OPINION
Opinion By
Appellants Kenneth Barnes and Thomas Lindsey guaranteed two loans from the Small Business Administration (SBA) to Antonio’s Incorporated. Appellee LPP Mortgage, Ltd. purchased one of the two loans and filed suit against Barnes and Lindsey to collect on the guaranties. Barnes and Lindsey appeal the trial court’s grant of summary judgment to LPP. We affirm the trial court’s judgment.
Background
The SBA made a disaster loan in the principal amount of $60,500 to Antonio’s Incorporated after a tornado damaged a building owned by the corporation. Barnes and Lindsey, who had formed Antonio’s to operate a restaurant, guaranteed the loan. The loan was evidenced by a note dated April 26, 1997, payable in monthly installments of principal and interest beginning in September, 1997, with payment of the balance in ten years. Antonio’s did not make any payments on the loan after January of 1999.
LPP purchased the note in 2000, and filed suit in 2009 to collect on appellees’ personal guaranties. Appellants moved for summary judgment on the ground that the statute of limitations had run. LPP filed a cross-motion for summary judgment. The trial court denied both motions, but ruled that a six-year statute of limitations applied. LPP filed a second motion for summary judgment, seeking a reduced amount of damages based on the trial court’s limitations ruling. Appellants reurged their motion for summary judgment. The trial court granted LPP’s motion and denied appellants’ motion. This appeal followed.
Standard of Review
The standard of review for summary judgments is well-settled. A party moving for summary judgment must con
Disoussion
In two issues, appellants contend the trial court erred in granting summary judgment for LPP and denying appellants’ summary judgment motion. In the alternative, appellants contend that there are genuine issues of material fact to be resolved on appellants’ limitations and laches defenses and on the amount of damages and attorney’s fees recoverable. We first address whether LPP’s claims were barred by limitations.
A. Applicable statute of limitations
The trial court determined that “the six-year statute of limitations found in 28 USCS § 2415(a) applies to the underlying SBA loan to Antonio’s, Inc.” Appellants argue the six-year statute of limitations set forth in 28 U.S.C. § 2415(a) is limited by its terms to suits “brought by the United States or an officer or agency thereof.” Because LPP now owns the loan, not the SBA, appellants argue the statute of limitations in section 2415(a) does not apply.
The issue of whether purchasers of notes from a federal agency may obtain the benefit of the federal statute of limitations was considered by the Texas Supreme Court in Jackson v. Thweatt,
The Jackson rule has been applied to allow assignees of the SBA to obtain the benefit of federal statutes of limitations. See Stephens v. LPP Mortgage, Ltd.,
B. Accrual
We next determine when the six-year limitations period began to run on appellants’ guaranties. Appellants argue the limitations period began to run on August 8, 2000, so that LPP’s suit in 2009 was barred even if the six-year limitations period is applied. Appellants contend the entire indebtedness became due on August 8, 2000, because Antonio’s made an assignment for benefit of its creditors on that date. Because of this assignment, appellants argue, the entire indebtedness “immediately became due” under the terms of the note, and the statute of limitations began to run. We disagree.
Appellants rely on a provision in the SBA note: “The indebtedness shall immediately become due and payable, without notice or demand, ... upon the making by the undersigned of an assignment for the benefit of creditors.” Citing Lochte v. Blum,
Appellee argues assignments for the benefit of creditors are governed by section 23.08 of the Texas Business and Commerce Code, and several of the statutory requirements, such as recording the assignment in the county records and filing a bond, were not met here. See Tex. Bus. & Com.Code Ann. § 23.08 (West 2009) (form and content of assignment for benefit of creditors). Appellants counter that common law assignments for the benefit of
Recent case law on either statutory or common law assignments for the benefit of creditors is scarce. At a minimum, however, we believe there should be evidence of an agreement under which a debtor assigns its property to an assignee for distribution to particular creditors. See, e.g., Tex. Bus. & Com.Code Ann. § 23.02 (West 2009) (debtor may assign real and personal estate to assignee for distribution to each consenting creditor in proportion to each consenting creditor’s claim); Weider v. Maddox,
Here, appellants cite to a letter and an e-mail between representatives of Elk Horn Bank & Trust Co. and the SB A regarding a proposed sale of the real estate and assets of Antonio’s and the planned application of the proceeds from the sale, as well as a letter from the bank to Lindsey advising that Antonio’s assets had been liquidated. They also rely on a settlement statement from the closing of the sale of real property by Antonio’s to two individuals not otherwise identified in the record. The settlement statement lists a $5000 “payoff of second mortgage loan” under “reductions in amount due to seller,” which appellants identify as the loan at issue here. None of these documents evidences Antonio’s agreement to assign its real and personal property to an assignee in trust for benefit of its creditors. See Johnson v. Structured Asset Servs., LLC,
Appellants next argue that there is at least a fact issue on accrual of the statute of limitations because no demand was made on them until after suit was filed. They rely on Wiman v. Tomaszewicz,
Where demand is a prerequisite to a right of action, the injured party must make the demand within a reasonable time after it may lawfully be made. [Citations omitted.] The reasonableness of the delay is normally a fact question, but in the absence of mitigating circumstances, the law will ordinarily consider a reasonable time as being coincident with the running of the statute, and an action will be barred if a demand is not made within that period.
Id. Appellants argue there was unreasonable delay as a matter of law because LPP
In Wiman, we considered when the statute of limitations began to run against the guarantor.
Appellants contend demand on them should have been made within a reasonable time after the “assignment for benefit of creditors” in 2000. They argue there is at least a fact question on whether the demand on the guaranties was made in a “reasonable time” after it “could have been made.”
Appellants concede the “general rule” that when recovery is sought on an obligation payable in installments, a separate cause of action accrues for each missed payment and a separate limitations period runs against each installment from the time it becomes due. See, e.g., F.D. Stella Products Co. v. Scott,
C. Amount due and attorney’s fees
Appellants contend in the alternative that there was no foundation for LPP’s calculation of the amount due under the note. Appellants further contend there are fact issues regarding whether LPP made an unreasonable demand for attorney’s fees. We disagree.
Appellants contend the affidavit of Lisa Callendar on which LPP relies for evidence of the amounts due under the guaranties is wholly conclusory and lacked foundation because she was “merely a custodian of records” and not an expert or a competent witness, and did not testify how the amounts due under the note were calculated. Callendar testified she was the litigation counsel for CLMG Corp., the current loan servicer for LPP, and had become familiar with LPP’s mortgage file on the loan and guaranties. She attached true and correct copies of documents from the file to her affidavit, testifying that they were business records of CLMG. She testified to the amounts due under the note as of December 31, 2009. Although she did not testify regarding her method of calculation, the face of the note reflects the amount of the monthly payments, the total indebtedness, and the interest rate on the note. Because Callendar provided the underlying facts to support her testimony, her affidavit is not conclusory. Cf. Brown v. Brown,
Appellants next contend that LPP made an excessive demand and therefore is not entitled to attorney’s fees. Appellants argue LPP demanded for the full amount due under the note three months after appellants pleaded their limitations defense. They contend LPP should have known that at least half of its claim was barred by limitations at the time of its demand. A creditor who makes an excessive demand on a debtor is not entitled to attorney’s fees for litigation required to recover the debt. Findlay v. Cave,
Next, appellants contend there is a fact issue on the amount of attorney’s fees recoverable, because demand was not made on them until after the lawsuit was filed, and attorney’s fees were not segregated to exclude any amounts incurred before the demand was made. Further, appellants contend the summary judgment evidence showed fees incurred by CLMG Corp., not by LPP, and argue the attorney’s fees affidavit is wholly conclusory. Appellants did not object to the failure to segregate in the trial court. See Arthur J. Gallagher & Co. v. Dieterich,
Conclusion
Judgment for LPP was proper as a matter of law. We overrule Barnes and Lindsey’s issues and affirm the trial court’s judgment.
Notes
. Jackson was decided under 12 U.S.C. § 1821(d)(14), a six-year limitations period enacted in 1989 as part of the Financial Institutions Reform, Recovery, and Enforcement Act (FIRREA). Jackson,
. In Wiman, as here, the terms of the guaranty agreements permitted LPP to sue the guarantors without first bringing suit against Antonio's. See Wiman,
. Appellants cite this rule as a quotation from Cowart v. Russell,
