Beverly C. Smith v. Ronnie R. Smith

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedNovember 22, 2005
DocketM2004-00257-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Beverly C. Smith v. Ronnie R. Smith (Beverly C. Smith v. Ronnie R. Smith) 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
Beverly C. Smith v. Ronnie R. Smith, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE April 12, 2005 Session

BEVERLY C. SMITH v. RONNIE R. SMITH, ET AL.

Appeal from the Chancery Court for Wilson County No. 02402 Charles K. Smith, Chancellor

No. M2004-00257-COA-R3-CV - Filed November 22, 2005

This case involves an intrafamily transaction in real property. A now-deceased owner of a piece of commercial property held by tenancy by the entireties agreed to sell it to his nephew in a handshake transaction. The nephew made a $10,000 down payment, began paying off the balance in monthly installments, and made improvements to the property. After the seller died, his widow filed a complaint for declaratory judgment asking the court to declare the rights of the parties with regard to the real property. Although the trial court found there was indeed an agreement between the uncle and the nephew to sell the land to the nephew, the court declined to require the widow to effectuate the contract, not because she had not agreed to the sale, but because she offered to reimburse the nephew for all his out-of-pocket costs. Because we conclude the widow should be estopped from asserting the statute of frauds to avoid the sale, and because her offer cannot limit the buyer’s remedies, we reverse.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Chancery Court Reversed

PATRICIA J. COTTRELL, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which WILLIAM C. KOCH , JR., P.J., M.S., and WILLIAM B. CAIN , J., joined.

August C. Winter, Brentwood, Tennessee, for the appellants, Ronnie R. Smith and Betty Jo W. Smith.

James M. Lea, Jr., Robert Evans Lee, Lebanon, Tennessee, for the appellee, Beverly C. Smith.

OPINION

I.

In 1982, Benton Smith purchased a small piece of commercial property located at 14111 Lebanon Road in the Hermitage area of Wilson County, Tennessee. The warranty deed stated that the property was being conveyed to “Benton M. Smith and wife, Beverly C. Smith, as tenants by the entireties.” The proof showed that Mr. Smith bought and sold rental property for investment purposes and that he had purchased ten or twelve such properties in Tennessee and Kentucky during his twenty-one year marriage to Beverly Smith. Mr. Smith dealt with the investment real property, and Mrs. Smith generally did not wish to involve herself in the transactions or assume responsibility for management or ownership of the properties. During the marriage, Mr. Smith generally made decisions concerning the real property he owned prior to the marriage1 as well as the property acquired after the marriage.

There was a building on the property in question that was divided by a common wall into two sections. Ronnie Smith, Benton Smith’s nephew, moved his home repair and painting business into the smaller A side. Randy Dillingham, Beverly Smith’s son by an earlier marriage, moved his automotive body shop business into the larger B side. Ronnie Smith and Randy Dillingham both paid monthly rent to Benton Smith, with Ronnie Smith apparently paying $500 per month.

In the year 2000, Benton Smith decided to sell some of his holdings, including the Lebanon Road property. He told both Ronnie and Randy of his plans, and encouraged them to buy the property. Randy went to the bank, but was unable to obtain the necessary financing. Ronnie owned a duplex that he could use as collateral, so the bank agreed to finance his purchase.

In June of 2000, Benton Smith agreed to sell the property to Ronnie Smith for $140,500. Because the bank rate for loans on commercial property was twelve percent, Benton Smith offered to finance the purchase himself, at a lower interest rate. Ronnie gave Benton Smith a check for the $10,000 down payment and agreed to pay him $1,500 per month on the balance. Ronnie also started paying the property taxes and the insurance.

Ronnie Smith subsequently informed Randy Dillingham about the transaction and presented him with a lease, dated July 1, 2000, which Randy signed. The lease required Randy to pay rent of $1,000 per month to Ronnie for the B side of the property, an increase over the $600 per month which he had been paying to Benton Smith. About six months after he bought the property, Ronnie decided to build an addition onto the A side of the building and rent it out to a used car dealer. He spent about $21,000 on the materials for the addition.

Benton Smith did not reduce the parties’ agreement to writing at the time of sale. According to Ronnie Smith, Benton Smith only wanted a handshake agreement because his motto was “A man’s word is only as good as he is.” In early 2001, Ronnie asked his uncle to write out the details of their agreement for use in preparing his tax return. Benton Smith wrote out a document in his own hand, the content of which was as follows:

1 Prior to their marriage, Benton Smith and Beverly Smith entered into a prenuptial agreement which established real property owned by him at the time of the marriage as his separate property.

-2- 14111 Leb. Rd.

Bought July 2000 $140,500 Down Payment 10,000 $130,500 (5) payments made $1500 of which $4,661,65 was Interest and remaining $2,878.35 Applied to deducted principal $ 2,878.65 Balance End year 2000 $127,621.35

Ronnie went to Benton Smith’s house to pick up the document. When he arrived, Mr. Smith was in the shower. Ronnie told Beverly Smith why he had come, and she retrieved the document and gave it to him.

In early November of 2001, Ronnie Smith had a warranty deed and deed of trust prepared.2 Ronnie testified that he, Benton Smith, and Beverly Smith went to the bank to execute the deeds,3 and to have their signatures notarized. However, the bank was closed, and the deeds were never executed.

Apparently unexpectedly, Benton Smith died in the hospital on November 20, 2001. He did not leave a will. By her own account, Beverly Smith was distraught and confused following her husband’s untimely death. Ronnie Smith and Randy Dillingham both realized that Benton Smith’s death left the title to the property they occupied unsettled, and they began to position themselves to establish or protect their interests in the disputed property.

According to Ronnie Smith’s testimony, he asked Beverly Smith to sign the warranty deed, and she was willing. However, Randy and his brother Brian subsequently advised her not to sign anything, so when she went to the attorney’s office, she declined. Randy Dillingham consulted with an attorney who advised him to start paying rent to Beverly Smith instead of to Ronnie. Randy began making those payments in January of 2002. When Ronnie asked him for the rent, Randy told him that he was sending it to his mother instead. Ronnie then began sending $500 checks each month, which were made out to the Estate of Benton Smith.

II. TRIAL PROCEEDINGS

On November 27, 2002, Beverly Smith filed a lawsuit in the Chancery Court of Wilson County, seeking a declaratory judgment of the rights of the respective parties to the disputed

2 The timing is evidenced by an invoice from the attorney who prepared the documents which was dated November 2, 2001.

3 Other testimony indicates the document to be signed that day was a promissory note. Of course, a promissory note could have been one of the documents included in the transaction since Benton Smith had financed the purchase.

-3- property. Ronnie Smith answered and also asked for a declaratory judgment as to the rights of the parties in the property.4

The hearing was conducted on November 17, 2003. Apart from Beverly Smith and Ronnie Smith, seven other witnesses testified, all of whom were relatives of the parties.

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Beverly C. Smith v. Ronnie R. Smith, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beverly-c-smith-v-ronnie-r-smith-tennctapp-2005.