Northwest Acceptance Corporation v. Heinicke Enstruments Company

441 F.2d 887, 1971 U.S. App. LEXIS 10369
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedMay 5, 1971
Docket28553
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 441 F.2d 887 (Northwest Acceptance Corporation v. Heinicke Enstruments Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Northwest Acceptance Corporation v. Heinicke Enstruments Company, 441 F.2d 887, 1971 U.S. App. LEXIS 10369 (5th Cir. 1971).

Opinion

INGRAHAM, Circuit Judge:

This breach of contract action was brought by plaintiff-appellant, Northwest Acceptance Corporation, an Oregon financier of commercial paper, against defendant-appellee, Heinicke Instruments Company, a Florida manufacturer of cleaning equipment, for approximately $160,000.00, the unpaid balance on certain “deferred payment paper” which defendant Heinicke assigned to plaintiff Northwest.

The factual complexity in this case is only overshadowed by the slipshod business practices of the parties. Fortunately, however, we are able to draw freely upon the district court’s opinion concerning the circumstances leading up to this controversy.

Heinicke, a manufacturer and seller of cleaning equipment, sought to obtain financing for its sales to its customers. Northwest was in the financing business. *889 Heinieke and Northwest entered into a contract in October 1965 which provided that if Heinicke offered to sell notes of its customers, together with the underlying security of title instruments (deferred payment paper) to Northwest, a certain procedure would be followed upon Northwest’s decision to buy the paper. 1 The court below described the procedure outlined in the contract as follows:

“Heinicke would make a sale to a customer. In return, Heinicke would get a note from the customer together with a security or title instrument. Heinicke would assign these to Northwest, which, upon acceptance, would pay Heinicke the amount due. Then the customer would pay Northwest as provided in the agreement.
“The contract provided that Heinieke could sell the customer’s note and underlying security to Northwest and that Heinicke would endorse or assign the paper to Northwest. It also provided that should Heinicke fail to execute the endorsement or assignment, Northwest would have the right to execute the assignment for it. The contract further provided that in the case of a default in payment, Heinieke would repurchase the paper it sold, upon the demand of Northwest.”

This suit was based upon the defaults by certain Heinieke customers involving 12 accounts, and plaintiff Northwest demands that defendant Heinicke should be required to repurchase the paper on these defaulted accounts. We divide our discussion into two groups of accounts in order to clarify the issues raised by the parties.

(1) The Langtry, Williams, Bordeaux and McCully Accounts

In the first 9 accounts sued upon (the 3 Langtry accounts, the 2 Williams accounts, the Bordeaux account, and the 3 McCully accounts), the trial court found that the contractual scheme was not followed because the notes were made directly from Heinicke’s dealers to Northwest, and not to Heinicke and by it assigned to Northwest.

Although the contract did not provide that Northwest could take the notes directly from these customers, the district court failed to see the significance in the fact that the trust receipts and conditional sales contract forms were assigned with an individual express guarantee in accordance with the underlying agreement. Each assignment contained the following provisions:

“For value received we hereby sell and assign to Northwest Acceptance Corporation, its successors and assigns, the annexed above-named contract, together with all our right, title and interest in the property described therein, and all our rights and remedies thereunder, including the right to collect any and all installments due and to become due thereon and to take, in our or its name, any and all proceedings thereon or thereunder we might otherwise take * * We guarantee the payments promptly when due of the amount of each and every installment payable thereunder and the payment on demand of the entire unpaid balance at the date of default in the event of any default by the buyer under the said contract.”

A general rule in the interpretation of contracts is that the court will look to the agreement between the parties as a whole. State of Florida for Use and Benefit of Westinghouse Electric Supply Co. v. Wesley Construction Co., 316 F.Supp. 490, 495 (S.D.Fla., 1970); 7 Fla.Jur., Contracts § 77. The practical interpretation which the parties themselves placed on the contract is entitled to great weight in determining its meaning. Pickren v. United States, 378 F.2d 595, 600 (5th Cir., 1967). Thus the fact that the notes were made payable to Northwest does not alter or discharge the legal effect of the guarantee, especially in view of the basic intention of the parties to obtain financing by Northwest’s purchase of the deferred payment *890 obligations of Heinicke’s customers. In interpreting the agreement as a whole, we cannot overlook the guarantee. 2

Heinicke, a manufacturer, arranged the financing in order that the customers could purchase its equipment. It was willing to take the risk of their default, and now it is time to face up to the obligation. The court below erred in failing to hold that Northwest has the right to demand that Heinicke pay the amounts due under the contracts.

(2) The ReMac Accounts

As to the 3 ReMac accounts, the court below allowed recovery on the first one, No. 6-1078, 3 and defendant Heinicke does not question this ruling, acknowledging that the contract procedures were followed.

The district court, however, found that for the other two ReMac accounts, Nos. 5-1158 and 5-1178, an additional step had taken them out of the course of financing provided for in the contract:

“In each of those accounts, ReMac gave a note in the same amount as that appearing in the respective trust receipt documents to Heinicke. The notes were each for 8.5% interest and named Heinicke as payee. On July 28, 1966, after the due date of each note, two additional notes, one for each account, were executed by ReMac directly to Northwest. Both of these ‘additional’ notes were for a smaller amount than their respective original notes, and both bore a 10.5% interest rate instead of the original 8.5%. The original notes were not cancelled or returned to the maker.”

The issue before us, as the district court recognized, is whether the July 28th notes were renewal notes or new obligations. If they were simply renewals of the original notes defendant Heinicke was required to repurchase them. If they constituted a new obligation, or novation, then Heinicke was discharged as a guarantor.

The district court held that they were not renewal notes because there was a “material change in the indebtedness [and] because the interest rate was raised. Northwest in effect, released Heinicke on the notes because it got additional 2% interest. Although by the contract, Heinicke gave Northwest the power to grant extensions of time, the mere extension of time, as in the ease of a renewal note, is substantially different from an extension of time coupled with a new payee and a higher interest rate.”

We disagree with the lower court’s ruling here for several réasons.

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Bluebook (online)
441 F.2d 887, 1971 U.S. App. LEXIS 10369, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/northwest-acceptance-corporation-v-heinicke-enstruments-company-ca5-1971.