Wheeler & Clevenger Oil Co. v. Washburn

127 S.W.3d 609, 2004 Ky. LEXIS 45, 2004 WL 314612
CourtKentucky Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 19, 2004
Docket2001-SC-0271-DG
StatusPublished
Cited by54 cases

This text of 127 S.W.3d 609 (Wheeler & Clevenger Oil Co. v. Washburn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Kentucky Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wheeler & Clevenger Oil Co. v. Washburn, 127 S.W.3d 609, 2004 Ky. LEXIS 45, 2004 WL 314612 (Ky. 2004).

Opinion

KELLER, Justice.

I. ISSUE

To secure credit with Appellant for his company, Appellee signed guaranty agreements contained on both the front and back of an “Application for Credit.” When Appellant sought enforcement of Appel-lee’s guaranties, Appellee claimed that his guaranties were invalid and unenforceable under KRS 371.065 because they did not specify a maximum amount of liability and a termination date. Did the failure to include those provisions in the guaranties render them invalid and unenforceable? Because KRS 371.065’s requirement that a guaranty contain such provisions does not apply to a guaranty set forth on the instrument being guaranteed, we hold that Ap-pellee’s guaranties are valid and enforceable. Accordingly, we reverse the Court of Appeals’s opinion that affirmed the trial court’s judgment finding Appellee’s guaranties invalid and unenforceable.

II. BACKGROUND

Appellee was president of HICO Transport, Inc. (hereinafter HICO). On June 14, 1993, he submitted to Appellant an “Application for Credit” on behalf of HICO for the purpose of establishing a line of credit to purchase fuel and other merchandise. At the bottom of the front of the application was a section captioned “GUARANTY AGREEMENT,” which Appellee signed as a guarantor of any credit extended to HICO, and it read as follows:

IN CONSIDERATION OF CREDIT BEING EXTENDED BY WHEELER & CLEVENGER OIL CO., INC. TO THE ABOVE NAMED APPLICANT FOR MERCHANDISE TO BE PURCHASED WHETHER APPLICANT BE AN INDIVIDUAL, A PROPRIETORSHIP, A CORPORATION OR ENTITY, THE UNDERSIGNED GUARANTOR OR GUARANTORS EACH HEREBY CONTRACT AND GUARANTEE TO WHEELER & CLEVENGER OIL CO., INC., THE FAITHFUL PAYMENT, WHEN DUE OF ALL ACCOUNTS OF SAID APPLICANT FOR PURCHASES MADE *611 WITHIN FIVE YEARS NEXT AFTER THE DATE OF THIS APPLICATION. THE UNDERSIGNED GUARANTOR OR GUARANTORS EACH HEREBY EXPRESSLY WAIVE ALL NOTICE OF ACCEPTANCE OF THIS GUARANTY, NOTICE OF EXTENSION OF CREDIT TO APPLICANT, PRESENTMENT AND DEMAND FOR PAYMENT ON APPLICANT, PROTEST AND NOTICE TO UNDERSIGNED GUARANTOR OR GUARANTORS OR DISHONOR OR DEFAULT BY APPLICANT, PROTEST AND NOTICE TO UNDERSIGNED GUARANTOR OR GUARANTORS OR DISHONOR OR DEFAULT BY APPLICANT OR WITH RESPECT TO ANY SECURITY HELD BY WHEELER & CLEVENGER OIL CO., INC. EXTENSION OF TIME OF PAYMENT TO APPLICANT, ACCEPTANCE OF PARTIAL PAYMENT OR PARTIAL COMPROMISE. ALL OTHER NOTICES TO WHICH THE UNDERSIGNED GUARANTOR OR GUARANTORS MIGHT OTHERWISE BE ENTITLED AND DEMAND FOR PAYMENT UNDER THIS GUARANTY.

On the back of the application, another section also captioned “GUARANTY AGREEMENT” was signed by Appellee, and it read as follows:

TO: WHEELER & CLEVENGER OIL CO., INC
DATE: June 14,1993
We, Bruce L. Washburn and Jay Crase 1 residing at HICO Transport, Inc., POB 50571, Nashville, TN, for and in consideration of your extending at our request credit to HICO Transport, Inc., hereinafter referred to as the “Company”, of which Bruce L. Washburn/Jay Crase is President & Director of Operations hereby personally guarantees to you the payment at WHEELER & CLEVEN-GER OIL CO., INC. in the state of Kentucky of any obligation of the company and we hereby agree to bind ourselves to pay you on demand any sum which may become due to you by the Company whenever the Company shall fail to pay the same. It is understood that this guaranty shall be a continuing and irrevocable guaranty and indemnity for such indebtedness of the Company. We do hereby waive notice of default, nonpayment and notice thereof and consent to any modification or renewal of the credit agreement hereby guaranteed.

On September 7, 1994, Appellant filed suit against HICO and Appellee for past due amounts, totaling $13,551.26. Appel-lee defended by asserting inter alia that the guaranty agreements that he signed were not enforceable against him because “[KRS 371.065] clearly makes void any guaranty agreement that ... does not contain provisions including a maximum amount of liability and a termination date” and the subject agreements did not contain such provisions.

After a bench trial, the trial court found that “KRS 371.065 is inapplicable to the case at hand ... in that this does not involve a guaranty of commercial paper.” Consequently, after rejecting Appellee’s other defenses, on October 20, 1998, the trial court awarded Appellant judgment against HICO and Appellee. However,

*612 Appellee moved the trial court to “to Alter, Amend or Vacate its judgment” because, he asserted, the trial court erroneously relied upon APL, Inc. v. Ohio Valley Aluminum, Inc., 2 a case that interpreted KRS 371.065 prior to its later amendment, which applied the statute’s requirements “to all guaranty contracts, not just commercial paper.” The trial court agreed with Appellee and held that “[t]he guaranty agreement in question does not meet the minimum standards as required by statute because it fails to specify the maximum liability of the guarantor and does not specify a termination date which renders it invalid and unenforceable. As a result, on February 6, 1999, the trial court by amended judgment vacated “so much of the Court’s Judgment ... granting personal Judgment [against Appellee]” but let stand Appellant’s judgment against HICO. Appellant’s subsequent motion to alter, amend or vacate the amended judgment was overruled, and it appealed from the amended judgment.

The Court of Appeals agreed with the trial court’s conclusions that, as a result of its amendment in 1990, KRS 371.065 applies to all guaranty agreements, including the guaranty agreement signed by [Appel-lee][,]” and thus “[Appellee’s] guaranty does not satisfy the statute, and is, therefore, unenforceable.” Accordingly, the Court of Appeals affirmed the trial court. We granted Appellant’s motion for discretionary review, and we reverse.

III. ANALYSIS

The dispositive issue in this case is the interpretation of KRS 371.065, and since the construction and application of statutes is a matter of law, we interpret KRS 371.065 de novo 3 without deference to the interpretations adopted by lower courts. 4

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
127 S.W.3d 609, 2004 Ky. LEXIS 45, 2004 WL 314612, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wheeler-clevenger-oil-co-v-washburn-ky-2004.