Castleton Capital Company, LLC. v. Lucius E. Burch, III ( 2004 )


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  •                  IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
    AT NASHVILLE
    May 8, 2002 Session
    CASTLETON CAPITAL COMPANY, L.L.C. v.
    LUCIUS E. BURCH, III
    Appeal from the Chancery Court for Davidson County
    No. 98-3860-II            Honorable Carol McCoy, Chancellor
    No. M2001-01597-COA-R3-CV - Filed April 23, 2004
    The Plaintiff filed suit seeking to recover a deficiency on a loan executed by the Defendant
    and another left owing after foreclosure upon real estate. The Defendant had purchased a parcel of
    real estate from a company in which he was a director, and had assumed responsibility for repayment
    of a loan secured by that real estate. The Defendant denied liability, and alleged mutual mistake and
    negligent misrepresentation surrounding the loan against the lender because the loan documents he
    signed contained language regarding cross-collateralization involving a separate parcel of real estate
    formerly owned by the company in which the Defendant was a director, which real estate was sold
    two days prior to assumption of the loan obligations by the Defendant. Following a bench trial, the
    Chancellor granted judgment for the Plaintiff for $134,127.65 and attorneys' fees totaling
    $73,417.37, for a total judgment of $207,545.02. The Defendant appealed. We affirm.
    Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal of Right; Judgment of the Chancery Court Affirmed
    ROBERT E. CORLEW , III , Sp. J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which BEN H. CANTRELL , P.
    J., M.S., and WILLIAM C. KOCH , JR ., J., joined.
    W. Gary Blackburn and Mathew R. Zenner, Blackburn & McCune, P.C., for the Appellant, Lucius
    E. Burch, III.
    Charles W. McElroy, White & Reasor, Nashville, Tennessee, for the Appellee, Castleton Capital
    Company, LLC.
    OPINION
    Before us is an appeal from the Chancery Court for Davidson County which granted
    judgment to the Plaintiff against the Defendant in the sum of $207,545.02, including principal,
    interest, and other fees in the amount of $134,127.65 and attorneys' fees in the amount of
    $73,417.37.
    Defendant Burch was a director of Automotive Franchise Corporation (AFC). In 1986, while
    the Defendant was serving as a director, AFC entered into two loan agreements with Metropolitan
    Federal Savings and Loan Association. One loan financed a project in Chesapeake, Virginia, and
    the other financed a project in Gwinnett County, Georgia. Each loan was documented by a separate
    promissory note, each of which matured on June 30, 1987. Each loan was secured by the parcel of
    real estate for which the loan was made, but language was included within each deed of trust so that
    each loan was secured by both pieces of property. All loan documents were executed by Joseph
    Dockery, President of AFC, on behalf of the corporation.
    When the loans were not paid on the original due date, the corporation obtained extensions.
    Eventually, AFC found itself in a precarious financial condition, and in an effort to alleviate some
    of that financial hardship, on December 27, 1988, AFC sold the Georgia property to a company
    known as The Betty Company, associated with Waffle House, Inc. for $290,000. The loan directly
    secured by the Georgia property in the sum of $267,652.14 was then paid in full from the proceeds
    of the sale. The record reflects that the sum approximating $22,000 in excess of the amount of the
    loan secured by the property was derived from the sale, but was not applied toward the loan on the
    Virginia property. Although the record does not fully explain the disposition of those funds, there
    is an inference that the additional money derived from the sale was used to pay the costs associated
    with the sale of that real estate.
    Two days later, Defendant Burch and Mr. Dockery purchased, as co-tenants, the Virginia
    property from AFC, and by agreement, assumed that debt. The parties executed the Assumption
    Agreement on December 29, 1988. Subsequently, both Mr. Dockery individually and AFC filed
    actions for relief under the United States Bankruptcy Code. Metropolitan Federal was placed in
    receivership. The loan assumed by the Defendant and Mr. Dockery was then purchased by an
    affiliate of the Plaintiff, then assigned to the Plaintiff. No payments were made to the Plaintiff when
    the note matured on January 1, 1995. Demand for payment was subsequently made, but no action
    was taken to foreclose upon the real estate until June, 1997, due to the existence of a stay issued by
    the Federal Bankruptcy Court in the case involving Mr. Dockery. Prior to the foreclosure, notice was
    given by the Plaintiff to the Defendant that the Plaintiff claimed sums totaling in excess of $736,000.
    The sum of $650,000 was derived from the foreclosure sale. The loan bears interest in the sum of
    8.95 percent.
    The Defendant asserted affirmative defenses asserting unenforceability of his Assumption
    Agreement based upon the theories of mutual mistake and negligent misrepresentation. He alleged
    that because the Assumption Agreement continued to contain language surrounding the cross-
    collateralization agreement concerning the Georgia real estate, which in fact had been sold two days
    before he assumed the debt secured by the Virginia property, there existed a mutual mistake.
    Our review of questions of fact is de novo upon the record, accompanied by a presumption
    of the correctness of the findings of the Trial Court, unless the preponderance of the evidence is to
    the contrary. Jones v. Garrett, 
    92 S.W.3d 835
    , 838 (Tenn. 2002). Our review with respect to
    questions of law is de novo without a presumption of correctness. Rutherford County v. Wilson,
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    121 S.W.3d 591
    , 595 (Tenn. 2003).
    The Trial Court found that there was no mutual mistake, and all persons who testified, with
    the exception of Defendant Burch, acknowledged that they knew of the sale of the Georgia property.
    The Court found that the lender knew of the sale of the property, and Mr. Dockery acknowledged
    on behalf of himself and AFC, that he knew of the prior sale at the time of the entry of the
    Assumption Agreement. The Trial Court thus found that there was no mutual mistake. We agree.
    It is perhaps elementary under our law that in order to set aside a contract on the ground of mutual
    mistake, the mistake in fact must be mutual. Thus, to be a mutual mistake, the issue must involve
    a material fact about which neither party to the contract was correctly informed, and the parties on
    each side of the transaction were mistaken in their belief as to the material facts which were a basis
    for the agreement. Kosterman Development Corp., v. Outlaw Aircraft Sales, Inc., 
    102 S.W.3d 621
    ,
    632 (Tenn. Ct. App. 2002) perm. app. denied ("In order to authorize relief for mistake the mistake
    generally must have been mutual, and it must have been material"); Loveday v. Cate, 
    854 S.W.2d 877
    , 880 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1992) perm. app. denied (1993); Robinson v. Brooks, 
    577 S.W.2d 207
    ,
    209 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1978) cert. denied (1979). Unilateral mistake will not justify rescission of a
    contract absent other circumstances such as fraud or misrepresentation. Lane v. Spriggs, 
    71 S.W.3d 286
    , 289 (Tenn. Ct. 2001) perm. app. denied (2002) (rescission, cancellation, and reaffirmation).
    On occasion, our courts have granted relief from the effect of a mistake which is unilateral where
    the other party knows or has reason to know of the other's error, and has good reason to believe that
    a mistake had been made. Cofrancesco Construction Company v. Superior Components, Inc., 
    371 S.W.2d 821
    , 823-824 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1963) cert. denied.
    The Defendant, relying on an unreported case from this Court, Wilkey, et al v. Rhea County,
    Tennessee, et al, [unpublished] 2000 Tenn. App. Lexis 397, 
    2000 WL 782011
     (Tenn. Ct. App., June
    20, 2000), no perm. app. sought, asserts that the reference in the Assumption Agreement documents
    to the Georgia property invalidates his Assumption Agreement on the ground of mutual mistake.
    Although the case at bar and Wilkey both involve issues where it was later determined that legal
    documents contained inaccuracies, there the similarity ends. Wilkey involves the sale of property
    where at an auction, it was represented that the seller was selling 10.5 acres when only 7.94 acres
    was conveyed. The sale of land in Wilkey was the essence of the contract. The Court in Wilkey
    found the quantity of land to be an issue material to the transaction, that the buyer had no reasonable
    means of learning the correct acreage, and that the seller was likewise of the mistaken belief that 10.5
    acres, not 7.94 acres, was being conveyed. In the suit at bar, the essence of the contract was the
    assumption of a loan agreement through which the Defendant and another assumed an indebtedness
    previously borrowed by a company of which they were both directors, and borrowed an additional
    sum of money over and above that which previously had been secured. There was no mistake as to
    the amount of the loan in the suit at bar, and no mistake as to the terms of repayment. In the case
    at bar, it is unquestioned that the lender knew at the time of the closing of the loan that the Georgia
    property had been sold two days earlier, and similarly that one of the two borrowers, Mr. Dockery,
    likewise knew. From the standpoint of all of these parties, failure to remove reference to the
    Georgia property within these documents was merely a clerical error. The Trial Court found the
    matters in the case at bar not to be material.
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    The Trial Court also found in the case at bar that the Defendant had the means of learning
    the true information, and that he relied, to his detriment, upon his co-borrower. Nonetheless, the
    Defendant asserts that he had no knowledge of the sale by AFC of the Georgia property. The Trial
    Court was unimpressed by his protestations, and questioned the credibility of a man who claimed
    to know very little about the sale of land in Georgia by the company of which he was a director,
    when two days later he personally committed himself to a loan in excess of one-half million dollars
    to aid that same company. We apply the presumption of correctness to the finding of the Trial Court.
    Given these factual findings, our determinations in Wilkey are clearly distinguishable from the suit
    at bar, and the rule of law applied in Wilkey has no application in the suit before us.
    The Trial Court further found that any claims which the Defendant might have with regard
    to negligent misrepresentation arose and were either known to the Defendant or should have been
    known by him in 1995, and knowledge of Mr. Dockery was imputed to him in 1988, all of which
    is more than three years before this suit was filed in 1998 or the answer setting forth the defenses was
    filed in 1999. Again we agree. The facts show that Defendant Burch knew, or certainly should have
    known at the time he signed the Assumption Agreement, that the Georgia property was discussed
    in the Assumption Agreement which he signed. Burch remained a member of the Board of
    Directors of AFC at all times when consideration of the sale of the two properties occurred.
    Defendant Burch knew or should have known when demand for payment was made on him on
    March 27, 1995, that AFC had in fact sold the Georgia property in 1988. In a larger sense, no
    representation was ever made to Defendant Burch of any control that he or the lender had with regard
    to the Georgia property, and AFC, the owner of the Georgia property, had the right to sell that
    property at any time, just as it sold the Virginia property to Defendant Burch and Mr. Dockery. We
    agree with the Trial Court that Defendant Burch should have known of the sale of the Georgia
    property for a period of time so long that the three year statute of limitations had run, and based upon
    that finding, we need not further address the lack of merit of that claim.
    Because we agree with the Trial Court that the Defendant either knew or should have known
    that the Georgia property had been sold, we need not further address the finding of the Trial Court
    that the Georgia property was immaterial to the transaction concerning the Virginia property, or the
    finding by the Trial Court that the Defendant and Mr. Dockery were partners as to this real estate in
    which they were co-tenants or the loan in which they were co-borrowers.
    Defendant Burch then further asserts a unilateral mistake on his own part, coupled with the
    defense of negligent misrepresentation. We have already addressed the knowledge of the Defendant
    with respect to the sale of the Georgia property. The Defendant's knowledge, by itself, defeats his
    defense. Nonetheless, we are compelled to address the application of the statute of limitations to the
    Defendant's allegations of negligent misrepresentation. The limitation of actions for negligent
    misrepresentation are governed by the provision of Tennessee Code Annotated §28-3-105, which
    provides a limitation of three years. Medical Education Assistance Corp. v. East Tennessee State
    University Quillen College v. Mehta, 
    19 S.W.3d 803
    , 817 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1999) perm. app. denied
    (2000). In Medical Education Assistance Corp., the Court was faced with a question similar to one
    now before us, in the enforcement of a contract against a physician. The physician alleged negligent
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    misrepresentation which induced him to sign an employment contract containing a covenant not to
    compete. Because the physician did not raise the issue of misrepresentation until he filed his answer,
    which was more than three (3) years before the Court found that he should have discovered the
    alleged misrepresentation, his defense of misrepresentation was barred. Id. We find the facts of the
    case at bar, where the Defendant alleges misrepresentation inducing him to sign a promissory note
    and other loan documents to be sufficiently similar and legally analogous to the circumstances in
    Medical Education Assistance Corp., where the Defendant alleged, as a defense to a non-compete
    agreement, negligent misrepresentation inducing him to sign the employment contract. Thus, we
    find that the Trial Court correctly found that the Defendant's defense of negligent misrepresentation
    is time barred.
    Thus, we find the judgment of the Trial Court should be affirmed in all respects. The cause
    will be remanded to the Trial Court for a determination of further attorneys' fees, if any, which may
    be appropriate, which have been incurred since the prior award of counsel fees. Costs of the appeal
    will be taxed against the Appellant.
    ___________________________________
    ROBERT E. CORLEW, III
    SPECIAL JUDGE
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