Louis Joliet Bank, the defendant in this diversity action to honor a guarantee, appeals from judgment on the pleadings (see Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(c)) in favor of the plaintiff, A.D.E. (Auto Dealers Exchange), which is in the business of conducting automobile auctions. The appeal requires us to consider the Illinois law of guarantee, and a procedural issue.
*396 According to the facts alleged in the complaint and admitted in the answer, an auto dealer named Mark Lee, doing business as Joliet Motors, had a checking account with the bank, as did his father-in-law, Howard Klugman, an auto dealer also using the name Joliet Motors. Presumably they had formerly been in business together but this is unclear from the pleadings. In any event, the bank decided not to honor checks drawn on Klugman’s account. But (presumably at Lee’s request) it wrote the following letter to A.D.E.:
To whom it may concern:
This is to verify that checks issued on the account of Mark Lee, Acct. # 156— 736-2, will be paid. Since Mark is no longer going under the name of Joliet Motors at your auction his checks will be honored.
The letter was signed by a loan officer of the bank. Lee bought cars at A.D.E.’s auction and gave A.D.E. two checks, for $33,450 and $31,585 respectively. The bank dishonored the checks because Lee did not have enough money in his account to pay them. The upshot was this lawsuit, in which A.D.E. charges that the bank, by the letter quoted above, guaranteed that Lee’s checks would be paid, and that A.D.E. accepted the guarantee by accepting the checks. See
Union Carbide Corp. v. Katz,
1. The district court was right to give judgment on the pleadings only if they made it a certainty that the bank was liable to A.D.E. for the checks the bank had dishonored. See
Flora v. Home Federal Savings & Loan Ass’n,
If the letter had stopped after the first sentence, we would agree with the district court that it constituted a guarantee that Lee’s checks would be paid; the first sentence is unequivocal. But like any contract, the letter must be interpreted as a whole. See id., § 7.10, at pp. 492-93. The second sentence, read in light of the fact that the bank had decided not to honor Klugman’s cheeks, could have been intended and understood as an assurance that the bank’s dispute with Klugman did not extend to Lee and that the bank would therefore continue to honor his checks — provided, of course, that the usual conditions for honoring a check, such as that the drawer have sufficient funds in his account to cover it, were satisfied. So read, the second sentence is not a guarantee at all; and when the first sentence is reread in light of the second, it can be understood not as a guarantee either but as a telescoped paraphrase of the second, amplifying sentence: an assurance just that Klugman’s difficulties would not cause the bank to dishonor Lee’s checks. The fact that the letter puts no ceiling on the amount of the bank’s “guarantee” is some indication that it was not intended to be a guarantee; it would have been imprudent for the bank to have undertaken a completely open-ended commitment to honor Lee’s checks, though such a commitment might not have violated the bank’s lending limits. See Ill.Rev.Stat. 1983, ch. 17, 11 342(4).
We do not hold that what the letter, read as a whole, meant was that Lee’s checks would be honored provided his account had sufficient funds to pay them— only that it
may
have meant that. But especially since “under well-established Illinois law, a guarantor is to be accorded the benefit of any doubt which may arise from the language of the contract,”
Telegraph Savings & Loan Ass’n v. Guaranty Bank & Trust Co.,
2. The bank further argues that even if it was a guarantor, A.D.E. was not harmed in the full amount of the two checks; it collected part of the amount from Lee directly, and is not entitled to a double recovery. A.D.E. replies that payment is an affirmative defense, and that since the bank raised no affirmative defenses in its answer (other than that the complaint failed to state a claim), it cannot argue part payment. This issue may become important on remand, so we will discuss it.
We do not know exactly what was in the answer. The answer was mislaid in the district court and is not part of the record on appeal. The district court notified the bank of the loss and invited it to submit a duplicate of the answer, but the bank inexplicably failed to do this. We therefore shall assume for purposes of this appeal that the answer raised no affirmative defense of payment.
The bank argues that, even so, A.D.E. must prove damages from breach of the alleged guaranty, and those damages will be less if A.D.E. in fact received part payment from the debtor. We disagree, and hold that part payment is an affirmative defense. See
Cormier v. Oceanic Contractors, Inc.,
Reversed and Remanded.
