Court Opinion

ID: 6327445
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-03-28 20:00:24.185377+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:22:25.496266
License: Public Domain

In the

    United States Court of Appeals
                 For the Seventh Circuit
                     ____________________

No. 21-1922
INDIGO OLD CORP., INC.,
                                                  Plaintiff-Appellant,

                                 v.

THOMAS P. GUIDO,
                                                 Defendant-Appellee.
                     ____________________

         Appeal from the United States District Court for the
           Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division.
           No. 19 C 7491 — Virginia M. Kendall, Judge.
                     ____________________

   ARGUED DECEMBER 10, 2021 — DECIDED MARCH 28, 2022
                     ____________________

   Before EASTERBROOK, KANNE, and SCUDDER, Circuit Judges.
   EASTERBROOK, Circuit Judge. As part of an asset-purchase
agreement, IS Investments (ISI) promised to pay Indigo Old
Corp. $2 million plus interest on a deﬁned schedule. Thomas
Guido guaranteed this debt. Indigo ﬁled this suit under the
diversity jurisdiction to collect on the guaranty. It is entitled
to enforce Guido’s obligation without ﬁrst trying to collect
from ISI. But Indigo must show that ISI has failed to keep its
promise to pay, and the district court dismissed the complaint
2                                                               No. 21-1922

after concluding that it does not allege that ISI owes any-
thing—yet. 2021 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 76258 (N.D. Ill. Apr. 21, 2021).
    On April 17, 2017, ISI, Indigo, Guido, and CIBC Bank exe-
cuted a number of related documents. One of these is the note
that ISI made in favor of Indigo. A second is the guaranty. A
third is a subordination agreement, which entitles the Bank to
be paid ahead of Indigo unless ISI meets certain ﬁnancial con-
ditions designed for the Bank’s security. Indigo’s complaint
does not allege that ISI has retired the Bank’s loan or met the
ﬁnancial conditions. This means, the district judge held, that
ISI is forbidden to pay Indigo—which also means that ISI is
not in default under the note. No default by the principal
debtor, no enforcement against the guarantor.
      Indigo relies on the guaranty’s language, the core of which
is:
      [Guido] does absolutely, unconditionally and irrevocably guaran-
      tee to [Indigo] the payment of all amounts owed [Indigo] pursu-
      ant to the Note (such payments sometimes hereinafter referred to
      as the “Guaranteed Obligations”).
      Upon any failure by [ISI] to timely make payment as required un-
      der the Note, [Indigo] may at its option proceed in the ﬁrst in-
      stance against [Guido] to require full and prompt payment and
      performance of the Guaranteed Obligations, without ﬁrst pro-
      ceeding against [ISI] … .
      [Guido’s] obligations hereunder shall remain fully binding and
      shall not be impaired or discharged although [Indigo] may have
      waived one or more defaults by [ISI] or granted indulgences to
      [ISI], or extended the time of performance by [ISI], modiﬁed or
      amended the Note, extended or renewed the Note or released [ISI]
      from the performance of its obligations under such Note, or failed
      or neglected to exercise any of [Indigo’s] rights against [ISI], not-
      withstanding that [Guido] may not have consented thereto or may
      not have notice or knowledge thereof.
No. 21-1922                                                        3

Indigo particularly relies on the third paragraph, which says
that side deals between Indigo and ISI, or anyone else such as
the Bank, do not aﬀect the guaranty’s obligation.
    There are two problems with Indigo’s argument. The ﬁrst
lies in the guaranty’s initial paragraph, which says that it co-
vers the amounts “owed” by ISI. The next paragraph repeats
this: the guaranty kicks in on ISI’s failure “to timely make
payment as required under the Note”. As long as ISI does not
owe anything, Guido need not pay on the guaranty. Of
course, if the reason ISI does not owe anything is a modiﬁca-
tion within the scope of the third paragraph, then Guido re-
mains liable. But that is the second problem. The district court
found that there had not been any modiﬁcation of ISI’s obli-
gation, and Indigo does not contest this conclusion.
    If the note and guaranty had been the only original docu-
ments, then a later-adopted subordination agreement would
have counted as a modiﬁcation for the purpose of the third
paragraph. That’s not what happened, however. All three
documents were executed contemporaneously. Illinois law,
which supplies the rule of decision, includes a “long-standing
principle that instruments executed at the same time, by the
same parties, for the same purpose, and in the course of the
same transaction are regarded as one contract and will be con-
strued together.” Gallagher v. Lenart, 226 Ill. 2d 208, 233 (2007).
See also, e.g., Sandra Frocks, Inc. v. Ziﬀ, 397 Ill. 497 (1947); Wil-
son v. Roots, 119 Ill. 379 (1887).
    Far from contesting the existence or application of this
package-deal rule, Indigo’s reply brief tells us: “The District
Court correctly ruled that the various agreements entered into
to accomplish the business sale that underlies this dispute are
to be considered together as a single instrument.” Indigo’s
4                                                     No. 21-1922

sole appellate argument is that the district court did not give
enough weight to the language of the guaranty in its role as
part of a “single instrument.” Yet we have already shown why
that is incorrect. To be sure, the guaranty allows enforcement
without ﬁrst trying to collect from ISI, but only if ISI has failed
to make “payment as required under the Note”. And the note
must be read together with the subordination agreement to
determine when payments are “required”. The district court,
reading all documents together, found that ISI is not yet “re-
quired” to pay anything to Indigo. It follows that Indigo can-
not collect from Guido under the guaranty.
    We could imagine an argument that ambiguities in these
documents might be illuminated by parol evidence. Indigo
has not made such an argument, however, or alluded to any
intrinsic or extrinsic ambiguities in the documents. Nor has
Indigo denied that the guaranty is part of the original pack-
age; it acknowledges that all three documents must be read as
one. Indigo stands on the documents’ language. Given that
choice, the judgment must be
                                                        AFFIRMED.