OPINION
This is an appeal from the trial court’s granting summary judgment for appellee, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC), finding appellants severally liable on personal guaranties made with regard to a promissory note. In their first point of error, appellants contend the FDIC had no legal right to hold them to the guaranties because of a material alteration in the underlying contract. The second point of error asserts that the presence of a material fact question precluded the trial court from granting appellee’s motion for summary judgment. We will affirm the judgment of the trial court.
The underlying promissory note and the guaranties were executed on October 3,1986. The promissory note was for an amount of $2,646,000. The individual appellants each signed a separate guaranty. Each guaranty contained identical wording, differing only in the portion of the entire note each guaranty would cover. For example, appellant Eeds signed a guaranty whose maximum amount was $220,000; Hetherington’s guaranty listed its maximum amount at $110,000; Sonne signed a guaranty for a maximum of $82,600; and Dueease guaranteed a maximum amount *791 of $38,500. However, the note underlying the guaranties on which the FDIC sued appellants had been altered by hand to show an amount of $2,940,000. The change is initialed, but the record does not describe the persons making the change or the initials.
Both parties filed motions for summary judgment, and appellants assert as point of error one the trial court’s error in denying their motion for summary judgment. Where both parties file motions for summary judgment, each party must carry its burden in establishing its right to judgment as a matter of law, and neither can prevail because of the failure of the other to discharge its burden.
Beck & Masten Pontiac GMC, Inc. v. Harris County Appraisal Dist.,
We address first one aspect of the material alteration argument on which appellants place great emphasis. Appellants argue that no contract came into existence in the first place because there was no meeting of the minds, an essential prerequisite to any contract.
Adams v. Petrade Int’l, Inc.,
The same language appeared in another case that appellants cite for their position that the contract never came into existence.
Southwest Savings Ass’n v. Dunagan,
We find appellants’ argument fails on its merits for another reason as well. Appellants are correct in citing the general rule that a material alteration in the contract will discharge the guarantor.
McKnight v. Virginia Mirror Co.,
Appellants cite a case out of this court that they assert supports their contention that a material alteration occurred in that underlying contract thereby releasing them from their respective guaranties.
Lenamond v. North Shore Supply Co.,
*793
We find this case does not support appellants’ argument. Indeed,
Lenamond
supports the FDIC’s position that all of the guaranty’s provisions must be read together to give effect to every provision. Other language in the contract or guaranty further supports our finding that appellants consented to an increase in the debtor’s total indebtedness. For example, the guaranty states in paragraph five that it is a continuing guaranty. A continuing guaranty is one which contemplates a future course of dealing between the lender and debtor and is intended to apply to other liabilities as they accrue.
Blount v. Westinghouse Credit Corp.,
Appellants likewise do not persuade us with their argument that they would not have signed a guaranty in connection with a note for this extra $300,000 because such increase would have increased the chance the debtor would not be able to pay and that they as the guarantors would then be held liable. This argument rings hollow in the face of paragraph seven of the guaranty that states, “Lender need not resort to Debtor or any other person or proceed against collateral before pursuing his rights against a Guarantor.” This language plainly places each appellant at risk for the maximum amount of his individual guaranty despite the debtor’s ability to pay. The guarantors thus knew they were liable for their individual amounts from the moment they signed the guaranty.
Although point of error one fails on the merits, we also find that appellants failed to carry their burden in proving their right to summary judgment as a matter of law. Because material alteration in the contract is an affirmative defense, the burden is on the guarantor to show that a material alteration occurred.
Federal Deposit Ins. Corp. v. Attayi,
The court of civil appeals opinion,
Hughes v. Straus-Frank Co.,
does include language finding that the changes at issue constituted “such material alterations as will affect the release of sureties and guarantors, regardless of whether the alterations increase the burden upon the obligors.” However, in affirming the lower court decision, the commission of appeals did not assess the material alteration issue in the same way; rather, the commission’s opinion turns on the fact that the guarantor validly revoked his guaranty, and the court found that a later note could not be within the original guaranty because no language appeared in the contract that would bind the guarantor after he revoked his guaranty.
Straus-Frank Co. v. Hughes,
Point of error two complains of error in the trial court’s granting appellee’s motion for summary judgment. In reviewing this point of error, we determine whether appel-lee satisfied its burden of proving its right to judgment as a matter of law, and we review the appellants’ response to the summary judgment in a light most favorable to them. Appellants assert specifically that they raised a material fact question that made summary judgment inappropriate. To recover on the promissory note, the FDIC had first to prove ownership of the note. The FDIC attached an affidavit with the promissory note in which Joe T. Vickery, authorized agent of the FDIC, asserted that the note was a true and correct copy of the note in question and that the note was properly endorsed to the FDIC and was in their possession. Such evidence establishes prima facie evidence of ownership of the note.
Zarges v. Bevan,
The judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
DRAUGHN, J., concurs in the results only.
