RBS Citizens, N.A. v. Sanyou Import, Incorporated

525 F. App'x 495
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedMay 24, 2013
Docket11-3517
StatusUnpublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 525 F. App'x 495 (RBS Citizens, N.A. v. Sanyou Import, Incorporated) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
RBS Citizens, N.A. v. Sanyou Import, Incorporated, 525 F. App'x 495 (7th Cir. 2013).

Opinion

ORDER

Invoking the federal courts’ diversity jurisdiction, a bank sued a borrower and a guarantor for their failure to repay a commercial loan. The plaintiff lender is RBS Citizens, N.A., which does business as Charter One. The defendant borrower is Sanyou Import, Inc., and the guarantor is Jian Qiang Yang. The district court granted Charter One’s motion for summary judgment, and both Sanyou Import and Yang have appealed. We affirm.

I. The Undisputed Facts and Procedural Background

On March 30, 2005, Charter One entered into a loan transaction with Sanyou Import and Yang. Sanyou Import borrowed $100,000 from the bank to fund its real estate ventures. Yang signed the loan agreement and note on behalf of Sanyou Import as its president, and he also personally guaranteed the loan in his individual capacity. The guaranty that Yang signed stated that he was personally liable for all of Sanyou Import’s obligations to Charter One. It also stated that Charter One need not proceed first against Sanyou Import or any security before proceeding against Yang for repayment of the loan.

The loan documents required Sanyou Import and Yang to repay the loan whenever Charter One made a demand, meaning Sanyou Import would not need to be in default for Charter One to order repayment of the loan. Sanyou Import, however, failed to make payments when due *497 under the note, and Charter One demanded full repayment of the loan by sending a notice to both Sanyou Import and Yang. Neither paid in response to the demand.

Charter One then filed this suit against Sanyou Import and Yang, seeking damages of $109,450.14, which includes the outstanding principal owing on the loan, accrued interest, late fees, and collection costs. Sanyou Import and Yang filed a joint answer, asserting several counterclaims and affirmative defenses. The district court dismissed all of the counterclaims and struck all but one affirmative defense. The surviving defense was “bad faith,” and the district judge allowed it to the extent it constituted an independent defense under Illinois law.

Charter One later moved for summary judgment and submitted a statement of undisputed material facts pursuant to Northern District of Illinois Local Rule 56.1(a), laying out the essentials of the loan transaction and the defendants’ failure to pay on demand. In opposition to summary judgment, appellants Sanyou Import and Yang argued that Charter One breached a duty of good faith and fair dealing and based their argument on additional facts. Appellants did not, however, comply with Local Rule 56.1. They did not submit a separate statement contesting Charter One’s statement of facts or asserting additional undisputed facts supported by citations to evidence in the record.

Without supporting evidence, appellants claimed that Stephanie Li Cheung, the Charter One employee who assisted with the loan, assured Yang before he signed the loan documents that he would not assume any risk for personally guaranteeing the loan. They further claimed that Li Cheung knew the loan was for the personal use of Sanyou Import’s owners, Gang Bai and Li Ma, rather than for Sanyou Import’s business use. Appellants also claimed that Bai and Ma pledged their own property as collateral for the loan and that Charter One, instead of using their property to secure the $100,000 loan, wrongfully used the equity in that property later to secure a separate loan to Bai and Ma.

Appellants did not support any of these allegations by submitting affidavits or declarations to the district court, and they did not verify that the allegations in their answer were made on personal knowledge. However, they had previously attached to their answer two documents that purportedly support their allegations. The first was Ma’s affidavit, which stated that Yang borrowed the $100,000 on behalf of Sanyou Import and that Bai and Ma used their property “as collateral to secure [the] transaction.” The Ma affidavit also referred vaguely to the fact that Bai and Ma later obtained another loan, presumably using the same property as collateral. The second was an agreement between Yang and Sanyou Import’s owners stating that Yang, on behalf of Sanyou Import, promised to borrow $100,000 for the use of Bai and Ma, who promised in return to pledge their property to Yang as collateral. Li Cheung’s official notary seal appears on the face of the document, and her business card is attached on another page.

The district court granted Charter One’s summary judgment motion, holding that appellants failed to present evidence properly contesting Charter One’s breach of contract claim or supporting their affirmative defense that Charter One breached a duty of good faith and fair dealing.

II. Discussion

We review de novo the district court’s grant of summary judgment. Good v. Univ. of Chicago Med. Ctr., 673 F.3d 670, 673 (7th Cir.2012). Summary judgment is appropriate if the evidence demonstrates that there is no genuine issue of material *498 fact and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Fed. R.Civ.P. 56(a).

Appellants contend on appeal that the district court erred in granting summary judgment because there are genuine issues of fact concerning: (1) whether Yang had authority to bind Sanyou Import to the contract, (2) whether Li Cheung told Yang that signing the guaranty would not make him personally liable on the loan, (3) whether Li Cheung knew, and thus whether Charter One knew, that the loan was for Bai and Ma’s personal use, (4) whether Charter One failed to secure the loan with Bai and Ma’s property, and (5) whether Charter One later used the equity in that property to secure another loan to Bai and Ma. Appellants also argue that the district court prematurely granted summary judgment before they were able to conduct discovery.

These arguments fail for both procedural and substantive reasons. The procedural reason is that Sanyou Import and Yang failed to comply with Local Rule 56.1 and submitted no actual evidence that genuine issues of material fact precluded summary judgment. Charter One, as the moving party, filed a proper motion for summary judgment supported by evidence backing up its Local Rule 56.1 statement of undisputed facts. Charter One showed that it had a contract with Sanyou Import and Yang, that it loaned the money to Sanyou Import, and that Sanyou Import and Yang breached the contract by failing to pay upon demand. These facts satisfied the elements for a breach of contract claim under Illinois law. See generally W.W. Vincent & Co. v. First Colony Life Ins. Co., 351 Ill.App.3d 752, 286 Ill.Dec. 734, 814 N.E.2d 960, 967 (2004) (stating elements for breach of contract).

Northern District of Illinois Local Rule 56.1(b)(3) states: “Each party opposing a motion filed pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 56 shall serve and file ... a concise response to the movant’s statement....

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Bluebook (online)
525 F. App'x 495, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rbs-citizens-na-v-sanyou-import-incorporated-ca7-2013.