IMO the Liquidation of Integrity Insurance Company
Case Date: 12/12/1996
Docket No: SYLLABUS
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(This syllabus is not part of the opinion of the Court. It has been prepared by the Office of the Clerk for
the convenience of the reader. It has been neither reviewed nor approved by the Supreme Court. Please
note that, in the interests of brevity, portions of any opinion may not have been summarized).
Argued January 29, 1996 -- Reargued September 24, 1996 -- Decided December 12, 1996
GARIBALDI, J., writing for a majority of the Court.
Integrity Insurance Company (Integrity or surety), became insolvent and filed for liquidation. The
Commissioner of Insurance (Commissioner) was appointed the Liquidator. Integrity had previously issued
surety bonds to Credit Lyonnais, guaranteeing the payment of the promissory notes of investors in certain
limited partnerships. The promissory notes, which called for installment payments, were assigned to Credit
Lyonnais as collateral for substantial loans that it made to the partnerships. The debtors had begun to
default on their installment payments before Integrity filed for liquidation.
The relevant statute governing the liquidation of an insolvent insurer permits creditors to file claims
that are due against the insurance company. Credit Lyonnais filed claims for the full amounts of the
promissory notes even though not all of the unpaid installments on the notes were actually due and owing on
the date the surety bonds terminated. That Credit Lyonnais may not file a claim with the Liquidator for
post-termination losses is undisputed. Credit Lyonnais, however, claims that it faced an uninsurable risk at
the time of Integrity's default and could not purchase alternative insurance. Therefore, it faced a loss in the
full amount of the bond. The issue, then, is whether Credit Lyonnais is entitled to file a claim for the full
amount of the surety bond because Integrity's liquidation led to damages equal to the whole value of the
bond.
The Liquidator sought summary judgment denying all proofs of claim to the extent that they made
claims for installment payments that were due after the date of liquidation. The trial court granted the
motions, finding that Credit Lyonnais and other similarly-situated creditors were entitled to the return of
unearned premiums only.
The Appellate Division reversed. It held that the claim of Credit Lyonnais was valid because under
the terms of the bond, Integrity's obligation to pay the outstanding bond amount arose when it issued the
bond. In addition, the Appellate Division held that the Liquidator was judicially estopped from challenging
this interpretation. The Supreme Court granted Integrity's petition for certification.
HELD: Credit Lyonnais is entitled to file a claim for an amount equal to each bond's face value less the
sum of payments already made by Integrity and the debtor and assets recoverable from the debtor.
1. The Legislature has enacted a statutory design to govern insolvent insurance companies, N.J.S.A. 17:30C-1
to -31. An order of liquidation effectively ends the insurer's business, and a court is required to set a specific
date for the termination of all policies. After liquidation, any losses suffered by policyholders should be
disallowed. Those with claims against the insurer can submit them and collect from the marshalled assets
pursuant to N.J.S.A. 17:30C-20. The statute, however, does not provide much guidance concerning which
claims should be allowed in liquidation, nor does it define the amount of any claim that may be filed due to
the premature termination of an insurance policy. Those answers must be found in the common law. 2. The common-law rule is that where an insurance company is adjudged insolvent, the claims existing on behalf of its policyholders have been held to be in the nature of damages for a breach of contract. Contract
damages are designed to put the injured in as good a position as he would have been if performance had
been rendered as promised. (p. 8)
3. For most policyholders, damages should be the difference between the cost of a new policy and the
present value of the premiums yet to be paid on the policy. If, however, the defaults of the debtors before
the date of termination indicated such a likelihood of future default that replacement insurance was
unavailable, then the Court should award the full amount of the policy. (pp. 9-12)
4. At the time Integrity was adjudged insolvent, the debtors had defaulted on several payments. Integrity
has conceded below that, as a result of the debtors' prior failure to pay, the risk of default on the remaining
payments was so great that Credit Lyonnais could not have obtained alternative insurance. Therefore, under
breach-of-contract rules, Credit Lyonnais is entitled to file a claim for an amount equal to each bond's face
value less payments already made by Integrity and the debtor and future amounts recoverable from the
defaulting debtor. (pp. 12-13)
5. From the record it cannot be determined whether some of the debtors may have assets capable of
covering all or a portion of the outstanding loans. It would be inequitable to permit Credit Lyonnais to
pursue recovery from the surety for the face value of the bonds without first seeking payment under the
promissory notes. On remand, Credit Lyonnais must quantify its loss by providing evidence of the amount of
recovery available under the promissory notes. (pp. 14-16)
Judgment of the Appellate Division is AFFIRMED and the matter is REMANDED for further
proceedings consistent with this opinion.
JUDGE SHEBELL, concurring, is of the view that at the time of Integrity's liquidation, the
outstanding balance due on the notes was an absolute obligation of the surety because of the default of the
debtors. The majority shifts the burden to Credit Lyonnais to prove that it cannot obtain payment under the
notes, notwithstanding the fact that the very purpose of obtaining the bonds was to avoid this burden.
Integrity's obligation to pay the outstanding balance due under the notes clearly flows from its contractual
liability under the surety agreements.
JUSTICE HANDLER, dissenting, in which JUSTICE O'HERN joins, is of the view that the relevant
statute, the language of the promissory notes, and hornbook concepts of suretyship allow creditors like Credit
Lyonnais to file claims only for promissory notes that are due and owing. The terms and provisions of the
suretyship contracts also indicate that Integrity's obligation was secondary and limited only to the amounts
actually due and owing under the principal obligations. The majority's analysis, which is based on a measure
of contract damages, is flawed. Contract principles allow recovery only for claims that already exist, namely,
claims that are currently due and owing. Moreover, by allowing Credit Lyonnais to recover in contract for
amounts that were not due and owing on the date of the termination of the bonds, the majority greatly
prejudices the legitimate contractual claims of other creditors whose claims were due and owing on the
termination date.
JUSTICES STEIN and COLEMAN, and JUDGE LONG, temporarily assigned, join in JUSTICE
GARIBALDI'S opinion. JUDGE SHEBELL, temporarily assigned, filed a concurring opinion. JUSTICE
HANDLER filed a dissenting opinion in which JUSTICE O'HERN joins. CHIEF JUSTICE PORITZ and
JUSTICE POLLOCK did not participate.
IN THE MATTER OF
THE LIQUIDATION OF INTEGRITY
INSURANCE COMPANY
Argued January 29, 1996 -- Reargued September 24, 1996
On appeal from the Superior Court, Appellate
Division, whose opinion is reported at 28l
N.J. Super. 364 (l995).
Thomas S. Novak argued the cause for
appellant The Commissioner of Insurance of
the State of New Jersey, in his capacity as
Liquidator of Integrity Insurance Company
(Sills Cummis Zuckerman Radin Tischman
Epstein & Gross, Special Council, and Peter
G. Verniero, Attorney General of New Jersey,
attorneys; Mr. Novak and Joseph L. Yannotti,
Assistant Attorney General, of counsel; Adam
J. Kaiser and Thomas M. Hunt, Deputy Attorney
General, on the brief).
Barry G. Saretsky, a member of the New York
bar, argued the cause for respondent Credit
Lyonnais (Shanley & Fisher, attorneys; Susan
M. Sharko, on the briefs).
James M. Mulvaney submitted a brief on behalf
of amicus curiae, Surety Reinsurers (McElroy,
Deutsch & Mulvaney, attorneys; Mr. Mulvaney
and Margaret F. Catalano, on the brief).
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
Integrity Insurance Company (Integrity or surety), a New
Jersey insurance company, became insolvent and filed for
liquidation. The Commissioner of Insurance (Commissioner) was
appointed the Liquidator. Integrity had previously issued surety
bonds to Credit Lyonnais, guaranteeing the payment of the
promissory notes of investors in certain partnerships. The
promissory notes, which called for installment payments, were
assigned to Credit Lyonnais as collateral for substantial loans
that it made to the partnerships. Before Integrity was
liquidated, the debtors had begun to default on their installment
payments.
breach of contract, led to damages equal to the whole value of
the bond. In l984 and l985, seven different groups of investors each created their own limited partnership in California. Some investors were limited partners in more than one partnership. Those partnerships were created as tax shelters for the investors. The investors signed promissory notes obligating them to make installment payments to the limited partnerships running through November l989. According to the terms of the promissory notes, if an investor defaulted on an installment payment, the limited partnership maintained the right to demand immediate payment of the entire note. All seven partnerships obtained loans from Credit Lyonnais, a multinational bank. The partnerships assigned the promissory notes to Credit Lyonnais as collateral for the loans. As part of those assignments, Credit Lyonnais became entitled to receive the installment payments directly from the investors. Credit Lyonnais sought surety bonds from Integrity to cover the risk of default on the part of the investors and partnerhips. Integrity issued surety bonds to Credit Lyonnais that obligated Integrity to pay to Credit Lyonnais the entire amount of the note if the principal debtor defaulted. In sum, Integrity guaranteed repayment of Credit Lyonnais's loans to the
partnerships. Integrity also issued surety bonds to other banks
for similar arrangements with limited partnerships. To limit its
risk, Integrity reinsured those bonds. At the time of
insolvency, Integrity had reinsurance policies in the amount of
$63.5 million.
The reinsurers were required to pay the full amount of any claim
to the Liquidator, even if the underlying claimants received only
a percentage of their claims from Integrity's remaining assets.
In addition, the order set a deadline for filing proofs of claim
against Integrity.
on installments due after termination, because they neither
occurred nor existed at the time the bonds terminated. The
Special Master further recommended refunding unearned surety
premiums attributable to post-termination coverage.
We granted Integrity's petition for certification. l
42 N.J. 5l0
(l995). The Legislature has enacted a statutory design to govern insolvent insurance companies, N.J.S.A. 17:30C-1 to -31. Under N.J.S.A. 17:30C-8, the Commissioner can apply to the Superior Court for an order directing the liquidation of an insolvent insurance company. The court will grant an order of liquidation if the insurer is indeed insolvent, and the Commissioner will be appointed the liquidator. The order of liquidation effectively ends the insurer's business, and the court is required to set a specific date for the termination of all policies. "When a company of this character becomes insolvent, and passes into the hands of a receiver, it ceases to be for all purposes, except that declared by the statute, the winding up of its affairs . . . ." Doane v. Millville Mut. Marine & Fire Ins. Co., 43 N.J. Eq. 522, 535 (Ch. 1887), rev'd on other grounds, 45 N.J. Eq. 274 (E. & A. 1889). After liquidation and termination, any losses suffered by policyholders "should be disallowed. The date of the decree of insolvency is the time at which the [insurer's] liability for future losses terminated." Withers v. Great Am. Nat'l Life Guardian, 124 N.J. Eq. 4, 9 (Ch. 1938); accord Mayer v. Attorney General, 32 N.J. Eq. 815 (E. & A. 1880).
N.J.S.A. 17:30C-9 requires the Commissioner to marshall all
assets of the estate, and N.J.S.A. 17:30C-20 provides a mechanism
for those with claims against the insurer to submit them and
collect from the marshalled assets. The statute, however, does
not provide much guidance concerning which claims should be
allowed in liquidation, nor does it define the amount of any
claim that may be filed due to the premature termination of an
insurance policy. Those answers must be found in the common law.
Appleman, supra, § 10721, at 204; see also American Lead Pencil
Co. v. New Jersey Title Guarantee & Trust Co.,
130 N.J. Eq. 148,
151 (Ch. 1941) (awarding cost of replacement insurance), aff'd
o.b.,
131 N.J. Eq. 473 (E. & A. 1942); In re Citizens Title Ins.
& Mortgage Co.,
127 N.J. Eq. 551, 554 (Ch. 1940) (awarding cost
of replacement insurance upon liquidation). The cost of
replacement insurance is evaluated as of the date of termination,
and should include consideration of any increased risk of loss
due to events since the issuance of the policy that have
increased the cost of insurance. See Davis v. Amra Grotto
M.O.V.P.E.R., Inc.,
89 S.W.2d 754 (Tenn. 1936) (stating that cost
of replacement life insurance, including fact that policyholder
is now older and disabled, is proper award), reh'g denied,
91 S.W.2d 294. Allowing a claim for the cost of reinsurance makes
sense, because the damages suffered by a policyholder, on the
date of breach, are limited to the cost of replacement insurance.
"The insured is enabled to place himself in the same position he
would [have] been in if his insurance policy had not been
cancelled by receiving [funds] sufficient to obtain similar
insurance . . . ." Caminetti v. Manierre,
142 P.2d 741, 747-48
(Cal. 1943). claim for equitable value of policy); Shloss v. Metropolitan Surety Co., 128 N.W. 384 (Iowa 1910) (holding that policyholders become creditors in amount equal to equitable value of policies); Kentucky Home Life Ins. Co. v. Miller, 104 S.W.2d 997, 1000 (Ky. 1937) ("[U]pon the insolvency of the [insurance company] the policyholder became entitled to his proportionate share in the reserve or cash value . . . of his policy . . . against the estate of the defunct company."); New York v. Security Life Ins. & Annuity Co., 78 N.Y. 114 (1879) (awarding damages in amount of cost of replacement insurance); Smith v. St. Louis Mut. Life Ins. Co., 2 Tenn. Ch. 727 (1877) (stating that upon insolvency each policyholder is entitled to recover difference between cost of new policy and present value of premiums yet to be paid on policy at time of breach through insolvency); Universal Life Ins. Co. v. Binford, 76 Va. 103 (1882) (holding policyholders entitled to amount required to purchase replacement insurance); accord 2A Couch on Insurance 2d §22:70, at 673 (rev. ed. 1984) ("[T]he company is liable in damages measured by the net value of such policies, calculated as of the date of dissolution."); Annotation, Basis for Allowance of Claims Under Policies of Insolvent Life Insurance Company, 106 A.L.R. 1513 (1937). But see State v. Surety Corp. of Am., 162 A. 852, 856 (Del. Ch. 1932) (holding that damage award for default is return of unearned premium); Guy v. Globe Ins. Co., 9 Ins. L. J. 466 (Va. 1880) (recognizing that, ordinarily, claimant's damage award should be
calculated as cost of replacement insurance, but holding that
when claimant is uninsurable, claim is limited to return of
premiums).
replacement insurance was unavailable, then the Court should
award the full amount of the policy. "[T]he claim of a
policyholder should be valued as a death claim [for the entire
amount], where, from the age and health of the claimant,
reinsurance would be impossible." 19A Appleman, supra, §10721,
at 204. Thus, the California Supreme Court has held that an
uninsurable policyholder should receive the face amount of his or
her policies "less the premiums payable during his [or her] life
expectancy, each reduced to its value at the time of
cancellation." Caminetti, supra, l42 P.
2d at 747; accord
Commissioner of Ins. v. Massachusetts Accident Co.,
50 N.E.2d 801, 807-08 (Mass. 1943) (upholding award to policyholders of
full value of disability insurance). The unavailability of
insurance indicates that the insured event is no longer a risk
but a certainty, and the insured should obtain compensation based
on that reality.
acknowledges that replacement insurance was unavailable once
Integrity became insolvent." In re Integrity Ins. Co.,
281 N.J.
Super. 364, 376 (App. Div. 1995).
Recall that Credit Lyonnais made loans to partnerships
secured by the promissory notes of investors in the partnerships.
From this record it cannot be determined whether some of those
investors may have assets capable of covering all or a portion of
the outstanding loans. It would be inequitable to permit Credit
Lyonnais to pursue recovery from the surety for the face value of
the bonds (less payments already received from the surety) due to
the partnerships' defaults on their loan payments, without first
seeking payment under the promissory notes. On remand Credit
Lyonnais will have to show that no recovery is available from the
investors.
The Appellate Division held that "[t]he clear language of the Bonds indicates that Integrity was liable at the time of execution and delivery for the full amount under the Bonds, and such amount was reduced if only the investors made their scheduled payments under the Notes." Integrity, supra, 28l N.J. Super. at 380. The panel also invoked judicial estoppel against Integrity based upon Integrity's prior assertion that the contract's terms imposed liability for the full amount of the bonds prior to termination. We disagree and hold that the bond language demonstrates that Integrity was liable only for payments as missed by the investors and that judicial estoppel should not apply. We conclude that any policyholder whose insured risk was no longer insurable on the date of default should be entitled to file a claim for the full amount of the policy, less amounts already paid and amounts recoverable from the debtors. Those policyholders who can purchase alternative insurance should be entitled to file a claim for the cost of that insurance, because that recovery would be sufficient to place them in the same position as before the breach of contract. That rule does not provide coverage for post-termination losses but simply applies general contract rules to value claims on the date of breach.
We affirm the judgment of the Appellate Division and remand
the matter to the trial court for further proceedings consistent
with this opinion.
JUSTICES STEIN and COLEMAN, and JUDGE LONG, temporarily
assigned, join in JUSTICE GARIBALDI'S opinion. JUDGE SHEBELL,
temporarily assigned, filed a concurring opinion. JUSTICE
HANDLER filed a dissenting opinion in which JUSTICE O'HERN joins.
CHIEF JUSTICE PORITZ and JUSTICE POLLOCK did not participate.
SUPREME COURT OF NEW JERSEY
IN THE MATTER OF
THE LIQUIDATION OF INTEGRITY
INSURANCE COMPANY
SHEBELL, P.J.A.D. (temporarily assigned), concurring.
I join in the opinion of the court insofar as it would allow
recovery on the surety bonds beyond that permitted by the trial
judge, who adopted the special master's recommendation that the
lender's claims for post-termination defaults be barred. I also
agree that the return of unearned premiums is not required in
these circumstances.See footnote 2
payments under the notes. Thus, at the time of Integrity's
liquidation, the outstanding balance due on the notes was an
absolute obligation because of the default of the investors. 1. (a) Should any investor fail to make a required payment under a Note, exclusive of any amount due by virtue of Lender's right of acceleration, when same shall be due (the Payment Due Date), Lender shall notify Surety of such
failure within thirty (30) days of
the Payment Due Date.
(b) . . .
(c) The Notice, signed by an officer of
Lender, shall contain the following
information: . . . .
2. . . .
3. The obligation of Surety hereunder is
primary, direct and unconditional,
except as set forth herein. . . .
4. The Premium hereunder shall be payable
upon the execution and delivery of this
Bond and shall be fully earned and non- refundable from that time.
5. . . .
6. . . . 7. Notice by Lender with respect to any one default by an Investor shall not exhaust Lender's rights against Surety, and unless Surety shall have required Lender to accelerate a Note and shall have paid to Lender the full amount of the unpaid balance thereof (if accelerated) with
accrued interest, Lender shall have the
right to make successive claims against
Surety on each succeeding due date of an
installment under a Note . . . .
[Emphasis added.]
It is unnecessary to inquire as to whether either Integrity
or Credit Lyonnais actually accelerated the entire unpaid balance
due from the debtors. As to both surety and lender, the maxim
that "[e]quity regards and treats as done what in good conscience
ought to be done" is applicable. See Martindell v. Fiduciary
Counsel, Inc.,
133 N.J. Eq. 408, 413 (E. & A. 1942). Further,
acceleration would as to both Integrity and Credit Lyonnais be to
their advantage and not their detriment as suggested by the
dissent. Post at ___ (dissenting slip op. at 8). The benefit
to Credit Lyonnais is direct and readily apparent. The benefit
of acceleration to Integrity, it being in liquidation, arises by
virtue of the Liquidator's ability to then proceed against the
reinsurers for the full balance due on the notes, thereby aiding
all of the Integrity's creditors.
its option to accelerate the entire balance due on the underlying
notes, which were clearly in default at that time. See Schorr 5¢
to $1.00 Stores, Inc. v. Jacob Ellis Realties, Inc.,
131 N.J. Eq. 499 (Ch. 1942). The agreements are clear that upon acceleration
"the amount due from Surety shall be such amount, as
accelerated." I concede that the Appellate Division's reliance
on the principle of judicial estoppel was misplaced; nonetheless,
Integrity's acts of advancing litigation on its own behalf for
the entire amounts due from debtors reflects that Integrity
itself considered the entire balances due pursuant to its right
of acceleration.
others creditors may not be heard to complain that Credit
Lyonnais is receiving favored treatment from the court.
Therefore, while I join in the decision to affirm the
judgment of the Appellate Division, I do so on a different basis
than that set forth in the Court's opinion.
SUPREME COURT OF NEW JERSEY
IN THE MATTER OF
THE LIQUIDATION OF INTEGRITY
INSURANCE COMPANY
HANDLER, J., dissenting.
This case presents the issue of whether, in an insurance-company liquidation proceeding, secured creditors may file claims
for the full amount of promissory notes even though not all of
the unpaid installments on the notes were actually due and owing
on the date that the debt instruments terminated. The relevant
statute, the language of the promissory notes, and hornbook
concepts of suretyship allow such creditors to file claims only
for promissory notes that are due and owing. However, the Court
overrides this requirement by holding that "basic principles of
contract law" entitle the banks to file claims for the full
amounts of the notes. Because the Court deviates from the
statute, the language of the notes, and sound principles of
suretyship, I respectfully dissent. The rights of claimants against an insolvent insurer are governed by statute. A creditor, such as Credit Lyonnais, may file a proof of claim for claims that "[became] absolute against the insurer on or before the last day fixed for filing proofs of claim." N.J.S.A. 17:30C-28(a)(1). The trial court terminated the surety bonds before the deadline for filing proofs of claim. Credit Lyonnais contends that at the time the surety bonds terminated, Integrity owed the entire remaining amount covered by the bonds, including installment payments not yet due. The parties and the courts below differed sharply over whether the provisions of the surety bonds dictated allowing claims for amounts not yet due. The issue calls initially for an analysis and interpretation of the terms of the surety bonds in the general framework of suretyship principles. The legal principles governing suretyships, though fairly complex, are well-settled and generally well-understood. Suretyships involve three parties: the surety (also known as the secondary obligor), the principal (also known as the principal obligor), and the creditor (also known as the obligee). The primary obligation is between the principal and the creditors; it is based on a debt that the principal owes to the creditor. The suretyship is the contractual relation between the surety and the creditor. Under the suretyship agreement, the surety promises the creditor that it will discharge the principal's obligation if the principal fails to do so. The extent of the surety's
obligation is ordinarily measured by the principal's liability
and cannot exceed it. The primary obligation that forms the
basis for the surety's undertaking with the creditor-obligee is
between the principal and the creditor. Hence, the essential
understanding is that the creditor looks first to the principal
rather than the surety to perform the duties of the underlying
obligation. Nevertheless, surety contracts can require that the
creditor-obligee resort first to the surety for satisfaction of
the principal obligation. The surety contract thus may provide
that the surety's obligation to the creditor is direct, primary,
and absolute.
(ii) the obligee has recourse against the
secondary obligor or its property in the
event of the failure of the principal obligor
to perform the underlying obligation; or
(iii) the obligee may subsequently require
the secondary obligor to purchase the
underlying obligation from the obligee or
incur the duties described in subparagraph
(i) or (ii).
[Restatement (Third) of Suretyship § 1(2)(b)
(Tentative Draft No. 4, 1995) at 48
(hereinafter Restatement (Third)).]
According to these general principles, Integrity's
obligation to pay Credit Lyonnais does not arise until the
investors fail to perform their underlying obligation of making
the installment payments. The investors' failure to perform is a
condition precedent to Integrity's obligation to pay.
Now, therefore, the condition of this
obligation is such that if the investors make
all payments in accordance with the payment
schedule set forth in each Note, then the
obligation is null and void; otherwise, the
parties agree as follows:
(1) (a) [If an investor misses a payment,]
Lender shall notify Surety of such failure
within thirty (30) days of the Payment Due
Date.
(c) The Notice, signed by an officer of
Lender, shall contain the following
information:
(iv) Amount of Payment Due and not
Paid (exclusive of any accelerated
balance)
(d) Notice sent by Lender as above set
forth shall constitute Lender's claim and
demand for payment, together with interest
from date of default, hereunder and Surety
shall be obligated to pay such amount to
lender; provided, however, Surety shall have
the right, at its sole option, to require
Lender to accelerate the entire balance due
under the Note(s), in which case the amount
due from Surety shall be such amount, as
accelerated.
(3) The obligation of Surety hereunder is
primary, direct and unconditional, except as
set forth herein. . . .
(4) The Premium hereunder shall be payable
upon the execution and delivery of this Bond
and shall be fully earned and non-refundable
from that time.
(7) Notice by Lender with respect to any one
default by an Investor shall not exhaust
Lender's rights against Surety, and unless
Surety shall have required Lender to
accelerate a Note and shall have paid to
Lender the full amount of the unpaid balance
thereof (if accelerated) with accrued
interest, Lender shall have the right to make
successive claims against Surety on each
succeeding due date of an installment under a
Note . . . .
The surety bonds' preamble states that Integrity is "firmly
bound" for the full amount "in accordance with the conditions
hereof." Moreover, the succeeding paragraph of the preamble
imposes a condition on the obligation that if the investors fully
perform, "then the obligation is null and void; otherwise, the
parties agree as follows."
The Appellate Division did not perceive the language of
"except as set forth herein" to modify the apparently
unconditional obligation of Integrity to pay Credit Lyonnais.
Instead, it held that the first sentence of the preamble was
conclusive of Integrity's obligation, particularly when
construing ambiguities against paid sureties.
281 N.J. Super. 364, 379-80 (1995). A consideration of all of the provisions of
the surety bonds, however, reveals that their certain meaning is
that Integrity's obligation is conditioned on the investors'
actual default on installments as they come due.
detriment of the party having the acceleration right without
manifestation of the intent to accelerate the debt. FDIC v.
Valencia Pork Store, Inc.,
212 N.J. Super. 335, 339 (Law Div.
1986), rev'd on other grounds,
225 N.J. Super. 110 (App. Div.
1988).
measured by the liability of the principal, and cannot exceed
it."). The critical interpretive determinations that we should make are that the condition that limits the obligation exclusively to amounts actually due and owing is in the nature of a condition precedent to the surety's secondary obligation and that, in this case, the nature of that condition is itself controlled by the provisions for accelerating the amount of the debt not otherwise due and owing. Several cases involving surety bonds that mandated that the obligation to pay "shall remain in full force and effect" if the principal did not fully perform appear to reach a different result. Those cases are distinguishable or not persuasive on this point of interpretation. E.g. Amelco Window Corp. v. Federal Ins. Co., 127 N.J. Super. 342 (App. Div. 1974) (holding contractor liable on construction surety bond where parties did not contest whether clause stating that the obligation "shall remain in full force and effect" created a condition precedent or condition subsequent); In re Liquidation of Wisconsin Surety Corp., 332 N.W.2d 860, 862-64 (Wis. Ct. App. 1983) (holding that language of replevin surety bond that provided that insurer and seller were "held and firmly bound unto [the buyer] for which payment [they] jointly and severally bind [themselves]" and that the obligation was "otherwise to remain in full force" was merely a condition subsequent, and was clearly influenced "by the purpose of the replevin bond: to insure that [the buyer] is reimbursed if the seizure, as here, is wrongful"); In re Liquidation of Wisconsin Surety Corp., No. 81-809, 1 981 WL 139113 (Wis. Ct. App. Dec. 28, 1981) (unpublished) (holding, in
case of surety bond issued to bank covering obligation of
corporate lender to repay loan, that bond provision that
principal and surety were "held and firmly bound unto" the bank
"jointly and severally, firmly by these presents" and that if
principal paid the loan "then this obligation shall be null and
void; otherwise it shall remain in full force and effect" for
principal that had not been defaulted before bankruptcy, was
condition precedent, thereby barring claim against insurance
company). In contrast to these decisions, Integrity's surety
bonds do not provide that the obligation "remain in full force
and effect." Rather, they provide that "the parties agree as
follows."
In spite of the bond language and fundamental principles of
suretyship, the Court concludes that Credit Lyonnais is entitled
to the entire outstanding bond amount as a measure of contractual
damages. The Court's analysis is flawed, however, in that
contract principles allow recovery only for claims that already
exist, namely, claims that are currently due and owing.
Moreover, by allowing Credit Lyonnais to recover in contract for
amounts that were not due and owing on the date of the
termination of the bonds, the Court greatly prejudices the
legitimate contractual claims of other creditors, whose claims
were due and owing on the termination date.
Insurance Law and Practice § 10721 at 196 (rev. ed. 1982). As
discussed previously, Integrity did not owe the full bond amount
at the time of liquidation. See supra at __ (slip op. at 6-12). |