Mansfield v. McReary

497 P.2d 654, 263 Or. 41, 1972 Ore. LEXIS 376
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedMay 24, 1972
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 497 P.2d 654 (Mansfield v. McReary) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mansfield v. McReary, 497 P.2d 654, 263 Or. 41, 1972 Ore. LEXIS 376 (Or. 1972).

Opinion

HOLMAN, J.

This is an action by a guarantor against her co-guarantors to enforce contribution. All defendants defaulted except the defendants Mr. and Mrs. MeBeary. The trial court entered judgment against the McRearys, who appealed, contending they should not have been required to contribute. The plaintiff cross-appealed, contesting the manner in which the judgment was fashioned and arguing that the amount the McRearys were required to contribute was inadequate.

The defendants Denton, Staben, Nicholas, A. G-. Mansfield, and Ronald McReary were stockholders and officers of a newly formed corporation, Intra-Jet Engineering Co. (Intra-Jet), which engaged in engineering and construction. The corporation borrowed money from the First National Bank of Oregon to finance construction contracts. As a condition of granting or extending loans, the bank required the stockholders to guarantee in varying amounts any advancements made to the corporation by the bank. The plaintiff signed a guaranty agreement with her husband, the defendant A. Gr. Mansfield, in the sum of $60,000, and the defendant Jane McReary signed one in like amount with her husband, the defendant Ronald McReary. The defendant Nicholas signed one in the *44 sum of $50,000. Denton and Staben signed separate guaranties of $80,000 each. During most of the active life of the corporation, McKeary was president and Mansfield was one of the corporation’s principal investors and money-raisers.

The corporation became insolvent and the bank made a demand for payment under the various guaranties. The defendant A. Gr. Mansfield paid one of Intra-Jet’s loans from the bank in the sum of $4,115.11 and assigned his rights against the other defendants to the plaintiff, his wife. Plaintiff paid the balance of the money owing the bank by Intra-Jet in the sum of $49,836.80, and then initiated this lawsuit for contribution.

Although these parties were liable on different guaranties in different penal sums, they are each other’s coguarantors since they each guaranteed the loans made to the corporation by the bank. (1) As a general rule, when a guarantor pays more than his proportionate share of the common obligation, he is entitled to contribution from his coguarantors. (2)

The McBearys defended, contending that their signatures on the guaranty were obtained as the result of an implied understanding with A. Gr. Mansfield that he would bear any financial loss which thereby resulted to them. After reading the transcript, we agree with the trial judge that there is no convincing evidence of any such implied agreement. Therefore, whether this alleged agreement, if satisfactorily proven, would have been a defense to contribution on that portion of the debt which was paid by plaintiff, and not by A. Gr. *45 Mansfield, we need not decide. As no other defense was raised, the trial court properly entered judgment for contribution against the McEearys.

The plaintiff’s cross-appeal raises questions relating to the nature of the judgment against the Mc-Eearys and the amount of contribution required to be paid by them. The trial court did not include in the amount of the loss upon which defendants’ proportionate contribution to plaintiff was based the $4,115.11 note paid by Mr. Mansfield, who assigned his right to contribution to plaintiff. Originally, payment of a different note was alleged in the complaint. However, the trial court allowed the complaint to be amended to rectify the error. This court is at a loss to understand why that amount should have been excluded since a surety’s right to contribution may be assigned to a cosurety for the purpose of suit or action. Lindblom v. Johnston, 92 Wash 171, 158 P 972, 975 (1916).

Plaintiff makes two further contentions, if we correctly understand her position. First, because the bank could have ultimately collected the full sum of the McEearys’ $60,000 guaranty from either of them, she argues that their proportionate responsibility for contribution should be as if each owed that amount, or, both owed a total of $120,000. This contention is not well taken. We hold that the McEearys should not be required to pay a greater proportion of the contribution than the proportion their combined guaranty of $60,000 bore to the total of all guaranties. The following language is found in Eestatement of the Law of Security $ 154, comment g. at 435:

“Where there are different groups of sureties, each group is considered as a unit in determining *46 the amount of contribution. Thus if four sureties are bound to a creditor for a principal’s duty for $6000, and two are bound for $4000 on the same duty, the first group should bear three-fifths of the loss and the second two-fifths. Assuming that all sureties are available and solvent and that each obligation is entirely satisfied, the contributiva shares of each surety in the first group is $1500, and $2000 in the second group. If the total loss is $5000, those in the first group must pay $3000, and those in the second group $2000. The individual shares in the first group are $750 each and $1000 each in the second * *

Second, plaintiff contends that the court erred because it entered a separate judgment for contribution against each of the McRearys, as if each had an obligation to the bank of $30,000, instead of a judgment for contribution against both based on the obligation of both for $60,000. While it is clear that the combined liability of the McRearys should be 60/230ths of the loss paid by plaintiff and her assignor, the question is whether a judgment for contribution should be entered against both based upon this proportion, or a separate judgment against each for one-half of their combined liability.

It is our belief that the trial court was correct in entering a separate judgment against each. If the rule were otherwise, a co-obligor, who alone was compelled to satisfy a judgment representing the whole proportionate part of the debt owed by his group, would have to proceed anew against the remaining members of his group for contribution, thus bringing on a multiplicity of cases. This reasoning is set forth in Todd v. Windsor, 118 Ga App 805, 165 SE2d 438, 440 (1968); Hall v. Harris, 6 Ga App 822, 65 SE 1086 (1909); and Lorimer *47 v. Julius Knack Coal Co., 246 Mich 214, 224 NW 362, 64 ALR 210 (1929). In those eases, the co-obligors all became obligated separately and the co-obligor who paid the debt unsuccessfully attempted to get a judgment for the entire contribution either from only one of numerous co-obligors or against several of them jointly. The reasoning of those eases would be equally applicable to the present situation in which plaintiff seeks a joint judgment against two co-obligors who together signed a separate guaranty. Judicial economy requires that the entire matter be disposed of in one proceeding.

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Bluebook (online)
497 P.2d 654, 263 Or. 41, 1972 Ore. LEXIS 376, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mansfield-v-mcreary-or-1972.