Preserving the Commercial Real Estate Guaranty -- A Primer on Principles and Pitfalls
December 17, 2002
James H. "Jim" Watson- Atlanta
Many ordinary actions by the beneficiary of a guaranty will
release the guarantor. Sometimes such actions are taken without a full
assessment of their consequences because of extraordinary business pressures.
At other times, the beneficiary may not focus on a guaranty analysis because the
transaction in which the beneficiary is engaged is not characterized expressly
as a guaranty. It is also possible that guaranty beneficiaries may not know
when and how to protect a guaranty against inadvertent release. Whatever the
circumstances, a refresher on some basic principles of guaranty law will help
the vigilant beneficiary avoid release of the guarantor.
Increasing the Guarantor’s Risk
Suppose you are the landlord of a major,
single-tenant, commercial property. The tenant asks to be released from the
lease so that the tenant can relocate its headquarters. You negotiate a lease
termination agreement, which includes a replacement lease of the property to a
new tenant and the old tenant’s guaranty that the rents will be paid. As part
of this agreement, you promise to loan the new tenant a substantial amount to
pay for refitting the premises. You also agree that if the new tenant defaults,
you will diligently and in good faith use all reasonable efforts to re-lease the
premises.
During the renovations, a dispute develops
between you and the new tenant about the construction work expense, and after
negotiations you eventually pay significantly less than the maximum allowable
advance. No guarantor’s consent to this compromise is obtained.
Business worsens for the new tenant, who
defaults under the new lease. You have various communications with the
guarantor and new tenant while making demands for the rent from both of them.
The guarantor pushes for a business resolution without litigation. You are
anxious for a resolution because the commercial lease market has worsened, the
new tenant’s net worth has plummeted to the depths of potential bankruptcy, and
your mortgage lender is extremely unhappy with your newly negative cash flow.
You are forced to cut your losses and know you will not be able to collect more
than a fraction of the mounting delinquent rent from the new tenant. You reach
a tentative agreement with the new tenant on a compromise amount, which the
guarantor approves, but the new tenant drags its feet in finalizing the
settlement and payment. Frustrated, you file a lawsuit for eviction against the
new tenant, without getting the guarantor’s consent to litigation and without
joining the guarantor.
After the new tenant is evicted, you attempt to
re-lease the property at the same rent (which is now above market), you brush
off real estate brokers to avoid paying a commission, and you offer no loan or
improvement allowance this time. You take all of these actions without consent
of the guarantor.
Your subsequent demands for payment from the
guarantor are met by refusal to pay and the contention that your actions have
released the guarantor from the guaranty.
On what basis can the guarantor claim to be
released by such actions? The answer is better remembered through a simple diagram that depicts the relationships in a guaranty.
When a guarantor undertakes a guaranty in favor of the
beneficiary to support the principal obligation, the law characterizes the
guarantor’s obligation as secondary, and implies automatically that the
principal owes the guarantor a duty not to increase the risk to the
guarantor in connection with the guaranty. The guarantor is deemed to have
made an assessment of the risks arising through the guaranty, and actions
that increase that risk will release the guarantor.
The long-standing and well-entrenched policy
underlying such a release is that the law should protect guarantors because
their willingness to undertake such risks is essential to promotion of
commerce. Various legal doctrines have been applied to implement this policy.
Courts have found a duty to the guarantor by the principal to perform in favor
of the obligee, as well as rights of the guarantor to receive reimbursement from
the principal for the guarantor’s performance, to be subrogated to the
beneficiary’s rights against the principal (and others) in order to recoup the
guarantor’s expenditures, and to have restitution from the principal. Detailed
discussion of these concepts is beyond the scope of this article, but a
recognition that guaranty law involves legal mechanisms for protection of
guarantors aids understanding the critical general principles that may lead to a
guarantor’s release.
In Georgia, the basic principle stated above is
statutory. Section 10-7-22 of the Official Code of Georgia Annotated (O.C.G.A.)
provides:
10-7-22. Discharge of surety by increase of risk.
Any act of the creditor, either before or after judgment
against the principal, which injures the surety or increases his risk or exposes
him to greater liability shall discharge him; a mere failure by the creditor to
sue as soon as the law allows or neglect to prosecute with vigor his legal
remedies, unless for a consideration, shall not release the surety.
In the hypothetical example above, the guarantor will claim
increased risk because (1) decreased renovation payments to the new tenant made
it more difficult for the new tenant’s business to succeed, and (2) re-leasing
efforts were stymied by unrealistic re-leasing terms, decreased exposure to
prospective replacement tenants, and litigation that tarnished the property
reputation.
Changing the Deal
Consider a second hypothetical. Suppose you
are the seller under a contract for sale of a commercial store property. The
contract permits the buyer to assign the contract only with your consent. The
contract also provides that even if there is a buyer’s assignment with consent,
the buyer is not released but remains liable if the assignee does not fully
perform. Pending closing of the purchase, the buyer finds a more desirable
property, and obtains your consent to assign the contract to a new buyer. The
assignee, who assumes the contract, is a franchisee. After the assignment and
before closing, the franchisor exercises franchise rights, which require the
assignee to reconstruct part of the store improvements before operation. This
requirement delays the intended occupancy date by six months, and the assignee
agrees to pay you the amount of your debt service and other expenses on the
property for six months in exchange for a six-month extension of the closing
date. You bind yourself to this extension without obtaining the consent of the
original buyer.
Before closing, the assignee discloses that
recent market interest rate spikes have made it impossible for the assignee to
finance the acquisition. The assignee refuses to close. You sue the assignee
and the original buyer for damages. The original buyer raises the defense that
it had merely a secondary obligation as a guarantor, and that your extension of
the closing date has released the original buyer.
In Georgia statutes and cases reflecting basic
principles of guaranty law, the buyer-assignor in this case will find support
for its refusal to pay. The buyer-assignor will likely be given an opportunity
to try to prove that keeping him obligated under the assigned purchase contract
“if the assignee does not fully perform” was intended to mean that the
buyer-assignor has only secondary liability and therefore is essentially a
guarantor. No express statement identifying the assignor as a guarantor is
necessary for such guarantor characterization to apply, under O.C.G.A. Section
10-7-4:
10-7-4. Form of contract immaterial.
The form of the contract is immaterial, provided the fact
of suretyship exists.
Once guarantor status is established, the guarantor may
invoke O.C.G.A. Section 10-7-21, which states:
“10-7-21. “Novation” defined; effect on surety’s
liability.
Any change in the nature or terms of a contract is called
a “novation”; such novation, without the consent of the surety, discharges him.
The result in the second hypothetical case could be not
only delay and significant expenses in dealing with the guarantor’s defense
contentions, but also real risk that the guaranty beneficiary will ultimately
bear the loss.
Recognizing and Remembering the Guarantor
In the first hypothetical example above, the
guarantor made an express, written guaranty. In the second hypothetical
involving a buyer-assignor, guarantor status could be established by
implication. There are many other circumstances in which guarantors are found
by implication. Parties whose mortgage loan is assumed, who have assigned their
leases, who co-sign a promissory note or
other obligation, or who mortgage
property as an accommodation to support another’s obligation, have all been
characterized as guarantors without any express statement of guaranty.
A clue to potential implied guarantor status
is any transaction in which one party (the eventual guarantor) has undertaken an
obligation that comes to be the performance obligation of another party without
an express and complete release of the first party.
The observant
beneficiary will think “potential guarantor” whenever such circumstances are
present, and will seek advice before taking actions that could release the
guarantor.
A very common guaranty context involves a
guarantor who is affiliated with the principal, such as a corporate parent or
individual shareholder who is a guarantor for a thinly capitalized subsidiary.
Because such principals and guarantors are affiliated, and the beneficiary may
deal with the same persons who represent both the principal and the guarantor,
special attention may be necessary for a beneficiary to remember that the parent
or owner is legally a separate, arm’s-length guarantor who can be released by
the beneficiary’s actions.
Recognizing Release Scenarios
The astute beneficiary will also keep in mind a
non-exclusive list of general actions that could generate a guarantor’s release
argument. Some of the more common actions of this kind include:
- changing any material part of the transaction or parties’
obligations from their original content or form
- releasing the principal from some part (or all) of the
principal obligation
- releasing or impairing the value of collateral for the
principal obligation
- delaying enforcement of the principal obligation, or
- impairing the principal’s ability to perform or to make the
guarantor whole if the guarantor performs
To illustrate the last circumstance above,
consider the following. Company B sells a portion of its assets to Company
P,
and takes back a promissory note for part of the payment. Shareholder G of
Company P guarantees the note. Companies P and B compete in the same type of
business. Before the promissory note is due, Company B engages in competitive
actions that Company P alleges are illegal as unfair trade competition, and
Company P loses half of the market share it previously had. When the note is
due to be paid, if Company P cannot pay, guarantor G will be able to contend
that the alleged illegal competition impaired Company P’s ability to pay and
therefore released the guarantor G.
Understanding these general scenarios will help
the beneficiary be alert to various fact patterns that signal a risk of
releasing the guarantor.
Getting the Guarantor’s Agreement or Consent
Well-written
guaranties should contain advance agreements by the guarantor that the guarantor
will not be released by actions of the beneficiary that would otherwise cause a
release. Many guaranty documents have such terms, that may specify
actions that the beneficiary may take without releasing the guarantor, and may
even purport to be a complete waiver of the guarantor’s rights to release by any
manner other than full performance. Georgia law recognizes that a guarantor may
make binding, anti-release agreements in advance, and in many cases, such a
comprehensive guaranty document will prevent release.
While necessary and advisable, however, such
document provisions are not foolproof insurance against release in all cases
when subsequent actions involving the beneficiary and the principal become
necessary. In the process of drafting a guaranty, it is not possible to foresee
every circumstance that could be a release scenario. In addition, many
commercial guarantors have sufficient bargaining clout to negotiate away terms
that would prevent release of the guarantor. Additionally, the policy of
protecting guarantors because of their value to commerce means that document
uncertainties could well be resolved in favor of the guarantor. Further, a
determination whether a guarantor’s risk has been increased often will be judged
through hindsight, making it more likely that increased risk will be found.
Moreover, a guaranty may be subject to the same contract defenses as any other
contract.
Consequently, whenever there could be an issue
regarding a guarantor’s release, the beneficiary should evaluate specifically
whether to seek the guarantor’s additional, separate, express consent to the
beneficiary’s planned action. Even if the beneficiary’s conclusion is that no
consent is required, giving notice of the planned action to the guarantor is
normally a good practice.
Summary
Guaranty beneficiaries should learn and
understand the principles and policies that may release guarantors from
commercial real estate guaranties, and particularly the effect of actions that
increase the guarantor’s risk, change the deal in which the guaranty was given,
or fall within other typical release scenarios. Learning to identify such
scenarios as well as transactions in which guarantor characterization could be
implied will aid in preventing release. Taking a well-written guaranty with
terms that attempt to give maximum protection against guarantor release is an
essential, good practice and should be done whenever possible, but beneficiaries
should also remember to seek a special consent from the guarantor whenever there
is any question whether the guarantor could be released.
For more information, contact James H. Watson, toll free,
at 888-688-8500.