Appellee Wells Fargo Bank, N.A. sued appellant Gerald Godoy to collect a deficiency on a debt that Godoy guaranteed. Godoy moved for summary judgment on grounds that Wells Fargo's claims were
At issue in this appeal is whether a general waiver of "any and all rights or defenses" that might be available to a guarantor is sufficient to waive application of a shortened statute of limitations applicable to deficiency actions. Because the Texas Supreme Court has determined that such a waiver applies to all defenses under the applicable statute, we affirm.
BACKGROUND
Wachovia Bank loaned $250,000 to GDG Mortgage, Inc. in 2005. The loan was evidenced by a promissory note and secured by a construction deed of trust on certain real property. Godoy guaranteed the promissory note.
GDG defaulted on the note, and Wells Fargo-Wachovia's successor by merger and holder of the note-foreclosed on the real property securing the note on November 1, 2011. Wells Fargo purchased the real property at the foreclosure sale with a bid that was insufficient to satisfy the outstanding balance on the promissory note, leaving a deficiency.
Wells Fargo sued Godoy to collect the deficiency on June 24, 2015-more than three years after the foreclosure sale. Godoy moved for summary judgment on the sole ground that Wells Fargo's claim was barred by a shortened two-year statute of limitations applicable to suits to collect deficiencies from guarantors. See
Wells Fargo then moved for final summary judgment on its deficiency claim seeking judgment for the outstanding balance as well as attorney's fees and costs. The trial court granted Wells Fargo's motion for summary judgment on its deficiency claim against Godoy and signed a final judgment.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
A party moving for summary judgment must conclusively prove all elements of its cause of action or defense as a matter of law. Tex. R. Civ. P. 166a(c) ; Browning v. Prostok ,
ANALYSIS
Godoy contends the trial court erred in denying his motion for summary judgment and in granting Wells Fargo's motions for summary judgment because a statute of limitations defense cannot be waived unless
Wells Fargo points to Moayedi ,
I. Scope of Waiver
Property Code section 51.003 -entitled "Deficiency Judgment"-provides that, if a deficiency remains after a nonjudicial foreclosure sale, any action to recover the deficiency must be brought within two years of the foreclosure sale. See
Moayedi addressed whether a party waived the statutory right of offset under section 51.003(c) by agreeing to a general waiver of defenses in a guaranty agreement. See Moayedi ,
Guarantor further agrees that this Guaranty shall not be discharged, impaired or affected by ... any defense (other than the full payment of the indebtedness hereby guaranteed in accordance with the terms hereof) that the Guarantor may or might have as to Guarantor's respective undertakings, liabilities and obligations hereunder, each and every such defense being hereby waived by the undersigned Guarantor.
The supreme court first examined section 51.003 and determined that "the statute provides an offset that otherwise would not be available. In other words, it provides a defense."
Rejecting Moayedi's argument that the general waiver in the guaranty agreement was not clear and specific, the court determined that a party's waiver of "any," "each," and "every" defense in a guaranty agreement "results in a broad waiver of all possible defenses." See
Just because the waiver is all encompassing does not mean that it is unclear or vague. To waive all possible defenses seems to very clearly indicate what defenses are included: all of them.
At issue here is whether, in light of Moayedi , Godoy waived the shortened two-year statute of limitations for deficiency actions contained within section 51.003(a).
The guaranty agreement at issue here provided in relevant part:
GUARANTOR'S WAIVERS. ...
... Guarantor also waives any and all rights or defenses arising by reason of (A) any "one action" or "anti-deficiency" law or any other law which may prevent Lender from bringing any action, including a claim for deficiency, against Guarantor, before or after Lender's commencement or completion of anyforeclosure action, either judicially or by exercise of a power of sale; ... (E) any statute of limitations, if at any time any action or suit brought by Lender against Guarantor is commenced, there is outstanding indebtedness of Borrower to Lender which is not barred by any applicable statute of limitations; or (F) any defenses given to guarantors at law or in equity other than actual payment and performance of the indebtedness....
...
GUARANTOR'S UNDERSTANDING WITH RESPECT TO WAIVERS. Guarantor warrants and agrees that each of the waivers set forth above is made with Guarantor's full knowledge of its significance and consequences and that, under the circumstances, the waivers are reasonable and not contrary to public policy or law. If any such waiver is determined to be contrary to any applicable law or public policy, such waiver shall be effective only to the extent permitted by law or public policy.
Wells Fargo contends that a party's broad waiver of all defenses in a guaranty agreement necessarily includes a defense based on any statute of limitations. It contends that, at the very least, the waivers at issue here are sufficient under Moayedi to waive the two-year statute of limitations contained in section 51.003(a). See
We need not decide the correctness of Wells Fargo's general assertion that a party may waive any statute of limitations via the language contained in the guaranty agreement. We focus instead on the narrower and dispositive issue presented by this case and agree that the waiver at issue was sufficient to waive the shortened two-year statute of limitations contained in section 51.003(a).
Moayedi explicitly held that guaranty agreement language waiving "any," "each," or "every" defense "results in a broad waiver of all possible defenses " under section 51.003. See Moayedi ,
A statute of limitations also is an affirmative defense that a party may plead. See, e.g. , Epps v. Fowler ,
Godoy contends on appeal that permitting a waiver of section 51.003(a) 's two-year statute of limitations contravenes public policy because a waiver of a statute of limitations is permissible only when the waiver is specific and limited to a reasonable time period. See Duncan v. Lisenby ,
We need not address Godoy's contention that the waiver provision to which he agreed is void. This is so because he did not affirmatively plead this "matter constituting an avoidance or affirmative defense" in his answer as required under Texas Rule of Civil Procedure 94.
"An allegation that a provision in a contract is void, unenforceable, or unconscionable is a matter in the nature of avoidance and must be affirmatively pleaded." 950 Corbindale, L.P. v. Kotts Capital Holdings Ltd. P'ship ,
This panel is bound by 950 Corbindale, L.P. 's holding with respect to the necessity of affirmatively pleading under Rule 94 that a contract provision is void, unenforceable, or unconscionable. See Chase Home Finance, L.L.C. v. Cal W. Reconveyance Corp. ,
The dissent overreaches when it invokes Phillips v. Phillips ,
In its first amended petition, Wells Fargo pleaded as follows: "Wells Fargo will further show that Defendant waived any limitations defense he may have had, as set forth in the Commercial Guaranty."
Under the Commercial Guaranty, Godoy waived "any and all rights or defenses arising by reason of ... any ... 'anti-deficiency' law ... which may prevent Lender from bringing any action, including a claim for deficiency, against Guarantor...."
Separately, Godoy waived "any statute of limitations, if at any time any action or suit brought by Lender against Guarantor is commenced, there is outstanding indebtedness of Borrower to Lender which is not barred by any applicable statute of limitations...."
Godoy agreed in the Commercial Guaranty that, "under the circumstances, the waivers are reasonable and not contrary to public policy or law." He further agreed
It is a significant stretch for the dissent to assume that a guaranty agreement containing a provision waiving all anti-deficiency defenses under section 51.003 is an illegal contract-and a still further stretch for the dissent to assume that such an agreement is "plainly illegal" or "illegal on its face" so as to dispense with Rule 94 pleading requirements. See Grace Interest, LLC ,
The difficulty of indulging the dissent's assumption is compounded because the contract provides that any limitations waiver "shall be effective only to the extent permitted by law or public policy." It follows that a narrower waiver of section 51.003(a) 's shortened limitations period does not demonstrate facial illegality of the guaranty agreement even if the agreement's separate waiver of other potentially applicable statutes of limitations is too open-ended. See Gupta v. E. Idaho Tumor Inst., Inc. ,
In the absence of section 51.003 's shortened two-year statute of limitations, the general four-year statute of limitations on suits to collect debts would apply. See
No waiver occurred here because (1) Wells Fargo raised the pleading defect in its response to Godoy's motion for new trial, in which he again asserted the same public policy arguments with respect to limitations; and (2) the trial court affirmatively recited that it "heard and considered Defendant's Motion for New Trial [and] Wells Fargo's response" in its order denying the motion. See Harvey v. Kindred Healthcare Operating, Inc. ,
CONCLUSION
Having concluded that Godoy waived a defense based on section 51.003(a) 's two-year statute of limitations, we further conclude that the trial court properly denied Godoy's motion for summary judgment premised solely on that defense. The trial court also acted correctly in granting Wells Fargo's motion for partial summary judgment on Godoy's two-year statute of limitations defense. Godoy has not challenged the trial court's grant of final summary judgment on any other grounds. Accordingly, we overrule Godoy's sole issue.
Having overruled Godoy's sole issue, we affirm the trial court's judgment.
( Frost, C.J., dissenting).
Kem Thompson Frost, Chief Justice, dissenting.
More than seven decades ago in Simpson v. McDonald , the Supreme Court of Texas announced that an agreement made in advance to completely waive the statute of limitations is void as against Texas public policy.
The majority also concludes that Godoy waived his void-as-against-public-policy defense by failing to plead it.
This court should apply the Simpson precedent and reverse the trial court's summary judgment enforcing a waiver of the statute of limitations that violates public policy. Because the court fails to do so, I respectfully dissent.
The Moayedi court did not abrogate the Simpson precedent.
In the guaranty agreement, Godoy waived "any and all rights or defenses arising by reason of (A) any "one action" or "anti-deficiency" law ... (E) any statute of limitations, if at any time any action or suit brought by Lender against Guarantor is commenced, there is outstanding indebtedness of Borrower to Lender which is not barred by any applicable statute of limitations...." The majority concludes that Godoy completely waived
Moayedi does not govern today's case. In Moayedi , a guarantor sought to avoid liability by asking the court to apply an offset under Texas Property Code section 51.003(c) ; no party raised any issue regarding the statute of limitations.
Although no party in Moayedi asserted that the provision could not be waived, before addressing whether the general-waiver provision waived the right of offset, the Moayedi court addressed whether a guarantor may waive " section 51.003."
A careful read of Moayedi reveals that the supreme court's conclusion in dicta that a party may waive " section 51.003" does not address whether a party's waiver of the statute of limitations in section 51.003(a) is void as against public policy.
First, the cases with which the Moayedi court agreed- LaSalle Bank National Association v. Sleutel
Though the Segal court did conclude that an agreement waiving the offset right in 51.003(c) was not void as against public policy, in doing so the court noted that the appellants had cited no cases holding that such a waiver is void as against public policy, and the Segal court could not find any such cases.
In addition, the Moayedi court stated that it had not yet addressed whether section 15.003 could be waived.
Furthermore, the Moayedi court's statements are not necessary to the court's holding, and the court did not speak after considering whether an agreement to completely waive the statute of limitations under section 15.003(a) is void as against public policy.
A higher court's holdings and judicial dicta remain binding precedent on lower courts until the higher court sees fit to reconsider them, even if later cases have raised doubts about their continuing vitality.
The Simpson precedent reflects the majority position nationwide.
The Moayedi court did not abrogate the Simpson precedent. Instead of yielding to the tug of the obiter dicta in Moayedi , this court should anchor its holding on the supreme court's decades-old precedent in Simpson.
Grace Interest does not abrogate or conflict with Simpson.
The majority relies upon this court's opinion in Grace Interest, LLC v. Wallis State Bank as support for its conclusion that "[t]he guaranty agreement is not illegal on its face because ... its express waiver of all section 51.003 defenses 'does not violate public policy.' "
The majority presents a bouquet of obiter dicta from section 51.003(c) cases and not a single holding from a statute-of-limitations case or one interpreting section 51.003(a). The majority's repetition of obiter dicta indicating that a waiver of section 51.003(a) does not violate public policy neither gives precedential force to the obiter dicta nor removes our obligation to follow the binding precedent in Simpson .
Even if the Grace Interest court's statements were holdings, the Grace Interest court did not purport to construe, apply, or distinguish Simpson , so this panel would be bound to follow Simpson rather than Grace Interest.
Godoy did not have to plead his void-as-against-public-policy defense.
In addition to concluding that the waiver of section 51.003(a) in the guaranty agreement does not violate public policy, the majority concludes that Godoy waived his void-as-against-public-policy defense by failing to plead it.
A defendant's assertion that part of an agreement is void because it violates public policy ordinarily would be a matter constituting an avoidance or affirmative defense that the defendant would have to plead in the answer.
The majority says that this dissent "invokes Phillips v. Phillips for the propositions that no affirmative pleading was necessary because (1) Wells Fargo pleaded an agreement that is illegal on its face and thereby anticipated Godoy's challenge to the guaranty agreement's waiver provision; and (2) courts will not enforce a plainly illegal contract even if the parties do not object."
In Phillips , the defendant asserted that a liquidated-damages provision in a partnership agreement was an unenforceable penalty; the defendant did not assert that the entire agreement was void, unenforceable, illegal, or against public policy.
The majority also indicates that the Facial Exception applies only if the defense would void the entire agreement.
The majority also indicates that even if the waiver of the statute of limitations in the guaranty agreement violated public policy, the void-as-against-public-policy defense does not appear on the face of the petition because, according to the majority, the guaranty agreement would not be void in whole or in part based on its savings clause.
Under the guaranty agreement's plain text, the presence of the savings clause does not preclude the void-as-against-public-policy defense from appearing on the face of the petition or from being established as a matter of law. From the outset, the complete waiver of the statute of limitations has violated public policy and made part of the guaranty agreement (subsection (E)) void, notwithstanding Godoy's agreement that the waiver would be ineffective
Instead of applying the high-court precedent in Phillips and recognizing that today's case falls within the Facial Exception, the majority relies upon this court's opinion in 950 Corbindale, L.P. as support for the notion that Godoy was required to affirmatively plead the Public Policy Argument in his answer.
Because Godoy did not have to plead the Public Policy Argument, he did not waive this defense by failing to plead it.
Wells Fargo tried the void-as-against-public-policy defense by consent.
Even if the Public Policy Argument did not fall within the Facial Exception and the pleading rules required Godoy to plead the Public Policy Argument in his answer, his failure to do so would waive the defense only if, before the trial court rendered judgment, Wells Fargo objected to Godoy's assertion of this defense in the absence of any pleading to support it.
The majority concludes that Wells Fargo did not try the void-as-against-public-policy defense by consent because Wells Fargo raised Godoy's failure to plead this defense in its response to Godoy's motion
In addition, even if Wells Fargo had complained in its motion-for-new-trial response that Godoy was asserting this defense in the summary-judgment proceedings without any pleading to support the defense, this complaint would have been untimely and incompetent to avoid trial by consent, given that Wells Fargo filed this response after the trial court granted summary judgment, rejected Godoy's Public Policy Argument, and rendered a final judgment.
The majority also relies upon 950 Corbindale, L.P. as support for its conclusion that by failing to plead the Public Policy Argument, Godoy waived the defense even without an objection from Wells Fargo.
The majority errs in concluding that the provision in the guaranty agreement completely waiving the statute of limitations in section 51.003(a) does not violate public policy. Established precedent from the Supreme Court of Texas says that it does. Godoy did not have to plead the Public Policy Argument in his answer because the Facial Exception relieved him of complying with that requirement. Even if a pleading were required, Wells Fargo tried the issue by consent because Wells Fargo did not object before rendition of judgment that Godoy was asserting this defense in the absence of any pleading to support it. Godoy did not waive this defense, and he preserved error in the trial court by raising the defense in his summary-judgment response.
In the course of explaining its rejection of the Public Policy Argument, the majority creates a lack of uniformity in this court's decisions.
Notes
The dissent heads down a rabbit trail by discussing whether an affirmative pleading is required when illegality is claimed only as to one provision of a contract-as opposed to a different circumstance in which the entire contract is claimed to be illegal. Any such distinction is irrelevant here because the guaranty agreement at issue is not illegal on its face-in whole or in part. The guaranty agreement is not illegal on its face because (1) its express waiver of all section 51.003 defenses "does not violate public policy," see Grace Interest, LLC ,
See Simpson v. McDonald ,
See Segal v. Emmes Capital, L.L.C.,
See ante at 51-54, 55, n.1.
See Moayedi v. Interstate 35/Chisam Road, L.P. ,
See Grace Interest, LLC v. Wallis State Bank ,
See Moayedi ,
See Lubbock Cty., Texas v. Trammel's Lubbock Bail Bonds,
See ante at 53-56.
See Phillips v. Phillips ,
See Via Net v. TIG Ins. Co. ,
In this opinion, the terms "complete waiver" or "completely waive" refer to a waiver under which no statute of limitations applies to the covered claims at all, thus allowing the claimant to sue at any time in the future, as opposed to a partial waiver extending the statute of limitations for a specific and reasonable period of time. See Am. Alloy Steel, Inc. ,
See ante at 51-54. In concluding that Godoy waived Property Code section 51.003(a) under subsection (A) of this provision, the majority fails to follow binding precedent under which this court must examine and consider the entire guaranty agreement in an effort to harmonize and give effect to all its provisions so that none are rendered meaningless. See Exxon Corp. v. Emerald Oil & Gas Co. ,
Ante at 53 (quoting Moayedi v. Interstate 35/Chisam Road, L.P. ,
See ante at 51-54, 55, n.1. The majority also concludes that Godoy waived his void-as-against-public-policy argument and that the majority need not address Godoy's argument that the waiver provision is void. See ante at 53-56. Yet, the majority also determines that "[t]he guaranty agreement is not illegal on its face because ... its express waiver of all section 51.003 defenses 'does not violate public policy.' " Ante at 55, n.1. The majority also cites Grace Interest, LLC v. Wallis State Bank for the proposition that a provision under which a guarantor waives all defenses based upon section 51.003 is not void as against public policy. See ante at 53-54.
See Moayedi ,
See Moayedi ,
See
See
See
See
See
See
See LaSalle ,
See
See
See
See Segal ,
See
See
See
See
Compare Moayedi ,
See Moayedi ,
See Moayedi ,
See Simpson ,
See Moayedi ,
See
See
See State v. PR Investments ,
See Bosse v. Oklahoma , --- U.S. ----,
Weiner v. Wasson ,
See
See Moayedi ,
See Haggerty v. Williams ,
See
See
See
Ante at 55, n.1.
See ante at 53-54.
See Segal,
See LaSalle ,
See Moayedi v. Interstate 35/Chisam Road, L.P. ,
See Grace Interest, LLC ,
See
See Edwards,
See Metro. Stevedore Co. v. Rambo ,
See
See Glassman v. Goodfriend ,
See Lubbock Cnty., Texas ,
See ante at 53-56.
See
See Tex. R. Civ. P. 94 ; Phillips v. Phillips ,
See Phillips ,
See Simpson ,
See
See Phillips ,
Ante at 54.
See Phillips ,
See
See
See
See
See
See
See
See ante at 54-55.
See
See Phillips ,
See
See ante at 55, n.1.
See Simpson ,
See 950 Corbindale, L.P. v. Kotts Capital Holdings Ltd. P'ship ,
See
See
See
See Glassman ,
See Phillips ,
See Tex. R. Civ. P. 166a(c) ("Issues not expressly presented to the trial court by written motion, answer or other response shall not be considered on appeal as grounds for reversal.") (emphasis added); Via Net v. TIG Ins. Co. ,
See Via Net ,
See ante at 56.
In its response to the motion for new trial, Wells Fargo asserted: "Godoy has not pleaded that the contractual waiver at issue was unenforceable or void as against public policy. See Godoy's Original Answer, on file with this Honorable Court. Nor did Godoy raise this issue in his summary-judgment response. Thus, Godoy has waived this defense." In fact, Godoy did raise the Public Policy Argument in his summary-judgment response.
See Roark ,
See Roark ,
See ante at 54; 950 Corbindale, L.P. ,
See 950 Corbindale, L.P. ,
See Edwards ,
See 950 Corbindale, L.P., at 196.
See
Compare ante at 51-54, 55, n.1, with Duncan ,
