Sacks v. Tavss

375 S.E.2d 719, 237 Va. 13, 5 Va. Law Rep. 1354, 1989 Va. LEXIS 16
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJanuary 13, 1989
DocketRecord 860244
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 375 S.E.2d 719 (Sacks v. Tavss) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sacks v. Tavss, 375 S.E.2d 719, 237 Va. 13, 5 Va. Law Rep. 1354, 1989 Va. LEXIS 16 (Va. 1989).

Opinion

CARRICO, C.J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

*15 On February 7, 1985, Richard J. Tavss and Ruth F. Tavss filed a motion for judgment against Stanley E. Sacks and Carole R. Sacks. In the motion, the Tavsses sought recovery by way of contribution for sums they had paid in excess of amounts paid by the Sackses in satisfaction of certain loans the two couples had guaranteed. Upon motion of the Tavsses, the matter was transferred to the equity side of the court. After a bench trial, the chancellor awarded the Tavsses judgment for $135,097.93. The controlling question on appeal is whether the Tavsses were entitled to contribution.

Richard Tavss and Stanley Sacks are former law partners. In the mid-1970s, they joined a third person to form Regency Oldsmobile, Inc., with each participant holding an equal number of shares of stock. Later, the third person sold his interest to V. C. Baker.

Virginia National Bank, now Sovran Bank, financed Regency’s operation through what is commonly known as a “floor plan,” under which the Bank acquired a security interest in the dealership’s inventory. Floor-plan loans made to Regency amounted to several million dollars.

In 1980, Regency experienced financial difficulty and secured two conventional loans from the Bank totalling $1,100,000. As part of the arrangement, the Tavsses and the Sackses as well as Baker and his-wife agreed to guarantee payment of all the Bank’s loans to Regency, including floor-plan loans. As additional security for the new loans, the Tavsses and the Sackses were required to mortgage some of their own property, including an apartment house in which the Tavsses held a two-thirds interest and the Sackses one-third. The Sackses also mortgaged other real estate they owned.

In 1982, the Bank demanded payment of the balance due on all the Regency loans, then amounting to $4,543,872.27. When the dealership failed to pay, the Bank sold Regency’s assets at foreclosure. With credit for the amount received from the sale, a balance of $1,481,555.46 remained unpaid.

The Bank then proceeded to foreclose on the property mortgaged by the Tavsses and the Sackses. After crediting the amounts received in foreclosure, a balance of $1,149,941.09 remained unpaid as of June 24, 1983. Because the Tavsses and the Sackses were jointly and severally liable as guarantors, the Bank merely deducted the proceeds of the sale of the apartment house *16 property from the total amount due, making no adjustment for the Tavsses’ greater interest in the property.

The Bank undertook negotiations with the Tavsses and the Sackses “to close out and settle [the] indebtedness in its entirety.” 1 As a result of separate negotiations, the Bank reached agreement with the Tavsses on April 11, 1984, and with the Sackses on May 22, 1984. Under their agreement with the Bank, the Tavsses paid $55,000 in satisfaction of “all [their] obligations ... as guarantors” of Regency’s loans, with the Bank reserving the right to pursue the Sackses for “any of the obligations owed to [the Bank] by Regency.” As a result of their agreement with the Bank, the Sackses paid $77,488.77 in satisfaction of “all [their] obligations ... as guarantors” of Regency’s indebtedness. Still, the Bank lost approximately $1,400,000 in the Regency transaction.

The $135,097.93 judgment awarded the Tavsses represents the excess they contributed toward reduction of the Regency indebtednesses when they are credited with two-thirds of the proceeds of the sale of the apartment house property. The Sackses do not question the amount of the judgment; they merely say the Tavsses are not entitled to any contribution.

The Sackses argue that the Restatement of Restitution § 82 (1937) applies to this case and supports reversal of the judgment rendered against them. The Sackses point out that under § 82, “[a] person who, with another, is subject to a duty ... is entitled to contribution from the other when, and only when, he has discharged more than his proportionate share.” The only exception to this rule, the Sackses note, is found in comment b to § 82, where it is provided that a party who pays less than his proportionate share of an obligation may yet obtain contribution if he secures “a full release” from the creditor. The Sackses conclude that because the Tavsses neither paid more than their proportionate share nor secured a full release, they are not entitled to contribution.

The Tavsses concede that “no obligation for contribution arises until a surety discharges more than his proportionate share.” The parties join issue, however, on the method of determining what constitutes a proportionate share in this case. While *17 the Sackses contend that the determination should be made upon the basis of the amount owed the Bank, the Tavsses contend that the determination should be based upon the amount paid in settlement. 2 The Tavsses maintain that their position is supported by the Restatement of Security § 154 comment d (1941). Comment d states:

Where a surety makes a settlement with a creditor by which the creditor accepts in full satisfaction less than the amount due from the principal and sureties, the cosureties and the principal as well as the paying surety are entitled to the advantage of this settlement .... Contribution is thus computed on the amount of the settlement.

The Tavsses also cite Singleton v. Shepherd, 196 Mo. App. 505, 183 S.W. 1077 (1917), and Carey v. McCaslin, 43 N.E.2d 519 (Ohio Ct. App. 1942). These cases, the Tavsses say, stand for the proposition that when there is a release of all sureties upon payment of less than the amount of the debt, contribution will not be based upon the amount of the debt but upon the amount of the settlement. The Tavsses analogize their situation to the situations of the paying sureties in Singleton and Carey. The Tavsses then conclude that since they and the Sackses have obtained releases from liability for Regency’s debts and they have paid more than the Sackses, they are entitled to contribution.

The difficulty with the Tavsses’ position is that they misinterpret comment d to § 154 of the Restatement of Security and mistakenly analogize their situation to the situations of the paying sureties in Singleton and Carey. Comment d contemplates that the settlement by one surety for less than the amount of the debt will be in full satisfaction of the debt, meaning that the paying surety must secure a release not only for himself but also for his cosurety or cosureties before he can demand contribution based upon the amount of the settlement.

Singleton and Carey are to the same effect. In Singleton, the court disallowed contribution, finding that the plaintiff had neither paid more than his share of “ ‘the original demand’ ” nor dis *18 charged the whole debt. 196 Mo. App. at 507, 183 S.W. at 1078.

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Bluebook (online)
375 S.E.2d 719, 237 Va. 13, 5 Va. Law Rep. 1354, 1989 Va. LEXIS 16, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sacks-v-tavss-va-1989.