Van Petten v. Oregon Bank

600 P.2d 507, 42 Or. App. 367
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedSeptember 24, 1979
Docket13,886-L, CA 11034
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 600 P.2d 507 (Van Petten v. Oregon Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Van Petten v. Oregon Bank, 600 P.2d 507, 42 Or. App. 367 (Or. Ct. App. 1979).

Opinion

*369 PETERSON, J., Pro Tempore.

The trial court sustained a demurrer to the plaintiffs’ 1 fourth amended complaint, and a judgment was entered for the defendant after the plaintiff’s fifth amended complaint was stricken.

The principal issue on this appeal is whether a lender may be liable in contract to a guarantor for breach of an agreement to lend money to a third person. 2

Plaintiff alleged that it was a partner with an individual in the Van Petten Lumber Company (the lumber company). The lumber company borrowed money from the defendant bank. As a prerequisite to making the loan, the bank required the lumber company to give it a security interest in approximately all of its assets.

In July, 1972, the plaintiff requested the bank to increase the line of credit to the lumber company. The bank agreed, but required additional security — a guaranty from the plaintiff.

Because this case involves the sufficiency of the plaintiff’s complaint, all of the allegations of the first count of the fourth amended complaint are set forth below: 3

"I- .
"At all times herein pertinent, The Oregon Bank was and now is an Oregon banking corporation, engaged in the banking business, including the lending of monies within the State of Oregon.
*370 "II.
"At all times herein pertinent, Builders Equity, Inc. was a corporation authorized to do business within the State of Oregon.
"III.
"At all times herein pertinent, Builder’s Equity, Inc. was a general partner with Paul E. Van Petten, an individual, in a partnership known as Van Petten Lumber Company, hereinafter for convenience referred to as 'the partnership’.
"IV.
"Said partnership owned and operated lumber sales yards in various locations in Eastern Oregon and Idaho. In order to finance its operations, said partnership borrowed money from Defendant, giving Defendant promissory notes executed by the general partners, as evidence of said obligations. Said notes were secured by security agreements by which the partnership granted to Defendant a security interest, among other things, in all inventory, raw materials, work in progress, and all products and proceeds therefrom, together with a security interest in all rights to payment arising out of said business.
"V.
"In consideration of said notes and security agreements, Defendant loaned the partnership $150,000.00 and granted the partnership a revolving line of credit secured by accounts receivable with a credit limit of $350,000.00 or 80% of accounts receivable less than 60 days old, whichever was less.
"VI.
"In or about July, 1972, the general partners, on behalf of the partnership, requested an adjustment in the credit formula to increase the revolving line of credit to $550,000.00 or 80% of accounts receivable less than 90 days old, whichever was less.
"VII.
"On or about July 20, 1972, Defendant agreed to said modification of the credit formula but required additional security as a condition to said modification.
*371 "VIII.
"In fulfillment of said condition, as a consideration for said modification, the general partners, on behalf of the partnership assets, and Plaintiff Builder’s Equity, Inc., guaranteed the full $700,000.00 line of credit.
"IX.
"Plaintiff also performed all other conditions precedent to Defendant’s obligations under said agreement.
"X.
"From and after the time entered into said agreement, the Defendant continuously breached said agreement by failing to grant the additional credit agreed upon.
"XI.
"As a natural and proximate result of Defendant’s failure to extend additional credit as called for under said modification of the agreement, the partnership was unable to obtain sufficient operating credit and ran into financial difficulty which, in turn, caused it to default on its obligations to various creditors, caused the partnership to become bankrupt, caused Plaintiff Builder’s Equity, Inc.’s interest in said partnership as a going operation to be destroyed, caused Builder’s Equity, Inc. to be destroyed as a going business, and caused Plaintiff to lose funds owed it by the partnership.
"XII.
"As a result of the conduct of Defendant, as aforesaid, Plaintiff has been damaged as follows:
"1. $795,600.00 in diminished value of its partnership interest.
"2. $12,664.80 paid over to Bankruptcy Court in order to avoid being pulled into bankruptcy itself.
"3. in funds owed it by the partnership.
"4. $ in lost value as a going business.”

The parties have not cited us to any case which is in point on this appeal, and we have found none. The case is unlike Johnston, supra, note 2, and Weiss v. Northwest Accept. Corp., 274 Or 343, 546 P2d 1065 (1976), in *372 that in this case the plaintiff alleges that defendant induced it to enter a new and separate guaranty relationship, in return for the defendant’s promise to lend money to Van Petten Lumber Company.

The plaintiff correctly relies upon the following statement from Weiss (274 Or at 349-350):

"Plaintiff Weiss relies upon two guaranty cases: Buschmann v. Professional Men’s Association, 405 F2d 659 (7th Cir 1959), and Sacks et al. v. AFNB, 258 Ind 189, 279 NE2d 807 (1972). These cases hold that the guaranty created a special duty to the guarantor which enabled the guarantor to maintain a cause of action, independent of the debtor corporation, against the person to whom the guaranty was extended. Neither case, however, is persuasive as in both cases the individual was induced to enter into the guaranty by the fraud or misrepresentation of the defendant. For example, in the Sacks case the allegation was that the defendant bank represented to the individual plaintiff stockholder that if the plaintiff guarantied [sic] the loans to the corporation, the bank would provide continual financing of the corporation. The bank refused to continue financing and the plaintiff stockholder incurred liability on his guaranty.
"In contrast to Sacks and

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
600 P.2d 507, 42 Or. App. 367, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/van-petten-v-oregon-bank-orctapp-1979.