US BANK NAT. ASS'N v. Whitney

81 P.3d 135
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedDecember 9, 2003
Docket21335-8-III
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 81 P.3d 135 (US BANK NAT. ASS'N v. Whitney) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
US BANK NAT. ASS'N v. Whitney, 81 P.3d 135 (Wash. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

81 P.3d 135 (2003)
119 Wash.App. 339

U.S. BANK NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, successor in interest by merger to U.S. Bank of Washington, National Association, and Peoples National Bank of Washington, Appellant,
v.
Philip A. WHITNEY and Arva L. Whitney, husband and wife, Respondents and Cross-Appellant,
Philip A. Whitney, Jr., and Jane Doe Whitney, husband and wife; Mountain Valley Products, Inc., a Washington corporation; Timothy W. Mahoney, P.S., a Washington professional service corporation; and the State of Washington, Department of Labor & Industries, a sovereign state, Defendants.

No. 21335-8-III.

Court of Appeals of Washington, Division 3, Panel One.

December 9, 2003.

*137 Wendell G. Kusnerus, Davis, Wright, Tremaine, Portland, OR, for Appellant.

Jerry K. Boyd, Paine, Hamblen, Coffin, Brooke & Miller, LLP, Spokane, WA, Leland B. Kerr, Paine, Hamblen, Coffin, Brooke & Miller, LLP, Kennewick, WA, for Respondents.

*136 SWEENEY, J.

The Uniform Commercial Code, Title 62A RCW, requires, first and foremost, good faith, fair dealing, and commercial reasonableness. The code also requires that payment on a promissory note must be tendered in the amount due and at the place stated in the instrument. Here, a debtor purported to tender payment at a bank branch other than that designated as the place for payment, in an amount less than the amount due, and with a third-party check — all without explanation. This tender did not, then, constitute payment on the notes. We reverse the trial court's ruling to the contrary. We affirm the court's conclusion that, absent mutual agreement, subsequent tender of a check for the *138 disputed balance did not constitute an accord and satisfaction.

FACTS

HISTORY

The historical facts are not disputed.

Philip and Arva Whitney farm near Prosser, Washington. In 1987, they filed for chapter 12 bankruptcy protection. The bankruptcy court allowed U.S. Bank National Association $237,500 in secured claims. Of this, $210,000 was secured by mortgages on farm real estate and $27,500 by mortgages on equipment. The bankruptcy court restructured the two U.S. Bank loans pursuant to stipulation. The order called for annual payments.

In 1989 and 1990, the Whitneys made payments at local U.S. Bank branch offices where they were known, either personally or through counsel or the bankruptcy trustee.

In 1991, the interest computation formula changed pursuant to the bankruptcy order. The Whitneys disputed the payment amount. They calculated the combined annual payment on the two loans at $30,389. The bankruptcy court issued an order clarifying the annual payments as $24,575.97 and $7,979.66 respectively, for a combined annual payment of $32,555.63.

In October 1991, U.S. Bank sent the Whitneys two payment invoices totaling $32,555.63, due on November 1, 1991. Each invoice included a tear-off portion to be mailed with the payments to the bank's loan processing center in Yakima. No other bank address appeared on the invoices.

The Whitneys mailed two checks to U.S. Bank's Seattle main branch. The checks totaled only $30,389 — the amount rejected by the bankruptcy court a few months before. The checks were drawn on the Home Security Bank account of Whitney Farms, Inc., a closely held corporation of the Whitney family. The payee was U.S. Bank. Philip and Arva Whitney signed the checks. But the printed information on the checks did not include their names. The Whitneys did not include the tear-off portions of the invoices or any other accompanying documentation to identify the purpose of the checks. On the memo line of each check they wrote: "Case-87-02667-K22." Clerk's Papers (CP) at 365.

The Seattle bank did not recognize the checks as intended payments, did not accept them as such, and did not, therefore, credit them against the Whitneys' debts. But Whitney Farms, Inc. had an account at the Seattle branch of U.S. Bank. And so U.S. Bank in Seattle treated the checks as deposits and put them through the collection process. The $30,389 wound up in the Whitney Farms corporate account at U.S. Bank. The next bank account statement to Whitney Farms on November 28, 1991, showed a "credit adjustment" for $30,389.

On December 4 (at about the time the Whitneys would have received their bank statement), the Whitneys wrote a check on the Whitney Farms, Inc. account for $30,389, payable to Whitney Construction, Inc. for a construction project on the Whitneys' home. Philip Whitney was a partner of Whitney Construction.

Ultimately U.S. Bank's records showed the Whitneys as delinquent on their loan obligation. So the bank demanded payment. The Whitneys refused. The bank then filed a motion in federal court to dismiss the Whitneys' chapter 12 bankruptcy. The Whitneys offered to tender the correct payment amounts if U.S. Bank agreed to waive additional interest and attorney fees. U.S. Bank agreed on the condition that the Whitneys agree to sign a release of all claims. The Whitneys sent checks in the correct amounts with a letter from their lawyer saying the checks "represent the payments due." CP at 967. But the Whitneys declined to sign a release of claims. The bank backdated the payments to November 1, 1991, without additional interest or fees. The bank also withdrew its motion to dismiss the bankruptcy.

The bank continued to send the Whitneys annual loan invoices. These statements reflected the February 1992 replacement checks but not the checks sent to Seattle on October 31, 1991. In December 1992, the Whitneys paid off the entire equipment loan balance of $13,849. This amount was almost twice what the payoff balance would have *139 been if the October 1991 checks had been credited.

On December 7, 1999, Mr. Whitney tendered a final payment of $21,414.36, which, according to his own calculations, was the outstanding balance on the real estate loan. This amount reflected credit for both the October 1991 payment and the replacement payment in February 1992. The Whitneys thus insisted on credit for the October 1991 "payment." The bank insisted that only the February 1992 payment was made and that the balance due was $59,320.45. Bank employees testified that they accepted the check on the clear understanding that no accord had been reached as to the disputed balance and that Mr. Whitney's tender of the check was not conditioned on the bank's acceptance of Mr. Whitney's accounting. On the same day, Jonathan Wolf, Special Asset Officer at U.S. Bank, sent Mr. Whitney a letter memorializing their discussion. The letter says the parties disputed the amount due, but that Mr. Whitney agreed there was "no condition of payoff" attached to the $21,414.36 payment. CP at 378. The bank cashed the check.

The bank refused to release the mortgage when the Whitneys refused to pay the balance due.

PROCEDURE

On March 15, 2001, U.S. Bank filed a foreclosure action on the mortgage securing the real property loan. The Whitneys answered and asserted the affirmative defense of accord and satisfaction. They also counterclaimed for damages based on the bank's refusal to release the mortgage. Later, the Whitneys amended their answer to include the affirmative defense of payment. They also claimed an overpayment of $7,245 on the equipment loan, based on the bank's failure to credit the November 1991 payment on that loan.

Both sides moved for summary judgment. The superior court granted the Whitneys' motion and denied U.S. Bank's.

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Bluebook (online)
81 P.3d 135, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/us-bank-nat-assn-v-whitney-washctapp-2003.