Don L. Wright v. Comfort Systems, U.S.A., and Walker-J-Walker, Inc. ( 2009 )


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  •                  IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
    AT JACKSON
    Submitted on Briefs July 31, 2009
    DON L. WRIGHT
    v.
    COMFORT SYSTEMS, U.S.A., and WALKER-J-WALKER, INC.
    Appeal from the Chancery Court for Shelby County
    No. CH-03-0195-01   Walter L. Evans, Chancellor
    No. W2009-00383-COA-R3-CV - Filed December 14, 2009
    This is a breach of contract case. When the plaintiff employee was hired as a department manager
    for the defendant employer, his employment contract provided that he would receive a bonus based
    on the net profit of the department. During the plaintiff’s term of employment, he received bonus
    payments; however, the parties had disagreements about how the department’s profit was calculated
    and thus about the amount of the bonus. After the plaintiff’s employment was terminated, the
    employee filed this lawsuit against the employer, alleging that the employer breached the contract
    by failing to pay the proper bonus amounts. The employer denied the allegation and asserted a
    counterclaim for excess amounts allegedly paid to the employee. The trial court referred issues on
    the plaintiff’s claim and the employer’s counterclaim to a special master. After conducting a
    hearing, the special master found that neither party carried its burden of proof and recommended that
    both the complaint and the counterclaim be dismissed. After considering the employee’s objection
    to the special master’s report, the trial court adopted the special master’s recommendations and
    dismissed the claims. The employee now appeals. We affirm, finding that there is material evidence
    to support the trial court’s concurrence.
    Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Chancery Court is Affirmed
    HOLLY M. KIRBY , J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which ALAN E. HIGHERS, P.J., W.S., and
    J. STEVEN STAFFORD , J., joined.
    Stephen R. Leffler, Memphis, Tennessee for the Plaintiff/Appellant Don L. Wright
    David A. Velander, Louisville, Kentucky and Craig M. Beard, Memphis, Tennessee for the
    Defendant/Appellee Walker-J-Walker, Inc.
    OPINION
    FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS BELOW
    Defendant/Appellee Walker-J-Walker, Inc. (“Walker”) is engaged in the mechanical
    contracting industry in the Memphis, Tennessee area. Walker’s contracting business involves both
    new construction and renovation. Its business is roughly divided into two main areas of focus:
    construction and service. Walker’s service department handled maintenance and service of existing
    mechanical systems.
    In March 1996, Plaintiff/Appellant Don L. Wright (“Wright”) was hired as general manager
    of Walker’s service department. As incentive to hire Wright, Walker agreed to pay Wright a base
    salary plus a bonus predicated on the net profit of the service department. At the time Wright was
    hired, Walker was owned by Lee Walker and John Walker.1 The letter memorializing Wright’s
    employment agreement stated that Wright’s bonus would be “10% of pretax net margin of Service
    Department billing including service contracts. (Formula is Gross Margin less Service Department
    Direct Overhead, less G & A in meeting each year with Lee and John Walker).”
    Problems with the calculation of Wright’s bonus arose almost immediately, primarily
    stemming from the fact that Walker’s accounting system commingled the financial information of
    both departments and produced financial statements for the corporation as a whole. As a result,
    Wright’s bonus calculation was done, in part, manually. Generally, Walker’s practice was that chief
    financial officer (“CFO”) Kristie Hand2 and director of human resources Tish Bartlett would first
    determine the gross margin from individual job reports produced by the accounting system. They
    would then compile a list of G&A expenses3 for the entire company and manually allocate a portion
    of each expense to the service department for the purpose of calculating Wright’s bonus. After the
    bonus calculation was completed for each period,4 Wright would meet with Walker personnel to
    review it.5 Disagreements often arose over particular items in the calculation, and some of the
    1
    In August 1997, Lee Walker and John Walker sold their interest in W alker-J-W alker, Inc. to Comfort Systems,
    U.S.A., a publicly traded company, but the record indicates that they retained positions as president and vice-president,
    respectively.
    2
    Throughout the record, Walker’s CFO is referred to as “Kristie Hand” and “Kristy Hand.” For the sake of
    consistency, this Opinion will use “Kristie Hand.”
    3
    “G&A” is a common accounting shorthand for the term “general administrative.” Generally, it refers to
    indirect costs, such as electrical bills or office supplies, and is sometimes used interchangeably with “overhead.”
    4
    The parties initially agreed that the bonus calculation and payment would occur on an annual basis; however,
    after the first year, they agreed to determine the bonus on a quarterly basis.
    5
    There is some dispute in the record as to who attended the meetings. Wright testified before the Special
    Master that in most instances only he, Lee Walker and John Walker attended the meetings. John Walker testified that
    in most instances he, Lee Walker, Tish Bartlett, Kristie Hand and Wright attended the meetings.
    -2-
    contested items would be revised. After revisions were made, Walker would issue Wright a check
    for the bonus, and Wright would accept it.
    Despite Wright’s acceptance of the bonus payments, he remained concerned about the
    calculation of the bonus, and in particular about the amount of G&A expenses allocated to the
    service department, as opposed to the construction department. On several occasions, he wrote
    letters to John and Lee Walker voicing his concerns. For example, after the first meeting to review
    the bonus calculation, Wright sent a letter to John and Lee Walker stating, “IT IS EVIDENT THAT
    ACCORDING TO THE ALLOCATION----THAT THE SERVICE CO. COVERS A LOT OF
    OVERHEAD FOR THE ENTIRE OPERATION.” Although the disagreements continued, Wright
    also continued to accept the bonus checks as calculated. Wright’s employment with Walker was
    terminated in July 2000.
    On January 30, 2003, Wright filed a lawsuit against Defendants Comfort Systems, U.S.A.
    and Walker, alleging claims for breach of contract, intentional misrepresentation and conversion.
    The gist of Wright’s complaint was that Walker, “in calculating the amount of Wright’s bonus,
    attributed overhead items to the Service Department that were not legitimate overhead items of that
    department” and thereby artificially depressed Wright’s bonus amount. After Wright took a
    voluntary non-suit as to Comfort Systems, U.S.A., Walker filed an answer denying Wright’s
    allegations. Discovery ensued. Walker later filed a counterclaim against Wright for amounts
    allegedly paid to Wright in excess of the amount owed under the bonus provision of his employment
    contract.
    On January 8, 2008, the trial court entered an order of reference to a special master. The
    issues referred to the Special Master6 included whether Walker breached the terms of the
    employment contract with Wright, and if so, the amount of damages Wright was entitled to recover.
    The Special Master was also asked to determine whether Walker was entitled to recover on its
    counterclaim and, if so, how much. The Special Master was ordered to conduct an evidentiary
    hearing and submit to the trial court a written report containing findings of fact and conclusions of
    law, as well as a transcript of the proceedings.
    On February 5 and 6, 2008, the Special Master conducted the evidentiary hearing. At the
    outset, the Special Master heard testimony from Plaintiff Wright, who testified at length about his
    concerns during his employment about the calculation of his bonus. He complained that he was not
    given access to supporting documentation of the calculation of Walker’s overhead, and felt that a
    disproportionate amount of overhead was allocated to the service department, which reduced the
    amount of his bonus.
    Walker’s CFO, Kristie Hand, testified that she calculated Wright’s bonus in accordance with
    the formula that was communicated to her by John Walker and Lee Walker. She said that the service
    department was not a “stand alone profit center” and that Walker’s accounting system did not
    separate the construction and service areas. Hand outlined how she calculated the overhead and
    6
    The Special Master was Attorney Clarence Halmon.
    -3-
    denied that a disproportionate amount of overhead was allocated to the service department. Walker’s
    human resources director Tish Bartlett corroborated Hand’s testimony.
    John Walker testified about the bonus agreement entered into when Wright was hired, and
    the process of manually computing the figures to calculate Wright’s bonus. He said that the same
    method was used each time to calculate Wright’s bonus, and that Wright accepted his bonus check
    each time.
    Wright presented the testimony of an expert witness, Andy Wilson (“Wilson”), a fraud
    investigator. Wilson testified that Walker’s calculations of Wright’s bonus were arbitrary and
    inconsistent, and that source documents utilized to determine overhead expenses for the service
    department were missing. Wilson opined that this was indicative of fraud. Wilson emphasized the
    necessity of source documents such as sales documents, job files, and invoices to verify the overhead
    and expense calculations. In the absence of supporting documentation, Wilson calculated the
    amount of bonus Wright was allegedly due by utilizing a calculation method that relied on a series
    of assumptions, designating an overhead amount based on a percentage of the service department’s
    sales.
    Walker proffered expert testimony by a certified financial auditor, Jeff Stallings (“Stallings”).
    Stallings stated that he had independently reviewed Walker’s records, such as Walker’s general
    ledger, but did not review source documents on expenses, such as bills for repairs. Stallings did not
    bring to the hearing records such as Walker’s general ledger, but instead brought his work papers
    from reviewing them. After reviewing Walker’s records, Stallings calculated Wright’s bonus, and
    asserted that the bonus calculations that were done by Walker’s employees conformed to the letter
    agreement outlining Wright’s bonus arrangement. He did not find that a disproportionate amount
    of overhead had been allocated to Walker’s service department. Stallings criticized Wilson’s
    calculation of Wright’s bonus, and in particular the assumptions underlying Wilson’s calculations.
    Stallings offered no testimony to support Walker’s counterclaim against Wright. At the conclusion
    of the hearing, the Special Master took the matter under advisement.
    On July 17, 2008, the Special Master filed a 14–page report outlining and analyzing the
    evidence and setting forth his findings of fact and conclusions of law on both Wright’s complaint
    and Walker’s counterclaim. The Special Master observed that “[t]he question of breach is, to a
    certain extent, intertwined with the question of damages” because Wright’s claim of breach of
    contract was based solely on the alleged underpayment of his bonus; therefore, he focused on the
    bonus calculations.
    The Special Master’s detailed report outlined the background and the parties’ allegations, and
    summarized the testimony by each of the witnesses at the evidentiary hearing. He set out Hand’s
    elaborate explanation of the manual assembly of information and the calculation of expenses utilized
    to determine Wright’s bonus, as well as Wright’s objections to specific portions of the expense
    calculation and allocation to the service department. The Special Master found “as a Finding of Fact
    that Neither Plaintiff [n]or Defendant produced ‘support documentation’ for line item[] costs in
    regards to the issue for calculating the bonus. Nor did any party explain why the documents for each
    line item cost[] were not produced.”
    -4-
    The Special Master analyzed Wilson’s testimony at length, noting that the methodology
    utilized by Wilson was necessitated by the fact that supporting documentation for overhead figures
    were not made available to him. The Special Master found specifically that Wilson’s proposed
    method was “too speculative” to be used to calculate Wright’s bonus. The Special Master also
    analyzed Stallings’ testimony at length, finding his testimony credible insofar as he explained the
    procedures used to calculate Wright’s bonus and his criticism of Wilson’s method for determining
    the bonus. The Special Master found that Wilson’s formula for calculating Wright’s bonus did not
    comport with the formula agreed upon by the parties. Because Wright did not attempt to quantify
    his damages but instead relied upon Wilson’s expert testimony, the Special Master found no credible
    evidence that Wright suffered any damages.
    The Special Master concluded that Wright “was not persuasive on the issue of breach” and
    that any damages he suffered “cannot be determined correctly to a degree of specificity not bordering
    on speculation” in the absence of source documents on Walker’s expenses. The Special Master
    likewise found that Walker’s proof on its counterclaim was “speculative,” and found no fraud by
    Walker. Finding that neither party had carried its burden of proof, the Special Master recommended
    that both Wright’s claims and Walker’s counterclaim be dismissed.
    After the Special Master’s report was filed, Wright filed an objection on the grounds that
    Walker either purposefully caused the destruction of the source documents on the company’s
    expenses or purposefully withheld the source documents from Wright. Walker responded by arguing
    that Wright’s objection was improper in that Wright never presented to the Special Master any
    evidence that Walker either was guilty of spoliation of evidence or that Walker intentionally failed
    to produce documents.7 In an order entered January 20, 2009, the trial court overruled Wright’s
    objections to the Special Master’s report and adopted the recommendation of the Special Master.
    Thus, the trial court dismissed Wright’s complaint and Walker’s counterclaim. Wright now appeals.
    ISSUE ON APPEAL AND STANDARD OF REVIEW
    On appeal, Wright seeks to frame the issue for review as “whether there was sufficient
    evidence in the record to prove the damages sustained by [Wright] as a result of the breach of
    Wright’s employment contract with [Walker].”
    7
    Although Wright argues on appeal that affirming the trial court’s judgment “would reward Walker for
    successfully covering their tracks by sitting on documents they had an obligation to produce in response to discovery,”
    no issue is raised on appeal on whether Walker was guilty of spoilation or the intentional withholding of evidence.
    -5-
    We note, however, that when there is a concurrent finding of a special master and a
    chancellor, our review is extremely limited. See T.C.A. § 27-1-113;8 Gammo v. Rolen, 
    253 S.W.3d 169
    , 174 (Tenn. Ct. App. 2007).
    Where there has been a concurrent finding of the Special Master and Chancellor, this
    Court may not disturb the concurrent findings. A concurrent finding of a master and
    chancellor is conclusive on appeal, except where it is upon an issue not proper to be
    referred, where it is based on an error of law or a mixed question of fact and law, or
    where it is not supported by any material evidence. This standard of review is similar
    to our standard when reviewing a jury verdict; we must affirm if there is any material
    evidence to support the trial court’s concurrence.
    Gammo, 253 S.W.3d at 174 (quoting In re Estate of Ladd, 
    247 S.W.3d 628
    , 636 (Tenn. Ct. App.
    2007)) (citations omitted). There is no allegation on appeal that the issues were not proper for
    referral to a special master. Thus, the issue presented to this Court on appeal can be only whether
    there was an error of law or on a mixed question of fact and law, or whether the findings were not
    supported by any material evidence.
    ANALYSIS
    On appeal, Wright essentially argues that the Special Master and thus the trial court, erred
    in not crediting expert Wilson’s testimony. Wright asserts that, because Walker failed to produce
    necessary source documents, in the absence of such documents, Wilson’s methodology for
    calculating and allocating Walker’s overheard, and thus Wright’s bonus, was reasonable and should
    have been adopted.
    The Special Master’s finding that Wilson’s method was “speculative” was an implicit
    determination that his expert testimony was not credible. This is neither a question of law nor a
    mixed question of fact and law; it is simply a factual finding by the Special Master, concurred in by
    the trial court. As such, it is conclusive on appeal. See Gammo, 253 S.W.3d at 174. Thus, we look
    only to whether there was any material evidence to support the trial court’s concurrence in the
    recommendations of the Special Master. As outlined above, the Special Master was presented with
    ample evidence to support his findings of fact and conclusions of law. This evidence was available
    for the trial court by virtue of the Special Master’s report and the transcript of the evidentiary
    hearing. From our careful review of the appellate record, we must conclude that there was material
    evidence to support the trial court’s concurrence.
    8
    The statute provides in pertinent part the following:
    Where there has been a concurrent finding of the master and chancellor, which
    under the principles now obtaining is binding on the appellate courts, the court of
    appeals shall not have the right to disturb such finding. . . .
    T.C.A. § 27-1-113 (2000).
    -6-
    CONCLUSION
    The decision of the trial court is affirmed. The costs of this appeal are taxed to the Appellant
    Don L. Wright and his surety, for which execution may issue if necessary.
    ___________________________________
    HOLLY M. KIRBY, JUDGE
    -7-
    

Document Info

Docket Number: W2009-00383-COA-R3-CV

Judges: Judge Holly M. Kirby

Filed Date: 12/14/2009

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/30/2014