Kansas State Bank & Trust Co. v. DeLorean

640 P.2d 343, 7 Kan. App. 2d 246, 33 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 632, 1982 Kan. App. LEXIS 146
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kansas
DecidedFebruary 11, 1982
Docket52,464
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 640 P.2d 343 (Kansas State Bank & Trust Co. v. DeLorean) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kansas State Bank & Trust Co. v. DeLorean, 640 P.2d 343, 7 Kan. App. 2d 246, 33 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 632, 1982 Kan. App. LEXIS 146 (kanctapp 1982).

Opinion

Bullock, J.:

John Z. DeLorean appeals from a judgment of the district court which found him liable, as guarantor, for certain corporate debts of Dahlinger Pontiac-Cadillac, Inc. to the Kansas State Bank and Trust of Wichita. The evidence introduced at the bench trial was extensive and conflicting, ultimately resulting in the entry of 79 findings of fact arid 58 conclusions of law by the trial court. Highly summarized, the factual background necessary for a determination of the issues raised on appeal follows.

DeLorean, a New York inventor-irivestor-entrepreneur and former vice-president of General Motors, contacted the Bank in 1976 expressing his interest in acquiring controlling interest in one of the Bank’s corporate customers, the financially troubled Dahlinger automobile dealership. Thereafter, DeLorean sent his agent, Roy Nesseth, to investigate Dahlinger’s financial condition. After concluding this investigation, Nesseth commenced negotiations with the owners of Dahlinger. Eventually, De-Lorean’s personal attorney, Thomas Kimmerly, assisted in closing the resulting sale, wherein 25% of the Dahlinger stock re *248 mained with Jerry Dahlinger and 75% was transferred to Nesseth and Kimmerly. Although DeLorean held no stock in his name, J. V. Lentell, the Bank’s president, understood, and the trial court found, that DeLorean was the “financial power” behind the purchase. Consistent with this understanding, DeLorean’s December 31, 1976, personal financial statement revealed an equity investment in a “Pontiac-Cadillac dealership in Wichita, Kansas” in the amount of $200,000.

In order to obtain credit from the Bank for this newly acquired dealership, DeLorean personally guaranteed the Dahlinger floor-plan loan, a Dahlinger promissory note and a $385,000 loan made by the Bank to the John Z. DeLorean Corporation (a separate corporation, wholly owned by DeLorean). Notwithstanding these infusions of credit, by the late summer of 1977, Dahlinger was once again experiencing financial difficulty. In fact, it was at this time that the Bank notified Dahlinger and DeLorean it would no longer honor overdrafts on the corporate checking account. As a result of these developments, the DeLorean interests decided to sell the troubled dealership, if a buyer could be found. In due course, a group of Texas investors became interested, but only on the condition that DeLorean could first purchase and then lease to them the land on which the Dahlinger place of business was located. In order to satisfy this condition, DeLorean needed another loan.

On Sunday, September 11, 1977, a meeting was held at the offices of the Bank for the purpose of discussing the financial condition of Dahlinger and the terms of the prospective sale of the dealership. On that date, the total Dahlinger indebtedness to the Bank, including both principal and interest, was in the approximate amount of $700,000. In addition, the $385,000 loan to DeLorean’s own corporation was in default. At this meeting, predictably, the Bank indicated its desire to both protect and recover its investments and, at the same time, avoid the difficulty and expense connected with foreclosure. On the other side of the conference table, the DeLorean interests desired to obtain additional monies for several purposes, including the purchase of the real estate in question. Consistent with its objectives, the Bank proposed to loan DeLorean $1,350,000 for 20 years at 5% and to loan the continuing Dahlinger corporation the sum of $250,000 on identical terms. The purpose of the loan to DeLorean, pro *249 posed by the Bank, was to provide $850,000 for the purchase of the subject real estate and an additional $500,000 to be held in escrow to assure the payment of that part of the remaining Dahlinger indebtedness to the Bank not covered by the new $250,000 loan. The remarkably favorable terms of the proposed loans, both as to time and interest rate, were the Bank’s concessions to the obvious financial difficulties of its borrower and were expressly offered by the Bank in an effort to avoid foreclosure.

In response to the Bank’s proposal, DeLorean expressed interest in the loans, but on different terms. His proposal was that the “extra” $500,000 be released to him for his own use, the Bank being required to look to Dahlinger and its assets for the repayment of the balance of the Dahlinger indebtedness. The Bank would not agree to DeLorean’s terms. Accordingly, a compromise was struck whereby the Bank loaned Dahlinger the sum of $250,000 and loaned DeLorean the sum of $1,350,000, both loans being for 20 years at 5% and on conditions which follow. The DeLorean loan was disbursed as agreed: $850,000 for the real estate purchase, $385,000 to pay off the delinquent DeLorean Corporation loan and $115,000 to DeLorean in cash. In exchange for these loans, DeLorean agreed to guarantee up to $450,000 of the remaining Dahlinger indebtedness (a sum slightly in excess of the principal and interest then due on the total Dahlinger debt to the Bank, after first subtracting the new loan to Dahlinger). The parties specifically agreed that the Bank would have no further obligation to liquidate the Dahlinger pledged collateral but, if Dahlinger did so, any proceeds therefrom, actually paid to the Bank, would reduce DeLorean’s guaranty “dollar for dollar.” The clear intent of the parties, reflected throughout the trial court’s extensive findings and conclusions, was that DeLorean’s guaranty would ultimately assure the Bank full payment of the remaining Dahlinger indebtedness to the same extent that the Bank would have been paid if the additional $500,000 had been escrowed and applied to those debts on September 11, as the Bank originally proposed.

On September 12, 1977, Kimmerly, DeLorean’s attorney, prepared and executed, as DeLorean’s attorney-in-fact, a written guaranty intended by the parties to reflect their agreements made the prior day. The terms of that agreement are as follows:

*250 “September 12, 1977

To THE KANSAS STATE BANK AND TRUST COMPANY WICHITA, KANSAS

“In consideration of one dollar, to me paid, receipt of which is hereby acknowledged, the total and absolute release of any and all other guarantees previously made by me on behalf of Dahlinger Pontiac-Cadillac, Inc., (hereinafter styled the ‘borrower’) and other valuable considerations and of the advances already made to the account of the borrower, I hereby guarantee to you, your successors and assigns, the payment of the principal sum of Four Hundred Fifty Thousand and 00/100 ($450,000.00) Dollars, so advanced, this sum of $450,000.00 here guaranteed is the amount owed to you by the borrower of approximately $700,000.00 less $250,000.00 you have agreed to loan the borrower on a 20 year 5% note and apply against the current due amount of $700,000.00 leaving the $450,000.00 here guaranteed; and I hereby authorize you at any time in such manner and upon such terms as you may see fit, to extend the time for or change the manner or terms of payment of any such sum or sums of money or any part thereof, without notice to me, and I hereby agree that such extension of time for or change in the manner or terms of payment shall not in any way release me from or reduce my liability on this guarantee.

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Bluebook (online)
640 P.2d 343, 7 Kan. App. 2d 246, 33 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 632, 1982 Kan. App. LEXIS 146, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kansas-state-bank-trust-co-v-delorean-kanctapp-1982.