delivered the opinion of the court:
This appeal arises out of a counterclaim for damages based on breach of contract filed by defendants, Tracy C. and Dorothy J. Mc-Junkins, in a foreclosure action instituted by plaintiff, Bartlett Bank after it had accelerated the maturity of a promissory note executed by the McJunkins and secured by a mortgage on the McJunkins’ home. The bank voluntarily dismissed its foreclosure suit and the jury subsequently found in favor of the McJunkins on the counterclaim and awarded damages in the amount of $60,000. The post-trial judge granted the bank’s motion in arrest of judgment and conditionally granted the bank’s motions for a judgment notwithstanding the verdict and for a new trial. The McJunkins appealed. During the pendency of this appeal, Tracy McJunkins died and Dorothy was substituted as his personal representative. We reverse in part, affirm in part and remand.
In 1979, the McJunkins began a series of loan transactions with Bartlett Bank which were evidenced by promissory notes secured by a junior mortgage on their home located at 550 Ashland Avenue in Hoffman Estates, Illinois. The McJunkins bought their house in 1960 for $24,000 and had financed the purchase in part through a mortgage from Bell Federal Savings and Loan. Tracy McJunkins was a painter/decorator, and his wife worked as a secretary. Periodically from 1979 to 1982 the McJunkins renegotiated their loan obligations with Bartlett Bank. As the old notes matured, they were either paid off or renewed. On February 10, 1982, the McJunkins executed a six-month promissory note in the amount of $33,252, which was secured by the junior mortgage on their home. The promissory note was payable in monthly installments of $650 with final payment due on August 19, 1982. A provision in the promissory note stated that upon default the bank at its option could accelerate the maturity of the note and declare the remaining balance due and owing. One event of default listed in the note was when the “Bank shall reasonably consider itself to be insecure.”
Apparently, the McJunkins used the proceeds of the loan to acquire an interest in a company called Countryside Painting and Decorating, Inc. In 1980, Countryside began a loan relationship with Bartlett Bank that was evidenced by a series of promissory notes. On May 14, 1980, Tracy McJunkins, as secretary of Countryside, executed a written guaranty to the bank as security for Countryside’s right to receive credit to the extent of $44,625.63. Sometime in late 1981 or early 1982, Countryside ceased doing business and defaulted on its loans with the bank. Tracy McJunkins’ liability under the guaranty was subsequently litigated in a separate proceeding and, in a Rule 23 order, this court recently affirmed a judgment in the amount of $9,971.17 against Tracy McJunkins. Northwest Federal Savings & Loan Association v. Lewis (1986),
In a letter dated April 30, 1982, the bank informed the Mc-Junkins that it deemed itself insecure as to the promissory note executed by the McJunkins in 1982 and demanded payment in full within three days. The remaining balance on the note was $32,965.20. The McJunkins were not otherwise in default or behind in the monthly payments at the time the bank exercised its option to accelerate the maturity of the promissory note under the “insecurity” clause. When the McJunkins were unable to pay the amount deemed due, the bank instituted the instant foreclosure action against the McJunkins. Bell Federal Savings and Loan Association, the holder of the first mortgage on the McJunkins’ home, was joined as a defendant in the suit.
In their answer, the McJunkins asserted a two-count counterclaim against the Bartlett Bank. Count I alleged intentional infliction of mental distress, but was stricken with prejudice on the motion of the bank. Count II sounded in breach of contract. Subsequently, the bank voluntarily withdrew its foreclosure suit and the case proceeded to trial on count II of the McJunkins’ counterclaim. As amended, count II alleged that the Bartlett Bank “unlawfully breached its contract with [the McJunkins], namely the promissory note, by demanding payment in full prior to the due date of said note and by filing a complaint against the McJunkins in the nature of a mortgage foreclosure action.” The counterclaim sought compensatory and punitive damages for, among other things, “substantial costs, expenses, attorneys’ fees and other losses sustained by the McJunkins.” Bartlett Bank’s motion to strike was denied.
In its answer to count II of the counterclaim, the bank claimed as an affirmative defense that it accelerated the debt based on a good-faith belief that it was insecure pursuant to section 1 — 208 of the Uniform Commercial Code (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1985, ch. 26, par. 1— 208). The court struck this affirmative defense prior to trial and ordered the bank to refrain from filing further pleadings raising its good faith under the “insecurity” clause. In an order in limine, the court also excluded evidence concerning the McJunkins’ relationship to Countryside Painting and Tracy McJunkins’ guarantee of Countryside’s obligations with the bank.
At trial, before Judge Wexler, the McJunkins called as an adverse witness Earl H. Cromer, the chairman of the board of Bartlett Bank. Despite objections by the bank concerning Cromer’s lack of familiarity with the McJunkins’ loan, he was allowed to identify various documents pertaining to the McJunkins’ loan relationship with the bank. The McJunkins also presented the testimony of Steven Stark, an employee of Bell Federal Savings and Loan, who identified Bell Federal records purporting to show payments by the McJunkins on their mortgage with Bell Federal from 1979 through 1983. Tracy McJunkins testified about his loan relationship with Bell Federal and Bartlett Bank, stating that he had been current in his payments to both institutions. He also testified that after Bartlett Bank instituted its foreclosure action he sought to borrow money from Bartlett Bank, Bell Federal and Harris Bank to pay off the promissory note held by the Bartlett Bank, but he was unable to obtain a loan. He also stated that he paid his attorney $2,500 to represent him in the foreclosure action. During his testimony, a photograph of the Mc-Junkins’ home was admitted into evidence over the objection of the bank.
Dorothy McJunkins testified as to the payments made to Bartlett Bank and Bell Federal. She also testified about various doctor visits and medical bills to treat the physical and emotional stress allegedly caused by the bank’s actions. At the close of the McJunkins’ case, the trial court granted the bank’s motion for a directed verdict on the issue of punitive damages.
The only testimony presented by the bank was that of Peter F. Geraci, an attorney concentrating in bankruptcy and personal injury cases, who testified that he would have charged a maximum of $500 to represent the McJunkins in the foreclosure action. In various conferences with the trial judge out of hearing of the jury, counsel for the bank indicated a desire to call as witnesses Robert Ullbricht and Gordon Ramsey, who were loan officers with Bartlett Bank. The bank’s counsel indicated that they would testify as to the reasons behind the bank’s decision to call in the McJunkins’ loan. However, when the trial judge reiterated his order excluding evidence of the bank’s good faith and other transactions involving Countryside Painting, the bank never called Ullbricht and Ramsey to testify.
At the close of all the evidence, the trial judge denied Bartlett Bank’s motion for a directed verdict. The judge then instructed the jury. Over the bank’s objection, an instruction on proximate cause was given. The court refused to give the bank’s proposed instructions on the applicability and definition of good faith under section 1 — 208 of the Uniform Commercial Code. The jury returned a verdict of $60,000 in favor of the McJunkins and against the bank. Judge Wexler subsequently retired and the post-trial matters of the cause were assigned to Judge Barth. On May 20, 1985, the post-trial judge granted the bank’s motion in arrest of judgment and conditionally granted its motions for a judgment notwithstanding the verdict and for a new trial.
In granting the bank’s motion in arrest of judgment, Judge Barth, the post-trial judge, found the Uniform Commercial Code was applicable and stated:
“My reason for entering a motion in arrest for judgment is that the complaint does fail to contain a necessary allegation of lack of good faith on the part of the creditor here, the Bank, and that this was an essential allegation necessary for the [McJunkins] here ***.”
His finding reversed a pretrial ruling by Judge Wexler that the Mc-Junkins were under no obligation to plead and prove the bank’s lack of good faith in this matter since the Uniform Commercial Code was inapplicable.
The disparate decisions by the two judges in the trial court reflects the confusion in the law regarding the applicability and impact of the Uniform Commercial Code in general and section 1 — 208 of the Code in particular in real estate transactions. Section 1 — 208 provides:
“A term providing that one party or his successor in interest may accelerate payment or performance or require collateral or additional collateral ‘at will’ or ‘when he deems himself insecure’ or in words of similar import shall be construed to mean that he shall have power to do so only if he in good faith believes that the prospect of payment or performance is impaired. The burden of establishing lack of good faith is on the party against whom the power has been exercised.”
Section 1 — 208 is found with article I of the Code, which contains general provisions applicable to all transactions coming with the scope of the Uniform Commercial Code. 1 Hawkland, Uniform Commercial Code Series sec. 1 — 208:1, at 205 (1982).
The scope of the Code is broad, but it does not purport to usurp the whole field of law as to commercial transactions. (Theo. Hamm Brewing Co. v. First Trust & Savings Bank (1968),
Nevertheless, there is a strong tendency among courts in Illinois and other jurisdictions to apply the Code directly or by analogy to non-Code transactions involving real property. (Lake Bluff Heating & Air Conditioning Supply Co. v. Harris Trust & Savings Bank (1983),
In the context of this case, however, we need not decide whether section 1 — 208 applies directly or by analogy to a transaction involving a promissory note secured by a real property mortgage because the parties incorporated the Code into their agreement. The promissory note states in the paragraph entitled “Remedies” that “[i]f a default shall occur, *** Bank may exercise any of the remedies of a secured party under the Uniform Commercial Code.” By incorporating the Code’s remedies, the parties also incorporated the Code’s limitations on the exercise of those remedies, including the good-faith limitation on acceleration under an “insecurity” clause contained in section 1 — 208. Even where the Code is otherwise inapplicable, the parties may incorporate the Code into their agreement and that agreement will be given effect. Southeast First National Bank v. LeGrace Co. (Fla. App. 1978),
Notwithstanding the above, the McJunkins rely on language in Hildner v. Fox (1974),
The bank, not surprisingly, asserts that section 1 — 208 is dispositive. However, even if section 1 — 208 applies, it does not necessarily follow that we must affirm the post-trial judgments here.
Where section 1 — 208 applies, the debtor has the burden of proving that the bank’s decision to accelerate on the basis of insecurity was not made in good faith. (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1985, ch. 26, par. 1— 208.) Although Illinois has not decided the question, the majority of courts from other jurisdictions have held that good faith under section 1 — 208 is tested by subjective standards in accordance with the Code’s general definition of good faith as honesty in fact. (Annot.,
We need not decide which test of good faith under section 1 — 208 should be adopted in Illinois because, in the case at bar, the test to be applied to the bank’s acceleration is discernable from the contract itself. Here, the promissory note states that in order to accelerate due to insecurity, the bank must “reasonably” consider itself to be insecure. The use of the term “reasonably” indicated a requirement of some rational basis for the bank’s determination of insecurity (Black’s Law Dictionary 1138 (5th ed. 1979), other than its mere subjective belief that there has been some impairment of its prospect of payment or performance. Although parties may not completely abrogate the obligation of good faith under the Code, we see no reason why the parties’ agreement to incorporate a higher standard of good faith should not be given effect. The bank argues that its motion in arrest of judgment was properly granted because Illinois law, presumably section 1 — 208, required that McJunkins allege that the bank failed to act in good faith and they did not make that allegation. A motion in arrest of judgment may test the legal sufficiency of the pleadings. (23 Ill. L. & Prac. Judgments sec. 163 (1979).) Only matters which appeared or should have appeared on the face of the record can be urged. (In re Munzer (1975),
Even though section 1 — 208 applies, it does not necessarily follow that lack of good faith is an essential allegation in the Mc-Junkins’ cause of action. Section 1 — 208 places the burden of establishing lack of good faith on the party against whom the power has been exercised (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1985, ch. 26, par. 1 — 208), but the Code defines the “burden of establishing” in terms of the burden of persuading the trier of fact at trial that the existence of the fact is more probable than its nonexistence. (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1985, ch. 26, par. 1 — 201(8).) The bank has not cited any case applying section 1— 208 to hold that a cause of action was deficient because it failed to allege lack of good faith on the part of the creditor. Where the question was considered in another jurisdiction, it was held that the burden of proof rule declared by section 1 — 208 applies only at trial after all the evidence is before the court. McKay v. Farmers’ & Stockmen’s Bank (1978),
Moreover, even if lack of good faith constituted an essential allegation in the McJunkins’ cause of action, the decision to grant the bank’s motion in arrest of judgment must be reversed under the common law doctrine of aider by verdict. Under that doctrine, “a verdict is deemed to cure not only all formal and purely technical defects in a complaint, but also any defect in failing to allege, or in alleging imperfectly, any substantial facts which are essential to a right of action, provided the issue joined is such as necessarily requires, on the trial, proof of facts so omitted or imperfectly stated and if such facts can be implied from the allegations of the complaint by fair and reasonable intendment.” Gustafson v. Consumers Sales Agency, Inc. (1953),
Here, count II of the McJunkins’ counterclaim survived repeated attempts to have it stricken for failure to state a cause of action for breach of contract. An adequate complaint based on breach of contract must allege the evidence of a contract, plaintiff’s performance of all contractual conditions required of him, facts of defendant’s breach and the existence of damages as a consequence thereof. (Martin-Trigona v. Bloomington Federal Savings & Loan Association (1981),
Having determined that the unconditional ruling by the post-trial judge with respect to the motion in arrest of judgment was erroneous, it is our duty to review the post-trial conditional rulings. Duffek v. Vanderhei (1980),
In contrast to the motion in arrest of judgment, a motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict tests the sufficiency of evidence. (See American College of Surgeons v. Lumbermens Mutual Casualty Co. (1986),
In this case, the judgment n.o.v. was entered based on the finding that the McJunkins had failed to prove an essential element of their cause of action, namely lack of good faith. Even though evidence of good faith was excluded upon the motion of the McJunkins, the fact remains that the absence of evidence on this issue was due to the court’s order in limine excluding evidence of good faith. By entering judgment n.o.v. on the ground that the McJunkins had failed to prove the allegedly essential element of lack of good faith, the court was in effect penalizing them for failing to introduce evidence that had been excluded by previous order of the court. This was error. Judgment n.o.v. is not a proper procedural device for correcting errors in the exclusion of evidence. Gundich v. Emerson-Comstock Co. (1960),
Turning to the conditional grant of a new trial, we recognize that decision to grant a new trial is a matter within the trial court’s broad discretion, the exercise of which will not be disturbed absent clear abuse of that discretion. (McCracken v. Westinghouse Air Brake Co. (1981),
This case turns on whether the bank’s exercise of its contractual discretion to accelerate under the “insecurity” clause constituted breach of contract. Although the McJunkins emphasized the fact that the bank called the loan prior to the date when final payment was due, the contract clearly allows the bank to accelerate the maturity of the note in the event the bank reasonably considered itself to be insecure. Because the promissory note in question gives the bank contractual discretion to accelerate in the event of insecurity, a requirement that the bank exercise its discretion in good faith was implied into the agreement by the parties’ incorporation of the Code into their agreement. Therefore, a determination as to whether the bank breached its agreement with the McJunkins by accelerating under the “insecurity” clause necessarily required an examination into the question of whether the bank exercised its contractual discretion in good faith. Evidence on this issue should have been admitted. Its exclusion prejudiced the bank and precluded the jury from deciding the central issue of the case — whether the bank’s acceleration of the McJunkins’ note constituted a breach of contract.
Because no evidence on the issue of good faith was introduced at trial and because good faith is a question of fact requiring consideration of all circumstances attending the transaction (Annot.,
As to the excluded evidence of the McJunkins relationship to Countryside and Tracy’s guaranty, Illinois courts have recognized that evidence of other transactions involving parties to contract litigation may be properly received where the other transactions were not too remote in time, relate analogously to the same general subject matter, and tend to show the background of the transaction involved and the motives of the parties in their subsequent conduct. See Beatrice Foods Co. v. Gallagher (1964),
In this case, Tracy McJunkins’ guaranty of some of Countryside’s corporate obligations to the bank met the above standard and evidence regarding this other transaction should have been admitted. The bank’s loan to the McJunkins was related to Tracy’s guaranty of Countryside’s obligations to the bank in that the Mc-Junkins used the loan to acquire an interest in Countryside. And even though the guaranty was executed prior to the note in question here, the guaranty occurred during the McJunkins’ long-standing loan relationship with the bank. A relationship primarily consisting of a single debt that was renewed periodically until the bank accelerated it following Countryside’s default on its obligations to the bank. Thus, the guaranty and the note which was accelerated were related and not too remote in time.
Clearly, evidence regarding the McJunkins’ relationship to Countryside was pertinent to the background of the transaction in question here. (See Sears v. First Federal Savings & Loan Association (1971) ,
In an acceleration case such as this, the jury was also entitled to consider the financial ability of the McJunkins to repay the loan in determining whether the bank breached its contract by accelerating. The adverse impact on the McJunkins’ financial well-being caused by either their relationship with the defunct Countryside or by Tracy’s guaranty was clearly relevant to this inquiry. (See Custom Panel Systems, Inc. v. Bank of Hampton (1977),
In view of our decision, we need not consider the bank’s other arguments that jury instructions and the admission into evidence of a photograph of the McJunkins’ home justified a new trial. For the reasons stated above, the judgment of the court below is reversed in part, affirmed in part and remanded for a new trial.
Affirmed in part, reversed in part and remanded.
QUINLAN, P.J., and BUCKLEY, J., concur.
