Plymouth-Home National Bank v. Plymouth Exports, Inc.

1990 Mass. App. Div. 29, 1990 Mass. App. Div. LEXIS 17

This text of 1990 Mass. App. Div. 29 (Plymouth-Home National Bank v. Plymouth Exports, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts District Court, Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Plymouth-Home National Bank v. Plymouth Exports, Inc., 1990 Mass. App. Div. 29, 1990 Mass. App. Div. LEXIS 17 (Mass. Ct. App. 1990).

Opinion

Kane, J.

This appeal by defendants, Plymouth Exports, Inc., (“Export”) and William Thurber (“Thurber”), challenges various rulings in favor of the plaintiff, Plymouth-Home National Bank (“Bank”). Those rulings denied Thurber leave to amend his answer and counterclaim, granted summaryjudgment on demand notes executed by Export and guaranteed by Thurber, and allowed entry of final judgement.

The principal question on appeal asks if defendants, by their proofs, raised a genuine issue of material factto avoid summáryjudgment on the demand notes and guaranties. Defendants argüe that by their proofs they sufficiéntly raised modification and novation of the demand notes the Bank sues under and that a trier of facts must resolve their claim that the original demand notes “no longer exist.”

To guide2 our review, we begin with a study of the pleadings. Plaintiffs complaint, identifying Export as principal and William Thurber and John Raisbeck as sureties, seeks money due under demand notes executed in the winter of 1984. Appended and described in the complaint are three demand notes amounting to ninety-seven thousand dollars carrying interest at prime plus one. and one-half percent. The signed-off terms of these notes provide for immediate payment without notice or demand “if there be such a change in the condition of affairs (financial or otherwise) of any maker, endorser or guarantor, asín the opinion of the holder will impair its security or increase its risk.” Demand and notice ofnonpayment are waived under the guaranties thatgo onto establish agreement by Messrs. Raisbeck andThurber thatinthecase of default they “shall become immediate [ly] liable.. .withoutnotice, without suit, and without any steps... taken or conditions... performed by the bank .. .”3 Suit, according tp the complaint, arose in the spring of 1987 upon the Bank learning that Export was no longer in business; that John Raisbeck was back in his native England after unloading practically all of his American assets; and that Thurber's financial statement to the Bank listing property in Plymouth was false.

An answer by Thurber and Export admitted the authenticity of the notes while defending on theabsence of prejudice or demand.Byway of counterclaim, Thurber and Export charged the Bank with abuse of process by bringing suit and seeking attachments. Some three months later, while summary judgment motions were pending, Thurber sought to supplement his answer and counterclaim. By the new [30]*30answer, Thurber would continue to grant the authenticity of the notes and guaranties; would not deny his false representation concerning the Plymouth property; and would agree that the Bank in 1987 discovered that Raisbeck, an Export officer, was now in England after virtually selling off his U.S. assets. What would be added beyond a string of affirmative defenses, including accord and satisfaction, would be the identification of Thurber as the source of the Bank's awareness of Raisbeck's exodus and an account of discussions between Thurber and the Bank "concerning the financial status of . . . Export and its obligations to the Bank.” By a new counterclaim setting forth a 93A claim, Thurber would explicitly agree that the Bank in 1987, through Thurber, became aware of Export's financial difficulties brought on by the missteps of its officer Raisbeck and were also alerted to Raisbeck's move back to England after unloading his American assets except for a Piper aircraft that Thurber asked the Bank "to attach.” (emphasis added) Seemingly, Thurber goes on to complain that the Bank failed to attach the aircraft and lulled defendants into forgoing legal steps against Raisbeck's remaining assets by signs that the Bank was discarding the original demand notes in favor of new agreements anchored by promises between third parties for the infusion of new capital to Thurber.

In November, the Bank had moved for summary judgment on the notes, on Thurber's guaranty, and on the abuse of process claims. Before the motion judge were three affidavits of the Bank's vice president coupled with the notes and guaranties; on the other side lay an affidavit of William Thurber. The proofs agree that by the beginning of 1987 the notes' principal exceeded seventy-two thousand dollars, and it is uncontradicted that the Bank at this time sought financial information which brought forth the news that Thurber did not hold title to the Plymouth property; that Raisbeck, practically stripped of U.S. assets, had returned to his native England;and that Export was now a “dormant, non-operating company with virtually no assets.” Thurber's affidavit concedes telling the Bank of Export's current financial difficulties and adds thatThurber contemporaneously pointed the finger at Raisbeck as the cause of such difficulties by such miscues as an extravagant extension of credit to ungrateful customers. Worried over holding the bag, Thurber avers that he then informed the Bank of Raisbeck's remaining asset, a Piper aircraft, and wanted the Bank to attach it.

Two paragraphs of Thurber's affidavit appear to be the foothold for the modification/novation claims. Without precisely identifying parties to conversations while intimating that the dialogue involved the Bank's Commercial Loan Officer, Brian Wood, Thurber relates that in the spring of 1987 the Bank, now aware of multiple holes in its security blanket, expressed “satisfaction” with new arrangements by Wesley Pietrasik and a company closely allied with Thurber under which Pietrasik would infuse up to twenty-two hundred dollars ($2,200) a month to Thurber who would use it for paying interest and principal on the Bank's demand notes. From conversations with the “Bank,” particularly Mr. Wood, Thurber's affidavit relates that the Bank found this arrangement satisfactory and only required written confirmation ofPietrasik's agreement. Not disclosed in Thurber's affidavit is what would become of the original agreements between the Bank and Export. Omitted from the affidavit is any disclosure of further steps taken to “enter” and confirm the contract with Pietrasik. This lone affidavit fails even to disclose what authority Export granted Thurber to make promises with the Bank or discuss Wood's authority to enter into a modification or novation of the Bank's demand notes.

I. Summary Tudgment

“Summary judgment is a ‘derice to make possible the prompt disposition of controversies in their merits without a trial, if in essence there is no real dispute as to the salientfacts or if only a question of law is involved.’ ” Cassesso v. Commissioner of Correction, 390 Mass. 419, 422 (1983) quoting in part 3 W.W. BARRON & A HOLTZOFF, FEDERAL PRACTICE AND PROCEDURE (Rules ed.) §1231, at 96 (Wrightrev. ed. 1958). Itis the moving party's burden “to show by credible evidence [31]*31from his affidavits and other supporting materials that there is no genuine issue of materialfact and thathe is entitled, as a matter of law, to a judgment.... On the other hand, if the moving party shows that there is no issue for trial, the opposing party must respond and allege specific facts which establish that there is a genuine triable issue, or summary judgment (if appropriate in all other respects) will be entered against him. The parties1 respective burdens are designed to discourage both ‘utterly unjustified motions for summary judgmenf and ‘specious denials or sham defenses’.... One undesirable consequence of the multitude of cases applying the rule is that too often ...

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Bluebook (online)
1990 Mass. App. Div. 29, 1990 Mass. App. Div. LEXIS 17, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/plymouth-home-national-bank-v-plymouth-exports-inc-massdistctapp-1990.