Tri-Continental Leasing Corp. v. Gunter

472 N.W.2d 437, 117 Oil & Gas Rep. 91, 1991 N.D. LEXIS 117, 1991 WL 109669
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedJune 25, 1991
DocketCiv. 900369, 900370
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 472 N.W.2d 437 (Tri-Continental Leasing Corp. v. Gunter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tri-Continental Leasing Corp. v. Gunter, 472 N.W.2d 437, 117 Oil & Gas Rep. 91, 1991 N.D. LEXIS 117, 1991 WL 109669 (N.D. 1991).

Opinion

GIERKE, Justice.

Tri-Continental Leasing Corporation has appealed from a district court judgment dismissing its claims against Richard Gun-ter and G. Jane Gunter, as Personal Representative of the Estate of Larry A. Gunter, Deceased, and from a judgment denying its motion for amended findings of fact or a new trial. The Gunters cross-appealed. We affirm.

After securing the financial backing of Larry Gunter, Forrest Charlesworth formed Gunter Oil Well Service, Inc. (GWS), in 1980 to engage in the oil well service business. The initial shareholders were Charlesworth, Larry Gunter, and David Brink. Richard Gunter later became a shareholder. Larry and Richard Gunter did not actively participate in managing GWS.

GWS acquired a number of workover rigs, including two that it acquired through lease-purchase transactions with Tri-Conti-nental. Eventually, GWS had difficulty making lease payments and the Tri-Conti-nental leases were modified in 1984 to extend the terms and reduce the payments. In 1985, Larry and Richard Gunter assigned their GWS stock to Charlesworth. Throughout 1985, Charlesworth sought a modification in the payments due under the leases. On January 3, 1986, Tri-Continen-tal, GWS, Larry Gunter and Richard Gun-ter executed a Consolidation Agreement, consolidating the two previous equipment leases into one. The consolidation agreement recited that the balance due Tri-Con-tinental under the two leases was $447,-798.00 and that one of the rigs had been destroyed, for which Tri-Continental antici *438 pated receiving insurance proceeds of $80,-522.56. The agreement provided in part:

“5. GWS agrees to pay to Tri-Con under this Consolidation Agreement, the aggregate sum of THREE HUNDRED THIRTY-SEVEN THOUSAND, SEVEN HUNDRED TWENTY-NINE and 40/100 DOLLARS ($337,729.40) in seventy-nine (79) equal and consecutive monthly payments of FIVE THOUSAND NINE HUNDRED NINE and 12/100 DOLLARS ($5,909.12) each, commencing January 1, 1986....
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“10. Gunters hereby unconditionally guarantee the prompt payment of all payments due Tri-Con pursuant to the Consolidated Lease, provided, however, in the event GWS makes twelve (12) timely monthly rental payments to TriCon pursuant to this Consolidated Lease Agreement, then the Gunters obligations hereunder shall terminate.”

Tri-Continental received from GWS one payment of $5,909.12, two checks for $3,000 each, several “payments of different amounts, 2,000, 3,000, $1500” and, since November 1986, “GWS has basically been making $1500 a month payments.”

In 1987, Tri-Continental sued G. Jane Gunter, as Personal Representative of the Estate of Larry A. Gunter, Deceased, for $474,008.84 pursuant to the guaranty provision in the consolidation agreement. In 1989, Tri-Continental filed a similar action against Richard Gunter. The district court ordered the two cases joined for a bench trial.

The parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment. The district court denied the Gunters’ motion and partially granted Tri-Continental’s motion for summary judgment. After trial, the district court made the following findings of fact:

“XVII.
“GWS sublet the rig covered by the Consolidation Agreement to Sanders Oilfield Construction, apparently sometime in 1986 or 1987.
“XVIII.
“Plaintiff was aware of the sublease to Sanders, but never raised any objection to it.
* * # * * *
“XXIII.
“The Gunters’ willingness to participate in and guarantee leases to GWS was based in large part on their business and personal relationships with Forrest Charlesworth, the operating member of GWS.”

The trial court concluded:

“IX.
“By its informed acquiescence and implicit consent, plaintiff permitted GWS to sublease the rig covered by the Consolidation Agreement, thereby altering the original obligation of GWS to act as the operator of the rig.
“X.
“The sublease was a change that a careful and prudent person undertaking the risk of guaranteeing GWS’s performance of the Consolidation Agreement would have regarded as substantially increasing the chances of loss; it was therefore a material change to the Gun-ters’ detriment.
“XI.
“Pursuant to section 22-01-15 NDCC, the original obligation of the principal having been altered, the guarantors are exonerated.
“XII.
“Defendants are entitled to judgment of dismissal of plaintiffs claims herein, and for their costs and disbursements.”

Upon dismissal of its lawsuit, Tri-Continen-tal moved for amended findings of fact or a new trial. The trial court denied the motion, and Tri-Continental appealed, raising as issues whether the trial court erred in (1) determining that a sublease was created, which materially altered the obli *439 gation of GWS and exonerated the guarantors; (2) failing to respect a partial summary judgment issued in the case; and (3) in denying its motion for amended findings of fact or a new trial. G. Jane Gunter cross-appealed to preserve defenses not considered by the trial court. Richard Gunter cross-appealed to challenge the denial of his request for a jury trial.

Section 22-01-15, N.D.C.C., provides:

“When guarantor exonerated. — A guarantor is exonerated, except insofar as he may be indemnified by the principal, if, by any act of the creditor without the consent of the guarantor:
1. The original obligation of the principal is altered in any respect; or
2. The remedies or rights of the creditor against the principal in respect thereto are impaired or suspended in any manner.”

Patrick Filippelli, a Tri-Continental vice president, testified that GWS subleased the rig to “Sanders Oil in Colorado”; that “Sanders is operating the rig”; and that he “spoke to Sanders the latter part of ’89 indicating that we may have to work something out on that, reduce something to writing, but that never came about.” Forrest Charlesworth stated in a deposition admitted into evidence that he subleased the rig to Sanders Oilfield Construction for $1,500 per month; that GWS pays TriContinental that $1,500 per month; and that “GWS doesn’t generate any income except the fifteen hundred dollars a month, and it pays it out to Tri-Continental.”

Thus, the evidence clearly supports the trial court’s findings of a sublease with Tri-Continental’s knowledge and implicit consent. The evidence shows that GWS owed Tri-Continental $5,909.12 per month, that GWS leased the rig to Sanders for $1,500 per month, that GWS had no other income with which to make payments to Tri-Continental, that GWS paid Tri-Conti-nental $1,500 per month, that Sanders was operating the subleased rig, and that the sublease was entered into without notice to or consent of the Gunters.

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Bluebook (online)
472 N.W.2d 437, 117 Oil & Gas Rep. 91, 1991 N.D. LEXIS 117, 1991 WL 109669, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tri-continental-leasing-corp-v-gunter-nd-1991.