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Phoenix Corp v. Campcore, Inc.

Court of Appeals of the State of New York
Mar 30, 1993
81 N.Y.2d 138 (N.Y. 1993)

Summary

holding that each failure to make an installment payment gives rise to a separate cause of action

Summary of this case from Israel v. Chabra

Opinion

Argued February 11, 1993

Decided March 30, 1993

Appeal from the Appellate Division of the Supreme Court in the Fourth Judicial Department, Bernard L. Reagan, J.

Hancock Estabrook, Syracuse (Thomas C. Buckel, Jr., of counsel), for appellant.

Theodore Fenstermacher, Cortland, for respondent.


We granted leave in this case to decide whether defendant debtor Campcore, Inc.'s default on one installment payment under its promissory note triggered the Statute of Limitations accrual against the entire debt. Upon that initial default in the installment payment, the creditor, Marine Midland Bank, chose not to exercise its option to accelerate the balance of the indebtedness. At issue is Marine's attempt to recover against a guarantor, Chester Wickwire (Wickwire), on otherwise timely portions of Campcore's debt. Supreme Court and the Appellate Division ruled that the Statute of Limitations blocked Marine's reach against guarantor-Wickwire, because Wickwire became obligated to pay the whole debt upon the initial default in a payment by Campcore. On the grant of leave to appeal to Marine, we now reverse the order of the Appellate Division.

I.

In July 1978, appellant creditor Marine loaned Campcore $500,000, secured by a promissory note providing, in part, that "[t]he holder hereof shall have the option to declare the balance due and owing hereunder at any time to be immediately due and payable * * * upon the happening of * * * 1. Nonpayment of any sum of principal or interest on the date which the same shall become due". The term loan agreement between the debtor and creditor contained a corresponding acceleration option exercisable unilaterally by the creditor bank. Marine later acquired a mortgage from Phoenix Acquisition Corp. and Dome Corp. as security for the loan.

Wickwire guaranteed a portion of the loan as follows: "[T]he undersigned hereby absolutely and unconditionally guaranties the full and prompt payment to Bank when due, whether by acceleration or otherwise, of such indebtedness of the borrower to Bank to the extent of [$105,000] and the unpaid accrued interest thereon." This guaranty also contained a provision that Marine would notify Wickwire of default in payment of any installment of principal or interest within 30 days after such default. The guaranty further added that "[i]f any default shall be made in the payment of the above indebtedness, the [guarantor] hereby agrees to pay the same to the extent above provided without requiring protest or notice of nonpayment to the [guarantor]".

On April 1, 1983, Campcore defaulted on a principal payment of $6,000 plus interest. From October 1983 to October 1987, Campcore made partial payments on other installments on the note, but it never regained currency on the payments of its indebtedness. In January 1988, Marine notified Campcore that its 1978 term loan had matured and demanded payment in full — the principal balance of $244,593.51 and interest due of $21,190. Litigation ensued in August 1990 when plaintiffs Phoenix Acquisition Corp. and Dome Corp. sought to rescind the mortgage held by Marine securing the loan. In October 1990, as a cross claim in that action, Wickwire sought a declaration that Marine's claim on the Wickwire guaranty was time-barred.

The Supreme Court granted Wickwire's motion for summary judgment, and the Appellate Division affirmed. In reversing, we hold that separate causes of action accrued as installments of the loan indebtedness became due and payable. We reject guarantor Wickwire's argument that creditor-Marine's action was barred by the Statute of Limitations because any action with respect to the entire debt accrued all at once on April 1, 1983 upon the initial default in an installment payment.

II.

The contractual language fixes the boundaries of the legal obligation of the guarantor. Without acceleration of the entire debt by Marine, Wickwire was liable only for the payment of the installment which was due and payable and in default. The Statute of Limitations began to run only for that discrete obligation and amount. The fact that Marine had a bargained-for, exclusive acceleration option to call the entire indebtedness due immediately upon any default does not, by operation of law, trigger the accrual of a cause of action for portions of the indebtedness which neither the debtor nor the guarantor were then liable to pay.

By the terms of the promissory note and the term loan agreement between Marine and Campcore, payments of principal and interest became due and payable according to a specified repayment schedule. Unless Marine exercised the acceleration option, the balance of the loan was not due and payable by the debtor. The guaranty obligated Wickwire to make "full and prompt payment to Bank when due, whether by acceleration or otherwise" of "indebtedness" of Campcore to Marine, up to the limit of $105,000 plus interest. The Wickwire guaranty is an explicit guaranty of "payment * * * when due". Therefore, Wickwire became explicitly and contractually liable only for sums which were due and payable.

Wickwire acknowledges that the extent of the debtor's liability following a single, skipped installment payment would depend on whether the creditor exercised the acceleration option. However, he would contrast the debtor's limited obligation on a default in a single payment from his broader immediate obligation to pay the entire debt as guarantor, including amounts not accelerated and not yet due and payable by the debtor. Wickwire finds support for this view in particular language of the guaranty, which stipulates that "[i]f any default shall be made in the payment of the above indebtedness, the undersigned hereby agrees to pay the same to the extent above provided", and contends that the "extent above provided" is the maximum amount of the guaranty, $105,000. The Appellate Division accepted that distinction, finding that "[t]he guarantee provides that Wickwire is obligated to pay the entire debt (up to $105,000) upon `any' default by the debtor." ( 182 A.D.2d 1101.)

We do not agree that the language of this guaranty supports an extension of the obligation of the guarantor beyond the indebtedness which is due and payable by the debtor in the first instance. The portion of the guaranty instrument which articulates liability upon "any default * * * to the extent above provided" is part of a paragraph discussing notice requirements. It should not be invoked to add obligations to the substantive guaranty liability. Moreover, the express limitation, "to the extent above provided" should be read, in conjunction with the primary guaranty obligation clause, "when due, whether by acceleration or otherwise". This liability refers only to amounts due and payable to the limit of $105,000.

Apart from the language of the guaranty, the authorities relied upon to trigger a complete accrual upon any default in these circumstances also falter. General Phoenix Corp. v Cabot ( 300 N.Y. 87) is concerned essentially with the distinction between a guaranty of payment and a guaranty of collection. That case holds that where a guaranty is one of payment, liability under a guaranty attaches and a cause of action accrues against the guarantor as soon as there is a default by the debtor in the payment of the obligation. Chemical Bank N.Y. Trust Co. v Amory ( 27 A.D.2d 730, affd no opn 21 N.Y.2d 832), explicitly concerned a demand promissory note. The Statute of Limitations affecting a note payable upon demand, without doubt, begins to run from the date of its execution (McMullen v Rafferty, 89 N.Y. 456, 459). Thus, the holding of Amory, that the obligation of a guarantor attaches and the Statute of Limitations begins to run on execution and delivery of a demand note, does not govern this case. Demand and installment obligations are critically distinct in this context and warrant different considerations and results under the Statute of Limitations' microscope.

Wickwire would regard Marine's failure in fact to exercise its option to accelerate against debtor-Campcore as irrelevant in the dispute between the creditor and the guarantor. This is so, Wickwire argues, because a guarantor's obligations to a lender are "separate and distinct" from those which exist between a lender and a borrower. Wickwire's position in this Statute of Limitations context is that even though the indebtedness which is guaranteed is not payable by the primary debtor by the terms of the loan agreement, "all of the conditions to the liability of the guarantee have occurred". However, the law does not so gingerly differentiate between the roles of guarantor and debtor in such a way as to vitiate, for limitations purposes, the fundamental coextensiveness of their substantive obligations (see, McMullen v Rafferty, 89 N.Y. 456, 459, supra). Had Marine exercised its acceleration option following the April 1, 1983 default, it would have triggered an obligation by Wickwire to pay Campcore's entire indebtedness up to $105,000 and interest. But Marine chose not to do so. Thus, a crucial link in the chain of events surrounding the accrual of the creditor's claim was left disconnected.

Next, Wickwire presses the point that the policy interests served by the Statute of Limitations override the unexercised acceleration option where an obligation against a guarantor is pursued. These statutes "compel the exercise of a right of action within a reasonable time" (18 Williston, Contracts § 2020, at 673 [3d ed 1978]), to avoid "the disrupting effect that unsettled claims have on commercial intercourse" (Note, Developments in the Law — Statutes of Limitations, 63 Harv L Rev 1177, 1185). However, these important policy values are not without significant competing policy considerations in the circumstances of this case and the kind of commercial transaction at issue here. If a creditor's action against a guarantor accrues wholly and immediately at the point of the first default in payment — the six-year limitations period for any action against the guarantor clocking in at that point — then creditors would be left with no alternative or incentive but to accelerate the entire debt or risk losing all opportunity to pursue the guaranty. The prudent commercial practice rule would keep in place incentives to the creditor to proceed with some flexibility in working with the debtor based on stipulated contractual provisions. In that dynamic, for example, parties might be able to continue to work toward amicable and fair resolutions between themselves rather than immediately drawing litigation swords and marching off to a courthouse.

Finally, Wickwire presents an alternative basis for affirmance. He claims that a notice requirement in the guaranty was a condition precedent to the enforcement of the guaranty. The guarantor's bargained-for right to notice is not without significant practical and legal effect. However, the trial court correctly found that the parties did not intend the notice provision contained in this guaranty to serve as a condition precedent and, therefore, that feature of this case does not preclude Marine from enforcing the guaranty (Barhydt v Ellis, 45 N.Y. 107). Barhydt involved a guaranty which, like the one at issue here, included inconsistent provisions regarding the effects of a failure to give notice. The Court in Barhydt reconciled the provisions by classifying the notice provision as a positive condition, not a condition precedent to liability. As a positive condition, it might mitigate a creditor's claim by the amount of damages resulting from the alleged failure to notify. Inasmuch as we are reversing the order of the Appellate Division and denying Wickwire's motion on summary judgment for dismissal on Statute of Limitations grounds, we also remit the matter to Supreme Court to determine the issue of the positive condition of notice.

Accordingly, the order of the Appellate Division should be reversed, with costs, and defendant Wickwire's motion to dismiss Marine Midland's answer or for summary judgment on its cross claim denied.

Chief Judge KAYE and Judges SIMONS, TITONE and SMITH concur; Judge HANCOCK, JR., taking no part.

Order reversed, etc.


Summaries of

Phoenix Corp v. Campcore, Inc.

Court of Appeals of the State of New York
Mar 30, 1993
81 N.Y.2d 138 (N.Y. 1993)

holding that each failure to make an installment payment gives rise to a separate cause of action

Summary of this case from Israel v. Chabra

noting that the guaranty at issue contained a thirty-day notice requirement as well as a promise by the guarantor "to pay the same . . . without requiring protest or notice of nonpayment"

Summary of this case from Israel v. Chabra

following rule despite recognition that it could interfere with statutes' promotion of certainty

Summary of this case from Pierce v. Metrppolitan Life Insurance Company

stating that a cause of action accrues as to the entire indebtedness when the creditor chooses to exercise its acceleration option upon the debtor's default

Summary of this case from Orix Credit Alliance, Inc. v. Horten

discussing term that required "'full and prompt payment . . . when due'" of the principal obligor's "'indebtedness,'" and finding that guarantor "became explicitly and contractually liable only for sums which were due and payable" at the time of the default

Summary of this case from U.S. Bank NA v. Perlmutter (In re South Side House LLC)

discussing term that required “ ‘full and prompt payment ... when due’ ” of the principal obligor's “ ‘indebtedness,’ ” and finding that guarantor “became explicitly and contractually liable only for sums which were due and payable” at the time of the default

Summary of this case from U.S. Bank National Ass'n ex rel. J.P. Morgan Chase Commercial Mortgage Securities Trust 2007-LDP11 v. Perlmutter (In re South Side House, LLC)

In Phoenix Acquisition Corp. v Campcore, Inc. (81 N.Y.2d 138), we added illumination that helps to support the correct rationale and result in the portion of the dispute we are here discussing.

Summary of this case from Vigilant Ins v. Housing Auth

In Phoenix, while the guaranty provided that the creditor, there a bank, would notify the guarantor of default in payment of any installment of principal or interest, it also provided that "`[i]f any default shall be made in the payment of the above indebtedness, the [guarantor] hereby agrees to pay the same to the extent above provided without requiring protest or notice of nonpayment to the [guarantor]'" (81 N.Y.2d, supra, at 141).

Summary of this case from Clurman v. Bronfman

In Phoenix, the court reversed the award of summary judgment to the creditor and remitted for determination of whether the condition of notice to the guarantor was a condition precedent, or a "positive condition... that could mitigate a creditor's claim by the amount of damages resulting from the alleged failure to notify" (id. at 144).

Summary of this case from GONZALEZ v. SUPPORTING STAFF ASS'N OF COLL OF PHY

In Phoenix Acquisition Corp. v. Campcore, Inc. (81 N.Y.2d 138, 141), the Court of Appeals found that where there was a default on a promissory note which provided for payment by installments, like payment of monthly rent, "[t]he Statute of Limitations began to run only for that discrete obligation and amount."

Summary of this case from 78/79 York Associates v. Rand

In Phoenix Acquisition Corporation v. Campcore, Inc., 81 N.Y.2d 138, 596 N.Y.S.2d 752, 612 N.E.2d 1219 [1993], the Court of Appeals found that where there was a default on a promissory note which provided for payment by installments, like payment of monthly rent, "[t]he statute of limitations began to run only for that discrete obligation and amount."

Summary of this case from 78/79 York Associates v. Rand
Case details for

Phoenix Corp v. Campcore, Inc.

Case Details

Full title:PHOENIX ACQUISITION CORPORATION et al., Plaintiffs, v. CAMPCORE, INC., et…

Court:Court of Appeals of the State of New York

Date published: Mar 30, 1993

Citations

81 N.Y.2d 138 (N.Y. 1993)
596 N.Y.S.2d 752
612 N.E.2d 1219

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