantors’ favor a dispute over the guaranty agreement’s text. 7 The appellate court’s opinion instructed the trial court to credit the property’s fair market value to that portion of the judgment for which each guarantor’s agreement stands as se curity. 8

II.

POSTCONFIRMATION LITIGATION

The Bank characterizes the guarantors’ setoff plea as a compulsory affirmative defense. It urges the guarantors’ failure to press that issue before judgment is fatal to their plea for credit. According to the Bank, that issue is no longer invocable because the guarantors neither appealed from nor sought to modify the January 12, 1987 judgment. The short answer to the Bank's contention is that because the set-off issue did not arise until after special execution on the mortgaged property had issued, it was not available as a counterclaim., 9

The landmark decision that distinguishes a postjudgment plea for credit from a quest to modify a judgment 10 is Willis v. *1361 Nowata Land and Cattle Co. Inc. 11 Willis was a foreclosure action in which the borrower sought credit for fire insurance proceeds on a previously adjudicated mortgage debt. We noted there that postconfir-mation litigation, which ordinarily encompasses only issues that arose after the sheriffs sale and confirmation, may include pleas for credit on the judgment. The guarantors’ quest for credit, here under consideration, clearly is a genuine postconfirmation issue. The decision to grant or deny credit for the property’s fair market value would neither alter the terms of the now confirmed judicial sale nor modify the now unassailable judgment. It would merely define the amount the Bank may demand in satisfaction of its unpaid judgment. 12

III.

THE GUARANTORS’ PURELY CONTRACTUAL OBLIGATION

A.

THE BREADTH OF THE UNDERTAKING

The Bank contends the agreement’s terms are consistent because the guarantors ensure payment of a fixed percentage of the note’s unpaid balance upon default, rather than a percentage of the unpaid judgment after credit for other sources of payment.

Oklahoma’s guaranty jurisprudence is well established. “A guaranty is a promise to answer for the debt, default or miscarriage of another person.” 13 The guarantor’s obligation is collateral to that of the principal debtor or obligor and independently and separately enforceable, 14

Because the present case deals with private-law guarantors, we must apply the general rule that obligations of a private-law guarantor are purely contractual. 15

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Bluebook (online)
1992 OK 35, 830 P.2d 1355, 63 O.B.A.J. 1048, 1992 Okla. LEXIS 61, 1992 WL 62136, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/founders-bank-and-trust-co-v-upsher-okla-1992.