OPALA, Justice:
The issues to be resolved on appeal are: [1] Do the provisions of 12 O.S.1971 § 686,
by which (upon creditor’s failure to seek deficiency judgment within 90 days after foreclosure sale) the principal debtor’s liability may be deemed terminated by fictional satisfaction of the mortgage debt, afford every guarantor the very same legal protection as that which is extended to the debt- or? [2] If not, does the discharge of the principal debt and debtor by operation of § 686 operate, by force of law,
ipso facto
to exonerate the guarantor from his collateral obligation on the theory that the creditor’s failure to seek deficiency judgment constitutes an “intervention or omission” under 15 O.S.1971 § 344?
We hold that the effect of § 686 as construed in
Apache
may be avoided by an agreement which allows the guarantor’s liability to survive regardless of the creditor’s omission to seek deficiency judgment against the principal debtor. What defenses remain available to a guarantor under § 344, upon creditor’s failure to seek a deficiency judgment, must be determined by the terms of the guaranty contract, i. e. by the breadth of the guarantor’s promise. In the case before us the guarantor, by the clear provisions of his promise, expressly waived all of the available § 344 defenses.
Jenks Plaza, Inc. [debtor] became indebted to Riverside National Bank, appellant [bank], on a promissory note. The note was secured both by personal property and realty. By several individual undertakings a number of persons guaranteed payment of the note. Manolakis, appellee [guarantor], was one among these many guarantors.
Following debtor’s default and guarantors’ refusal to pay, bank instituted suit to recover the amount of the note, foreclose on personal property securing it and to enforce the guarantors’ promise. A creditor other than the bank who had a prior mortgage interest in debtor’s encumbered real property brought a foreclosure suit in which the bank and the debtor were among the defendants. As holder of the second mortgage, the bank cross-claimed and was successful in recovering a judgment. The sale of the realty, which followed foreclosure, brought insufficient proceeds to pay the first mortgage. The bank, which was thus left without any satisfaction, did not seek a deficiency judgment.
In the action here under review the bank sought to enforce against the guarantor, his assumed liability for payment of the principal debtor’s obligation. The trial court’s judgment rests on the view that the principal debt became satisfied, by operation of § 686, when the bank failed to file a deficiency-judgment motion within 90 days of the foreclosure sale. As a basis for its
decision the trial court cited
Apache Lanes, Inc. v. National Educators Life Ins. Co.
In
Apache
we held that creditor’s failure to seek a deficiency may not only extinguish the principal debt by force of § 686 but could also discharge the guarantor’s obligation.
I.
Anti-deficiency statutes much like our § 686 were adopted in many states to protect mortgagors from personal liability after a foreclosure sale has been effected at a time of greatly deflated land values in a depressed economy.
Some of these statutes effect a mere restriction upon the time period during which recovery of deficiency may be sought, while others require that the mortgage debt be considered set off by either the sale proceeds or by the full market value of property sold, whichever of these amounts is higher.
New York and Oklahoma went even farther. In these two states the mortgage debt is deemed satisfied when deficiency recovery was not timely sought.
Although New York, unlike Oklahoma, has not adopted the Field Code chapters which deal expressly with guaranty and suretyship obligations,
there are some statements in our case law which without a closer examination appear to extend in favor of all guarantors the shield afforded by the anti-deficiency statute’s automatic discharge provisions.
We cannot ascribe to our holding in
Apache
the broad sweep contended for it by guarantor. Were we to do so, the legal effectiveness of guaranty would be made totally dependent on the continued existence of the principal debt rather than be regarded as co-extensive in its breadth and sweep with the terms of the guarantor’s valid and hence enforceable promise. For the reasons to be stated we absolutely reject the notion that the benefits of a § 686 discharge automatically avail to a guarantor.
A. Guarantor’s argument in effect equates the position of a guarantor with that of the security owner who, while not becoming liable for the obligation of another, allows it to be impressed as a lien on his/her own property. In that situation, when the underlying obligation for which the security is given ceases to exist, the lien upon the security is automatically dis
charged.
The lien cannot survive the life of the obligation it secured. A guarantor’s undertaking, on the other hand — because it differs so vastly from the rights of a nono-bligor who provides security for another person’s debt — creates a collateral obligation independent and separately enforceable from that of the principal debtor. The debtor need not be and frequently is not a party to the guaranty agreement.
Nor need the guarantor be a party to the principal obligation.
The obligation of a guaranty is contractual, and the inquiry must, in each case, focus on the precise terms of the guarantor’s undertaking — the dimension or breadth of the promise.
Oklahoma has long recognized the independent nature of the guarantor’s obligation.
It has long held that the running of the statute of limitations on the principal debt does not operate to bar an action against the debt- or’s guarantor.
B. Our anti-deficiency statute, § 686, addresses itself exclusively to the creditor/debtor relationship. It does not deal with the more complex, tripartite relationship of guarantor/debtor/creditor or with the rights under a guaranty agreement. The obligations in the latter category are regulated by the distinctly unrelated and separate provisions of 15 O.S. 1971 §§ 321-344. Although a creditor’s failure to seek a deficiency recovery may impair a guarantor’s right to proceed against the principal debtor, it does not follow that a guarantor is automatically discharged in every case. That must, of course, depend on the nature of the guarantor’s undertaking. Giving
Apache
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OPALA, Justice:
The issues to be resolved on appeal are: [1] Do the provisions of 12 O.S.1971 § 686,
by which (upon creditor’s failure to seek deficiency judgment within 90 days after foreclosure sale) the principal debtor’s liability may be deemed terminated by fictional satisfaction of the mortgage debt, afford every guarantor the very same legal protection as that which is extended to the debt- or? [2] If not, does the discharge of the principal debt and debtor by operation of § 686 operate, by force of law,
ipso facto
to exonerate the guarantor from his collateral obligation on the theory that the creditor’s failure to seek deficiency judgment constitutes an “intervention or omission” under 15 O.S.1971 § 344?
We hold that the effect of § 686 as construed in
Apache
may be avoided by an agreement which allows the guarantor’s liability to survive regardless of the creditor’s omission to seek deficiency judgment against the principal debtor. What defenses remain available to a guarantor under § 344, upon creditor’s failure to seek a deficiency judgment, must be determined by the terms of the guaranty contract, i. e. by the breadth of the guarantor’s promise. In the case before us the guarantor, by the clear provisions of his promise, expressly waived all of the available § 344 defenses.
Jenks Plaza, Inc. [debtor] became indebted to Riverside National Bank, appellant [bank], on a promissory note. The note was secured both by personal property and realty. By several individual undertakings a number of persons guaranteed payment of the note. Manolakis, appellee [guarantor], was one among these many guarantors.
Following debtor’s default and guarantors’ refusal to pay, bank instituted suit to recover the amount of the note, foreclose on personal property securing it and to enforce the guarantors’ promise. A creditor other than the bank who had a prior mortgage interest in debtor’s encumbered real property brought a foreclosure suit in which the bank and the debtor were among the defendants. As holder of the second mortgage, the bank cross-claimed and was successful in recovering a judgment. The sale of the realty, which followed foreclosure, brought insufficient proceeds to pay the first mortgage. The bank, which was thus left without any satisfaction, did not seek a deficiency judgment.
In the action here under review the bank sought to enforce against the guarantor, his assumed liability for payment of the principal debtor’s obligation. The trial court’s judgment rests on the view that the principal debt became satisfied, by operation of § 686, when the bank failed to file a deficiency-judgment motion within 90 days of the foreclosure sale. As a basis for its
decision the trial court cited
Apache Lanes, Inc. v. National Educators Life Ins. Co.
In
Apache
we held that creditor’s failure to seek a deficiency may not only extinguish the principal debt by force of § 686 but could also discharge the guarantor’s obligation.
I.
Anti-deficiency statutes much like our § 686 were adopted in many states to protect mortgagors from personal liability after a foreclosure sale has been effected at a time of greatly deflated land values in a depressed economy.
Some of these statutes effect a mere restriction upon the time period during which recovery of deficiency may be sought, while others require that the mortgage debt be considered set off by either the sale proceeds or by the full market value of property sold, whichever of these amounts is higher.
New York and Oklahoma went even farther. In these two states the mortgage debt is deemed satisfied when deficiency recovery was not timely sought.
Although New York, unlike Oklahoma, has not adopted the Field Code chapters which deal expressly with guaranty and suretyship obligations,
there are some statements in our case law which without a closer examination appear to extend in favor of all guarantors the shield afforded by the anti-deficiency statute’s automatic discharge provisions.
We cannot ascribe to our holding in
Apache
the broad sweep contended for it by guarantor. Were we to do so, the legal effectiveness of guaranty would be made totally dependent on the continued existence of the principal debt rather than be regarded as co-extensive in its breadth and sweep with the terms of the guarantor’s valid and hence enforceable promise. For the reasons to be stated we absolutely reject the notion that the benefits of a § 686 discharge automatically avail to a guarantor.
A. Guarantor’s argument in effect equates the position of a guarantor with that of the security owner who, while not becoming liable for the obligation of another, allows it to be impressed as a lien on his/her own property. In that situation, when the underlying obligation for which the security is given ceases to exist, the lien upon the security is automatically dis
charged.
The lien cannot survive the life of the obligation it secured. A guarantor’s undertaking, on the other hand — because it differs so vastly from the rights of a nono-bligor who provides security for another person’s debt — creates a collateral obligation independent and separately enforceable from that of the principal debtor. The debtor need not be and frequently is not a party to the guaranty agreement.
Nor need the guarantor be a party to the principal obligation.
The obligation of a guaranty is contractual, and the inquiry must, in each case, focus on the precise terms of the guarantor’s undertaking — the dimension or breadth of the promise.
Oklahoma has long recognized the independent nature of the guarantor’s obligation.
It has long held that the running of the statute of limitations on the principal debt does not operate to bar an action against the debt- or’s guarantor.
B. Our anti-deficiency statute, § 686, addresses itself exclusively to the creditor/debtor relationship. It does not deal with the more complex, tripartite relationship of guarantor/debtor/creditor or with the rights under a guaranty agreement. The obligations in the latter category are regulated by the distinctly unrelated and separate provisions of 15 O.S. 1971 §§ 321-344. Although a creditor’s failure to seek a deficiency recovery may impair a guarantor’s right to proceed against the principal debtor, it does not follow that a guarantor is automatically discharged in every case. That must, of course, depend on the nature of the guarantor’s undertaking. Giving
Apache
the meaning for which the guarantor contends would make legally impermissible and hence unenforceable any guarantor’s promise that is broad enough to survive § 686 discharge of the principal debtor. There is no statutory warrant for so restricting the creditor’s power to exact a broader promise and the guarantor’s capacity to bargain away his § 344 defenses. In short, the protection of § 686 applies only to debtors. It does not make illegal those contracts that allow the guarantor’s liability to survive § 686 discharge nor can it, per se, operate to exonerate the guarantor from liability on an obligation deemed “satisfied” by that section.
II.
Our inquiry is next directed to the effect of the bank’s failure to seek a deficiency judgment upon the guarantor’s promise. In short, may this failure be treated as an “intervention ‘or omission” under § 344?
We are confronted here with facts materially different from those in
Apache.
In that case six guarantors, in a two-sentence guaranty contract limiting their individual liability to a designated amount, promised payment of the debtor’s note. The guarantors did not expressly or impliedly agree to become liable for any amount remaining due after the sale of the security. In short, the guarantors’ promise did not reach far
enough to include a waiver of their § 344 defenses.
In the instant case the guarantor promised full and prompt payment of the debtor’s obligation and waived certain statutory defenses. Specifically, guarantor agreed that his liability would not be “affected or impaired” by any “failure, neglect or omission” of the bank to protect, in any manner, the collection of the indebtedness or the security given therefor. This part of the promise is alone broad enough to deprive guarantor of his § 344 defenses and prevent his exoneration by operation of § 344 through the bank’s “omission” in procuring a deficiency judgment.
The law is clear that the terms of guaranty agreement should be read in favor of one who has parted with property in reliance on the collateral promisor and hence against the guarantor.
Summary judgment in favor of the guarantor, together with the allowance of attorney’s fee against the bank, is reversed and cause remanded for further proceedings.
IRWIN, V. C. J., and WILLIAMS, BARNES, SIMMS, DOOLIN and HAR-GRAVE, JJ., concur.
LAVENDER, C J., and HODGES, J., dissent.