Alfred H. Knight v. Tyree B. Harris, IV

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJanuary 11, 2018
DocketM2016-00909-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Alfred H. Knight v. Tyree B. Harris, IV (Alfred H. Knight v. Tyree B. Harris, IV) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alfred H. Knight v. Tyree B. Harris, IV, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

01/11/2018 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE October 3, 2017 Session

ALFRED H. KNIGHT, ET AL. v. TYREE B. HARRIS, IV

Appeal from the Chancery Court for Davidson County No. 11-1045-III Ellen H. Lyle, Chancellor ___________________________________

No. M2016-00909-COA-R3-CV ___________________________________

This case arises out of the dissolution of a law firm and the resulting accounting. The trial court held that Appellant, who withdrew as a member of the Appellee/Firm, converted a portion of an earned fee by withdrawing the fee directly from the Firm’s trust account. The trial court further held that the conversion was done through concealment so as to warrant an award of punitive damages. Appellant appeals the trial court’s finding of conversion, the award of punitive damages, and its award of various accounts receivable and payables. We reverse the trial court’s award of punitive damages against Appellant and reduce the compensatory damages award.

Tenn. R. App. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Chancery Court Reversed in Part, Affirmed in Part, and Remanded

KENNY ARMSTRONG, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which ANDY D. BENNETT and W. NEAL MCBRAYER, JJ., joined.

Katherine Anne Brown, Nashville, Tennessee, for the appellant, Tyree Bryson Harris, IV.

Robert L. Delaney and James Leroy Weatherly, Jr., Nashville, Tennessee, for the appellee, Willis & Knight, PLC.

OPINION

I. Background

Appellant Tyree B. Harris, IV is an attorney licensed in Tennessee. In 1999, Mr. Harris joined Appellee Willis & Knight (the “Firm”) as a partner. At that time, the Firm operated as a partnership, and there were five partners: William R. Willis, Jr. (father of Russell Willis), Alfred H. Knight, Alan Johnson, Reese Willis, Russell Willis (William R. Willis, Jr.’s son), and Marian Harrison. Russell Willis was made managing partner of the Firm in 1997. When Mr. Harris joined the Firm, he did not execute a partnership agreement, nor was he required to make a capital contribution. Rather; Mr. Harris met with William Willis, a senior partner, and based on the business Mr. Harris anticipated bringing to the Firm, an agreement was reached as to Mr. Harris’ percentage of ownership. The percentage of ownership of each partner varied from year-to-year; however, each partner had an equal vote and expenses were shared equally, without regard to actual overhead per partner or percentage of ownership. Effective January 1, 2003, the Firm registered as a PLC with the State of Tennessee. Partners joined and left the Firm such that, by January 1, 2010, there were only three partners remaining: Russell Willis, Mary Arline Evans, and Mr. Harris. As the number of partners decreased, the Firm’s revenue also decreased.

The building where the Firm’s offices were located was owned by W&K Properties, which was owned by Alfred H. Knight and William R. Willis, Jr. In November 1978, the Firm entered into a triple net lease agreement with W&K Properties. By 2010, the lease was month-to-month with rental amounts varying monthly; at times, the monthly rent was as high as $10,000.00. However, the Firm was no longer occupying all of its leased space due to the decrease in employees and partners. Some adjustment to the Firm’s overhead was needed. To that end, in early 2010, Russell Willis, as managing partner, met with his father, William Willis, to discuss a reduction in the rent. William Willis allegedly agreed to defer 25% of the total rent amount, but allegedly rejected the Firm’s demand for a 50% reduction in the rent.

Due to his parents’ declining health, Russell Willis could not continue to serve as managing partner of the Firm. In approximately June of 2010, Mr. Harris assumed the position of interim managing partner until Russell Willis resumed his practice full time in late August of 2010.

At issue in this appeal is the distribution of a fee of $336,857.57, which the Firm received from its client, Restaurant Supply Solutions, Inc. (the “RSSI Fee”). Restaurant Supply Solutions, Inc.’s check was dated February 24, 2010; however, there is some dispute as to when the Firm received the check. Regardless, Mr. Harris was the principal lawyer on the case and was assisted by associate Katherine A. Brown. A dispute arose between the Firm and the client as to a portion of the fees (i.e. approximately $70,000.00- -$80,000.00 in fees paid for work done by accountants, who were called as experts in the case). Mr. Harris agreed to place the entire fee (not just the disputed portion) into the Firm’s trust account pending resolution of the client’s dispute. Angela Haynie Scherzer, the Firm’s bookkeeper, testified that she deposited the check for the RSSI Fee into the Firm’s trust account on or about May 28, 2010. At some point between May 28, 2010 and the end of the year, Mr. Harris, Russell Willis, and Mary Arline Evans met to discuss -2- allocation of the RSSI Fee. They allegedly agreed that the RSSI Fee would be allotted as follows: Mr. Harris would receive $225,000.00; Ms. Evans would receive $70,000.00, and Russell Willis would receive $41,857.57. This agreement was not reduced to writing. At the time the allocation decision was made, the Firm was allegedly current on all bills including rent.

Ms. Evans left the Firm effective September 14, 2010, which was before the client’s accountant dispute was settled, but she allegedly expected to receive her portion of the RSSI Fee. Mr. Harris testified that the partners voted to distribute the RSSI Fee directly from the Firm’s trust account to ensure that each partner would pay his or her pro rata share of the Firm’s expenses. Ms. Evans testified that she did not recall whether the vote had included an agreement that the funds would be distributed from the trust account. Regardless, Mr. Harris caused three checks to be issued from the Firm’s trust account, in the amounts outlined above. The checks, which were dated January 31, 2011, were written by Ms. Scherzer, the Firm’s bookkeeper. Mr. Harris then signed his $225,000.00 check (number 1466) and Ms. Evans’ $70,000.00 check (number 1472). Mr. Harris delivered Ms. Evans’ check to her at her new office. As to Mr. Willis’ $41,857.57 check, Mr. Harris testified that he caused the check to be issued but did not sign the check (because Mr. Willis, as a partner, could sign the check himself). It is undisputed that Mr. Willis never cashed his check, and the Firm ultimately transferred the remaining RSSI Fee (i.e., Mr. Willis’ portion of the fee) into the Firm’s operating account to pay expenses.

During the period Mr. Willis was not practicing full time, cash flow began to be a problem for the Firm. Allegedly, Russell Willis had not billed his clients during the period that he was helping with his parents, i.e., approximately 3 months. There is also a dispute, in this case, concerning the carry-over of approximately $70,000 in client expenses on William Willis’ capital account. Mr. Harris asserts that these expenses should have been written off (before he joined the Firm), but were carried over in an effort to inflate William Willis’ capital account.

Concerning the rent to W&K Properties, the Firm’s cash flow during the first half of 2010 was sufficient to continue to pay the full amount of rent. Allegedly, Russell Willis represented to the other two partners that he was still negotiating a reduction of rent with William Willis. Expecting a reduction in rent, Mr. Harris contends that, after paying full rent through June 2010, the Firm decided to forego further payments because it expected that the amount paid to date for 2010 would cover the entire year if the rent had been reduced as expected. Ms. Scherzer testified that Mr. Harris was the person who told her to withhold rent after June 2010. Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
Alfred H. Knight v. Tyree B. Harris, IV, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alfred-h-knight-v-tyree-b-harris-iv-tennctapp-2018.