Hart v. FIRST FEDERAL S. & L. ASS'N
This text of 727 S.W.2d 723 (Hart v. FIRST FEDERAL S. & L. ASS'N) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Sherman W. HART, et al., Appellants,
v.
FIRST FEDERAL SAVINGS & LOAN ASSOCIATION OF ESTERVILLE & EMMETTSBURG, IOWA, Appellee.
Court of Appeals of Texas, Austin.
*724 Roy G. Scudday, Fielder & Scudday, Lockhart, for appellants.
David C. Duggins, Clark, Thomas, Winters & Newton, Austin, for appellee.
Before POWERS, GAMMAGE and CARROLL, JJ.
POWERS, Justice.
Appellants Sherman W. Hart and Ralph E. Reed appeal from that part of the trial court's summary judgment which declares that they take nothing by their suit against appellee First Federal Savings & Loan Association of Esterville and Emmettsburg, Iowa. We will affirm the trial-court judgment.
THE CONTROVERSY
Appellants entered into a written contract of guaranty wherein they agreed unconditionally to pay when due the debt owed by Hart-Reed, Inc. to appellee, whether the debt be evidenced by an original promissory note described in the contract or any subsequent note given in renewal, extension, or "rearrangement" of the debt. The corporation failed to pay the debt at maturity and appellee sued appellants on their guaranty contract. The principal debtor, the corporation, was not joined in the suit. We are informed in appellants' brief that the corporation is the debtor in a bankruptcy proceeding governed by 11 U.S. C.A. § 1101 et seq. (West 1979 & Supp. 1987).
In answer to appellee's pleading on the guaranty contract, appellants interposed several defensive pleas and a counterclaim against appellee. In the counterclaim, they *725 averred the statutory cause of action given a "consumer" by § 17.50(a) of Tex.Bus. & Com.Code Ann. (Supp.1987), a section of the Deceptive Trade Practices-Consumer Protection Act. That section authorizes a "consumer" to recover against another for any of several specified wrongs if they "constitute a producing cause of actual damages...." The damages averred were incurred by the principal debtor, Hart-Reed, Inc., and not by appellants. It is undisputed that neither appellant was literally a "consumer" entitled to bring the action. Finally, appellants do not challenge the authenticity of the principal debtor's corporate character. The issue on appeal is whether appellants were entitled to bring or benefit from the statutory cause of action belonging to the principal debtor.
On appellee's motion for summary judgment, the trial court awarded appellee recovery against appellants on their guaranty contract, and adjudged that appellants take nothing by their counterclaim against appellee. Appellants appeal to this Court on a single point of error relating solely to the trial court's adverse judgment on their counterclaim against appellee.
In appellants' point of error, they contend they were entitled to assert against appellee the principal debtor's statutory cause of action under § 17.50(a); and, in consequence, the trial court erred in its judgment to the contrary. Appellants' in their brief argue they were entitled to bring that action against appellee either by way of an affirmative recovery or by way of a set-off or recoupment against any sum appellee was entitled to recover against them on their guaranty contract.
HOLDINGS AND DISCUSSION
Regarding appellants' contention that they were entitled in law to seek an affirmative recovery on their counterclaim, based upon the principal debtor's statutory cause of action, we find there is no allegation and no record showing that appellants have ever received an assignment of the cause of action from the corporation or one lawfully acting for it. This is an essential part of appellants' case if they are to bring a cause of action that admittedly belongs to another. Briscoe v. Texas General Ins. Agency, 60 S.W.2d 814 (Tex.Civ.App.1933, no writ); Indemnity Ins. Co. of North America v. Garsee, 54 S.W.2d 817 (Tex. Civ.App.1932, no writ). We need not, in consequence, consider such problems as the jurisdiction of the bankruptcy court, the possibility of a double recovery against appellee, the formalities required for such an assignment, or whether the statutory cause of action was assignable at all. We therefore reject that part of appellants' argument.
We turn then to appellants' contention that they were entitled in equity to assert the principal debtors' cause of action as a set-off or recoupment of appellee's claim against appellants. Equity will allow as much when the guarantor and the principal debtor are joined in the suit. 1 Brandt, Suretyship and Guaranty § 236 (1891); Childs, Law of Suretyship and Guaranty § 148 (1907); Stearns, The Law of Suretyship, § 7.21, at 233 (1951). The equitable right may, however, be circumscribed by the terms of the guaranty contract spelling out the particulars of the guarantor's undertaking.
In Aultman & Taylor Co. v. Hefner, 67 Tex. 54, 2 S.W. 861 (1886), the seller of machinery sued the buyer on his promissory notes given for the purchase price, jointly with the guarantors of the buyer's debt. The machinery proved defective but the buyer retained it nevertheless. He therefore became entitled either to sue for the difference in value or "set up the defective quality of the thing warranted in diminution of the price." He did the latter when the seller sued him on the notes he had given. Concerning the guarantors who were also sued, the Court stated that they had undertaken to pay the notes at maturity if the maker did not; and,
It would seem, therefore, that if, by reason of the existence of any facts between the appellant and the maker of the notes by which the latter becomes entitled to recover from the former a sum equal to the balance due on the notes, as for damages on breach of warranty or otherwise, *726 that then, in contemplation of law, the notes are paid and the guaranty satisfied....
In the case before us the matters which operate as a defense to the notes guarantied grow out of the contract under which the notes were given; and, under the procedure recognized in this state, we see no objection to giving relief to a guarantor when the person primarily liable for the debt guarantied is shown to have a defense, growing out of the same transaction, which entitles him to a judgment in effect declaring that the notes guarantied have been satisfied. It may be that the appellants might have stated a case which would have rendered the guarantors liable on their guaranty, notwithstanding the defenses set up by the maker of the notes were good as to himself. No such facts, however, are stated.
2 S.W. at 864-65 (emphasis added). The emphasized portions of the opinion reflect a theory that the guarantors' liability is satisfied to the extent the principal debtor recovers on his claim for a set-off; and, the guarantors are entitled to judgment accordingly, at least where the holder of the notes fails to state a case under which the guarantors would be liable for the debt notwithstanding the maker's right to a set-off.
In Houston Sash & Door Co. v. Heaner, 577 S.W.2d 217
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