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Smith v. Cent. Point Pawn, LLC
David J. Smith filed the brief pro se.
Kendell H. Ferguson and Sorenson, Ransom, Ferguson & Clyde, LLP, Grants Pass, filed the brief for respondent.
Before Armstrong, Presiding Judge, and Tookey, Judge, and Shorr, Judge.
Plaintiff sued defendant, Central Point Pawn, LLC (CPP), after CPP failed to repay a loan from plaintiff that was arranged by a member-manager of CPP, without the knowledge or approval of the other member-managers. CPP moved for summary judgment, maintaining that it was not responsible for repaying the loan because it was not made in the ordinary course of business and not approved by a majority of CPP’s member-managers. The trial court granted CPP’s motion.1 For the reasons explained below, we reverse and remand.
In reviewing a trial court’s summary judgment ruling, we view the evidence in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party, here plaintiff, to determine whether there is a genuine issue of material fact that precludes summary judgment. Rush v. Corvallis School District 509J , 291 Or.App. 252, 253, 419 P.3d 746 (2018). There is no genuine issue of material fact if, "based upon the record before the court viewed in a manner most favorable to the adverse party, no objectively reasonable juror could return a verdict for the adverse party on the matter that is the subject of the motion for summary judgment." ORCP 47 C. We state the facts and apply the law consistently with that standard.
CPP is a member-managed limited liability company (LLC) that owns and operates a pawn shop in Oregon. Under its operating agreement, the purpose of CPP is to "engage in any Pawnbroker act or activity for which a limited liability company may be organized under the laws of the state of Oregon."2 The operating agreement does not specify any procedures for borrowing money that will be used for CPP’s business operations.
In early 2011, plaintiff met with Bogart, a member-manager and CPP’s registered agent, and proposed to extend a line of credit to CPP. Bogart accepted the loan on behalf of CPP and borrowed $ 48,800 over the next six months. In a declaration submitted to the trial court, Bogart averred that the loan was "needed for and used in the operation of CPP’s pawn shop." Based on the summary judgment record, plaintiff and Bogart did not memorialize the loan agreement in a written contract, but evidence of the loan was furnished to CPP’s tax preparer. Undisputed evidence in the summary judgment record shows that Bogart did not consult with CPP’s other member-managers regarding the loan, and the other member-managers only learned of the loan when plaintiff brought this action against CPP to recover the balance due.
Plaintiff brought the underlying lawsuit when CPP failed to repay the loan.3 CPP argued that it was not bound by the loan agreement between Bogart and plaintiff. In its motion for summary judgment, CPP maintained that the debt owed to plaintiff was not incurred in the ordinary course of business—because, as CPP put it, pawnbrokers are "in the business of loaning money—not being debtors"—nor was the loan approved by a majority of the member-managers. During the summary judgment hearing, CPP took the position that a loan from a bank or other "standard lender" would "probably" be in the ordinary course of business but a loan from "an unsecured private party" like plaintiff would not.
The trial court granted CPP’s motion with a ruling that did not explain the bases for its decision. During the summary judgment proceedings, the parties primarily focused their arguments on whether CPP borrowed money from plaintiff in the ordinary course of its business. In light of the arguments presented at summary judgment, we understand the court’s ruling to mean that the court concluded that CPP did not, as a matter of either fact or law, borrow money from plaintiff in the ordinary course of business, and, therefore, that CPP was not obliged to repay plaintiff.
On appeal, plaintiff argues, as he did below, that there is at least a triable issue of fact whether the loan to CPP was arranged by Bogart in the ordinary course of CPP’s business. CPP, for its part, did not argue at summary judgment or on appeal that Bogart lacked authority to bind CPP to any and all loan agreements. Nor did CPP contend that plaintiff knew or had notice that Bogart lacked authority to bind CPP to the loan in question. Rather, CPP argues only that the debt was not incurred in the ordinary course of business, because CPP operated "a pawnshop in the business of loaning money to others in exchange for possession of collateral," and "was not in the business of borrowing money in the form of handshake, paperless, unsecured loans with individuals who happened to walk through the door." Essentially, CPP contends that this particular loan was so unusual that it could not possibly have been taken on in the ordinary course of business and, therefore, required authorization by the other member-managers, which Bogart neither sought nor secured.
The key question on appeal, therefore, is whether a reasonable juror could find that CPP incurred the debt from plaintiff’s loan in the ordinary course of business as provided in ORS 63.140(1)(a).4 Only if that predicate inquiry is answered in the negative does the subsequent inquiry—whether CPP’s indebtedness was nevertheless approved by a majority of the member-managers under ORS 63.140 (1)(b) —become relevant.
"Ordinary course" of business is not a defined statutory term under Oregon law. When we encounter an undefined statutory phrase, we assume, at least at first, its "plain, natural, and ordinary" meaning. DCBS v. Muliro , 359 Or. 736, 745-46, 380 P.3d 270 (2016). When the phrase is a legal term of art, however, we initially "turn to legal dictionaries to understand the established legal meaning." State v. McNally , 361 Or. 314, 322, 392 P.3d 721 (2017). We "potentially also consider the overall statutory scheme in which a legal term appears, as well as the meaning that the term has for regulators who oversee the field." Comcast Corp. v. Dept. of Rev. , 356 Or. 282, 296, 337 P.3d 768 (2014). Further, we can also look to other provisions of related statutes and opinions (existing at the time of the statute’s enactment) interpreting the pertinent statutory phrase. Polacek and Polacek , 349 Or. 278, 284, 243 P.3d 1190 (2010).
The phrase "ordinary course" of business is a legal term of art that is commonly used in the law governing business transactions and commercial disputes. At the time that ORS 63.140 was enacted, "ordinary course of business" was defined as follows:
Black’s Law Dictionary 1098 (6th ed. 1990).5 That definition supports a broad construction that encompasses routine and expected business activity both directly related and ancillary or incidental to a company’s primary business purpose. Further, an act or transaction can be in the "ordinary course" even if it only occurs occasionally, so long as the act or transaction is sufficiently related or incidental to maintaining or performing normal, everyday business operations. For example, as CPP acknowledged to the trial court, a business can, in the ordinary course of business, occasionally borrow money from a bank to be used for business operations.
Oregon case law provides additional insight into the meaning of the phrase "ordinary course" of business. While we have found no case law construing the phrase "ordinary course" under ORS 63.140 or other sections governing LLCs, there is Oregon case law examining the same or very similar terms in the context of corporations and commercial law. In Sailer v. Land-Livestock-Rec., Inc. , 268 Or. 531, 534-35, 522 P.2d 214 (1974), for example, the Supreme Court examined a similar phrase—"usual and regular course of business"—in former ORS 57.511 (1973), repealed by Or Laws 1987, ch. 52, § 181, which...
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