Case Title: Chamberlain v. Marshall Auto & Truck Center, Inc.

Citation: 

Docket Number: 160349

State: virginia

Court: Virginia Supreme Court

Date: 2017-04-13T00:00:00Z

Document:
PRESENT:  All the Justices 
 
CHARLES R. CHAMBERLAIN 
 
 
 
OPINION BY 
v.  Record No. 160349 
CHIEF JUSTICE DONALD W. LEMONS 
 
 
 
APRIL 13, 2017 
MARSHALL AUTO & TRUCK CENTER, INC. 
 
 
FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF FAUQUIER COUNTY 
Herman A. Whisenant, Jr., Judge Designate 
 
 
In this appeal, we consider whether the Circuit Court of Fauquier County (“circuit court”) 
erred by holding that a surety who was an accommodation guarantor of a promissory note was 
not entitled to judgment against the maker of the note under Code § 49-27 upon default by the 
maker and seizure of collateral by the lender. 
I. Facts and Proceedings 
 
On January 5, 2015, Charles R. Chamberlain (“Chamberlain”) filed a complaint against 
Marshall Auto & Truck Center, Inc. (“Marshall”) in the circuit court.  The complaint alleged that 
Marshall executed a promissory note (“Note”) in the amount of $950,000 in favor of Middleburg 
Bank (“Middleburg”), and that Chamberlain executed a guaranty (“Guaranty”) of that Note.  
Marshall failed to make payments to Middleburg, and the bank withdrew funds from 
Chamberlain’s account to satisfy Marshall’s obligations under the Note.  Chamberlain maintains 
that, pursuant to Code § 49-27, he is entitled to judgment against Marshall for the amount taken 
by the lender from his account and applied in satisfaction of Marshall’s obligations under the 
Note.  Chamberlain demanded $50,614.94, plus interest. 
 
Marshall filed an answer, which admitted the validity of the Note and that Chamberlain 
executed the Guaranty.  As an affirmative defense, however, Marshall asserted that “[a]ny and 
all payments, if any, by Chamberlain constituted a gift.” 
 
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At a bench trial on November 2, 2015, evidence was presented demonstrating that in 
2007 Marshall executed the Note in favor of Middleburg to obtain a loan.  Payment of the Note 
was secured, in part, with the Guaranty.  As collateral for the loan, Chamberlain provided a 
$50,000 certificate of deposit (“CD”) on account with Middleburg and further took out a $1 
million life insurance policy on his life, naming the bank as beneficiary. 
 
On numerous occasions between 2009 and 2011, Marshall failed to make its scheduled 
payments on the Note.  Consistent with the Guaranty, Middleburg withdrew a total of $50,614.94 
from Chamberlain’s CD and applied those funds in partial satisfaction of Marshall’s payment 
obligations. 
 
At trial, Chamberlain testified that he executed the Guaranty because he “wanted to help 
out” Marshall’s sole owner and president, Manzar Asjodi (“Asjodi”).  The two were “intimately 
involved.” Chamberlain believed that Asjodi would be unable to obtain a new loan without his 
assistance.  Chamberlain “was not looking to make a profit” and he did not consider the 
arrangement to be a business opportunity.  Instead, Chamberlain testified that he placed the CD 
on deposit with Middleburg “[t]o help [Asjodi] gain loan approval.” 
 
Chamberlain further testified that the banker informed him and Asjodi that the CD was 
intended only as a “backstop” in the event that Marshall missed payments.  According to 
Chamberlain, the suretyship arrangement “was supposed to be a low-risk situation.”  He “did not 
expect payments would not be made.”  For her part, Asjodi testified that “the purpose of that CD 
was whenever [Marshall] needs money we can go take that money.”  At some point after 
Chamberlain executed the Guaranty, his romantic relationship with Asjodi ended.  The two were 
no longer communicating regularly when the bank began making the withdrawals from the CD. 
 
 
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After presentation of the evidence, the circuit court announced its ruling from the bench.  
First, the court found that “the gift was putting the CD up,” and that Chamberlain did so because 
of the “romantic relationship that he was having with [Asjodi].”  Second, the court found that 
Chamberlain wanted to help Asjodi and did not file suit until “everything went sour between the 
parties.”  Third, the lack of documentation between the parties to “make it very clear as to who 
owed what to whom,” suggested that Chamberlain “did it as a friend to another friend. It wasn’t 
a business transaction and, indeed, it was a gift.”  For these reasons, the circuit court ruled “that 
the Plaintiff recover nothing from the Defendant and that the Defendant have a verdict in its 
favor.”  Chamberlain filed a motion for reconsideration, which the circuit court denied.  
Chamberlain then appealed to this Court, and we granted his appeal on the following assignment 
of error: 
1.  The trial court erred in ordering that the plaintiff recover 
nothing and entering a verdict in favor of the defendant. 
 
a. The trial court erred in failing to apply § 49-27 of the Code. 
 
b. The trial court erred in finding a gift. 
 
II.  Analysis 
A.  Standard of Review 
 
Statutory interpretation presents a question of law, which we review de novo.  McGrath 
v. Dockendorf, 292 Va. 834, 837, 793 S.E.2d 336, 337 (2016).  We likewise review the circuit 
court’s application of law to undisputed facts de novo.  Johnson v. Hart, 279 Va. 617, 623, 692 
S.E.2d 239, 242 (2010).  The circuit court’s findings of fact, however, will not be disturbed 
unless they are plainly wrong or without supporting evidence.  Preferred Sys. Sols., Inc. v. GP 
Consulting, LLC, 284 Va. 382, 394, 732 S.E.2d 676, 682 (2012). 
 
 
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B.  Code § 49-27 
 
An accommodation or gratuitous surety is someone who assumes secondary liability on 
an obligation for the benefit of the principal rather than for their own profit.  See Southwood 
Builders, Inc. v. Peerless Ins. Co., 235 Va. 164, 168-69, 366 S.E.2d 104, 106-07 (1988) (noting 
that accommodation sureties “deriv[e] no benefit from the transaction”) (quoting Kirschbaum v. 
Blair, 98 Va. 35, 40, 34 S.E. 895, 897 (1900)).  In Virginia, “the accommodation surety has 
always been one of the favorites of the law.”  Dickenson v. Charles, 173 Va. 393, 406, 4 S.E.2d 
351, 356 (1939) (quoting Scott v. Norton Hardware Co., 54 F.2d 1047, 1051 (4th Cir. 1932)).  
Compensated sureties, by contrast, act “to promote their own interests, and are to be judged 
accordingly.”  Southwood Builders, 235 Va. at 169, 366 S.E.2d at 107 (quoting C. S. Luck & 
Sons v. Boatwright, 157 Va. 490, 494-95, 162 S.E. 53, 54 (1932)).  Compensated or not, 
however, “[i]t is elementary that one secondarily liable on an obligation . . . who has satisfied the 
demands of the holder . . . is entitled to reimbursement from the party primarily liable.”  
Dickenson, 173 Va. at 400, 4 S.E.2d at 353. 
 
A surety’s or guarantor’s right to reimbursement is founded “upon the plainest principles 
of natural reason and justice.”  Id. (quoting Kendrick v. Forney, 63 Va. (22 Gratt.) 748, 749-50 
(1872)).  The common law has long recognized this right, which is now codified by Code § 49-
27.  In pertinent part, that statute states: 
If any person liable as . . . guarantor . . . pay[s], in whole or in part, 
such note . . . the person having a right of action for the amount so 
paid may . . . obtain a judgment or decree against any person 
against whom such right of action exists for the amount so paid, 
with interest from the time of payment, and five per centum 
damages on such amount. The person so paying, in whole or in 
part . . . any such note . . . shall, by operation of law, in addition to 
the remedy above provided, be substituted to and become the 
 
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owner of all of the rights and remedies of the creditor for the 
enforcement and collection of the amount or amounts so paid, and 
shall be deemed the assignee thereof. 
 
Code § 49-27. 
 
On appeal, Marshall argues that Code § 49-27 does not apply because Chamberlain 
executed the Guaranty as a gift.  Marshall maintains that the circuit court’s finding that 
Chamberlain executed the Guaranty “to help out” Asjodi precludes him from exercising any 
right to reimbursement under Code § 49-27.  We do not agree.  Code § 49-27 makes no 
distinction between compensated and uncompensated sureties.  On the contrary, the right to 
reimbursement is expressly available to “any person liable as [a] . . . guarantor.”  Code § 49-27 
(emphasis added). 
 
Chamberlain testified that he put the CD on deposit with Middleburg to “help [Asjodi] 
gain loan approval,” but the CD was not itself a “gift.”  To the extent the facts demonstrate any 
gift at all, that gift was Chamberlain’s decision to act as an accommodation surety rather than a 
compensated surety.  Chamberlain merely made it possible for Marshall to gain loan approval by 
putting the CD on deposit as collateral. 
 
Neither Chamberlain nor Asjodi testified that Chamberlain agreed not to seek 
reimbursement if the CD was drawn down by Middleburg.  Indeed, the record does not contain 
any evidence that Chamberlain waived his rights under Code § 49-27.  The undisputed evidence 
instead demonstrates that Chamberlain assumed secondary liability as a guarantor of the Note 
and that Middleburg withdrew funds from Chamberlain’s CD to partially satisfy the Note.  
Taken together, these facts triggered Chamberlain’s right to reimbursement “for the amount so 
paid, with interest from the time of payment, and five per centum damages on such amount.”  
 
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Code § 49-27.  Because there is no evidence in the record that Chamberlain made a gift of the 
CD or waived his statutory rights under Code § 49-27, he is entitled to judgment. 
III.  Conclusion 
 
For the reasons stated, we will reverse the judgment of the circuit court and remand for a 
determination of the amount due to Chamberlain under Code § 49-27. 
Reversed and remanded.