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Posted on Feb 15 2017 4:41PM by Attorney, Jason A. Lee
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The Tennessee Court of Appeals recently decided
a case (F&M Marketing
Services, Inc. v. Christenberry Trucking and Farm, Inc., E2016-00205-COA-R3-CV,
2017 WL 417223_(Tenn. Ct. App. 2017)) involving a request to pierce the
corporate veil of a Defendant after the Plaintiff got a substantial judgment
against that Defendant for breach of contract.
The total judgment in this case was $375,524.29. After the initial judgment was entered, the
Plaintiff learned that the Defendant had no assets to satisfy the
judgment. As a result, the Plaintiff petitioned
the trial to hold the primary shareholder of the Defendant personally liable
for the judgment against the Defendant corporation. The Tennessee Court of Appeals did a good job
discussing the circumstances when an individual shareholder can be found
personally responsible for a judgment against a corporation in Tennessee.
The Court noted that the most important case
outlining when it is appropriate to pierce the corporate veil in Tennessee is
the FDIC v. Allen, 584
F. Supp. 386 (E.D. Tenn. 1984) decision.
The Court noted that numerous Tennessee Court of Appeals and the
Tennessee Supreme Court have nearly uniformly considered the “Allen
factors” that were outlined in this case many years ago. The factors to be considered when determining
whether to allow a judgment to be against individual shareholders and simply
disregarding the corporate veil include the following:
Factors to be
considered in determining whether to disregard the corporate veil include not
only whether the entity has been used to work a fraud or injustice in
contravention of public policy, but also: (1) whether there was a failure to
collect paid in capital; (2) whether the corporation was grossly
undercapitalized; (3) the nonissuance of stock certificates; (4) the sole
ownership of stock by one individual; (5) the use of the same office or
business location; (6) the employment of the same employees or attorneys; (7)
the use of the corporation as an instrumentality or business conduit for an
individual or another corporation; (8) the diversion of corporate assets by or
to a stockholder or other entity to the detriment of creditors, or the
manipulation of assets and liabilities in another; (9) the use of the
corporation as a subterfuge in illegal transactions; (10) the formation and use
of the corporation to transfer to it the existing liability of another person
or entity; and (11) the failure to maintain arms length relationships among
related entities.
F&M
Marketing at 3 (quoting Rogers v.
Louisville Land Company, 367 S....
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Posted on May 15 2016 3:03PM by Attorney, Jason A. Lee
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The Tennessee Court of
Appeals in John
Jason Davis v. Johnstone Group Inc. v. Appraisal Services Group, Inc., No.
W2015-01884-COA-R3-CV, 2016 WL 908902 (Tenn. Ct. App. 2016) discussed
the enforceability of a non-compete agreement and a request for injunctive
relief. The key issues in this case was
whether there was a legitimate business protectable business interest that would
justify the enforcement of this non-competition agreement. This case provides a very good overview of
Tennessee law on the enforcement of non-competition agreements.
The Court noted that
non-compete agreements are disfavored in Tennessee because they restrain trade
(citing Hasty
v. Rent-A-Driver, Inc., 671 S.W.2d 471 (Tenn. 1984)). However, the Court found that Tennessee
Courts will still uphold agreements if the restrictions are reasonable. Additionally, the time and territorial of
limits of the agreement must be no greater than is necessary to protect the
business interests of the employer (citing Matthews v. Barnes, 293 S.W.
1993 (Tenn. 1927)).
The Court noted that
the Tennessee Supreme Court’s analysis in the Hasty
opinion is the key case law on the issue of whether a legitimate business
interest justifies the enforcement of the non-competition clause. Specifically, the Tennessee Supreme Court in
the Hasty
case said as follows:
Of course, any
competition by a former employee may well injure the business of the employer.
An employer, however, cannot by contract restrain ordinary competition. In
order for an employer to be entitled to protection, there must be special facts
present over and above ordinary competition. These special facts must be such
that without the covenant not to compete the employee would gain an unfair
advantage in future competition with the employer.
Hasty,
671 S.W.2d at 473. As a result, the
employer trying to enforce the agreement must show special facts “beyond
protection from ordinary competition that would give” the employee...
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Posted on Oct 19 2014 4:39PM by Attorney, Jason A. Lee
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The Tennessee Court of Appeals’ case of Gary
Atchley v. Tennessee Credit, LLC, No. M2013-00234-COA-R3-CV, 2014 WL 4629042
(Tenn. Ct. App. 2014), discussed the doctrine of “after-acquired-title”
under Tennessee law. This case is
relatively straight forward. On
September 22, 2009, the plaintiff purchased from Tennessee Credit, LLC a piece
of real property for $18,000.00. At that
time he signed and presented the $18,000.00 check to Tennessee Credit,
LLC. The problem was, Tennessee Credit,
LLC did not actually own the property at the time of the sale. Tennessee Credit, LLC did have the right to foreclose
on the property at the time of the sale but they had not done this yet, so they
did not actually own the property. It
was not until December 4, 2009 that Tennessee Credit, LLC actually owned the
property.
After Tennessee Credit, LLC obtained
title, the purchaser desired to rescind the transaction and demanded a refund
of the $18,000.00 paid to Tennessee Credit, LLC. This Tennessee Court of Appeals’ decision ultimately
agreed that this contract could be rescinded and the $18,000.00 should be
refunded to the purchaser. The Trial
Court said it best, “you can’t sell property you don’t own . . .”. Atchley at
2. The Appellate Court reviewed
some very old Tennessee decisions from the early 1900’s and 1800’s in order to
decide this case. There has not been
case law on the “after-acquired-title” doctrine at issue in this case in the last
80 years. Tennessee Credit, LLC
attempted to argue the principal of “after-acquired-title” which would allow
them to enforce the transaction because they acquired the title after the
transaction. The Tennessee Court of
Appeals rejected this argument and stated as follows:
When Mr. Dunn
advertised Ms. Roller's property for sale and attempted to sell the property to
Mr. Atchley,
he knew Tennessee Credit did not have title to the
property. Like the executor in Woods,
Mr. Dunn's representation that he had a right to sell Ms. Roller's property was
a “species of fraud.” Therefore, in keeping with the principles announced in Woods, we do not
believe Mr. Atchley
should be compelled to take the after-acquired-title from Tennessee C...
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Posted on Sep 7 2014 9:46PM by Attorney, Jason A. Lee
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A new Tennessee Court of Appeals decision,
Samuel
Bridgefourth, Jr. v. Santander Consumer USA, Inc., No. W2013-02468-COA-R3-CV,
2014 WL 3563470 (Tenn. Ct. App. 2014), dealt with a situation involving
repossession of the plaintiff’s car by a finance company. The plaintiff then paid the balance due on
the loan. He then received the title in
the mail but never received the vehicle back.
As a result, the plaintiff sued the defendant Santander Consumer USA,
Inc. alleging breach of contract, conversion, trespass to chattels, fraud,
misrepresentations and violation of the Tennessee Consumer Protection Act.
Ultimately, the case went to trial. The trial court awarded Mr. Bridgefourth
$6,000.00 in compensatory damages for conversion of the car and “special
damages in the amount of $13,348.00 for attorney’s fees necessary to compensate
Plaintiff for his losses as a result of Defendant’s actions.” The plaintiff then asked the court to clarify
its order and the trial court changed the $13,348.00 award from “special
damages” to “punitive damages”. As a
result, the defendant Santander appealed, arguing that it was not appropriate
to award attorneys’ fees in this case.
The Tennessee Court of Appeals noted the rule
in Tennessee is that “litigants must pay their own attorney’s fees unless there
is a statute or contractual provision providing otherwise.” Bridgefourth at 2 (citing State
v. Brown & Williamson Tobacco Corp., 18 S.W.3.d 186, 194 (Tenn. 2000)). The Tennessee Court of Appeals next addressed
whether the trial court could award attorney’s fees as “punitive damages” as
was done in this case. The Court noted:
The purpose of
punitive damages is not to compensate the plaintiff but to punish the wrongdoer
and to deter others from committing similar wrongs in the future. Attorney's
fees are not punitive in nature.
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Posted on Jun 1 2014 8:42PM by Attorney, Jason A. Lee
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Analysis: A recent Tennessee Court of Appeals decision
discussed the viability of a contract that had a one-sided arbitration provision. The Tennessee Court of Appeals decision of Richard A.
Berent v. CMH Homes, Inc., 2014 WL 813874 (Tenn. Ct. App. 2014) dealt
with an arbitration agreement that required the purchaser of a manufactured
mobile home to submit virtually all of the buyer’s potential claims to
arbitration. On the other hand, the same
contract provided certain exceptions to the “mandatory” arbitration that
exclusively benefited the mobile home manufacturer. The effective result was that the purchaser
of the mobile home had to submit virtually all of his claims to arbitration
whereas the seller of the manufactured mobile home could pursue judicial relief
for many claims.
As a result, the question before the Court
was whether this arbitration requirement was unconscionable and therefore
unenforceable under Tennessee law.
Previously in Taylor
v. Butler, 142 S.W.3d 277 (Tenn. 2004) the Tennessee Supreme Court held
that an arbitration agreement was unconscionable when it reserves the “right to
a judicial forum for the defendants while requiring the plaintiff to submit all
claims to arbitration.” Taylor
at 280. In the Berent
case the Tennessee Court of Appeals applied the Taylor
reasoning and found that this arbitration agreement was unconscionable. As a result, this Tennessee Court of Appeals
decision reaffirmed the applicability of the Taylor
decision finding that it is improper in Tennessee for any arbitration agreement
to selectively decide that one party has access to a judicial remedy while the
other party only has access to an arbitration remedy.
Interestingly, the defendants in this case
attacked the viability of the Supreme Court’s holding in Taylor
from 2004. The defendants asserted in
this case that Taylor
is no longer in the legal majority across the country and that this decision
should be overruled (in fact they assert this holding is only accepted in a “small
minority” of jurisdictions). Obviously,
the Tennessee Court of Appeals declined to overrule a Tennessee Supreme Court
decision and specifically stated that such an issue must be directed to...
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Posted on May 11 2014 10:01PM by Attorney, Jason A. Lee
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Analysis: The Tennessee Court of Appeals recently
decided an interesting case that discussed how long a settlement offer stays
open when the settlement offer does not have a specific expiration date or any
reference to how long the offer will remain open. In the Tennessee Court of Appeals decision of
Tonita
Reeves v. Pederson-Kronseder, LLC d/b/a Pederson’s Natural Farms, Inc., No. M2013-01651-COA-R3-CV,
2014 WL 1285702 (Tenn. Ct. App. 2014) the employee and employer were
preparing to arbitrate an age discrimination case. Prior to the time of the arbitration the
parties entered into settlement negotiations.
On June 29, 2012, a specific settlement
proposal was made by defense counsel to the plaintiff after multiple prior
emails discussing the concept of settlement (this proposal did not have any
expiration date). Defense counsel
followed up with additional emails inquiring about the status of settlement but
plaintiff’s counsel provided no specific response. In the following month the parties engaged in
additional written discovery and took additional depositions. The arbitration was set for August 15, 2012. Without any further offer being made, the
plaintiff emailed defense counsel August 12, 2012, three days before the
arbitration, and accepted the June 29, 2012 offer of settlement. Defense counsel responded by stating that the
June 29, 2012 offer of settlement was no longer viable due to the passage of
time and the expenses that had been incurred since it was made.
Ultimately, the arbitration went forward
and the plaintiff did not receive a favorable outcome at the arbitration. As a result, the plaintiff filed a lawsuit in
Chancery Court alleging breach of contract for the settlement proposal that was
“accepted” prior to the mediation. The
trial court found there was no enforceable settlement agreement in this
circumstance. This was appealed to the
Tennessee Court of Appeals.
The Tennessee Court
of Appeals considered whether there was a legitimate settlement. The Court basically found that settlement
offers only remain open for a reasonable period of time even when there is no
expiration date. Reeves at 4,
5. The court cited the rule in
the Tullahoma
Concrete case where the Court stated:
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Posted on Apr 27 2014 10:15PM by Attorney, Jason A. Lee
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Analysis: In a Tennessee breach of contract case if the
defendant has a counterclaim pending to recover attorney’s fees under the
contract and the plaintiff voluntary dismisses the case, the defendant can
recover attorney fees if not timely refiled.
This is governed by a Tennessee statute, T.C.A.
§ 20-6-306 that provides as follows:
(a) If a plaintiff voluntarily dismisses an action while a counterclaim
is pending for contractual attorney fees, and if the plaintiff does not timely
recommence the action, the court, upon proper showing, may order that the
counterclaimant is the prevailing party for the purpose of recovering
contractual attorney fees.
(b) This section shall only apply if the contract clause providing for
attorney fees applies equally to all parties to the contract.
As a result, the counterclaiming party is
essentially considered the prevailing party for the purpose of determining if
contractual attorney’s fees must be paid (this is the usual terminology in
contracts that discuss when attorney’s fees are due). However, this only occurs after the plaintiff
does not recommence the action in a timely manner (usually this will be within
one year from the dismissal). Even
though a voluntary dismissal under Tennessee Rule
of Civil Procedure 41.01 is not a determination on the merits, under this
statute, it does have the impact of essentially finding the defendant is the prevailing
party under a contractual term for attorney’s fees.
This statute was adopted and put in effect
on July 1, 2004. A search on Westlaw
shows this statute has not been substantively addressed by the Court of Appeals
or the Tennessee Supreme Court. I am not
sure how well known this statute is but it is certainly something to consider
in the context of a counterclaim in a bre...
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Posted on Oct 14 2013 9:03AM by Attorney, Jason A. Lee
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Brief
Summary: The Tennessee Court of Appeals court
determined that an employer cannot be held liable for intentional interference
with its own employment contract with an employee.
Analysis: The Tennessee Court of Appeals decision of Keith A. Davis v.
Shaw Industries Group, Inc., 2013 WL 1577642, No. M2012-01688-COA-R3-CV (Tenn.
Ct. App. 2013)
involved a situation where an employee was terminated from his employment in
Tennessee. The employee was terminated
for violating company policy for allegedly lying during an investigation into
whether he was involved in a romantic relationship with the human resource
manager. Part of plaintiff’s case was an
assertion that the employer intentionally interfered with his employment
contract with the employer. This claim
was dismissed by the trial court on a motion for summary judgment and this
issue was appealed to the Tennessee Court of Appeals.
The Tennessee Court of Appeals noted that
in order to prove a claim of intentional interference with an at will
employment contract the plaintiff must establish:
the defendant
intentionally and without justification procured the discharge of the employee
in question. The claim contemplate [s] a
three-party relationship—the plaintiff as employee, the corporation as
employer, and the defendants as procurers or inducers.
Davis at 3. The Appellate Court therefore found the trial
court correctly determined the employer could not be held liable for
intentional interference with its own employment contract with the plaintiff
employee. The court found that Tennessee
law is very clear on this issue when it stated:
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Posted on Sep 16 2013 9:02AM by Attorney, Jason A. Lee
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Analysis: The recent
Tennessee Court of Appeals decision of Reginald M. Mudd
v. Rexford Goostree, Jr. and Liberty Cabinets and Millwork, Inc., 2013 WL 1402157
(Tenn. Ct. App. 2013)
provided a good example of the great danger in signing a lease agreement in an
individual’s own name when it is intended to be signed on behalf of a
company. In this case, the lease
agreement listed the landlord as “Mudd Properties”. Mudd at 1. The tenant was listed as “Liberty Cabinets
& Millworks, Inc.” Mudd at 1. However, in the
signature box at the end of the lease Rexford Goostree Jr., the owner of
Liberty Cabinet & Millworks, Inc., signed the lease as follows:
TENANT:
REX GOOSTREE, JR.
By Rex Goostree, Jr.
(bold portions were handwritten) Mudd at 1. He did not state that he was signing on behalf
of the company as a representative. The
lease terms were breached by the Tenant and therefore the plaintiff sued Rex
Goostree Jr. personally for breach of contract. Mudd at 1. Rex Goostree Jr. asserted in response that he
should not be held personally liable under the commercial lease because “Liberty
Cabinets & Millworks, Inc.” was na...
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Posted on Aug 19 2013 10:14PM by Attorney, Jason A. Lee
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Analysis: The recent Tennessee Court of Appeals
decision of Brooke Buttrey v.
Holloway's, Inc., No. M2011-01335-COA-R3-CV, 2012 WL 6451802 (Tenn. Ct. App.
December 12, 2012)
considered a case where the defendant failed to construct the home in a
workmanlike manner. The trial court
concluded the defendant breached its contract based on the deficiencies in the
construction of the home. The next
question was, what are the appropriate damages for the deficient work? The trial court found the defendant was
required to pay back the total amount the plaintiff paid to build her house,
$143,272.00. Buttrey at 4.
It is clear under Tennessee law that in a
breach of contract action, “damages resulting from the breach are a necessary
element of the claim and, therefore, the claimant has the burden of proving
damages at trial.” Buttrey at 7. Under Tennessee law the purpose of assessing
damages in a breach of contact case is to "make the non-breaching party
whole, to place the non-breaching party in the same position he would have been
in had the contract been performed."
Buttrey at 7. (citing Hiller
v. Hailey, 915 S.W.2d 800, 805 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1995)). As a result, the “damages awarded by the
trial court should have been designed to place Ms. Buttrey
in the position she would have been in had the contract been performed as contemplated." Buttrey at 7.
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