Lee v. Yano

997 P.2d 68, 93 Haw. 142, 2000 Haw. App. LEXIS 32
CourtHawaii Intermediate Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 2, 2000
Docket21666
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 997 P.2d 68 (Lee v. Yano) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hawaii Intermediate Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lee v. Yano, 997 P.2d 68, 93 Haw. 142, 2000 Haw. App. LEXIS 32 (hawapp 2000).

Opinions

Opinion of the Court by

BURNS, C.J.

Plaintiff-Appellant Lorrin D. Lee (Lorrin) appeals the circuit court’s: (1) February 12, 1997 Order Denying Plaintiffs Motion for Summary Judgment Filed November 22, 1996 (February 12, 1997 Order Denying SJ); (2) May 5, 1997 Order Granting Defendant and Third-Party Plaintiff Francis H. Yano’s Motion for Summary Judgment Filed on March 5, 1997 (May 5, 1997 Order Granting SJ); (3) June 8, 1998 Judgment in favor of Defendant/Third-Party Plaintiff-Appellee [144]*144Francis H. Yano (Yano) against Lorrin “as to all claims”; and (4) June 8, 1998 Order Granting Defendant and Third-Party Plaintiff Francis H. Yano’s Motion for Attorney’s Fees, Costs and Sanctions Filed on April 1, 1998 (June 8, 1998 Order Granting Attorney’s Fees) awarding Yano $2,399 in “attorney’s fees and costs[.]”

In this opinion, we decide that (1) a guarantor is not a co-obligor or joint and/or several obligor with the principal obligor; (2) the creditor’s unsatisfied1 judgment against the debtor for the amounts of multiple debts, including the guaranteed debt, does not extinguish the guarantor’s liability; and (3) when a debtor who owes two or more matured debts to the creditor makes a payment to the creditor, the payment shall be applied according to the following priorities: (a) in accordance with the relevant terms of a binding agreement between the debtor and the creditor, (b) in accordance with the debtor’s instructions to the creditor prior to or at the time of the payment, (c) as actually applied by the creditor prior to the existence of any controversy with the debtor or the guarantor concerning the application of the payment, or (d) by the court in accordance with the law’s notions of justice as specified in Restatement (Second) of Contracts § 260 (1981).

BACKGROUND

Lorrin and Third-Party Defendant Choong Gil Lee (Choong) were married and had two children, a daughter born in August 1971 (Daughter) and a son born in August 1975 (Son). On October 29,1979, Lorrin and Choong were divorced. In its divorce decree, the family court awarded Lorrin custody of Daughter and Son and ordered Choong to pay child support of $200 per child per month commencing August 1,1979.

On October 30, 1991, the family court entered its order increasing child support to $1,000 per month commencing July 2, 1991, and requiring Choong to pay Lorrin on account of Daughter’s tuition, books, and schooling expenses the amount of $1,600 per year at the rate of $133.33 per month commencing July 2,1991.

On March 16, 1992, in response to Lorrin’s February 19, 1992 Motion and Affidavit for Relief After Order, the family court entered an order requiring Choong to pay to Lorrin the following:

Arrearage for child support ($4,800) and attorney’s fee ($750) totalling $5,500) [sic] to be [p]aid by 12/1/92 with 11% interest ([p]ayable monthly).

In addition,

Child support of $1,000/month due under 10/30/91 order to be paid through Child Support Enforcement Agency. Tuition, books and school expense money may be paid throughcharges [sic] on Defendant’s Credit Card.

Also on March 16, 1992, Choong executed a promissory note (the Note) promising to pay Lorrin the $5,500 for child support ar-rearage and attorney fees, plus monthly interest at the annual rate of 11% until the principal was paid, and to pay all attorney fees and costs incurred to induce or compel payment. Yano signed the Note as a guarantor. In exchange for Yano’s guaranty of Choong’s debt, Lorrin gave Choong more time to pay his debt.

On March 21, 1996, Lorrin filed a Motion and Affidavit for Post-Decree Relief in family court seeking past-due child support from Choong.

On May 21, 1996, the family court entered its judgment in favor of Lorrin and against Choong for $27,510.33. Choong did not appeal the family court’s May 21, 1996 judgment.

The amount of $27,510.33 was for

amounts due through March 31, 1996[,] herein in the amount of $23,041.50[,] together with interest on unpaid child support in the amount of $2,923.83, attorney’s fees and costs in the amount of $1,545.00, for a total amount of $27,510.33. Interest on said amount of $23,041.50 shall accrue interest from and after the date hereof at the rate of ten percent (10%) per annum, except that the portion of said amount reduced to the promissory note shall bear interest at the rate stated in the note.

The amount of $23,041.50 was based on Lorrin’s itemized statement of payments and [145]*145allocations (Lorrin’s 1996 Payment Record) attached to Lorrin’s March 21, 1996 Motion and Affidavit for Post-Decree Relief, the totals of which were stated as follows:

Child support from 1/93 through 3/96 $29,000
Child support paid from 1/93 through 3/96 (17,100)
Tuition for 1993 and 1994 3,200
Promissory Note 5,550
Interest from 4/92 through 3/96 2,391

In support of her present claim against Yano, Lorrin presented a record (Lorrin’s 1998 Payment Record) contained in her February 19, 1998 answers to interrogatories listing the amounts owed by Choong for the $5,500 principal of the Note, interest on the Note at the rate of 11% per annum, tuition, and child support. Lorrin’s 1998 Payment Record also itemized the payments made by Choong. According to Lorrin’s 1998 Payment Record, Choong paid Lorrin a total of $23,100 from January 1993 through March 1996. On Lorrin’s 1998 Payment Record, Lorrin designated $19,900 of Choong’s payments as child support payments2 and $3,200 of Choong’s payments as tuition payments. Lorrin did not apply any of Choong’s payments to the Note.

We note that the $23,041.50 amount of the family court’s May 21, 1996 judgment is premised on the itemization in Lorrin’s 1996 Payment Record that itemizes that Choong paid a total of $17,100 in child support payments through March 1996, whereas Lorrin’s 1998 Payment Record itemizes that Choong paid a total of $20,100 in child support payments through March 1996.3

[146]*146Yano was not a party to this family court proceeding.

On July 16, 1996, Lorrin filed a Complaint against Yano in the district court to collect on the guarantee. Lorrin’s Complaint sought the following: $5,650 principal, $3,256 interest, $750 attorney fees, $25 court costs, and $15 sheriffs fees, a total of $9,596. On August 19,1996, the case was removed to the circuit court. On September 5, 1996, Yano filed a Third-Party Complaint against Choong.

On November 22, 1996, Lorrin filed a motion for summary judgment (November 22, 1996 SJ Motion). In her motion, Lorrin argued as follows:

In the end, this case turns on a legal question previously raised by Defendant Yano. That question is whether the fact that [Lorrin] filed a separate action (in which Defendant Yano was not a party) against [Choong] and obtained a paper judgment against him means that Defendant Yano is discharged from any liability under his guaranty, even though nothing has been paid.

The circuit court denied this motion in its February 12,1997 Order Denying SJ.

On March 5, 1997, Yano filed a motion for summary judgment (March 5, 1997 SJ Motion).

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Papaku LLC v. Straub
497 P.3d 1103 (Hawaii Intermediate Court of Appeals, 2021)
Gurrobat v. HTH Corporation.
323 P.3d 792 (Hawaii Supreme Court, 2014)
Park v. Stanford
2011 UT 41 (Utah Supreme Court, 2011)
Park v. Stanford
2009 UT App 307 (Court of Appeals of Utah, 2009)
A.J. Rinella & Co. v. Bartlett (In Re Bartlett)
367 B.R. 21 (D. Massachusetts, 2007)
Lee v. Yano
997 P.2d 68 (Hawaii Intermediate Court of Appeals, 2000)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
997 P.2d 68, 93 Haw. 142, 2000 Haw. App. LEXIS 32, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lee-v-yano-hawapp-2000.