GreatAmerica Financial Services Corporation v. Ride Now Auto Parts LLC, Josephine Dolatowski and Robert Hastis

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedJanuary 12, 2022
Docket20-1066
StatusPublished

This text of GreatAmerica Financial Services Corporation v. Ride Now Auto Parts LLC, Josephine Dolatowski and Robert Hastis (GreatAmerica Financial Services Corporation v. Ride Now Auto Parts LLC, Josephine Dolatowski and Robert Hastis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
GreatAmerica Financial Services Corporation v. Ride Now Auto Parts LLC, Josephine Dolatowski and Robert Hastis, (iowactapp 2022).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

No. 20-1066 Filed January 12, 2022

GREATAMERICA FINANCIAL SERVICES CORPORATION, Plaintiff-Appellee,

vs.

RIDE NOW AUTO PARTS LLC, JOSEPHINE DOLATOWSKI, AND ROBERT HASTIS, Defendants-Appellants. ________________________________________________________________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Linn County, Christopher L. Bruns

(summary judgment) and Mary E. Chicchelly (attorney fees and final judgment),

Judges.

Defendants appeal the grant of summary judgment in favor of GreatAmerica

Financial Services Corp. AFFIRMED IN PART, REVERSED IN PART, AND

REMANDED.

Larry J. Thorson of Ackley, Kopecky & Kingery, L.L.P., Cedar Rapids, for

appellant.

Christopher K. Loftus of Simmons Perrine Moyer Bergman PLC, Cedar

Rapids, for appellee.

Considered by Mullins, P.J., and May and Ahlers, JJ. 2

AHLERS, Judge.

The question in this appeal is whether a party that accepts the benefits of a

contract and partially performs under it can escape liability by claiming the contract

was procured by misrepresentations and deceit. We find that the party cannot

escape liability under these circumstances, so we affirm the district court’s grant

of summary judgment against that party. The same cannot be said with respect to

a separate party executing a personal guaranty of the underlying contract, so we

reverse the grant of summary judgment against one of the purported guarantors.

In 2018, Ride Now Auto Parts LLC (Ride Now) executed a financing

agreement (Agreement). Ride Now’s president, Josephine Dolatowski, signed the

Agreement on Ride Now’s behalf. The Agreement called for Ride Now to make

monthly payments to GreatAmerica Financial Services Corp. (GreatAmerica) for

sixty months in order to lease several pieces of office equipment obtained from a

third-party vendor. The Agreement includes a “hell or high water” clause stating:

NET AGREEMENT. THIS AGREEMENT IS NON-CANCELABLE FOR THE ENTIRE AGREEMENT TERM. [RIDE NOW] UNDERSTAND[S] [GREATAMERICA IS] PAYING FOR THE EQUIPMENT BASED ON [RIDE NOW’S] UNCONDITIONAL ACCEPTANCE OF IT AND [RIDE NOW’S] PROMISE TO PAY [GREATAMERICA] UNDER THE TERMS OF THIS AGREEMENT, WITHOUT SET-OFFS FOR ANY REASON, EVEN IF THE EQUIPMENT DOES NOT WORK OR IS DAMAGED, EVEN IF IT IS NOT [RIDE NOW’S] FAULT.

On the same date the Agreement was signed, Dolatowski and her

grandson, Robert Hastis, signed a personal guaranty (Guaranty).1 If it is

enforceable, the Guaranty makes Dolatowski and Hastis personally responsible

1 Hastis was employed by Ride Now at the time. 3

for Ride Now’s obligations to GreatAmerica under the Agreement via the following

clause:

Guarantor hereby unconditionally guarantees, as a direct and primary obligation of Guarantor, the full and timely performance of all payment and nonpayment obligations owed by [Ride Now] to [GreatAmerica] under the Agreement, under any prior existing agreements between [Ride Now] and [GreatAmerica], and under all future agreements between [Ride Now] and [GreatAmerica] . . . . Guarantor also agrees to pay all of [GreatAmerica’s] out-of-pocket expenses, including attorneys’ fees, incurred by [GreatAmerica] in connection with the enforcement of this Guaranty.

A little more than one year later, GreatAmerica filed a petition alleging Ride

Now breached the Agreement by failing to make the required payments. The

petition also sought to recover against Dolatowski and Hastis under the Guaranty.

GreatAmerica moved for summary judgment, which the district court granted. The

court entered judgment in GreatAmerica’s favor in the amount of $32,068.42 for

breach of contract and $35,166.50 for attorney fees plus costs. The judgment was

entered against Ride Now, Dolatowski, and Hastis, jointly and severally. Ride

Now, Dolatowski, and Hastis appeal.

I. Scope and Standard of Review

“We review a district court’s ruling on a motion for summary judgment for

correction of errors at law.”2 “The legal standard for a proper ruling on summary

judgment is when there is no genuine issue of material fact on the record, and ‘the

moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law.’”3 “Where reasonable

2 GreatAmerica Fin. Servs. Corp. v. Natalya Rodionova Med. Care, P.C., 956 N.W.2d 148, 153 (Iowa 2021). 3 Id. (quoting Iowa R. Civ. P. 1.981(3)). 4

minds can differ on how an issue should be resolved, a fact question has been

generated, and summary judgment should not be granted.”4

II. Analysis of the Issues

The three defendants argue summary judgment was not appropriate

because Dolatowski and Hastis were fraudulently induced into signing the

documents by, among other actions, hiding key provisions from their view. Hastis

also argues he was a mere employee of Ride Now and his signature “was obtained

by the ruse that he was just signing a ‘receipt for delivery’”; thus, he received no

consideration when signing the Guaranty and the Guaranty is not a valid contract

as to him.

A. Enforcement of the Agreement

The Agreement requires the signers to provide “unconditional acceptance”

of the equipment and to fulfill their obligations under the Agreement regardless of

whether they are later dissatisfied with the equipment. Such language is known

as a hell-or-high-water clause, which “is a contractual provision that requires the

lessee to absolutely and unconditionally fulfill its obligations under the lease in all

events (i.e., come hell or high water).”5

A hell-or-high-water clause in a leasing contract is valid and enforceable

upon acceptance of the goods.6 There is no factual dispute that Ride Now took

possession of the equipment. There is also no factual dispute that GreatAmerica

sent monthly invoices to Ride Now and Ride Now made six payments on the

4 Id. (quoting C & J Vantage Leasing Co. v. Wolfe, 795 N.W.2d 65, 73 (Iowa 2011)). 5 Wolfe, 795 N.W.2d at 76–77. 6 See id. 5

equipment covering eight months of the Agreement. Dolatowski signed all six

checks, and several of the checks included notations corresponding to the invoice

numbers on the invoices sent by GreatAmerica. Such activity establishes that Ride

Now accepted the equipment.7 Dolatowski’s observation that she directed five of

the six payments to “Commodore Financial” instead of GreatAmerica does not help

Ride Now. The Agreement states that Commodore Financial is “a business unit

of GreatAmerica” and a filing with the Iowa Secretary of State shows GreatAmerica

adopted Commodore Financial as a fictitious name. As a result, the fact that some

payments were made payable to Commodore Financial and another made to

GreatAmerica is inconsequential. Because the documents contain a valid hell-or-

high-water clause and Ride Now accepted the equipment, Ride Now is barred from

raising most defenses to GreatAmerica’s breach-of-contract claim.

Although the hell-or-high-water clause bars many defenses, it does not bar

Ride Now from raising defenses related to contract formation.8 If the contract was

never formed, then the contract’s clauses, including the hell-or-high-water clause,

would not take effect. Ride Now asserts there was fraud in the execution of the

Agreement because the contents of the Agreement were hidden from its signers.

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Bluebook (online)
GreatAmerica Financial Services Corporation v. Ride Now Auto Parts LLC, Josephine Dolatowski and Robert Hastis, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/greatamerica-financial-services-corporation-v-ride-now-auto-parts-llc-iowactapp-2022.