Preferred Investment Company v. Westbrook

174 N.W.2d 391, 1970 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 758
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedFebruary 10, 1970
Docket53666
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 174 N.W.2d 391 (Preferred Investment Company v. Westbrook) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Preferred Investment Company v. Westbrook, 174 N.W.2d 391, 1970 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 758 (iowa 1970).

Opinion

MASON, Justice.

Plaintiff, Preferred Investment Company, an Iowa corporation engaged in the finance business, brought this law action against T. C. Westbrook, Joseph W. Grant, Jr., individually and doing business as Cedar Rapids Citizen-Times, to recover upon a conditional sales contract, promissory note and written guarantee of the contract and note. The contract and note were in the amount of the agreed purchase price of certain printing equipment purchased by Citizens Publications, Inc.

I. Arthur D. Beers, president of A. D. Beers Company, Inc., a distributor of printing equipment, had sold certain equipment on installment contract to George Forby. In May 1964 Forby was in default under his contract. In June Beers met in Cedar Rapids with Forby, defendants Grant and Westbrook and other officers and directors of Citizens Publications, Inc., publishers of the Cedar Rapids Citizen-Times, to discuss the possibility of Beers’ repossessing the equipment from Forby and its resale to Citizens Publications, Inc. Either at this meeting or at a meeting one week later it was agreed the newspaper would buy the equipment for the balance due on Forby’s contract with payments beginning after the equipment became operational and was in use. Repossession and delivery to the newspaper premises followed on June 24.

By August 14 the equipment was in use. That day Beers and Vem Houghton, plaintiff’s president, met in Cedar Rapids with Westbrook and Grant at the newspaper office. Beers presented a conditional sales contract, separate promissory note and the written guarantees endorsed thereon for the signatures of Westbrook and Grant. After some discussion the four went to the office of a Linn County notary public where the instruments were signed by Grant and Westbrook in the notary’s presence. Beers did not sign the contract but assigned it, the note and the property described to plaintiff.

The same night the building housing the newspaper, including the equipment covered by the conditional sales contract, was destroyed by fire. Nothing was ever paid *393 on the contract, note or guarantees and this suit followed.

II. Plaintiff as assignee seeks recovery on the contract and note in Division I of its petition against defendants in their individual capacities doing business as Cedar Rapids Citizen-Times. Division II was a separate cause of action predicated on Westbrook’s guarantee of the note given as a part of the transaction and seeks judgment against him personally. Division III asks judgment against Westbrook on the theory he guaranteed payments by defendants (not the corporation) of the amount specified in the conditional sales contract.

In answer after denying certain allegations of plaintiffs petition Westbrook and Grant alleged the contract was made with Citizens Publications, Inc., a corporation, not with them as individuals doing business as Cedar Rapids Citizen-Times; they denied they had signed the instruments in their individual capacities and alleged affirmatively that said documents had been executed by them while carrying out their duties as officers of the corporation; Westbrook further alleged by way of affirmative defense the guarantees had been endorsed on the instruments after the original signing and therefore lacked consideration.

At trial the dispute was whether the contract and note were intended to be obligations of the corporation and whether the guarantees by Westbrook were executed after the contract and note had been signed and notarized.

Instead of submitting the case to the jury for a general verdict, the trial court submitted only certain alternative findings on the question whether there was a corporate or individual obligation and whether the guarantee by Westbrook was executed after or at the same time as the contract and note.

In response to the interrogatories the jury first found Grant and Westbrook had signed the documents as corporate officers and not in their individual capacities. They next determined the words “personal guarantee” of Westbrook were affixed at or about the same time as other signatures of defendants and before the conditional sales contract was notarized.

The court then made findings of fact and conclusions of law in the belief that there were no other factual disputes material to a decision, refused to grant plaintiff judgment against defendants individually on the contract or note but entered judgment against Westbrook as prayed in Division II of plaintiff’s petition on his guarantee of the note.

The court concluded the cause asserted in Division I of plaintiff’s petition should have been against Citizens Publications, Inc. Plaintiff’s petition clearly indicated the claim asserted in this division was against defendants in their individual capacities, doing business as Cedar Rapids Citizen-Times. Defendants by denying they had executed the documents in their individual capacities generated a fact issue. The jury found Grant and Westbrook had executed the contract and note on behalf of the corporation. Recovery was denied on this division.

The court further reasoned plaintiff’s cause asserted in Division III was predicated on the theory Westbrook was guaranteeing the credit of Grant and West-brook in their individual capacities on the conditional sales contract. Defendants’ answer in denial created a fact issue as to this division. In view of the jury’s special finding plaintiff had not established its theory, no recovery could be had against Westbrook under this division.

Grant was not a defendant in either Divisions II or III.

III. Although notice of appeal refers to defendants appealing, no judgment was entered against Grant. He has nothing to appeal from. Therefore, we are concerned here only with Westbrook’s appeal.

*394 He contends the trial court erred (1) in failing to sustain defendants’ motion for directed verdict made at the conclusion of plaintiff’s evidence since there was no showing of a valid subsisting agreement between plaintiff’s assignor and the purported contract purchasers, (2) in entering judgment against Westbrook as a guarantor when the record disclosed Westbrook’s liability, if any, was only secondary, (3) in not properly instructing the jury as to the law applicable to the facts and (4) in failing to submit defendants’ request for interrogatories.

Westbrook argues in support of his first assigned error that negotiations with reference to purchase of the equipment were all conducted in June and it was the parties’ manifest intention that before the agreement would be culminated there would be a written agreement signed by all parties in interest. There is no dispute Beers did not sign the conditional sales contract as “seller”.

Basis of defendants’ motion to direct made at the close of plaintiff’s evidence was this failure of Beers to sign the conditional sales contract. It should be pointed out that defendants renewed this motion at the close of all evidence.

The trial court rendered judgment against Westbrook in the amount of $9062.-59 plus attorney fees, interest and costs based on the cause asserted in Division II of plaintiff’s petition — Westbrook’s guarantee of the promissory note. No judgment was rendered against Westbrook predicated on the conditional sales contract alleged for recovery in Division I.

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Bluebook (online)
174 N.W.2d 391, 1970 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 758, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/preferred-investment-company-v-westbrook-iowa-1970.