Atalanta Corp. v. Ohio Valley Provision Co.

OPINION OF THE COURT

FLAHERTY, Justice.

This is an appeal from an Order of the Superior Court1 which reversed an Order of the Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County holding in favor of appellant, Ohio Valley *392Provision Company (Buyer), in an action for breach of contract brought by appellee, Atalanta Corporation (Seller). Seller, engaged in the business of distributing meat products to processors, brought suit to recover damages for the alleged failure of Buyer, a large meat processing business, to provide a bank guaranty to secure payment for a quantity of meat ordered from Seller.

In January, 1974, Seller’s salesman solicited from Buyer a $19,000 order for Irish beef trimmings. Subsequently, the salesman requested that Buyer furnish a bank guaranty securing payment of the purchase price and, consequently, on February 20, 1974, Buyer’s bank sent a letter to Seller containing language identical (except for date and dollar amount) to the subsequent letter dated May 8, 1974 which appears hereafter. On February 22, 1974, Seller’s credit manager received the letter but was dissatisfied with the language therein because of an ambiguity as to whether the letter constituted a guarantee or a mere credit reference. The credit manager telephoned the president of Buyer’s bank who said the letter was a guarantee. The Irish beef trimmings were then released to Buyer in March of 1974 and payment was made by Buyer.

On or about February 22, 1974, the same salesman solicited a much larger order for a $33,000 sale to Buyer of Australian Shank Meat. A written confirmation of sale containing the words “bank guarantee due prior to delivery” was mailed to Buyer but due to an incorrect address was never received. On May 8, 1974, when no bank guarantee had been forthcoming, the salesman visited Buyer and demanded such a guaranty. Buyer’s president agreed to have one furnished, dispatched the salesman to go the bank, and telephoned ahead to the bank’s vice president instructing him to prepare a guaranty. While at the bank, the salesman telephoned Seller’s credit manager who stated he wanted a letter of credit from the bank rather than a bank guarantee. Buyer’s president, however, declined to agree to have a letter of credit supplied so the following letter was sent by the bank instead:

*393“May 8, 1974
Atalanta Corporation
1725 Varick Street
New York, New York 10013
Attention: Credit Manager
Gentlemen:
One of our valued customers, Ohio Valley Provision Company has placed an order with your company in the amount of approximately $33,000.00 and we understand that you want a guarantee before releasing the meat products to them.
You may be assured that this amount will be paid by the above mentioned company within 10 days. This company has been a customer of ours since their organization and maintains substantial balances with us.
Very truly yours,
(s) E. R. MILLER
E. R. MILLER
President”

After receipt of this letter, Seller communicated to Buyer and the bank that a sufficient bank guaranty had not been received; hence, shipment of the goods was never made.

On May 8, 1974 a contract was formed requiring a bank guarantee as a term of payment. Buyer contends that Seller’s request for a letter of credit constituted a material breach of contract which excused Buyer from further performance including the furnishing of a bank guarantee. We disagree. By asking for a letter of credit, after a contract had been formed between Buyer and Seller’s sales agent, Seller did not breach the contract but rather requested a material change in contract terms which was objected to and did not become part of the contract. Hence, the contract remained in its original form requiring a bank guarantee. After receipt of the bank’s letter of May 8, 1974, Seller communicated to Buyer and to Buyer’s bank that a sufficient guaranty had not been received. Consequently, Seller never shipped the ordered goods.

*394If the letter of May 8, 1974 constituted the promised bank guarantee then Seller breached its obligation to deliver the goods. Buyer and Seller do not dispute the existence of a contract binding them but rather implicitly focus their arguments on an analysis of whether, based on the bank’s letter of May 8, 1974 and the attendant circumstances, the letter would likely have created bank liability to Seller in the event the goods had been delivered and Buyer refused to pay. It is not necessary to determine the probable ultimate effect of the letter in question. The overriding issue is simply whether the parties exchanged that which was bargained for by the parties and reasonably contemplated by the same as the mode of performance, termed by them as a “bank guaranty”.

By requiring a bank guaranty in a transaction, the Seller’s purpose, obvious to both parties, is to avoid the risk of default in payment. Both parties are, therefore, chargeable with knowledge when a “bank guarantee” is bargained for that the Seller is not bargaining for a document of such uncertain meaning that, in light of the circumstances, acceptance of the same would force a reasonably cautious businessman to knowingly be exposed to the very risk of non-payment against which he sought to ensure. This case, then, is to be distinguished from those where the effect of a purported guaranty which has already been accepted by a Seller is to be determined. A guaranty is a promise to pay the debt of another when the creditor is unable, after due prosecution, to collect the amount owed by the debtor. Strohecker v. Farmers Bank, 6 Pa. 41, 44 (1847). The alleged guarantee in question, without regard to whether under rules of construction and in light of the circumstances an arguable liability for the bank in a suit by Seller may have existed, could not have constituted the “Bank Guarantee” necessarily contemplated as suitable for commercial reliance by the parties. A cautious Seller could reasonably interpret the letter of May 8, 1974 as a carefully worded attempt by the bank to avoid obligating itself by giving only an opinion as to the customer’s reliability and credit-worthi*395ness without promising that the bank would pay the obligation upon the customer’s failure to do so. In the prior sale in which Seller was furnished with a letter dated February 20, 1974 like that dated May 8, 1974, the Seller questioned the sufficiency of the language and although the goods were subsequently released in that one smaller transaction a sequence of prior dealing2 is not present to support a conclusion that in the transaction in question, where Seller had more of a financial stake, the parties intended less than a reasonably unambiguous guaranty to be furnished.

Order affirmed.

ROBERTS, J., filed a concurring opinion in which EAG-EN, C. J., joins. LARSEN, J., concurs in the result. KAUFFMAN, J., filed a dissenting opinion. ROBERTS, Justice,

concurring.

I concur in the result reached by the majority. It is clear that the buyer promised the seller, as part of their sales contract, to provide a bank guarantee for the purchase price, and that the buyer breached this material term of the contract. See Atalanta Corp. v. Ohio Valley Provision Co., 263 Pa.Super. 374, 398 A.2d 183 (1979).

EAGEN, J., joins this opinion.

. Atalanta Corporation v. Ohio Valley Provision Co., 263 Pa.Super. 374, 398 A.2d 183 (1979).

. § 1-205. Course of Dealing and Usage of Trade

(1) A course of dealing is a sequence of previous conduct between the parties to a particular transaction which is fairly to be regarded as establishing a common basis of understanding for interpreting their expressions and other conduct.

(3) A course of dealing between parties and any usage of trade in the vocation or trade in which they are engaged or of which they are or should be aware give particular meaning to and supplement or qualify terms of an agreement.

Act of April 6, 1953, P.L. 3, § 1-205 (reenacted October 2, 1959,

P.L. 1023, § 1), 12A P.S. § 1-205 (1970).