ScanSource Inc. v. Dependable Technology Center LLC

CourtCourt of Appeals of South Carolina
DecidedJuly 17, 2024
Docket2022-001619
StatusUnpublished

This text of ScanSource Inc. v. Dependable Technology Center LLC (ScanSource Inc. v. Dependable Technology Center LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
ScanSource Inc. v. Dependable Technology Center LLC, (S.C. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

THIS OPINION HAS NO PRECEDENTIAL VALUE. IT SHOULD NOT BE CITED OR RELIED ON AS PRECEDENT IN ANY PROCEEDING EXCEPT AS PROVIDED BY RULE 268(d)(2), SCACR.

THE STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA In The Court of Appeals

ScanSource, Inc., Respondent,

v.

Dependable Technology Center, LLC and George G. Moraru, Appellants.

Appellate Case No. 2022-001619

Appeal From Greenville County Edward W. Miller, Circuit Court Judge

Unpublished Opinion No. 2024-UP-260 Submitted June 1, 2024 – Filed July 17, 2024

AFFIRMED

J. Falkner Wilkes, of Oakland, Mississippi, and William R. McKibbon, III, of Greenville, both for Appellants.

Craig Horger Allen, of Craig H. Allen, P.A., of Greenville for Respondent.

PER CURIAM: Dependable Technology Center and George G. Moraru appeal a circuit court judgment of $149,379.07, arguing the circuit court erred by: (1) issuing judgment against Appellants before they had an opportunity to present evidence at trial, (2) finding as a matter of law that Moraru's individual personal guarantee was valid and enforceable, and (3) granting judgment against Moraru in an amount exceeding $5,000. We affirm.

Facts and Procedural History

On April 12, 2013, Dependable completed a credit application with ScanSource in order to purchase goods on a short-term credit basis. That same day, Moraru executed an individual personal guarantee (the Guarantee) covering Dependable's indebtedness. The Guarantee stated:

In conjunction with my individual personal guarantee and customer application to ScanSource, Inc. and its subsidiaries and/or affiliates (hereinafter "Creditor") on behalf of Dependable Tech Center (hereinafter "Debtor") of which I, George G. Moraru . . . am an officer, principal, partner, or major shareholder, I represent to Creditor that neither Debtor nor any company in which I have been an officer, principal, partner, or major shareholder, nor have I personally never [sic] experienced any type of insolvency including bankruptcy.

I, for good and valuable consideration, including the extension of trade credit to debtor which I hereby acknowledge as having been received, do hereby personally guarantee and promise to pay any obligation to Creditor on demand for any indebtedness of Debtor to Creditor now due and/or which may be hereafter become due to Creditor for merchandise and other property hereafter sold and delivered by it to Debtor. This guarantee is one of payment, not of collection.

This guarantee is given individually, not in my capacity as _________ of Dependable Tech Center.

This guarantee shall be an irrevocable guarantee and indemnity to Creditor. Further, I hereby subrogate any indebtedness of Debtor, which it may have to me to the indebtedness of Creditor. I do hereby waive notice of default, non-payment and notice thereof and to jury trial and consent to (i) changes in the terms of the guaranteed indebtedness and (ii) any and all renewals or modifications of extension of trade credit. I agree that Creditor may take any action with regard to the disposition of the collateral, including releasing it, and still enforce this guarantee without foreclosing on the collateral first. I agree that this guarantee shall be governed by the substantive law of the State of South Carolina without regard to its provisions concerning conflicts of law. I grant permission to Creditor to obtain information from any and all sources required to properly ascertain my capability to meet my financial obligations.

On September 13, 2019, ScanSource filed an action seeking judgment against Appellants following ScanSource's extensions of credit for the sale of goods and services. ScanSource sought $72,923.39, plus one and a half percent interest, and attorney's fees. To its complaint, ScanSource attached Dependable's September 10, 2014 credit application and Moraru's April 12, 2013 Guarantee. Appellants answered, arguing that if Moraru's Guarantee were valid, his liability was limited to $5,000—the credit limit requested in the September 2014 credit application.

At trial, ScanSource's Director of Financial Services, Steven Zielinski, identified Dependable's initial April 2013 credit application and Moraru's Guarantee, and testified that ScanSource opened a credit account for Dependable. ScanSource conducted business with Dependable from 2013 to 2016, and during this time, Dependable submitted three credit applications. Zielinski identified Dependable's December 7, 2013 and September 10, 2014 applications, noting their terms were similar to those of the initial April 2013 credit application. Zielinski explained that ScanSource periodically requests updated credit applications from customers to ensure it has accurate contact and legal entity information.

Zielinski identified past due invoices and testified Dependable last made payment to ScanSource on December 21, 2016. Although Dependable made payments towards some invoices, an unpaid balance of $72,923.39 remained. According to Zielinski, Dependable had not disputed the amount owed on the account. On cross-examination, Appellants asked Zielinski about a May 21, 2013 email from ScanSource denying Dependable's April 2013 credit application. Counsel for ScanSource objected because he had not received the document in discovery.

ScanSource explained it served discovery and while it received a response to its requests for admission, it never received any response to its interrogatories or request for production of documents. Although Appellants did not deny that they failed to respond to the discovery requests, they sought to introduce a chain of emails between ScanSource and Appellants. Appellants' counsel stated:

Your Honor, this is a document from ScanSource, itself, that specifically declines giving any credit to my company. And, Your Honor, I haven't seen any of the documents that they provided. In fact, the Plaintiff just based the contract on a completely different document than they pled in the complaint. The complaint tries to make a claim for a 2014 contract and today comes in here arguing about a 2013. We've never seen that. And the Plaintiff is limited to pleading and proving the case as it is pled. And that is not done.1

The circuit court allowed Appellants to make a proffer regarding the email chain. Zielinski testified that if ScanSource emailed a customer stating it declined credit, that meant ScanSource denied credit as to that particular application. When Appellants noted Zielinski testified ScanSource accepted the 2013 application and granted credit, Zielinski responded, "That's my understanding." After reviewing the emails, Zielinski noted ScanSource denied Dependable's April 2013 credit application because Dependable failed to respond to ScanSource's requests that it update certain missing information, including an incomplete resale tax certificate. However, on December 7, 2013, Dependable submitted a second credit application, rectifying the issue of the missing tax information. ScanSource approved this credit application, and Dependable made its first purchase in 2014.

Appellants then argued, "Your Honor, the point here is there is only one grouping of documents that they allege created a contract with a personal guarantee by my client. And that was April of 2013, and it was declined." The circuit court

1 Following this assertion, counsel for ScanSource explained he "never received any discovery requests from them, Your Honor," noted he had never seen the email, and reiterated his objection. reviewed the documents and noted nothing in the Guarantee tied it to the April 2013 application. The circuit court explained, "[T]he document says it shall be an irrevocable guarantee and indemnity to creditor.

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Bluebook (online)
ScanSource Inc. v. Dependable Technology Center LLC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scansource-inc-v-dependable-technology-center-llc-scctapp-2024.