Appellant-defendant is the guarantor of a note held by appelleeplaintiff. After the note went into default, the collateral which secured it was sold by appellee. Appellee then initiated the instant deficiency action against appellant. Appellant answered and asserted that the collateral had been sold “in a commercially unreasonable manner. ...” (Emphasis supplied.) After discovery, appellee moved for summary judgment. The trial court granted appellee’s motion and appellant appeals.
OCGA § 11-9-504 (3) provides, in relevant part, that “every aspect of the [post-default] disposition [of the collateral] including the *676 method, manner, time, place, and terms must be commercially reasonable.” In his answer, appellant challenged only the “manner” in which the post-default disposition of the collateral had been made. In its motion for summary judgment, appellee introduced uncontradicted evidence that the post-default disposition of the collateral had been made in a commercially reasonable “manner.” On appeal, appellant urges only that it was error to grant appellee’s motion because a genuine issue of material fact remains as to the commercial reasonableness of the “terms” of the post-default disposition of the collateral.
Since OCGA § 11-9-504 (3) itself recognizes that the “manner” and the “terms” are separate and distinct aspects of the commercial reasonableness of a post-default disposition of the collateral, it follows that the commercial reasonableness of each of those aspects is likewise a separate and distinct issue. See
Emmons v. Burkett,
If, unlike the instant case, commercial reasonableness of the terms is specifically contested by the defendant-debtor, “ ‘[t]he burden is on the secured party to prove the value of the collateral at the time of repossession and that such value does not equal the debt. . . .’ ”
Farmers Bank v. Hubbard,
Judgment affirmed.
