Lead Opinion
ACTION
This is аn appeal by the Defendant, First Bank of Aberdeen (N.A.), hereinafter denominated the Bank, from a judgment of the trial court which held the Bank liable to Plaintiff, Western Petroleum Co., hereinafter denominated Western, for $17,000 plus interest based on a “letter of credit” issued by the Bank to Western. We reverse.
PARTIES
Western is a Minnesota corporation authorizеd to do business in South Dakota. Its business consists of the wholesale distribution of petroleum products. The Bank is a national bank located in Aberdeen, South Dakota. Third-party Defendant, Gordon Diedtrich, is the sole stockholder of East Side 1 Stop, Inc., which is a retail gasoline service station in Aberdeen. East Side 1 Stop, Inc., was incorporated in March 1978 and all of its stock was purchased by Diedtrich in July 1980. Another third-party Defendant, Keith Norman, is Diedtrich’s son-in-law and helps operate East Side 1 Stop, Inc. Both Diedtrich and East Side 1 Stop, Inc., are customers of the Bank.
FACTS
Western initially sold petroleum to Diedt-rich, Norman, and East Side 1 Stop, Inc., on a cash-on-delivery basis. The delivery person was to procure cash or a cashier’s check before delivering the product; however, on several occasions, a personal check
This letter is to advise you that First Bank (N.A.) Aberdeen will honor any check or checks payable to you uр to $17,000.00 for purchase of petroleum products issued by Gordon Diedrich [sic] and Keith Norman doing business as East Side and West Side One Stop of Aberdeen, South Dakota.
Upon receipt of this letter, Western’s credit manager contacted Banker Wood and expressed his dissatisfaction with the form of the letter and requested a change in wording. Banker Wood then wrote a second letter addressed to Western, similar to the first, but which stated in part:
This letter is to advise you that First Bank Aberdeen will guarantee any invoice or invoices up to $17,000.00 for purchase of petroleum products from you by Gordon Diedrich [sic] or Keith Norman doing business as East Side and West Side One Stop of Aberdeen, South Dakota.
Thеreafter, Western began delivering shipments on an open account basis. When four shipments made in September and October of 1982 were not paid, Western confronted East Side 1 Stop about payment. After East Side failed to pay, Western approached the Bank about honoring the guaranty and making payment, but the Bank refused.
DECISION
I.
MAY A BANK’S LETTER WHICH GUARANTEES THE PAYMENT OF A CUSTOMER’S OBLIGATION BE CONSTRUED AS A LETTER OF CREDIT?
The trial court held that the letter from the Bank to Western was a letter of credit within the purview of SDCL ch. 57A-5 and that it was also a guarantee to Western to pay open account invoices up to $17,000. Western’s pleadings, however, did not assert that the letter was a letter of credit and when Western proposed a Conclusion of Law to that effeсt, the Bank objected thereto. Western failed to amend its Complaint by motion and the Bank contends that the trial court erred because the issue was not raised in the pleadings nor tried by express or implied consent of the parties.
SDCL 15-6-15(b) allows issues not raised by the pleadings to be tried by the express or implied consent of the parties. This Court, in American Property Services v. Barringer,
Thе test for allowing an adjudication of an issue under ... SDCL 15-6-15(b) tried by implied consent is whether the opposing party will be prejudiced by the implied amendment, i.e., did he have a fair opportunity to litigate the issue, and could he have offered any additional evidence if the case had been tried on the different issue. (Footnote omitted.)
The Bank assеrts that it did not have a fair opportunity to litigate the issue because it was not raised in the pleadings, not addressed in the trial briefs, and no evidence was presented on the issue. The Bank argues that it was not put on notice of the letter of credit issue because Western’s Complaint consistently referred to it as a guaranty. The Bank cites Gross v. Gross,
Western, in contravention, argues that it was not required to allege that the obligation sued on was a letter of credit but need only file a pleading containing “a short and plain statement of the claim showing that the pleader is entitled to relief, and ... a demand for judgment_” SDCL 15 — 6— 8(a). Western maintains that it is obvious that the letter is a letter of credit and since it was attached to the petition and referred to as a letter of credit at Banker Wood’s deposition and at a pretrial conference, the Bank cannot now claim to be taken by surprise. Western also сlaims that it is hard to imagine any additional evidence the Bank could have presented on the letter of credit issue, in light of counsel’s and the court’s examination of the Bank’s president, Thompson.' Western thus is contending that the trial court’s ruling is not in error because the Bank had notice of the issue and therefore a fair opportunity to litigate thе same and could not have offered any additional evideneé on that issue.
In Nelson v. Stadel,
We now address the trial court’s holding that the letter in question was a letter of credit and also а letter of guaranty. The Bank contends that the determination of the letter as a guaranty within SDCL 56-1-1 or as a letter of credit within SDCL 57A-5-103(l)(a) must be made in light of the intention of the parties. The Bank points to Western’s request for a guaranty, the letter’s reference to a guaranty, and Western’s demand for payment from the Bank only after the principal debtors failеd to pay. The Bank also asserts that its failure to follow normal procedures for issuing a letter of credit supports its contention that the parties intended the Bank to be only secondarily liable and that the letter was therefore a letter of guaranty.
Western advocates that the intentions of the parties are irrelevant becаuse the letter falls within the definition of a letter of credit set forth in SDCL 57A-5-103(l)(a) and that the statute therefore controls. It is asserted that SDCL ch. 57A-5 does not require any “particular form of phrasing” or that the beneficiary must first look for payment from the issuer of the letter.
The universally recognized distinction between a letter of credit and a guaranty is that the former creates a primary liability while the latter creates a secondary liability. See Prudential Ins. Co. of America v. Marquette Nat’l Bank of Minneapolis,
an engagement by a bank or other person made at the request of a customer*777 ... that the issuer will honor drafts or other demands for payment upon compliance with the conditions specified in the credit. A credit may be either revocable or irrevocable. The engagement may be either an agreement to honor or a statement that the bank or other person is authorized to honor.
“[N]o particular form of phrasing is required for a credit. A credit must be in writing and signed by the issuer....” SDCL 57A-5-104(l).
This Court, in interpreting the predecessor of SDCL 56-1-1, held:
[A guaranty] is a сontract on the part of one person which is collateral to a primary or principal obligation on the part of another.... However, because the term “guaranty” or “guarantee” is not always employed in commerce in an unequivocal sense, the employment of that term is not conclusive of an intent to assume a mere collateral obligation, and it is permissible to read a writing in the light of all of the surrounding circumstances to determine whether an original and independent obligation, rather than a mere guaranty was intended.
Miners & Merchants Savings Bank v. Comer,
II.
CAN A NATIONAL BANK BE ES-TOPPED FROM ASSERTING ITS LACK OF AUTHORITY TO GUARANTEE DEBTS OF ITS CUSTOMER?
We first observe that national banks derive their рower from 12 U.S.C.A. § 24 (1945). This statute does not grant the authority to guarantee debts of another. It is therefore generally held that “a national bank cannot lend its credit by guar
The trial court found that the letter in question allowed Diedtrich and Norman to continue in business longer than they could have without it; that they deposited funds with the Bank and made payments on loans to the Bank during this time; that the Bank earned money on the deposited funds; and that none of the above would have occurred if the Bank did not issue the letter. The trial court thus concluded, in Conclusion of Law XXXVI, that the Bank received material benefits by virtue of issuing the letter to Western and was therefore estopped from raising the defense of ultra vires. We disagree.
The Bank cites extensive authority for the proposition that an ultra vires act of a national bank is totally void and unenforceable even under the doctrine of equitable estoppel. The Bank does concede, however, the validity of the two exceptions noted above. The trial court’s ruling appears to be that thе guaranty was not issued for the sole benefit of the debtor. Rather, the trial court’s finding is that the Bank had an interest in the obligation guaranteed and derived benefits therefrom and thus fell within one of the two defined exceptions. The Bank contends that the facts of this case do not support the decision below. Bank asserts that it did not own or have an interest in the petroleum products supplied to Diedtrich and thus does not fall within the stated exception.
[T]he fact that a national bank is creditor of a debtor company, and interested in its securing money or merchandise, does not make the bank’s guaranty binding, nor would such guaranty be valid because plaintiff extended credit because of it.
7 Michie, Banks and Banking § 163, at 281 (1980) (footnote omitted). The Bank also argues, in the alternative, that enforcement of the ultra vires guaranty is against public policy because these guaranties are liabilities that are not reflected in the Bank’s accounting system and the general public is therefore deceived about its financial stability.
Western counters that the trial court’s ruling is correct under the facts of this case and it cites respectable authority for enforcing a national bank’s ultra vires act when the bank had or received some interest, benefit or consideration from the act. Western contends that failing to enforce the guaranty would be tantamount to commercial piracy.
The trial cоurt found that the Bank had been benefited by the issuance of the letter because it allowed Diedtrich to continue to run his business and make deposits and loan repayments to the Bank. The Bank, it is clear, did not own or have a security interest in the petroleum products delivered on credit to Diedtrich because of this letter. We conclude thаt the facts of this case do not fall within the two exceptions to the general rule. Neither party has maintained that this debt was guaranteed in the ordinary course of banking.
When the letter [of guaranty] is not purchased, but is purely an aceomihodation, or simply a guaranty of the payment of an account to be created in the future, it is not binding on a national bank, for such an institution has no power to thus jeopardize its capital. Such transactions are not necessary to the exercise of powers granted to national banks, and are therefore withоut their charter powers, and invalid.
Thilmany v. Iowa Paper-Bag Co.,
Deeming the resolution of these two issues decides the four issues addressed in both briefs, we deem it unnecessary to treat the other two issues.
Reversed.
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting).
I dissent.
The trial court found the bank received material benefits by issuing the letter to Western. By keeping Diedriсh and Norman in business longer, the bank was able to collect more money on its loan to them. In addition, the bank earned interest on their deposits. This court reviews a trial court’s findings of fact under the “clearly erroneous” standard and overturns a trial court’s conclusions of law only when it has erred as a matter of law. Wefel v. Harold J. Westin & Associates, Inc.,
In my opinion, the bank was not performing an act of charity when this letter was written. They wanted to keep the parties in business so they could collect an apparent shaky loan. The trial court was not “clearly erroneous” nor was it wrong in applying estoppel. It was highly unequita-ble for the bank to repudiate the transaction and it should be held liable. See 10 Am.Jur.2d Banks § 300 (1963). As a matter of plain honesty, the bank should be held liable.
I am authorized to state that Chief Justice FOSHEIM joins in this dissent.
