OPINION BY
TODD, J.:¶ 1 In these consolidated cross-appeals, we are asked to address both procedural and substantive issues in an action against sureties on a commercial lease, following the default of and confession of judgment against the tenant on the lease. The sureties appeal judgment against them and the landlord cross-appeals. We reverse and remand.
*449¶ 2 In 1991, Professional Male Inc. d/b/a Professional Male (“Professional Male”) entered into a commercial lease with McIntyre Square Associates (“McIntyre Square”) for space in the McIntyre Square Shopping Center in the North Hills of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. The lease, which was executed on behalf of McIntyre Square by its property management agent, First City Company (“First City”), had a 5-year term, and did not contain an option to extend or renew. Several months after the lease was executed, William J. Evans, James A. Hengelsberg, and Garfield M. Grant, officers and owners of Professional Male, and Mildred Hengelsberg, Hengels-berg’s wife, (collectively “Guarantors”) signed a Guaranty Agreement personally guaranteeing Professional Male’s obligations under the lease.
¶ 3 On February 15, 1996, Evans, as president of Professional Male, executed a Lease Amendment and Extension Agreement, extending the lease another 5 years, and significantly increasing the rent. It is disputed that Grant also signed the extension, and undisputed that Hengelsberg did not. No new guaranty agreement was signed
¶ 4 In 1998, Evans resigned as president of Professional Male and Hengelsberg stepped in. Professional Male later defaulted on its lease and vacated the premises on March 1, 1999. As provided in the lease, on behalf of McIntyre Square, First City confessed judgment against Professional Male for $187,811.43 for this default. A petition to open that judgment was later filed by Professional Male, but denied. On March 31, 1999, First City, again as agent for McIntyre Square, sued Evans and Grant, and then on May 3, 1999, sued the Hengelsbergs, in each case alleging that they were liable for Professional Male’s breach under the Guaranty Agreement.1 Grant also sued James Hengelsberg for claims arising from an indemnity agreement. All these cases were consolidated in April 2000.
¶ 5 The parties filed cross motions for summary judgment. A central issue in these motions was whether the Guaranty Agreement, signed by Evans, Grant, and the Hengelsbergs in conjunction with the original lease, applied to the lease extension. The motions were heard by the Honorable Patrick McFalls of the Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County, and were denied.
¶ 6 Trial was set for September 19, 2000 before Judge McFalls. On that day, in chambers, the trial court ruled on the parties’ motions in limine. As we will discuss more fully below, Guarantors moved to preclude introduction of the confessed judgment against Professional Male as evidence of First City’s damages, and First City moved to prohibit Guarantors from relitigating the same issue. In each case, the trial court ruled against First City, refusing to give preclusive effect to the confessed judgment regarding the liability of Guarantors. (N.T. Trial, 9/19/00, at 7-9.)
¶ 7 The trial court, still in chambers, then sua sponte ruled that, as a matter of law, the Guaranty Agreement did cover the lease extension, effectively reversing its prior summary judgment ruling. Having effectively granted summary judgment to First City and against Guarantors as to liability, the court ordered a trial on damages only, and a nonjury trial commenced that same day.
¶ 8 On October 2, 2000, the trial court issued its verdict. Preliminarily, it sua sponte substituted McIntyre Square for First City as the real party in interest, and *450then issued a non-jury verdict" in favor of McIntyre Square and against Guarantors for $49,643.89, plus post-verdict interest, and ruled in favor of Grant in his indemnity suit against James Hengelsberg.2 On May 7, 2001, post-trial motions were denied, and judgment was entered in favor of McIntyre Square.
¶ 9 Guarantors appealed, and First City cross-appealed. Although the parties were ordered to, and did, file concise statements of matters complained of on appeal pursuant to Rule 1925 of the Pennsylvania Rules of Appellate Procedure, no trial court opinion was filed.3
¶ 10 On appeal, Guarantors ask:
1. Whether the trial court erred by sua Sponte granting judgment for the Plaintiff on the morning of trial, after the jury was selected?
2. Do material changes in a document captioned “Lease Amendment and Extension Agreement” constitute a new and different lease agreement such that guarantors of the first lease do not guaranty the second?
3. Whether gratuitous guarantors cease to be liable under a lease when the terms and duration of the lease are changed without their notice?
(Appellants’ Brief at 4.) In its cross-appeal, First City asks:
1.Is a duly authorized property management agent a proper party plaintiff in an action for breach of lease when the agent disclosed its representative capacity in the caption and the body of its Complaint?
2. Can a guarantor re-litigate a confessed judgment entered against his guarantee corporation after he unsuccessfully challenged the validity of the confessed judgment?
3. Is a party entitled to reasonable attorneys’ fee and expenses incurred in connection with enforcing a guaranty that specifically provides for reimbursement of those fees and expenses?
(Cross-Appellant’s Brief at 4.)
¶ 11 In their first issue, Guarantors argue that,, as a procedural matter, the trial court erred in sua sponte granting judgment as to liability to First City on the morning of trial, after the jury was selected, and assert that their due process rights were thus violated.4 We conclude that Guarantors’ due process rights were protected.
¶ 12 The parties’ summary judgment motions, which the trial court had earlier denied, fully addressed the issue of whether the Guaranty Agreement signed by Guarantors applied to the lease extension. Thus, Guarantors cannot argue that they were surprised by the motion, in the sense that they did not have the ability to fully respond to it, which is the basis of the cases on which Guarantors rely. See, e.g., Cagnoli v. Bonnell, 531 Pa. 199, 611 A.2d 1194 (1992) (vacating trial court’s grant of motion for judgment on pleadings made on the morning of trial after the jury had been empaneled, finding that court’s last *451minute action denied appellant a full and fair opportunity to argue against the motion). Here, the issue was fully briefed and discussed, thus Cagnoli and related cases are inapplicable. The trial court’s action was more akin to a reconsideration of its prior motion, which, although sua sponte, we find to be unobjectionable, and, indeed, promoting of judicial economy.5
¶ 13 In their next two issues, Guarantors assert that the trial court erred in concluding that they were hable to First City upon the basis of the Guaranty Agreement executed in 1991.6 They make two alternative arguments in this regard. First, they argue that the terms of the lease under the “Lease Amendment and Extension Agreement” were so different from the original lease that it constituted a wholly new, second lease to which the Guaranty Agreement did not apply. Second, they assert that under the Guaranty Agreement they did not consent to material modifications in the lease that might materially increase their risk. We will address this second argument first because we find it to be dispositive.
¶ 14 The Guaranty Agreement obligated Guarantors to fulfill Professional Male’s obligations under the lease upon Professional Male’s default.7 (Guaranty Agreement, 10/8/91, at ¶ 1.) Guarantors contend, however, that the trial court erred in concluding that they were bound as sureties for the amended lease, asserting that the amended lease materially in-*452creased their risk under the Guaranty Agreement without their consent, thus discharging them.
¶ 15 In Reliance Ins. Co. v. Penn Paving, Inc., 557 Pa. 439, 734 A.2d 833 (1999), our Supreme Court, quoting an earlier decision from this Court, explained the principle on which Guarantors rely:
Cognizant of the problems posed by the three-party composition of suretyships, Pennsylvania courts have uniformly recognized that where the creditor and the debtor materially modify the terms of their relationship without obtaining the surety’s assent thereto, the surety’s liability may be affected. A material modification in the creditor-debtor relationship consists of a significant change in the principal debtor’s obligation to the creditor that in essence substitutes an agreement substantially different from the original agreement on which the surety accepted liability. Where, without the surety’s consent, there has been a material modification in the creditor-debtor relationship,. a gratuitous (uncompensated) surety is completely discharged. A compensated surety is discharged only if, without the surety’s consent, there has been a material modification in the creditor-debtor relationship and said modification has substantially increased the surety’s risk.
Id at 449-50, 734 A.2d at 838 (quoting Continental Bank v. Axler, 353 Pa.Super. 409, 415-16, 510 A.2d 726, 729 (1986)); see also Restatement of Security, § 128 (“Where, without the surety’s consent, the principal and the creditor modify their contract otherwise- than by extension of time of payment (a) the surety, other than a compensated surety, is discharged unless the modification is of a sort that can only be beneficial to the surety, and (b) the compensated surety is (i) discharged if the modification materially increases his risk .... ”). Here, we conclude that Guarantors were compensated sureties.8
¶ 16 Nevertheless, “material modifications in the creditor-debtor relationship will not serve to discharge the surety where the surety has given prior consent to such material modifications as part of the suretyship contract.” Id. at 450, 734 A.2d at 838. To determine “whether a surety has consented to a material modification, the suretyship ‘contract must be given effect according to its own expressed intention as gathered from all the words and clauses used, taken as a whole, due regard being had also to the surrounding circumstances.’ ” Id. (quoting Continental Bank, 353 Pa.Super. at 417, 510 A.2d at 730).
¶ 17 We agree, as Guarantors assert, that the amended lease was a material modification of the original lease which substantially increased their risk. The original lease was for a 5 year term and the amendment extended the lease term for an additional 5 years. Obviously, this doubling of the lease term substantially increased Guarantors’ exposure under the Guaranty Agreement. Furthermore, the original lease had no renewal provision — it consisted of a single 5 year term — so it cannot be argued that Guarantors could *453have anticipated, or implicitly consented to, an extension of the lease term.
¶ 18 The question remains, then, whether under the Guaranty Agreement Guarantors assented to material modifications to the lease that substantially increased their risk. They contend that they did not. First City contends, on the other hand, that “the language of the Guaranty Agreement which [Guarantors] signed clearly indicates that they in fact did consent to guarantee any material changes to the Lease Agreement” (Response Brief for Cross-Appellant at 12), and cites to two sections of Paragraph 2 of the Guaranty Agreement:
2. No Discharge of Guaranty — The liability of any Guarantor hereunder shall not be impaired, released, terminated or discharged, in whole or in part, by any of the following, notwithstanding that the same are made with or without notice to the Guarantor:
(a) any amendment or modifícation of the provisions of the Lease Agreement;
(b) any extensions of time for performance, whether in whole or in part, of the covenants of Lessee under the Lease Agreement given prior to or after default thereunder;
(c) any other Guaranty now or hereafter executed by any Guarantor or any other person;
(d) any waiver of, assertion of enforcement of, or failure or refusal to assert or enforce, in whole or in part, any covenants, claims, causes of action, rights, or remedies that Lessee may, at any time, have under the Lease Agreement or with respect to any guaranty or any security that Landlord may hold, at any time, for or under the Lease Agreement or with respect to Lessee;
(e) any act, thing, omission or delay to do any act or thing that may, in any manner, or to any extent, vary the risk of Guarantor or that would otherwise operate as a discharge of any Guarantor as a matter of law;
(f) the failure to give any Guarantor any notice whatsoever; or
(g) the release of any security, Guaranty, or any rights, power, or privileges Landlord may now or hereafter have against any persons, entity, or collateral.
(Guaranty Agreement, 10/8/91, at ¶ 2 (emphasis added).) We disagree.
¶ 19 Subpart a of Paragraph 2, providing that “any amendment or modification of the provisions of the Lease Agreement” shall not discharge a guarantor, is ineffective to bind Guarantors regardless of whether or not this language is read to include material modifications, as it says nothing about modifications that increase a guarantor’s risk as required under Reliance Ins., supra and Continental Bank, supra
¶ 20 More noteworthy is subpart e, which First City asserts explicitly incorporates Guarantors’ assent to changes that increase (or, rather nonsensically, decrease) their risk. It provides that Guarantors are not discharged by “any act, thing, omission or delay to do any act or thing that may, in any manner, or to any extent, vary the risk of Guarantor or that would otherwise operate as a discharge of any Guarantor as a matter of law.” (Guaranty Agreement, 10/8/91, at ¶ 2(e).) First City contends that the phrase “vary the risk” covers increased risk to Guarantors, and standing alone perhaps it would. First City ignores, however, the qualifying language at the end of this phrase: “or that would otherwise operate as a discharge of any Guarantor as a matter of law.” Id. (emphasis added). Black’s Law Dictionary defines “otherwise” as “[i]n a different manner; in another way, or in other ways”. Blacks Law Dictionary 1101 (6th Edition 1990); see also Bateman v. Motorists Mut. Ins. Co., 527 Pa. 241, 246, *454590 A.2d 281, 288 (1991) (defining “otherwise” as “in a different way or manner”). This meaning, when inserted into subpart e, reads “any act, thing, omission or delay to do any act or thing that may, in any manner, or to any extent, vary the risk of Guarantor or that would in a different manner operate as a discharge of any Guarantor as a matter of law.” Read this way, the entire phrase appears to refer to any condition that discharges a guarantor as a matter of law, one way or another. In the narrowest sense, this may refer to errors of procedure that might extinguish a guarantor’s obligations under the agreement. In the broadest sense, this- phrase could been seen as an attempt to eliminate any defense or- argument that would relieve Guarantors of liability as, in some sense, application of any legal principle to the interpretation of a contract that thereby releases a party “operatefs] as a discharge ... as a matter of law”.9
¶ 21 Accordingly, we find that the use of “otherwise” in subpart e creates an ambiguity regarding whether or not Guarantors, by this language, guaranteed material changes in the lease that increased their risk, as First City contends.10 Cf. Bateman, 527 Pa. at 246, 590 A.2d at 283 (finding phrase “[a]ny amounts otherwise payable for damages under” an insurance policy was ambiguous where there were no other payments payable under the insurance contract). Because we find the phrase to be ambiguous, we conclude that the trial court erred in determining, as a matter of law, that Guarantors were bound under the Guaranty Agreement to guarantee the lease extension. As a result, judgment against Guarantors must be reversed and the case remanded for further proceedings. Further, because of our resolution of this issue, we need not address Guarantors’ alternative argument that the amended lease constituted an entirely new lease.
¶ 22 We now address those issues raised in First City’s cross-appeal which have not been rendered moot by our resolution of Guarantors’ appeal. First City initially contends that the trial court erred when it sua sponte, by order dated October 2, 2000, substituted McIntyre Square in place of First City in the caption.11 *455First City asserts that, as the duly authorized property management agent for McIntyre Square, it was a proper party plaintiff in an action for breach of lease where it had disclosed its representative capacity in the caption and the body of the complaint. We agree.
¶ 28 Rule 2002 of the Pennsylvania Rules of Civil Procedure provides:
Rule 2002. Prosecution of Actions by Real Parties in Interest. Exceptions
(a) Except as otherwise provided in clauses (b), (c) and (d) of this rule, all actions shall be prosecuted by and in the name of the real party in interest, without distinction between contracts under seal and parol contracts.
(b) A plaintiff may sue in his or her own name without joining as plaintiff' or use-plaintiff any person beneficially interested when such plaintiff
(1) is acting in a fiduciary or representative capacity, which capacity is disclosed in the caption and in the plaintiffs initial pleading; or
(2) is a person with whom or in whose name a contract has been made for the benefit of another.
(c) Clause (a) of this rule shall not apply to actions where a statute or ordinance provides otherwise.
(d) Clause (a) of this rule shall not be mandatory where a subrogee is a real party in interest.
Pa.R.Civ.P. 2002. First City asserts that under subsection (b)(1), it was entitled to sue, as the agent for McIntyre Square, on McIntyre Square’s behalf. We note that, in accordance with subsection (b)(1), First City’s role as agent was indicated both in the caption of its complaint, and in its initial pleading. (Complaint, 5/3/99, Caption & ¶ 1.) The trial court erred, therefore, in ordering the caption to be changed. While the real party in interest is McIntyre Square, the party named on the lease,12 and while McIntyre Square will be bound by the outcome of the litigation, Rule 2002(b)(1) clearly allows First City to sue on their behalf. See Craig by Boosel v. Farren, 700 A.2d 548 (Pa.Super.1997) (grandparents of alleged property owner could bring replevin action as owner’s attorneys-in-fact against owner’s parents to recover property allegedly in parents’ possession: grandparents were acting in representative capacity; both caption and complaint correctly disclosed their capacity; and real party in interest would be bound by determination rendered). We therefore reverse the trial court’s order of October 2, 2000 altering the caption and, on remand, instruct the trial court to correct the caption accordingly.
¶ 24 First City next contends that the trial court erred in not giving preclusive effect to First City’s confessed judgment against Professional Male regarding the extent of First City’s damages under the Guaranty Agreement, thus allowing Guarantors to re-litigate the damages. *456Because this issue is capable of repetition on remand, we will review it. See Estate of Kofsky, 487 Pa. 478, 480, 409 A.2d 1358, 1361 (1979).
¶ 25 On the morning of trial, the trial court granted Guarantors’ motion in li-mine and prohibited First City from introducing its confessed judgment against Professional Male for $187,811.43 to establish its damages against Guarantors. Guarantors were thus allowed to offer evidence of the damages caused by Professional Male’s breach of the lease, and a verdict was ultimately entered against Guarantors for $49,643.89, plus • post-verdict interest. First City asserts that the confessed judgment should have been given preclusive effect regarding its damages against Guarantors.
¶26 In this regard, First City cites to cases from the Supreme Court and this Court, reaching back almost 200 years, for the proposition that a surety is bound by a determination of the principal’s liability. (See Cross-Appellant’s Brief at 11-12.) A review of these cases, as well as our own research, however, leads us to conclude that the confessed judgment obtained by First City against Professional Male is not binding on Guarantors in First City’s suit against them.
¶ 27 Most of the decisions on which First City relies belong to a narrow category of cases concerning sureties on official, or “good faith,” bonds. These bonds ensure the performance of official or fiduciary duties13 and, regarding such bonds, a long line of cases from this Commonwealth support the contention that a surety is bound by a determination of the principal’s liability. See Pennsylvania Turnpike Com’n v. United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co. 412 Pa. 222, 194 A.2d 423 (1963) (turnpike commissioner’s bond; criminal liability of principal determines surety’s liability on principal’s official bond); Commonwealth, to Use of Ulshofer v. Turner, 340 Pa. 468, 17 A.2d 352 (1941) (notary public’s bond; judgment against principal is conclusive against surety as to principal’s misconduct and resulting damages); Commonwealth, to Use of Carman v. Toebe, 315 Pa. 218, 173 A. 169 (1934) (administrator’s bond); Commonwealth, to Use of Haines v. Fidelity & Deposit Co. of Maryland, 224 Pa. 95, 73 A. 327 (1909) (trustee’s bond); McMicken v. Commonwealth, 58 Pa. 213 (1868) (constable’s bond) Eagles v. Kern, 5 Whart. 144, 1840 WL 3930 (1840) (constable’s bond).
¶28 This proposition is not generally applicable to all sureties, however. Indeed, in the most recent of the above decisions, Pennsylvania Turnpike Com’n, supra., the Court, in finding a surety liable on a turnpike commissioner’s bond following the commissioner’s criminal conviction for malfeasance, cited only official bond cases whose holdings were clearly limited to such bonds. See Fidelity & Deposit Co. of Maryland, 224 Pa. at 102, 73 A. at 329 (“As to official bonds, bonds of indemnity, and bonds to insure the faithful performance of duty and to secure a proper accounting by persons in fiduciary relations, the rule of our cases seems to be that a judgment against the principal is conclusive against his sureties as to his misconduct and failure to properly account.” (emphasis added)); Turner, 340 Pa. at 471, 17 A.2d at 354 (“where the official bond is conditioned upon the recovery of judgment against the principal, or upon the declaration of a forfeiture, the *457rights of the surety will be concluded by the entry of such judgment against him, or by such forfeiture.” (emphasis added)).
¶29 The sureties on official or fiduciary bonds are liable because, by the nature of the bond relationship, the sureties submit to the acts of the principal and to judgments against the principal. Our Supreme Court explained:
At the outset, it may be remarked that the bond in the case at bar [an attachment bond] is not an official bond, or a bond of indemnity, or a bond to insure the faithful performance of duty, or to secure a proper accounting by persons acting in fiduciary relations, and therefore the rule in this class of cases, that a judgment against the principal is conclusive against his sureties as to his misconduct, and failure to properly account, has no controlling force here. In the class of cases referred to, the surety submits himself to the acts of his principal as a legal consequence of his surety-ship because, as the courts have said, it was the intention of the parties to the undertaking to assume this liability. This rule applies to bonds of administrators and guardians, bonds of assignees for benefit of creditors, official bonds, bonds of indemnity, and other bonds of like character.
Commonwealth, to Use of Gettman v. A.B. Baxter, 235 Pa. 179, 182-83, 84 A. 136, 137 (1912). Thus, where an official bond is at issue, or a similar bond concerning the faithful performance of an official or fiduciary duty, a judgment against the principal necessarily triggers the liability of the surety given the nature of the bond.
¶ 30 Similarly, where a surety has explicitly agreed to be bound by a judgment against the principal, the same result is reached. For example, attachment bonds issued to dissolve an attachment and allow the sale or other disposition of property attached by a plaintiff often specifically provide that the plaintiff may look to the surety on the bond for satisfaction of any judgment obtained against the property owner. In such cases, a judgment against the surety is likewise binding on the surety. See Clauss v. Ainey, 279 Pa. 534, 124 A. 183 (1924); Commonwealth, to Use of Gettman v. A B. Baxter, supra. But see G.H. McShane Co., Inc. v. Travelers Indem. Co., 262 Pa.Super. 80, 85-6, 396 A.2d 654, 657 (1978) (surety in foreign attachment action may raise issue of unconstitutionality of foreign attachment law not raised by principal).
¶ 31 Decisions that concern official bonds, administrator’s bond, attachment bonds, or the like, where the surety, either explicitly or by the nature of the surety arrangement, has agreed to be bound by a judgment against the principal, do not apply here. Nothing in the surety agreement between Guarantors and First City indicates that Guarantors agreed to be conclusively bound by a confessed judgment against Professional Male.
¶ 32 Moreover, even in bond cases, there is some question whether a surety is bound by a judgment reached by default or confession, where, as here, the surety had no opportunity to defend. See Turner, 340 Pa. at 472, 17 A.2d at 354 (noting that there is “some authority” for extending rule to judgments by default or confession, and commenting that “[w]here judgment is entered against the principal by confession or default, upon pleadings which set forth solely acts of official misconduct for which the surety would be liable upon the bond, and where the surety has failed to avail itself of an opportunity to enter a defense in the name of the principal, there can be no injustice in giving the judgment the effect of conclusive, or at least prima facie, evidence against the surety” (emphasis added), but declining to reach the issue); G.H. McShane Co. *458262 Pa.Super. at 86-7, 896 A.2d at 657 (Spaeth, J., concurring) (commenting that in the absence of fraud or collusion, “a consent judgment against the principal may be attacked by the surety if the surety did not participate in the suit against the principal in some cases, but not in cases where the surety is a judgment surety”).
¶ 33 Our research has disclosed far fewer cases regarding the binding effect of a judgment on a surety outside the context of a bond arrangement. The extant cases, however, suggest that where the surety had no right to defend, as in the case of a confessed judgment, as here, or potentially in the case of a default judgment, the judgment against the principal is not binding.
¶34 Indeed, a Supreme Court case is directly on point. In Giltinan v. Strong, 64 Pa. 242, 1870 WL 8689 (1870), the Court held that a judgment recovered against a tenant for rent is not evidence against the surety on the lease where the surety had no opportunity to defend:
But we think the court erred in holding that the record of the judgment against Maguire [the tenant] was competent evidence against Giltinan [the surety]. If the liability is direct and primary, it is clear this is so, and if the writing is viewed as a mere undertaking of suretyship, still it was error; Giltinan was no party to that action, had no notice to defend it, and could not be brought into defence of it by the plaintiff.
Id. at 245, 1870 WL 8689 at *3.
¶ 35 Giltinan was cited for support in a later case, Thommen v. Aldine Trust Co., 302 Pa. 409, 153 A. 750 (1931). There, the plaintiff and her husband had jointly started a company. She left the company, and later sued her husband’s estate to make payments guaranteed by him in the event the company defaulted on payments due under her noncompete agreement with the company. The Court held that she could not use her prior successful judgment against the company, wherein the estate had no notice or ability to defend, against the estate. Id. at 414-16, 153 A. at 752. In so holding, the Court clarified the distinction between official bonds and the situation where a surety had agreed only to pay on the default of another:
Had the agreement to indemnify been based on an official bond, or constituted a promise to pay a judgment which might be secured against the principal, the first recovery would be held binding on defendant in the second action.... A contrary determination is reached where, as here, the surety has not agreed to be bound by a judgment against his principal (Giltinan v. Strong, supra), but has contracted to indemnify only in case of default in the payment of a debt by another.
Id. at 416,153 A. at 752.
¶ 36 We find further guidance in the Restatement of Security, to which this Court has turned for support in other contexts.14 Subsection 3 of Section 139, “Judgments Between Creditor And Principal: Effect As Proof Of Principal’s Liability In Action By Creditor Against Surety,” states:
*459Where, in an action by a creditor against a principal, judgment is obtained by default or confession against the principal, and the creditor subsequently brings an action against the surety, proof of the judgment against the principal is evidence only of the fact of its rendition.
Restatement of Security § 139. The commentary to this section explains:
The probative significance of a judgment obtained by confession or default is much less than that of a judgment after trial on the merits. Moreover, the arguments of policy and convenience against duplication of trials have little weight where there has not been a determination after consideration of evidence introduced by both sides to a litigation. Such a judgment against the principal does not create a rebuttable presumption of the principal’s liability, in an action between creditor and surety.
Restatement of Security § 139 cmt. e.
¶ 37 In accord with these authorities, we hold that, except where the surety agreement concerns an official or other fiduciary bond, or where the agreement explicitly states otherwise, a default or confessed judgment obtained against the principal in the underlying action is not evidence of liability in an action against the surety, unless, in the underlying action, the surety had an opportunity to defend. Applying this rule, the trial court below correctly prohibited the admission of the confessed judgment against Professional Male, an action in which Guarantors had no ability to defend, as evidence of Guarantors’ liability in the action by First City against them.15
¶38 For all the foregoing reasons, we reverse the judgment for First City, and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
¶ 39 Judgment REVERSED. Case REMANDED. Jurisdiction RELINQUISHED.
¶ 40 GRACI, J. files a Concurring and Dissenting Opinion.
. Evans, however, did not contest this suit, and is not a party to the present appeals.
. Grant's indemnity claim against James Hen-gelsberg was later discontinued.
. As Judge McFalls was unavailable, the case was forwarded to this Court without an opinion.
. Guarantors made a fleeting reference to this argument in their post-trial motion, stating "[b]y making its erroneous ruling, this Court effectively denied the Hengelsbergs’ and Mr. Grant's right to trial by jury as to liability without due process of law.” (Defendants’ Motion for Post-Trial Relief, 10/13/00, at 6.) There is, however, no elaboration on this argument in their brief filed in support of the post-trial motion.
. In a variation on their due process argument, Guarantors assert that First City, at the in-chambers hearing, for the first time argued an additional basis for the trial court’s action: that Guarantors, through admissions in their pleadings, effectively had waived any argument that the Guaranty Agreement did not cover the amended lease. (Reply Brief of Appellants at 3-4.) Assuming that this oral motion for judgment on the pleadings was the sole basis for the trial court’s ruling just prior to trial, and that is questionable although unclear from the transcript of the hearing (see N.T. Trial, 9/19/00, at 4-28), the Guarantors raised this variation on their due process argument for the first time in their reply brief on appeal. Thus, it has been waived. See Commonwealth v. Lopata, 754 A.2d 685, 689 (Pa.Super.2000) ("A claim which has not been raised before the trial court cannot be raised for the first time on appeal.”).
. The trial court’s decision in this regard, on the morning of trial, was essentially a grant of summary judgment to First City on liability. Our scope of review of an order granting or denying a motion for summary judgment is well established:
We view the record in the light most favorable to the non-moving party, and all doubts as to the existence of a genuine issue of material fact must be resolved against the moving party. Only where there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and it is clear that the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law will summary judgment be entered. Our scope of review of a trial court's order granting or denying summary judgment is plenary, and our standard of review is clear: the trial court’s order will be reversed only where it is established that the court committed an error of law or abused its discretion.
Pappas v. Asbel, 564 Pa. 407, 418, 768 A.2d 1089, 1095 (2001) (citations omitted), cert. denied, 536 U.S. 938, 122 S.Ct. 2618, 153 L.Ed.2d 802 (2002).
.Although denominated as a "guaranty” agreement, the Guaranty Agreement, which allowed the landlord to seek payment from Guarantors immediately upon Professional Male’s default, without first pursuing remedies agáinst Professional Male (see id. at ¶ 3), is most properly categorized as a surety agreement. While both guaranty and surety agreements are agreements to be liable for the debt of another, the principal difference is that the creditor may look to the surety for immediate payment upon the debtor's default, without first attempting to collect the debt from the debtor, whereas the creditor must first seek payment from the debtor before going after a guarantor. See Reuter v. Citizens & Northern Bank, 410 Pa.Super. 199, 208 n. 3, 599 A.2d 673, 678 n. 3 (1991); see generally Summary of Pennsylvania Jurisprudence 2d, Commercial Law, §§ 6.1, 6.2 & 6.4.
. Although Guarantors assert that they were uncompensated/gratuitous sureties, and therefore should be discharged from liability for any material modification of the underlying lease, we find they that their status as officers and owners of Professional Male when making the guarantee indicates that they were compensated. See J.F. Walker Co., Inc. v. Excalibur Oil Group, 792 A.2d 1269; 1274 (Pa.Super.2002) (disagreeing that the sole shareholder in a corporation is "uncompensated” when, in exchange for his guarantee, a creditor extends a line of credit to the corporation in which he owns all shares; concluding that such a surety is not gratuitous).
. While such an interpretation would seemingly swallow the whole agreement, in referring to this provision, First City seems to make just such a sweeping argument: "Guarantors now argue that, under their theory of the caselaw discussed above [Reliance, supra, and other cases], their liability is discharged as a matter of law. However, by the plain language of the Guaranty Agreement they have specifically waived the very defense upon which they are attempting to rely.” (Response Brief for Cross-Appellant at 15.)
. In considering whether contract language is ambiguous, it is well-settled that:
A contract contains an ambiguity "if it is reasonably susceptible of different constructions and capable of being understood in more than one sense.” This question, however, is not resolved in a vacuum. Instead, "contractual terms are ambiguous if they are subject to more than one reasonable interpretation when applied to a particular set of facts.” In the absence of an ambiguity, the plain meaning of the agreement will be enforced. The meaning of an unambiguous written instrument presents a question of law for resolution by the court.
Murphy v. Duquesne Univ. Of The Holy Ghost, 565 Pa. 571, 591, 777 A.2d 418, 430 (2001) (citations omitted).
.The order states:
AND NOW, to wit, this 2nd day of October, 2000, this member of the Court having heard the above-captioned matter without a jury and finding that the real party plaintiff in interest is McIntyre Square Associates, and pursuant to Pa.R.C.P. 2002(a), it is hereby ORDERED that McIntyre Square Associates shall be, and it hereby is, substituted in place and stead of First City Company, and the caption of this case and all pleadings herein henceforth shall be *455deemed amended to reflect this substitution.
(Trial Court Order, 10/2/00.) It should be noted, however, that there has never been a dispute that McIntyre Square, as the landlord named on the lease, was the real party in interest.
. We have held that "[a] real party in interest in any given contract or chose in action is the person who can discharge the duties created and control an action brought to enforce rights.” Craig by Boosel v. Farren, 700 A.2d 543, 545 (Pa.Super.1997).
. Black’s Law Dictionaiy defines official bond as "[a] bond given by a public officer, conditioned that he shall well and faithfully perform all the duties of the office. The term is sometimes made to include the bonds of executors, guardians, trustees, etc.” Black's Law Dictionaiy 180 (6th Edition 1990).
. See, e.g., J.F. Walker Co., Inc. v. Excalibur Oil Group, Inc., 792 A.2d 1269, 1274 (Pa.Super.2002) (citing Section 128, "Modification Of Principal’s Duty”); Uhl Const. v. Fidelity & Deposit Co. of Maryland, 371 Pa.Super. 520, 530, 538 A.2d 562, 567 (1988) (citing Section 142, “Application Of Payments To Creditor”); First Nat'l Consumer Discount Co. v. McCrossan, 336 Pa.Super. 541, 550, 486 A.2d 396, 401 (1984) (citing Section 132, "Surrender Or Impairment Of Security By Creditor”).
. Given that we have vacated the judgment entered against Guarantors, we will not review First City’s final argument, that it was entitled to an award of counsel fees under the Guaranty Agreement.