Venaglia v. Kropinak

1998 NMCA 043, 956 P.2d 824, 125 N.M. 25
CourtNew Mexico Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 3, 1998
Docket17660
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 1998 NMCA 043 (Venaglia v. Kropinak) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Venaglia v. Kropinak, 1998 NMCA 043, 956 P.2d 824, 125 N.M. 25 (N.M. Ct. App. 1998).

Opinion

OPINION

HARTZ, Chief Judge.

(1) The Appellants, Frank Venaglia, Ann P. Venaglia, and Roy J. Venaglia (the Venaglias), sued Roy M. Kropinak on his guarantee of a $68,000 promissory note from Downtown Business Center, Inc. (DBC) to the Venaglias. On cross-motions for summary judgment the district court granted Kropinak’s motion and denied the Venaglias’. The Venaglias appeal, asking that we set aside the summary judgment against them and order the district court to enter summary judgment in their favor. This appeal requires us to examine suretyship defenses under the Uniform Commercial Code (the UCC) and the common law, and the relationship between these two sources of law. We hold that the record before us will not sustain a summary judgment for either party. We therefore reverse the summary judgment and remand for further proceedings.

I. BACKGROUND

(2) On August 3, 1992 DBC entered into a purchase agreement to buy from the Venaglias a commercial property (the Property) in downtown Albuquerque. The negotiated price was $470,000, with $90,000 cash due at closing and the $380,000 balance payable under a standard form real estate contract. Although there is some dispute regarding precisely what documents were executed by the time the transaction closed, it is not contested that (1) on November 19, 1992 DBC entered into a real estate contract (the Real Estate Contract) to purchase the Property from the Venaglias for $460,000, (2) the contract acknowledged the receipt of a $90,-000 cash down payment, and (3) $68,000 of the down payment was in the form of a promissory note (the Promissory Note) dated October 30, 1992. The text of the note was as follows:

After date, as hereinafter set forth, for value received, I, we, or either of us, promise to pay to the order of FRANK VENAGLIA, ANN P. VENAGLIA and ROY J. VENAGLIA, Albuquerque, New Mexico, the sum of Sixty Eight Thousand ($68,-000.00) Dollars in the manner following, that is to say:
Nineteen Thousand Dollars ($19,000.00), or more, on or before April 30, 1993, and the balance of Forty Nine Thousand Dollars ($49,000.00), plus all accrued interest, on or before October 30,1993.
The said installments shall include interest on said principal amount and/or on the unpaid balance ther[e]of at the rate of ten per centum (10%) per annum, and when said installments are paid, they shall be apportioned between interest and principal, and applied first to the payment of all interest due at date of payment, and the balance applied on the prine[i]pal amount.
If any one of said installments is not paid within ten (10) days after the same becomes due and payable, the whole of the principal sum then remaining unpaid, together with the interest that shall have accrued thereon, shall forthwith become due and payable without notice or demand, at the option of the holder of this note.
The makers, endorsers, and sureties hereof hereby severally waive protest, demand, presentment, notice of dishonor, and notice of protest in case this note, or any installment due thereunder, is not paid at maturity, and agree that after maturity of this obligation or any installment thereof, the time of making payment of the same may be extended without prejudice to the holder and without releasing any makers, endorsers or sureties hereof.
The maker, all endorsers, and sureties agree to pay, in addition to all other sums due hereunder, all costs and expenses of collection of this note and/or enforcing the same including a reasonable attorney’s fee at the time of collection and/or enforcement should this note be placed in the hands of an attorney for collection and/or enforcement, or is collected or enforced through bankruptcy, probate, or other judicial proceedings.

The note was signed by Robert J. Doucette as president of DBC. Immediately beneath Doucette’s signature was the heading “GUARANTORS (individually),” under which were the signatures of William W. Anderson, Kropinak, and Doucette. No collateral secured the note.

(3) DBC defaulted on the Promissory Note in October 1993. When the guarantors failed to pay, the Venaglias sued DBC, Anderson, and Kropinak. Pursuant to a stipulated order, the Venaglias obtained judgment against all three defendants in the amount of $48,727.91 on August 29, 1994. (As will be explained below, the judgment against Kropinak was later set aside.)

(4) In the meantime DBC had continued to make some payments under the Real Estate Contract. But in August 1994 DBC failed to make any payments and the Venaglias terminated the contract effective September 19, 1994. On October 11, 1994 the Venaglias entered into an Agreement of Compromise and Mutual Release (the Settlement Agreement) with DBC, signed on behalf of DBC by its then president Ron Perea. Under the agreement DBC relinquished the Property to the Venaglias and the parties mutually released any potential claims against one another. The pertinent terms of the agreement are as follows:

1. [The] Venaglia[s] release[] DBC, together with its shareholders, officers, directors and affiliates, from any and all further liability under the [Real Estate Contract] or as result of their default of the provisions of the [Real Estate Contract], including without limitation, past due amounts, holdover rents, property taxes upon the property for the year 1993, costs of collection, attorneys’ fees, and other amounts; provided, however, that this release shall not include amounts due to [the] Venaglia[s] under that certain judgment against DBC and others in the face amount of $48,727.91 entered on or about August 29,1994 ____
2. DBC releases [the] Venaglia[s] from any and all claims which it may have or assert, of any nature whatsoever, arising from, under or in connection with, the [Real Estate Contract] or the property described in the [Real Estate Contract], and waives and releases any and all rights of any nature whatsoever which it may have or assert to the property. DBC acknowledges that it has “equity” in the property, and that it understands that even in the event of a default under the [Real Estate Contract] it might be determined by a court of competent jurisdiction to be entitled to recoupment or reimbursement of certain amounts by reason of its payments toward the purchase price of the property and by reason of amounts expended by it to preserve, maintain or improve the property. By its execution of this Agreement, DBC waives any right which it may have to claim such recoupment or reimbursement in any amount whatsoever.
3. DBC shall immediately take all reasonable steps to deliver sole possession of the property to [the] Venaglia[s], to terminate any leases upon the property granted by DBC to any person, and to cooperate with [the] Venaglia[s] in securing to [the] Venaglia[s] sole possession of the premises.

Nine days after the date of the Settlement Agreement, the Venaglias entered into an agreement to sell the Property to Suzanne Dutcher for $425,000, an agreement that was consummated by a real estate contract dated November 28, 1994.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1998 NMCA 043, 956 P.2d 824, 125 N.M. 25, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/venaglia-v-kropinak-nmctapp-1998.