Allied Steel Corp. v. Cooper

607 So. 2d 113, 1992 WL 296197
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 31, 1992
Docket07-CA-59563, 91-CA-0287
StatusPublished
Cited by54 cases

This text of 607 So. 2d 113 (Allied Steel Corp. v. Cooper) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Allied Steel Corp. v. Cooper, 607 So. 2d 113, 1992 WL 296197 (Mich. 1992).

Opinion

This opinion reflects the consolidation of two actions. The first ("Cooper I") is an appeal by construction lienholders, Allied Steel Corporation, Park Supply Company and Quick Grice, Inc. from a July 1, 1988, decision of the Pearl River County Circuit Court, finding Carle Cooper not personally liable for debts owed to them in connection with the development of the Chimney Square Mall. The second ("Cooper II") is an appeal by Cooper from a February 28, 1991, ratification by the Pearl River County Circuit Court of a Sheriff's Sale and Conveyance of the west side of the Chimney Square property to the appellants inCooper I and additional construction lienholders, David Diamond and James T. Bennett, Jr. d/b/a The Lite House.

Finding that the evidence in the record does not support the lower court's finding, but does support a finding that Cooper and his former business associate, Bernard Heaps, acted as partners or joint venturers in the development of the Chimney Square Mall project, we reverse the decision of the Circuit Court in CooperI. We affirm the Circuit Court's ratification of the Sheriff's Sale and Conveyance in Cooper II.

FACTS
Carle Cooper, a real estate developer and contractor, and Bernard Heaps, owner of an interior construction business alternately known as "House of Interiors" and "House of Interiors Construction," purchased a property known as the "old blanket factory" from Sunbeam Electric Company in 1984 for $155,000.00. Each owned an undivided one-half interest in the property. Although they intended to resell the property, their efforts to do so were unsuccessful.

In 1986, Cooper and Heaps made the decision to renovate part of the building for use as a retail mini-mall. They obtained a variance for commercial use and began renovations later that year. To finance the project, they co-signed a promissory note and deed of trust to the First National Bank of St. Tammany Parish in Slidell, Louisiana, on June 2, 1986. As the proceeds of the $410,000.00 construction loan were disbursed by the bank, they were deposited in a joint checking account established *Page 115 for the purpose of paying for materials and work incident to the transformation of the east half of the old factory building into the Chimney Square Mall.

Cooper obtained a builder's risk insurance policy as well as a loss of earnings policy from Thigpen Insurance Company, Inc. He signed the policy application on behalf of Cooper, Heaps and Latier Corporation, one of his business enterprises, added to the application at his request.

Work on Chimney Square Mall began in 1986. From the beginning, it appears from the record that Cooper and Heaps took a ratherad hoc approach to the undertaking. They entered into no express agreements with each other. Likewise, the record indicates that the rehabilitation of the building was done on a day-by-day basis rather than under the aegis of an overall design and development plan. It appears, however, that Cooper and his construction crew concentrated on the site work and refurbishing the exterior, while Heaps and the House of Interiors were charged with renovating the interior and adapting it for re-use as a mini-mall.

Materials for the interior were supplied by the appellants in the case sub judice, as well as the Lite House. Cooper and Heaps, as well as the site foreman, Bruce Burge, ordered materials as needed. Most were billed to the House of Interiors, but paid for with checks requiring the signatures of both Heaps and Cooper.

Late in 1986, as funds dwindled, Cooper and Heaps fell behind in the payments on the open accounts they held with their suppliers. One by one, construction and materialman's liens were filed against the property as follows:

Lienor Date Lien Filed Principal Amount

First National Bank 06/3/86 $410,000.00 Quick Grice 12/9/86 $ 24,658.39 Allied Steel 12/18/86 $ 2,935.00 Park Supply 01/8/87 $ 13,093.91 The Lite House 3/30/87 $ 6,251.26 Thigpen Insurance 7/15/87 $ 6,093.08

The appellees' liens were filed against the unimproved west side of the building only. Hibernia National Bank, successor to the failed First National Bank of St. Tammany Parish, purchased the renovated east side of the building at a foreclosure sale in September, 1989 for $378,000.00 and subsequently sold it to the County for $300,000.00 in May, 1990. Seeking to hasten foreclosure of the remaining half of the Chimney Square property, but fearing that a deficiency might leave their open accounts unpaid, the various construction and materialmen's lienors then instituted a series of claims against Cooper and Heaps.

David Diamond and James T. Bennett d/b/a The Lite House were the first to file suit. In a complaint against Bernard Heaps d/b/a The House of Interiors and the House of Interior Construction, Cooper, and the First National Bank of St. Tammany Parish, which had financed the project, they sought recovery of approximately $9,808.17 for lighting and electrical fixtures supplied to the project. Although Cooper appealed the August 17, 1987 judgment against him, this Court affirmed per curium the Circuit Court's decision in Carle Cooper v. David Diamond andJames T. Bennett, Jr. d/b/a The Lite House, 554 So.2d 925 (Miss. 1989).

Following the judgment against Cooper, the Lite House amended its complaint to join as defendants the other lienholders: Quick Grice, Park Supply Company, Allied Steel Corp. and Thigpen Insurance Agency. In a series of joinders and crossclaims, these parties sought to foreclose on their construction liens, to consent to a foreclosure sale, and to hold both Cooper and Heaps liable for any deficiencies that might result. *Page 116

A hearing was held on April 1, 1988 and the Pearl River County Circuit Court entered its final order on May 31, 1988. The court found in favor of Thigpen Insurance Agency on the matter of an unpaid premium on an insurance policy Cooper had obtained on the Chimney Square project. However, as to the claims against Cooper asserted by Allied Steel, Park Supply and Quick Grice, the court found that while entitled to their respective shares in any judgment against the Chimney Square property, they could not recover against Cooper personally because there was insufficient evidence to show that a partnership existed between Cooper and Heaps or that the parties had relied on the existence of a partnership when they provided materials for the Chimney Square project.

In June, 1988, Allied Steel, Quick Grice and Thigpen Insurance Agency, as well as Park Supply Company, entered Motions for a New Trial. A hearing on the motions was held on July 1, 1988. The trial court overruled the motions.

The efforts by all four Appellees to enforce their liens had been thwarted further by Heaps' filing for bankruptcy in the U.S. Bankruptcy Court, Southern District of Mississippi. Those proceedings, however, were dismissed on June 1, 1989. On June 19, 1989, the Circuit Court ordered the sale of the property to satisfy some $67,166.90 in judgments against it owed the construction lien holders.

On June 26, 1989, the Circuit Clerk of Pearl River County issued a Special Writ of Execution pursuant to Miss. Code Ann. §85-7-153, directing the Sheriff to conduct a sale of the west side of the building known as the Old Blanket Factory in Picayune, Mississippi to satisfy the judgments. Notice of the sale was published in accordance with the provisions set forth in Miss. Code Ann. § 89-1-55.

The sale was held on July 28, 1989 on the steps of the Pearl River County courthouse.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
607 So. 2d 113, 1992 WL 296197, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allied-steel-corp-v-cooper-miss-1992.