Winthrop Resources v. Stanley Works

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedAugust 1, 2001
Docket00-2867
StatusPublished

This text of Winthrop Resources v. Stanley Works (Winthrop Resources v. Stanley Works) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Winthrop Resources v. Stanley Works, (8th Cir. 2001).

Opinion

United States Court of Appeals FOR THE EIGHTH CIRCUIT ___________

No. 00-2867 ___________

Winthrop Resources Corporation, * A Minnesota Corporation, * * Appellant, * * v. * Appeal from the United States * District Court for the District of The Stanley Works, * Minnesota. A Connecticut Corporation, * * Appellee. * ___________

Submitted: May 16, 2001

Filed: August 1, 2001 ___________

Before MORRIS SHEPPARD ARNOLD, BRIGHT, and BYE, Circuit Judges. ___________

MORRIS SHEPPARD ARNOLD, Circuit Judge.

In 1991, The Stanley Works guaranteed a lease of computer equipment from Winthrop Resources Corporation to Taylor Rental Corporation and its successive assignees, which came to include General Rental, Inc. (GR). Following GR's default on lease payments for equipment rented in 1996 and 1997, Winthrop sued to collect the debt from Stanley. After a bench trial, the district court1 held that the defaulted lease payments were outside the scope of the guaranty and entered judgment for Stanley. We affirm.

I. Winthrop buys computer equipment and then leases that equipment to its clients. On May 1, 1991, Winthrop leased certain computer equipment to Taylor pursuant to a lease that referred to itself as Lease Agreement No. TA050191. The parties call this the "Master Lease Agreement" and it contained a clause stating that "This Master Agreement shall only cover Equipment leased under the Topic II Project." The Master Lease Agreement did not specify the particular equipment to be leased; instead, it stated that the equipment would be listed on separate lease schedules that would be incorporated into the agreement.

At the same time that Winthrop and Taylor executed the Master Lease Agreement, they executed Lease Schedule No. A, which stated that "This Lease Schedule shall only cover equipment leased under the Topic II Project." Lease Schedule No. A did not specify any particular equipment, either, but did state that the equipment was to be delivered and installed between April, 1991, and January, 1993. Late in 1991 and in 1992, Winthrop and Taylor executed Lease Schedule Nos. A01 through A05, each setting forth both the specific equipment to be leased to Taylor and the lease payment schedule for that equipment.

Contemporaneously with the execution of the Master Lease Agreement and Lease Schedule No. A, Winthrop requested and received a guaranty from Stanley, which at the time was Taylor's parent company. The guaranty was made in consideration of Winthrop's "entering into the lease(s) of personal property and/or

1 The Honorable Ann D. Montgomery, United States District Judge for the District of Minnesota.

-2- Software ... with [Taylor] under the terms of the Lease Agreement No. TA050191, dated May 1, 1991 for Equipment described as _______ [sic] with all accessories, attachments, components, and spare parts thereto and other related personal property now or hereafter leased by [Winthrop to Taylor]." Stanley guaranteed "the prompt payment of any and all rental payments of [Taylor] pursuant to the terms of said lease(s)," and granted Winthrop "full power to change, alter, cancel, renew, [and] extend the lease(s)" without altering Stanley's liability under the guaranty. There was no reference in the guaranty to the Topic II project by name.

In 1993, Stanley reaffirmed its guaranty when Taylor assigned its Winthrop lease to a different Stanley subsidiary. A year later, Stanley sold that subsidiary to an entity unrelated to Stanley, but agreed to reaffirm the guaranty. In 1996, Stanley once again affirmed the original guaranty when that entity transferred the Winthrop lease to GR, also unrelated to Stanley.

During the next eight months, GR and Winthrop executed Lease Schedule Nos. 006 and 007, both relating to new equipment designed to replace the equipment received by Taylor between 1991 and 1993. GR subsequently experienced financial problems and defaulted on the payments that it owed under Lease Schedule Nos. 006 and 007. In early 1999, Winthrop informed Stanley that it intended to collect GR's debt (approximately $1.5 million) from Stanley. When Stanley refused to pay, Winthrop sued, but the trial court entered judgment for Stanley.

The court held that the Master Lease Agreement and the guaranty were unambiguous, and that the modification clause of the guaranty allowed Winthrop to modify only the lease schedules, not the Master Lease Agreement itself. Because the equipment listed on Lease Schedule Nos. 006 and 007 was not Topic II equipment, the trial court concluded, the equipment listed on Lease Schedule Nos. 006 and 007 was not within the scope of the Master Lease Agreement and thus was not covered by Stanley's guaranty.

-3- II. Winthrop challenges the trial court's interpretation of the Master Lease Agreement and the guaranty on several grounds. We review de novo the trial court's determination that the contracts were unambiguous, see John Morrell and Co. v. Local Union 304A of the United Food and Commercial Workers, 913 F.2d 544, 550 (8th Cir. 1990), cert. denied, 500 U.S. 905 (1991), as well as its interpretation of what it concluded to be unambiguous contracts, see Porous Media Corp. v. Midland Brake, Inc., 220 F.3d 954, 959-60 (8th Cir. 2000). We review the trial court's factual findings, however, for clear error. See Mohamed v. UNUM Life Insurance Co., 129 F.3d 478, 480 (8th Cir. 1997). As a federal court sitting in diversity jurisdiction, we apply the law that the forum state would apply. See Klaxon Co. v. Stentor Electric Manufacturing Company, Inc., 313 U.S. 487, 496-97 (1941). We apply Minnesota law to this case because it is both the law of the forum and the law selected by the Master Lease Agreement.

Winthrop's primary contention is that the trial court inaccurately interpreted the scope of the modification clause of the guaranty. In Winthrop's view, the language of the guaranty allowing Winthrop to "change, alter, cancel, renew, [and] extend the lease(s)" gave it a free hand in its dealings with Taylor and Taylor's assignees by allowing Winthrop to change any provision in either the Master Lease Agreement or the lease schedules without altering Stanley's liability under the guaranty. In particular, Winthrop maintains that it could change the Master Lease Agreement by removing the limitation specifying applicability only to the Topic II project and that Winthrop did just that by agreeing to Lease Schedule Nos. 006 and 007 with GR.

We believe, as did the trial court, that Winthrop has construed its powers under the modification clause too broadly by reading the definition of "lease(s)" as including the Master Lease Agreement. The guaranty states that Winthrop and Taylor will enter into "lease(s) ... under the terms of the Lease Agreement." This language unambiguously indicates that the term "lease(s)" is not interchangeable with the term

-4- "Lease Agreement," for the "lease(s)" are to be executed only under terms provided by the "Lease Agreement." The term "lease(s)" must thus refer to something other than the Lease Agreement as a whole.

The only components of the contract, however, are the Master Lease Agreement and the lease schedules, and thus the only reasonable reading of "lease(s)" is one synonymous with the lease schedules. Indeed, Lease Schedule No.

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