LAFARGE BUILDING MATERIALS, INC. v. THOMPSON
S13G1711
Supreme Court of Georgia
SEPTEMBER 22, 2014
763 SE2d 444
NAHMIAS, Justice.
On Oсtober 23, 2007, Larry B. Thompson executed a continuing guaranty in favor of Lafarge Building Materials, Inc., as part of an application for credit submitted by his company, Elite Dwellings, LLC. During 2008, Elite Dwеllings ordered building materials under the account established based on the application but then failed to pay Lafarge for the materials. In May 2009, Lafarge sued Elite Dwellings and Thompson, alleging that they were jointly and severally liable for the debt.1 Lafarge and Thompson eventually filed cross-motions for summary judgment, and in October 2012, the trial court ruled that the guаranty satisfied the Statute of Frauds and entered summary judgment against Elite Dwellings and Thompson jointly and severally for $105,147.
Elite Dwellings did not appeal the judgment, but Thompson did. A divided Court of Appeаls reversed, holding that the guaranty was unenforceable because it did not sufficiently identify the name of the principal debtor and thus failed to satisfy the Statute of Frauds.2 See Thompson v. LaFarge Building Materials, Inc., 323 Ga. App. 276,
Did the Court of Appeals err in holding that the guaranty agreement at issue here did not identify the principal dеbtor with sufficient specificity to satisfy the Statute of Frauds? Compare Capital Color Printing, Inc. v. Ahern, 291 Ga. App. 101 (1) (661 SE2d 578) (2008), with LaFarge Building Materials, Inc. v. Pratt, 307 Ga. App. 767 (1) (706 SE2d 131) (2011).
We conclude that the Court of Appeals did err, and we therefore reverse its judgment.
1. The application for credit and continuing guaranty at issue comprise two pages, with the guaranty set off in a box at the bottom of the second page. In the first section on the first page of the application, Elite Dwellings, LLC is listed as the “Name of Company/Individual,” with Larry B. Thompson listed as the owner. Three trade references are then listed, as is the Bank of Americа on the line for bank references. The application is signed on the second page by Elite Dwellings‘s office manager “on behalf of the Applicant.” The “General Prоvisions” section on that page provides for Lafarge to investigate the credit history of the “Applicant,” saying:
This application and the information contained herеin is a request for the extension of credit. The Applicant authorizes Lafarge to obtain a written or oral credit report from any credit reporting agency. The Applicant further authorizes any bank or commercial business with whom the Applicant is doing or has done any type of business to give any and all necessary information to Lafarge whiсh will assist in the credit investigation. The Applicant further authorizes Lafarge to reinvestigate the Applicant‘s credit status from time to time as Lafarge deems necessary. Lafаrge reserves the right to limit or terminate any extension of credit to Applicant.
In the continuing guaranty box, Thompson signed the line for “Signature of Individual Guarantor.” The guaranty incorporates the application and describes the party whose debt is guaranteed as the “Applicant,” saying:
In consideration of the credit extended to the Appliсant identified on page 1 of this Application for Credit, the entirety of said applications [sic] being incorporated herein
by reference thereto, . . . the undersigned guarantor (jointly and severally if more than one), unconditionally guaranty [sic] the payment when due of all indebtedness now due or which may become due by Applicant to LAFARGE . . . .
2. Under Geоrgia‘s Statute of Frauds, a personal guaranty of a debt is not enforceable unless it is in writing, is signed by the party being charged as the guarantor, and identifies the debt, the principal debtоr, the promisor, and the promisee. See John Deere Co. v. Haralson, 278 Ga. 192, 193 (599 SE2d 164) (2004). See also
The Court of Appeals‘s majority opinion relied on Pratt and McDonald v. Ferguson Enterprises, Inc., 274 Ga. App. 526 (618 SE2d 45) (2005), to conclude that the principal debtor is not identified because both thе guaranty and the incorporated application “fail[] to define ‘Applicant.’ ” Thompson, 323 Ga. App. at 280. Those two cases are, however, factually distinguishable from this one.
In Pratt, the Court of Apрeals held that a guaranty using language almost identical to the language used in the guaranty in question here, including referring to the principal debtor as “Applicant,” failed to identify the principal debtor. See 307 Ga. App. at 770. Unlike the guaranty in this case, however, the guaranty in Pratt did not incorporate the application. See id. That is a critical difference. Because the party applying for credit was named оnly in the application and the application was not incorporated into the guaranty, the name of the applicant in that case was not designated anywhere in the guaranty.
In McDonald, the Court of Appeals held that a guaranty failed to satisfy the Statute of Frauds because the guaranty identified the principal debtor as the “applicant” or “entity,” but neither the guaranty nor the application identified the party that was the “applicant” or “entity,” and the purported principal debtor was mentioned only in the billing information, making it unclear what party was the “applicant.” See 274 Ga. App. at 526-527.3 By contrast, in this case Elite Dwellings is listed on the first page of the application on the blank for
The dissenting opinion below distinguished Pratt and McDonald and relied instead on Capital Color. See Thompson, 323 Ga. App. at 281 (Boggs, J., dissenting). In Capital Color, the guaranty identified the principal debtor as the “customer” and the “purchaser,” and the Court of Appeals held that the identity of the “customer” and “purchaser” was clear from the incorporated application. See 291 Ga. App. at 103, 106. The entity found to be the principal debtor was listed in the “customer” box on the first рage of the application, and while the application did not label any entity as the “purchaser,” the court looked to the “usual and common signification” of “customer” and “purchaser” to conclude that they referred to the same entity. Id. at 106-107. As the court explained, “no ambiguity exists where, examining the contract as a whole and affоrding the words used therein their plain and ordinary meaning, the contract is ‘capable of only one reasonable interpretation.‘” Id. at 106 (citation omitted).
It is similarly appropriate to define the term used to identify the principal debtor in the guaranty here — “Applicant” — using its usual and common signification. To understand a contract, we must read and understand the words used in the contract. And unless the contract indicates otherwise, “we generally accept that contractual terms carry their ordinary meanings.” Archer Western Contractors, Ltd. v. Estate of Mack Pitts, 292 Ga. 219, 224 (735 SE2d 772) (2012) (citing
Judgment reversed. All the Justices concur.
DECIDED SEPTEMBER 22, 2014.
Cohen, Cooper, Estep & Allen, Scott A. Schweber, Evans, Scholz, Williams & Warncke, John A. Williams, Garland, Samuel & Loeb, Robin N. Loeb, for appellant.
Dupree & Kimbrough, Hylton B. Dupree, Jr., Blake R. Carl, for appellee.
