Rtc Mortgage Trust 1994-N2, a Delaware Business Trust v. Myron W. Haith Richard Brock Stuart Kahn

133 F.3d 574, 1998 U.S. App. LEXIS 49, 1998 WL 1828
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 6, 1998
Docket96-4018
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 133 F.3d 574 (Rtc Mortgage Trust 1994-N2, a Delaware Business Trust v. Myron W. Haith Richard Brock Stuart Kahn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rtc Mortgage Trust 1994-N2, a Delaware Business Trust v. Myron W. Haith Richard Brock Stuart Kahn, 133 F.3d 574, 1998 U.S. App. LEXIS 49, 1998 WL 1828 (8th Cir. 1998).

Opinion

*576 ROSS, Circuit Judge.

Myron Haith, Richard Brock and Stuart Kahn (appellants) appeal from the district court’s summary judgment ruling in favor of RTC Mortgage Trust (Trust) on the Trust’s claim for the payment of basic interest under Guaranties executed by the appellants. We affirm in part and remand in part.

I.

On August 12,1986, Executive Hills North, Inc. (Executive Hills) executed and delivered to Home Savings Association of Kansas City (Home Savings) two promissory notes, whereby Executive Hills agreed to pay $17.5 million plus interest. The notes were secured by a deed of trust on property known as the Tech Buildings owned by Executive Hüls.

In the late summer of 1989, appellant Myron Haith met with David Feingold at Metro North State Bank (Metro North) seeking an extension of the due date and modification of the terms of a loan agreement he and his partners, Richard Brock and Stuart Kahn, had with Metro North for a project known as St. Louis Air Cargo Services (the SLAC loan). According to Haith, the SLAC loan extension was provided, but only upon the condition that the appellants purchase the Tech Buildings owned by Executive Hills and assume its loan held by Metro North and its affiliated savings association, Home Savings. The appellants were required to assume notes, which were modified versions of the two promissory notes executed in 1986 by Executive Hills and which had by then become financially insecure. Accordingly, the appellants formed a Missouri general partnership called Exec Tech Partners for the express purpose of purchasing the Tech Buildings.

On December 29, 1989, Executive Hills, the Exec Tech Partners, and Home Savings entered into an Assumption and Modification Agreement (the A & M Agreement), whereby the Exec Tech Partners assumed four million dollars of Executive Hills’ indebtedness evidenced by the promissory notes. The A & M Agreement provided that interest was to accrue until December 31, 1994. Also on December 29, 1989, the appellants each executed and delivered to Home Savings separate but identical limited unconditional guaranties of certain obligations under the A & M Agreement (Guaranties), including the payment of basic interest on the principal balance due and owing on the promissory notes, as modified by the A & M Agreement. Under the Guaranties, basic interest accrued until the “date of demand.” The A & M Agreement provided that Home Savings’ “sole recourse shall be against the [Tech Buildings']” and that Home Savings “shall not be entitled to recover any deficiency judgment against the Partnership or the Partners.” However, the A & M Agreement also set forth an exception to the otherwise non-recourse nature of the obligation with respect to the payment of basic interest:

Notwithstanding the foregoing limitation of liability, the Partnership (and to the extent provided in the Guaranty, each of the Guarantors, as such terms are hereinafter defined) shall be fully liable (1) for the payment, in accordance with the terms of this Note, of the Basic Interest as defined above____

A & M Agreement, page 7.

According to the appellants, as part of the inducement for the deal, Metro North agreed to loan the appellants additional money for the purpose of constructing or rehabilitating existing tenant improvements in the Tech Buildings. The A & M Agreement acknowledges the possibility that tenant improvement loans might be made when it defines that term to “mean such funds as are hereafter loaned to [the appellants] by a financial institution or other person and used for tenant improvements to the [Tech Buildings] to enable Partnership to enter into leases with new tenants to occupy space therein.”

On March 15, 1991, the RTC was appointed receiver of Home Savings. Among the assets acquired by RTC were the promissory notes, the A & M Agreement and the Guaranties. The record indicates the RTC caused notice of the statutory claims to be published on three separate occasions, advising that the claims bar date under the Financial Institutions Reform, Recovery and Enforcement Act of 1989 (FIRREA) was July 1,1991, and *577 that claims not brought by that date would be barred. The record also shows that prior to the claims bar date, Myron Haith met with representatives of the RTC and was aware of RTC’s involvement with Home Savings. -

On December 23, 1993, the appellants as Exec Tech Partners, filed a voluntary Chapter 11 bankruptcy. Through successive assignments, RTC Mortgage Trust acquired all right, title and interest of the RTC in and to the promissory notes, the A & M Agreement and the Guaranties. On July 24, 1995, the Trust brought this action on the Guaranties only, seeking payment of basic interest. The appellants initially brought several counterclaims which were dismissed by the district court for lack of jurisdiction based upon the appellants’ failure to file an administrative claim with the RTC prior to the July 1, 1991 claims bar date.

The district court granted summary judgment in favor of the Trust and against the appellants, awarding damages in the amount of $741,816.97 in unpaid basic interest and other costs. In response, the appellants filed a motion to alter or amend the judgment and on October 7, 1996, the district court amended the part of the judgment relating to the calculation of interest, finding that the date on which basic interest ceased to accrue was December 31, 1994, pursuant to the A & M Agreement, instead of July 24,1995, the date this suit was filed. Accordingly, damages were reduced to $594,126.20.

II.

Relying on Boatmen’s First Nat’l Bank v. Bogina Petroleum Engineers, 794 S.W.2d 703, 705 n. 2 (Mo.Ct.App.1990)(Bogina), the appellants first argue that the Guaranties are void and unenforceable because the appellants obligated themselves twice on the same debt — once on the A & M Agreement and again on the Guaranties, thereby rendering the Guaranties a nullity.

A guaranty is a “collateral agreement for performance of an undertaking of another. It imports two different obligations, that of principal debtor and that of guarantor.” Mobil Oil Corp. v. Days, 618 S.W.2d 286, 287 (Mo.Ct.App.1981). Relying on Mobil Oil, the Bogina court stated in dicta that when the makers and the guarantors on a note are the same parties, the lender can only recover on the note because “[i]n effect the [guarantors] simply obligated themselves twice for the same debt — once on the note and again on the ‘guaranty.’ The ‘guaraní/ was therefore not a guaranty of the note.” Bogina, 794 S.W.2d at 705 n. 2. Thus, according to the appellants, Bogina requires the conclusion in the present ease that the Guaranties are unenforceable because they are merely dupli-cative of the appellants’ obligation already existing under the A & M Agreement.

We are averse to apply Bogina in the instant case for several reasons. First, the quoted portion from Bogina,

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Bluebook (online)
133 F.3d 574, 1998 U.S. App. LEXIS 49, 1998 WL 1828, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rtc-mortgage-trust-1994-n2-a-delaware-business-trust-v-myron-w-haith-ca8-1998.