Johnson v. J & S Scales ( 2020 )


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  •                        NOT DESIGNATED FOR PUBLICATION
    No. 122,199
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF KANSAS
    DENNIS T. JOHNSON,
    Appellee,
    v.
    J & S SCALES, INC.,
    and
    JOHN P. REBANT,
    Appellants,
    and
    J & S WEIGHING SOLUTIONS, LLC,
    and
    MARJON, LLC,
    Defendants.
    MEMORANDUM OPINION
    Appeal from Reno District Court; TIMOTHY J. CHAMBERS, judge. Opinion filed December 23,
    2020. Affirmed.
    David E. (Rick) Roberts, of Hutchinson, for appellants.
    Gregory D. Bell, of Bell and Robinson LLC, of Hutchinson, for appellee.
    Before HILL, P.J., BRUNS and SCHROEDER, JJ.
    PER CURIAM: Kansas courts have long allowed parties to be bound by a contract
    for goods through their course of dealing and performance. J & S Scales, Inc. (J & S
    Scales) and its owner, John P. Rebant, wanted to buy Dennis T. Johnson's business, J & S
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    Scale Fabricators, Inc. (J & S Fabricators). J & S Scales and Rebant now appeal the
    district court's decision granting Johnson a joint and several judgment of $94,182 for
    conversion and breach of contract against them, arguing the district court erred in finding
    the parties created an enforceable consignment contract for the unpaid portion of the
    inventory at closing. Upon careful review of the record, we agree with the district court's
    finding there was a binding contract between the parties for J & S Scales to take the extra
    inventory on consignment. We observe no error by the district court, and we affirm its
    judgment.
    FACTS
    Johnson created J & S Fabricators to design, manufacture, and sell livestock,
    truck, and bulk weighing scales. In 2008, Johnson decided to sell the business with the
    assistance of a broker. In 2009, Johnson's broker introduced him to Rebant, the president
    of J & S Scales, a company Rebant formed for the purpose of buying J & S Fabricators.
    Johnson and Rebant extensively negotiated the sale of the business between 2009 and
    2011. During this time, J & S Fabricators continued to manufacture scales. On June 3,
    2010, J & S Fabricators and Johnson, individually, executed an asset sale and purchase
    agreement (the sales contract), whereby J & S Scales agreed to purchase the assets of
    J & S Fabricators. Relevant to the issues on appeal are Paragraphs 1, 3, 4, and 21 of the
    sales contract.
    Paragraph 1 provided:
    "SALE AND ASSIGNMENT OF ASSETS. Sellers agree to sell, transfer and
    assign to Buyer all of Sellers' right, title and interest in and to the tangible and intangible
    personal property of Sellers' Business, including all the Intangible Property Rights and all
    Sellers' inventory, machinery, equipment, trade fixtures, tools, office furniture, vehicles,
    computers, computer software and designs, product designs, designs in process,
    discontinued designs, prints, manufacturing jigs, replacement and maintenance parts,
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    books and records (other than the corporate minute book and stock ledger and corporate
    tax records), permits, equipment leases, licenses, contracts with suppliers and customers,
    royalty agreements, endorsement agreements, patents, trademarks, service marks, trade
    names, telephone and facsimile numbers, domain sites, web sites, goodwill, customer
    lists, and customer files (collectively referred to herein as the 'Assets'), but excluding
    Sellers' cash and cash deposits, cash escrows and accounts receivable and the inventory
    Buyer does not accept at Closing (referred to herein as the 'Rejected Inventory')."
    Paragraph 3 provided:
    "PURCHASE PRICE. For and in consideration of the selling, transferring and
    assigning the Assets to Buyer and Sellers' agreements in the Consulting and Non-
    Compete Agreement, Buyer agrees to pay to Sellers Two Hundred Fifty Thousand
    Dollars ($250,000.00) at Closing (referred to herein as the 'Fixed Payment'); and an
    additional amount agreed upon in writing by Sellers and Buyer at or prior to Closing for
    Sellers' inventory, excluding the Rejected Inventory (referred to herein as the 'Agreed
    Value of Inventory'). $100,000.00 of the Fixed Payment shall be allocated to the
    Intangible Property Rights, $50,000.00 of the Fixed Payment shall be allocated to the
    Consulting and Non-Compete Agreement, and the remaining $100,000.00 of the Fixed
    Payment shall be allocated to the remaining tangible assets."
    Paragraph 4 provided:
    "TRANSFER OF ASSETS. At Closing, Sellers, contemporaneously with the
    performance by Buyer of its obligations to be performed at Closing, shall deliver bills of
    sale (with full warranty of title), assignments, transfers of intellectual property (including
    the Patents and NTEP Certificates) and assignments of contracts, titles and other
    appropriate instruments of transfer, all in form and substance reasonably satisfactory to
    Buyer's counsel, and as shall be sufficient to convey and transfer to Buyer the Assets and
    all of the right, title and interest of Sellers therein, free and clear from all liabilities, liens,
    restrictions and encumbrances of whatever nature."
    3
    Paragraph 21 provided:
    "ENTIRE AGREEMENT. This Agreement and the Exhibits attached hereto,
    together with the Agreements referenced in the attached Exhibits, all of even date
    herewith, contain the entire understanding between the parties hereto and supersede any
    prior or contemporaneous, written or oral agreements between them respecting the within
    subject matter. There are no representations, agreements, arrangements or
    understandings, oral or written, between the parties hereto relating to the subject matter
    of this Agreement which are not fully expressed herein or therein. The terms and
    provisions of any prior agreements between Sellers and Buyer are superseded by this
    Agreement. Any amendments to this Agreement shall be in writing, signed by the parties
    hereto."
    Johnson believed Paragraph 3 of the agreement required J & S Scales to pay an
    amount to be determined at the time of closing for J & S Fabricators' inventory, as J & S
    Fabricators was continuing to purchase material and manufacture inventory through the
    date of closing. The sales contract specified a closing date of July 30, 2010. However,
    closing had to be postponed because Rebant had difficulty obtaining financing. Johnson
    agreed to extend the closing as needed to allow Rebant to obtain financing. On October 5,
    2010, Rebant obtained a loan guaranteed by the Small Business Administration (the SBA
    loan) for $739,000. The SBA loan provided that only $300,000 of the loan proceeds
    would be designated toward the purchase of inventory.
    In November 2010, J & S Fabricators' inventory had a value of approximately
    $416,000. Because the cost of the inventory exceeded his available funds, Rebant needed
    to reach an agreement with Johnson to purchase all of J & S Fabricators' inventory. On
    November 26, 2010, Rebant sent Johnson an email proposing J & S Fabricators consign
    $116,052.89 of inventory to J & S Scales to make up the difference. The email stated, in
    pertinent part:
    4
    "I went through the inventory list, and I want to run this by you. Your current
    total value of inventory is $416,052.89. I will have $300,000 for inventory at the time of
    closing. In looking at your inventory, the majority of the dollars is in the Bulk Scale
    section (BL). I took some of the larger items (finished good items) and with just a
    handful of items, came up with just over $116,000.
    "BL101003-000 10K BPH AIR OPER BULK SCALE (1) ea. Total: $20,254.29
    "BL101005-000 20K BPH BULK SCALE 42" GATES (1) ea. Total: $28,146.88
    "BL101010-000 2.5K BPH AUTOMATIC BULK SCALE (3) ea. Total: $42,110.64
    "BL201001-008 AIR SUPPLY ASSEMBLY (4) ea. Total: $5,408.80
    "BL201001-003 30 IN GATE COMPLETE [ASSEMBLY] (7) ea. Total: $20,571.88
    "These items total $116,492.49.
    "Subtracting this from your total inventory list $416,052.89, leaves $299,560.40.
    "What I would propose is that the items listed above be consigned to us, and we
    will pay you as they are sold. We will buy the remaining inventory for $299,560.40. We
    may have to adjust this a little bit, as if I understood you correctly, you have almost
    $15,000 of inventory that was coming from Travis, and was not included in your
    inventory listing. If that is the case, we would need to find another $15,000 to add to your
    consigned inventory.
    "Let me know if this sounds reasonable, or if you have any other suggestions.
    This seems to be a clean way of tracking what we would still owe you."
    Johnson spoke with Rebant regarding the proposal in his email. Johnson did not
    want to consign specific pieces of inventory, although he and Rebant agreed the items
    specified in Rebant's email would likely be the first to sell. The parties agreed the value
    of the inventory was approximately $420,000 at the time of closing. Johnson agreed to
    consign inventory—although not specific items—from which Rebant would pay him the
    $120,000 difference between the amount allocated under the SBA loan ($300,000) and
    the value of the inventory at closing. In other words, Johnson wanted to be paid back as
    5
    soon as the inventory sold, irrespective of the items sold. Rebant, by his conduct,
    accepted Johnson's response to his offer.
    On February 1, 2011, Rebant and his wife, the sole stockholders of J & S Scales,
    executed a stockholders' agreement which stated, in part:
    "RESOLVED, that J & S Scales, Inc. will honor the aforementioned Asset Sale
    and Purchase Agreement, and will purchase the assets at the earliest date possible,
    pending requirements set forth in this agreement.
    "RESOLVED FURTHER, that J & S Scales, Inc. will also purchase $300,000
    worth of Inventory from J & S Scale Fabricators, with the remaining Inventory
    (approximately $120,000) being consigned, as agreed to by the buyer and seller."
    Closing occurred on February 11, 2011. At closing, Johnson and Rebant executed
    a bill of sale, which provided, in pertinent part:
    "For good, valuable and sufficient consideration, Dennis T. Johnson , d/b/a J & S
    Scale Fabricators, Inc., a Kansas Corporation (hereinafter referred to as 'SELLER')
    transfers, sells, conveys, warrants and assigns to J & S Scales, Inc., a Kansas Corporation
    (hereinafter referred to as 'BUYER'), pursuant to the Asset Purchase Agreement between
    the parties dated June 8, 2010, the following:
    "a. All of Seller's furniture, fixtures, and equipment.
    "b. All of Seller's goodwill."
    Johnson did not include inventory in the bill of sale because that was a separate
    item for which Rebant agreed to pay $300,000 at closing and $120,000 from sales of the
    consigned inventory. On February 10, 2011, J & S Scales remitted a check for $300,000
    to J & S Fabricators for "Inventory." On July 13, 2011, J & S Scales sent a check to
    Johnson, via Johnson's broker, for $19,318. The memo line on the check indicated it was
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    for "Inventory." On September 22, 2011, J & S Scales paid $5,000 to Johnson, via
    Johnson's broker, although there is no notation on the memo line of the check. At trial,
    Rebant claimed the postclosing payments were gifts to Johnson, not payments for
    inventory.
    Johnson did not receive any further payments. At some point, Johnson and his
    attorney sent Rebant letters inquiring about the consigned inventory. On October 3, 2015,
    Rebant sent Johnson a letter stating, in pertinent part:
    "I received your letter, along with the letter from your attorney regarding the
    consigned inventory. I apologize for the delay in responding to this.
    "There appears to be a discrepancy in regards to the value of the inventory in
    question. I have a complete inventory printout you gave me at closing, showing an
    inventory value on February 8, 2011 of $398,342. We paid for $300,000 of inventory at
    closing, which would leave a balance of $98,342.
    "Contrary to the claim in the letters, we have made payments so far of $19,318.
    These payments were made to the escrow attorney for Sunbelt. We will pull these records
    this week and forward them to you.
    "We are in the process of moving all of our inventory records to a new inventory
    accounting database. As part of this process, we will also do a complete physical
    inventory count of our current inventory. I am asking for additional time to provide this
    information to you, so we can complete this process and have an accurate report. I can
    give you a complete accounting of the inventory when this switch over is complete,
    which should be in the next 30-45 days.
    "I will send you more information as soon as we pull it together."
    Between the time of closing and Johnson filing suit, Johnson and Rebant had
    several discussions, mostly via telephone, about Johnson not being paid for the consigned
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    inventory. In those discussions, Rebant never told Johnson he believed the inventory had
    not been consigned. Rebant never told Johnson that J & S Scales did not owe Johnson for
    the consigned inventory or the inventory could not be sold. Rather, he attributed the
    nonpayment to cashflow issues. At trial, Rebant admitted he had nothing in writing to
    support his claim the inventory had not been consigned.
    In June 2016, Rebant formed two new companies, J & S Weighing Solutions, LLC
    (J & S Weighing), and Marjon, LLC. In August 2016, J & S Scales and J & S Weighing
    executed an asset purchase agreement to sell all of J & S Scales' assets, including the
    inventory previously transferred from J & S Fabricators, to J & S Weighing. Those assets
    were later transferred from J & S Weighing to Marjon.
    Johnson filed suit against Rebant, J & S Scales, J & S Weighing, and Marjon,
    alleging claims for breach of contract, breach of fiduciary duty, conversion, and unjust
    enrichment. The district court held a bench trial at which Johnson and Rebant both
    testified. After considering the evidence, the district court denied Johnson's claim for
    breach of fiduciary duty, finding no special relationship or confidences existed between
    Rebant and Johnson. With respect to the inventory, the district court found:
    "The contract for the sale of the company was signed in June of 2010. Closing
    did not occur until February 2011. The delay in closing was precipitated by the difficulty
    Defendant J & S Scales had in securing financing.
    "In November [2010], Defendant Rebant sent an email to Plaintiff indicating they
    had secured $300,000.00 for purchase of $416,052.89 of inventory. Rebant proposed
    consigning $116,492.49 of the larger items of inventory. Upon sale of the items by
    Defendant J & S Scales, the unpaid portion of the inventory would be paid.
    "On February 1, 2011, J & S Scales stockholders gave written consent to the
    consignment proposal of Defendant Rebant. The closing on the sales occurred on
    February 11, 2011.
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    "Defendant J & S Scales made two payments on the consignment sales with a
    balance remaining of $94,182.00.
    "In the summer of 2016, J & S Scales sold their assets to Defendants J & S
    Weighing Solutions and MarJon LLC.
    "At trial, Defendant Rebant testified the inventory in question had been
    purchased in 2011 and not taken in on [consignment]. Plaintiff testified to the contrary.
    The Court finds the testimony of Plaintiff to be credible. The evidence was overwhelming
    that an agreement was reached between Plaintiff and J & S Scales to consign the
    inventory in question to Defendant J & S Scales. The consignment was done at the
    request of Rebant with Plaintiff agreeing to the proposal as an accommodation to John
    Rebant and J & S Scales.
    "The evidence also establishes in the summer of 2016 the inventory in question
    was transferred to the Defendants J & S Weighing Solutions and MarJon LLC by
    Defendant J & S Scales. The transfer of assets may have been partly to deal with the
    Small Business loan and other financial issues. The Court also finds a reason for the
    transfer was in reaction to Plaintiff seeking payments on the rest of the consigned
    inventory."
    The district court held all named defendants—Rebant and the three defendant
    companies acting through him—were aware of, participated in, and were, therefore,
    liable for conversion of Johnson's property in the summer of 2016. The district court
    further held there was no valid claim for unjust enrichment against any of the named
    defendants. Regarding the breach of contract claim, the district court held:
    "The Court finds substantial compliance was made with the terms of the contract.
    The Court has no question an agreement was reached between Plaintiff and Defendant J
    & S Scales in relation [to] the consignment of $120,000.00 of equipment. The Court finds
    the email of November 26, 2010 and the February 1, 2011 written consent of the
    stockholders of J & S Scales satisfies the terms of the contract to make the consignment
    binding upon the parties.
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    "Judgment is granted to Plaintiff against Defendant J & S Scales on the breach of
    contract claim in the amount of $94,182.00."
    Rebant and J & S Scales timely appealed. Additional facts are set forth as
    necessary herein.
    ANALYSIS
    On appeal Rebant claims there was no meeting of the minds and no agreement
    between the parties in writing as required by the sales contract to support the
    consignment of the inventory not paid for at the closing. Johnson responds the parties'
    actions reflect by their course of dealing and performance the oral agreement for the
    consignment of the inventory.
    Standard of Review
    An appellate court exercises unlimited review over the interpretation and legal
    effect of written instruments and is not bound by the lower court's interpretations or
    rulings. Born v. Born, 
    304 Kan. 542
    , 554, 
    374 P.3d 624
     (2016). "'The primary rule for
    interpreting written contracts is to ascertain the parties' intent. If the terms of the contract
    are clear, the intent of the parties is to be determined from the language of the contract
    without applying rules of construction. [Citations omitted.]'" Peterson v. Ferrell, 
    302 Kan. 99
    , 104, 
    349 P.3d 1269
     (2015).
    "'An interpretation of a contractual provision should not be reached merely by
    isolating one particular sentence or provision, but by construing and considering the
    entire instrument from its four corners. The law favors reasonable interpretations, and
    results which vitiate the purpose of the terms of the agreement to an absurdity should be
    avoided. [Citations omitted.]'" Waste Connections of Kansas, Inc. v. Ritchie Corp., 
    296 Kan. 943
    , 963, 
    298 P.3d 250
     (2013).
    10
    Normally, whether a contract exists is a question of fact. U.S.D. No. 446 v.
    Sandoval, 
    295 Kan. 278
    , 282, 
    286 P.3d 542
     (2012). An appellate court reviews a district
    court's finding that a contract exists for substantial competent evidence. Price v. Grimes,
    
    234 Kan. 898
    , 904, 
    677 P.2d 969
     (1984); Source Direct, Inc. v. Mantell, 
    19 Kan. App. 2d 399
    , 407, 
    870 P.2d 686
     (1994). Other issues in contract law amount to issues of fact
    subject to the substantial competent evidence standard. See Stover v. Superior Industries
    Int'l, Inc., 
    29 Kan. App. 2d 235
    , 237-39, 
    29 P.3d 967
     (2000). Substantial competent
    evidence is legal and relevant evidence that a reasonable person could accept as being
    adequate to support a conclusion. Geer v. Eby, 
    309 Kan. 182
    , 190, 
    432 P.3d 1001
     (2019).
    "In evaluating the evidence to support the district court's factual findings, an appellate
    court does not weigh conflicting evidence, evaluate witnesses' credibility, or redetermine
    questions of fact. A court ordinarily presumes that the district court found all facts
    necessary to support its judgment. [Citations omitted.]" Hodges v. Johnson, 
    288 Kan. 56
    ,
    65, 
    199 P.3d 1251
     (2009).
    To the extent the parties' arguments also require us to interpret statutes, they
    present questions of law subject to unlimited review. Nauheim v. City of Topeka, 
    309 Kan. 145
    , 149, 
    432 P.3d 647
     (2019).
    Discussion
    The district court found a contract existed to cover the consigned inventory based
    on:
    • the email from Rebant to Johnson proposing consignment of the inventory to
    pay for the portion not covered by the SBA loan;
    • Johnson's testimony he orally agreed to consign inventory;
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    • the stockholder agreement of J & S Scales signed by Rebant and his wife to
    consign a portion of J & S Fabricators' remaining inventory on behalf of
    Johnson;
    • Johnson's testimony he received some consignment payments from Rebant;
    and
    • the district court's finding—contrary to Rebant's testimony—the two payments
    of $19,318 and $5,000 were for the consigned inventory, not gratuitous gifts to
    Johnson.
    The district court held the consignment agreement was in "substantial compliance"
    with the terms of the sales contract and the long-running negotiations for Rebant to buy
    the business and its inventory. The district court's conclusion may simply be a matter of
    inartful wording; it may have said substantial compliance—rather than substantial
    competent evidence—when it found a binding implied-in-fact agreement existed.
    Nevertheless, we find the district court's decision is supported by substantial competent
    evidence, and we can uphold the district court's decision as right, even for a wrong
    reason. See Gannon v. State, 
    302 Kan. 739
    , 744, 
    357 P.3d 873
     (2015).
    The parties formed an implied-in-fact consignment agreement.
    Johnson persuasively argues an implied-in-fact contract was formed for the
    consignment of inventory. "Kansas courts recognize that parties may become
    contractually obligated by their conduct as well as by their use of oral or written words.
    Evidence of a contract implied in fact shows a mutual intent to contract. [Citations
    omitted.]" Hall v. Kansas Farm Bureau, 
    274 Kan. 263
    , 273, 
    50 P.3d 495
     (2002).
    "Parties may be bound as firmly by implied contracts as by those expressed in words, oral
    or written. The law implies, from circumstances and the silent language of men's conduct
    and actions, contracts and promises as forcible and binding as those made by express
    12
    words or through the medium of written memorials. [Citations omitted.]" In re Estate of
    Langdon, 
    165 Kan. 267
    , 274, 
    195 P.2d 317
     (1948).
    These same principles are recognized by Kansas statute—parties may create an
    enforceable contract for goods, i.e., inventory, through a course of performance.
    "(a) A 'course of performance' is a sequence of conduct between the parties to a
    particular transaction that exists if:
    (1) The agreement of the parties with respect to the transaction involves repeated
    occasions for performance by a party; and
    (2) the other party, with knowledge of the nature of the performance and
    opportunity for objection to it, accepts the performance or acquiesces in it without
    objection." K.S.A. 2019 Supp. 84-1-303(a).
    Here, this implied-in-fact contract is supported by oral and written words and
    through action, i.e., performance. The written portions giving rise to the agreement are
    clear on their face—Rebant sent Johnson an email proposing consignment of the
    inventory, and Rebant and his wife signed a stockholders' agreement recognizing the
    inventory consignment agreement. The district court's factual findings reflect Johnson
    orally agreed to the consignment of inventory. The district court's acceptance of
    Johnson's testimony and specific rejection of Rebant's assertion the payments to Johnson
    were merely gifts reflect the district court found Johnson's testimony to be more credible
    than Rebant's. Accordingly, we cannot reweigh the evidence or the district court's
    credibility findings. See Hodges, 288 Kan. at 65.
    With respect to a course of performance, Rebant sent Johnson the email proposing
    consignment of the inventory. After Johnson orally agreed to consignment, Rebant
    presented to Johnson a stockholders' agreement prepared at Johnson's request, which
    Rebant and his wife then signed. Rebant also made payments to Johnson of $19,318 and
    $5,000. The memo line of the check for $19,318 indicated it was for "Inventory." Rebant
    13
    also recognized the consigned inventory in a letter he sent in October 2015 to Johnson.
    Rebant never disputed inventory had been consigned; rather, he indicated there may have
    been some discrepancy in the total value of the inventory. Rebant testified he did not
    have any correspondence in which he questioned whether the inventory was consigned.
    And Rebant further admitted he never disputed the existence of a consignment agreement
    until after Johnson filed suit.
    We observe multiple points of performance by Rebant—drafting and signing the
    stockholders' agreement, accepting the inventory at closing, making payments to Johnson
    as the consigned inventory was sold, and his later letter to Johnson acknowledging the
    consigned inventory. Rebant did not object to doing these things, although he did stop
    making payments for the inventory because money was tight. According to Johnson,
    Rebant told him this was due to cashflow issues, not because of a dispute as to whether a
    consignment agreement existed. And when Johnson inquired about further payments for
    the inventory, Rebant did not dispute it had been consigned; he merely questioned the
    total value of the inventory.
    Rebant's actions reflect a course of performance. He could have refused to draft or
    sign the stockholders' agreement, could have rejected some or all of the inventory at
    closing, could have refused to make any payments, and/or could have denied the
    inventory had been consigned when Johnson asked about further payments, but he did not
    do so. The record shows he accepted the benefits of the agreement and voiced no
    objection until Johnson sought payment. Accordingly, the parties by their actions formed
    a binding implied-in-fact contract for Rebant to sell the consigned inventory and pay
    Johnson from the proceeds of the sales in order to satisfy the debt owed on the consigned
    inventory. See K.S.A. 2019 Supp. 84-1-303(a); Hall, 
    274 Kan. at 273
    ; In re Estate of
    Langdon, 165 Kan. at 274.
    14
    Rebant's interpretation of the sales contract leads to an absurd result.
    Rebant's arguments on appeal are unpersuasive. His primary argument is there
    could not be a valid consignment agreement for the inventory because the sales contract
    was never modified in writing. The problem with Rebant's argument is he essentially asks
    us to view one contract provision in isolation—specifically, Paragraph 21 of the sales
    contract. However, when interpreting contracts, we do not view provisions in isolation.
    Rather, contractual provisions should be interpreted and reconciled by looking to the
    contract as a whole. And we must interpret contracts in a reasonable manner to avoid
    absurd results. Waste Connections of Kansas, Inc., 296 Kan. at 963. Rebant's argument is
    thoroughly undercut by Paragraph 3 of the sales contract, which states, in pertinent part:
    "Buyer agrees to pay to Sellers Two Hundred Fifty Thousand Dollars . . . at Closing . . .
    and an additional amount agreed upon in writing by Sellers and Buyer at or prior to
    Closing for Sellers' inventory." (Emphasis added.)
    The sales contract clearly contemplated a separate agreement, i.e., purchase price,
    for J & S Scales to buy J & S Fabricators' inventory at or prior to closing. In fairness to
    Rebant, Paragraph 3 indicated such agreement was to be in writing, and there was no
    formal written agreement signed by both parties. But the parties' discussions and
    agreement regarding the inventory—the email from Rebant to Johnson and J & S Scales'
    stockholders' agreement—reflects their agreed upon value for the inventory at closing of
    approximately $420,000. Rebant only had $300,000 to allocate to the purchase of
    inventory, and the difference of approximately $120,000 would be made up by Rebant
    selling the consigned inventory and paying Johnson with the proceeds.
    Rebant argues the district court erred in finding the consignment agreement had
    been reached in substantial compliance with the terms of the sales contract. Specifically,
    Rebant asserts Paragraph 21 contained no provision for substantial compliance; therefore,
    15
    no consignment agreement could have ever existed. Rebant asks us to take an all-or-
    nothing approach in construing the sales contract.
    There is no evidence Rebant sought to modify the sales contract to reject J & S
    Fabricators' inventory value at any point prior to or at closing. Paragraph 3 clearly
    contemplated the sale and transfer of inventory at closing. It provided for the exclusion of
    "Rejected Inventory" from the total purchase price, and it contemplated an inventory
    value subject to change prior to closing and the necessity for a separate, agreed-upon
    value as a result thereof. It was also known by the parties that J & S Fabricators would
    continue doing business—to include buying, selling, and using its inventory—until the
    date of closing. Yet, the sales contract did not provide for the inventory to be valued as of
    the date the contract was signed—June 8, 2010—nor did it provide for the inventory to be
    valued at $300,000, which Rebant allocated toward the purchase of inventory at closing.
    Rebant admits he paid $300,000 towards the inventory value at closing. But he
    offers no written agreement showing the $300,000 paid was for all of the inventory
    delivered to him at the closing. In essence, Rebant is trying to use Paragraph 21 of the
    sales contract as both a sword and a shield. His argument Johnson is entitled to nothing
    more for the inventory because there was no formal written agreement lacks support in
    the record. Furthermore, there is nothing in writing showing Rebant was entitled to all the
    inventory based on the $300,000 he paid at the closing. Rebant's argument, therefore,
    leads to an absurd result—one we cannot accept. See Waste Connections of Kansas, Inc.,
    296 Kan. at 963.
    Rebant's response to Johnson's arguments lacks merit.
    Rebant filed a reply brief responding to Johnson's arguments. He asserts there
    cannot be an implied-in-fact contract based on a course of performance. Specifically, he
    16
    claims any course of performance had to have occurred after or under the agreement, and
    there was no subsequent performance because:
    "It is undisputed that JS Scales, after the ASSET AGREEMENT Closing, never
    sold any items of inventory pursuant to a consignment sale. In the absence of
    consignment sales, JS Scales did not engage in a 'sequence of conduct' or 'repeated
    occasions for performance'; therefore, none of the required elements of [K.S.A. 2019
    Supp. 84-1-303](a)(1) and (a)(2) ever existed."
    Rebant's argument is not supported by the evidence. The district court found: "J &
    S Scales made two payments on the consignment sales with a balance remaining of
    $94,182.00." We accept the district court's factual findings, and we will not weigh the
    evidence, determine credibility, or make independent factual findings. See Hodges, 288
    Kan. at 65. Moreover, as previously explained herein, Rebant performed under the
    consignment agreement by delivering the stockholders' agreement signed by him and his
    wife and by making two payments. The record reflects multiple occasions where Rebant
    recognized the consignment and performed under the terms of the agreement.
    Rebant next disputes Johnson's argument the consignment agreement was a
    supplement to the sales contract, not a modification of the contract. Rebant's argument
    generally lacks merit. Rebant asserts an agreement to consign the inventory materially
    altered or modified the sales contract because Paragraph 4 of the sales contract required
    transfer of all assets at closing "free and clear from all . . . restrictions and
    encumbrances." What Rebant fails to acknowledge is the earlier language in Paragraph 4,
    providing: "At Closing, Sellers, contemporaneously with the performance by Buyer of its
    obligations to be performed at Closing. . . ." (Emphasis added.) Those duties of the buyer
    included paying for seller's inventory at an agreed-upon price at closing. Based on the
    parties' testimony, the agreed-upon price was approximately $420,000.
    17
    To the extent the inventory was encumbered at closing, it was because Rebant
    could not pay for the entire value of the inventory and proposed the consignment as a
    means of making up for the shortfall in his financing. The consignment agreement
    allowed Rebant to have all of the inventory immediately available to him to sell. Rebant's
    argument on this point is disingenuous at best. Rebant also ignores the language of
    Paragraph 14(c) of the sales contract, which states: "Buyer shall have performed and
    complied with all agreements, obligations and conditions required by this Agreement and
    all Exhibits attached hereto to be performed or complied with on or prior to the date of
    Closing." Paragraph 3 required payment of "an additional amount agreed upon in writing
    by Sellers and Buyer at or prior to Closing for Sellers' inventory." Nothing in Paragraph 3
    required this agreement to be drafted by either party; thus, completing a written
    agreement for the purchase of inventory was an obligation equally applicable to Rebant
    and Johnson. Yet, Rebant now unilaterally faults Johnson for not reducing the agreement
    to writing. Based on the language of Paragraph 3, Paragraph 4, and Paragraph 14(c),
    Johnson did not have an obligation to transfer the entirety of his inventory unencumbered
    when Rebant had insufficient loan funds to pay for all of the inventory at closing.
    Rebant's argument the sales agreement entitled him to unencumbered transfer of
    Johnson's inventory based upon what was or, more pertinently, was not agreed to in
    writing lacks merit. There is no writing establishing Rebant was entitled to all of
    Johnson's inventory for $300,000. In very plain terms, Rebant wants to have his cake and
    eat it too. His argument on this point lacks credibility as a matter of fact and law.
    Rebant further argues a valid consignment agreement could not exist because
    Johnson never agreed to the consignment of specific pieces of inventory. Rather, Johnson
    wanted to be paid the $120,000 from all the initial inventory sales, regardless of which
    inventory items were sold. Again, Rebant's argument seems rather disingenuous. In his
    email, Rebant proposed consigning specific items of inventory with a value of
    approximately $116,000. However, Johnson testified he did not want to wait for specific
    18
    items to be sold in order to be paid and he and Rebant agreed in their verbal discussions
    Johnson would be paid $120,000 from the initial inventory sales. Rebant's testimony and
    actions reflect he agreed to "Johnson's consignment solution whereby no specific items of
    inventory would be designated for consignment purposes."
    Without citation to authority, Rebant claims:
    "A consignment occurs when the seller retains title to identifiable goods which are then
    physically transferred to a second party for subsequent sale to a third party purchaser. As
    such, title to the consigned goods remain[s] with the seller and [is] not transferred to the
    second party. By Mr. Johnson's testimony, the Parties never agreed that specific items of
    inventory would be subject to consignment; therefore, when Mr. Johnson handed the
    Final Inventory to Mr. Rebant at the time of Closing, as per the provisions of ¶1 and ¶4 of
    the ASSET AGREEMENT, all of the right, title and interest with respect to all of the
    inventory was transferred to JS Scales at that time."
    First, Rebant's argument is flawed because he fails to support his point with
    citation to pertinent authority, which is akin to failing to brief the issue. See In re
    Adoption of T.M.M.H., 
    307 Kan. 902
    , 912, 
    416 P.3d 999
     (2018). Second, as previously
    discussed herein, Rebant has not shown he was entitled to the entirety of the inventory
    under the terms of the sales contract. There was no agreement—written or otherwise—for
    Rebant to receive all inventory for $300,000. In the bill of sale signed on the date of
    closing, Johnson indicated he was transferring to Rebant "[a]ll of Seller's furniture,
    fixtures, and equipment [and] [a]ll of Seller's goodwill" pursuant to the sales contract.
    Nothing in the record establishes Johnson transferred unencumbered title of his inventory
    to Rebant at closing. As provided in Paragraphs 1, 3, and 4 of the sales contract, Rebant
    had to pay Johnson for the value of the inventory at closing, but the inventory Rebant
    wanted exceeded his loan proceeds available to pay for the inventory. Thus, he only
    received title to the inventory he actually paid for. The evidence establishes Rebant paid
    for some, but not all, of Johnson's inventory and agreed to pay him for the remainder—
    19
    $120,000—through sale of the inventory. This is reflected in the stockholders' agreement
    signed by Rebant and his wife, his letter to Johnson, and Johnson's testimony at trial.
    Rebant next argues Johnson improperly briefed his claims Rebant took advantage
    of an oral modification of the sales contract when the parties agreed to extend the closing
    date to accommodate Rebant's financing issues. Johnson is just pointing out the
    obvious—Rebant wanted to extend the contract closing until he obtained the financing he
    needed to buy the business from Johnson. However, this point is largely tangential, and
    we will not dwell on it.
    Finally, Rebant takes issue with what he characterizes as a "fraud allegation" by
    Johnson. Johnson did not plead a claim of fraud in this action. In his brief, Johnson
    asserts: "Mr. Rebant and J & S Scales [are] attempting to use the statute of frauds to
    commit a fraud upon Mr. Johnson to obtain $94,182.00 of inventory for free." While
    Johnson uses the word "fraud," it is clear from reading the brief he is referring to an
    inequitable or unfair result. Johnson cites Quaney v. Tobyne, 
    236 Kan. 201
    , 209, 
    689 P.2d 844
     (1984), for the proposition "the statute of frauds was enacted to prevent fraud and
    injustice, not to foster or encourage it, and a court of equity will not ordinarily permit its
    use as a shield to protect fraud or to enable one to take advantage of his own wrong."
    (Emphases added.)
    Johnson's argument is sound. Rebant cannot accept consigned inventory, agree to
    it orally, sign a stockholders' agreement indicating the agreement existed, later send a
    letter acknowledging the consigned inventory, and make two payments on the consigned
    inventory only to disavow the agreement years later when payment is requested.
    Moreover, as repeatedly stated herein, Rebant is unreasonably trying to use the
    contractual statute of frauds provision of Paragraph 21 as both a sword and shield. On the
    one hand, he asserts Johnson is entitled to nothing more than the $300,000 Rebant paid
    for the inventory because nothing more was agreed to in writing. But on the other hand,
    20
    Rebant claims he is entitled to unencumbered title to the inventory despite the fact no
    price—$300,000 or $420,000—had been agreed to in writing.
    Rebant's arguments lack support in the record. Substantial competent evidence
    supports the district court's finding the parties agreed to an inventory value of $420,000 at
    the time of closing for which Johnson would receive $300,000 at closing and the
    remaining $120,000 would be paid to Johnson as Rebant sold the inventory. Based on
    Rebant's email to Johnson, Johnson's testimony regarding their subsequent discussions,
    Rebant presenting to Johnson the signed stockholders' agreement, Rebant's letter to
    Johnson, and the district court's finding Rebant made two payments to Johnson for
    consigned inventory, the parties formed a binding contract based on their course of
    dealing and performance for Rebant to take possession of the excess inventory at closing
    and pay Johnson as it was sold. There was substantial competent evidence to support the
    district court's judgment in the amount of $94,182.
    Affirmed.
    21