OPINION
This is a suit on a guaranty agreement. The guarantors, Charles M. Friday and Gary R. Woodall, appeal from a summary judgment entered against them.
Friday and Woodall were sued by Grant Plaza Huntsville Associates, appellee, on a guaranty of payment of a lease contract for Seven Elves Corporation, which they owned. Shortly after filing suit, appellee filed a motion for summary judgment on the guarantees.
Appellants filed a response, which included affidavits of Woodall and Friday, alleging fraud in the inducement, and an affidavit of their attorney contesting the attorney fees requested by Appellee. The trial court entered an interlocutory summary judgment as to appellants’ liability and the amount of damages, and later held a nonju-ry trial on attorney’s fees. Appellants contest the entry of the summary judgment, claiming that material fact issues existed concerning their affirmative defense of fraud in the inducement.
The appellee’s affidavit sets forth clear and positive statements showing that appellants had executed the guaranty agreement and that the payments guaranteed in the agreement had not been made. Thus, to avoid an entry of summary judgment against them, appellants had to present summary judgment evidence showing that a fact issue existed upon their affirmative defense.
Clark v. Dedina,
For summary judgment evidence to be considered by the trial or reviewing court, it must meet the same standards as evidence admitted in a trial.
Clark v. Dedina,
Appellants’ affidavits do not contain any allegations of trickery or deception which are in addition to the representations allegedly made to the effect that appellants were never to be liable personally on the guarantees. Therefore, they do not meet the standard set out in
Broaddus
and the progeny of cases following its holding.
Id; see also, Bailey v. Gulfway National Bank of Corpus Christi,
We hold that appellants failed to allege facts which, if proved, would establish fraud in the inducement and thereby render the facts admissible. Because the evidence produced by appellants on their affirmative defense is inadmissible, they failed to meet their burden of showing the existence of a fact issue. Appellants’ points of error are overruled, and the judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
