Boardwalk Regency Corp. v. Roy Patterson and Trump Taj Mahal Assoc. v. Roy Patterson

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedAugust 24, 1999
DocketM1999-02805-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Boardwalk Regency Corp. v. Roy Patterson and Trump Taj Mahal Assoc. v. Roy Patterson (Boardwalk Regency Corp. v. Roy Patterson and Trump Taj Mahal Assoc. v. Roy Patterson) 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
Boardwalk Regency Corp. v. Roy Patterson and Trump Taj Mahal Assoc. v. Roy Patterson, (Tenn. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE August 24, 1999 Session

BOARDWALK REGENCY CORPORATION v. ROY B. PATTERSON

and

TRUMP TAJ MAHAL ASSOCIATES v. ROY B. PATTERSON

Appeals from the Chancery Court for Putnam County Nos. 96-478 & 96-479 Vernon Neal, Chancellor

No. M1999-02805-COA-R3-CV - Filed December 18, 2001

This appeal involves the efforts of two Atlantic City casinos to collect the gambling debts of a Tennessee resident. After obtaining default judgments against the Tennessee resident in New Jersey, the casinos twice attempted to file their judgments in the Chancery Court for Putnam County in accordance with the Uniform Enforcement of Foreign Judgments Act. On both occasions, the trial court declined to file the judgments after finding that they were irregular and that they were not properly authenticated. On the second occasion, the trial court also concluded that its refusal to file the first set of judgments precluded the casinos from filing the second set of judgments. The casinos have appealed. We have determined that the second set of judgments meet the requirements for filing and enforcement under the Uniform Enforcement of Foreign Judgments Act and that the casinos’ unsuccessful efforts to file the first set of judgments does not prevent them from filing the second set of judgments. Accordingly, we reverse the trial court’s order denying the application to enforce the foreign judgments.

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

WILLIAM C. KOCH , JR., J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which ALAN E. HIGHERS and DAVID R. FARMER , JJ., joined.

John E. Buffaloe, Jr., Nashville, Tennessee, for the appellants, Boardwalk Regency Corporation and Trump Taj Mahal Associates.

Jon E. Jones and Gwen D. Jones, Cookeville, Tennessee, for the appellee, Roy B. Patterson.

OPINION

I.

Sometime in the early or mid-1990s, Roy Patterson, a resident of Putnam County, traveled to Atlantic City, New Jersey where he ran up debts at two casinos. He returned to Tennessee owing the Boardwalk Regency $5,558.92, and the Trump Taj Mahal $5,587.32. Both casinos eventually filed suit against Mr. Patterson in the Superior Court of New Jersey in Atlantic County and obtained default judgments against him for their respective debts.

In 1995 the Boardwalk Regency and the Trump Taj Mahal retained counsel in Tennessee to register and enforce their judgments against Mr. Patterson under Tennessee’s version of the Uniform Enforcement of Foreign Judgments Act [Tenn. Code Ann. §§ 26-6-101, -107 (2000)]. However, in July 1996, the trial court dismissed the applications to enforce the judgments after concluding that they were irregular on their face, that they conflicted “with another judgment filed in this record from the same case in the same Court,” and that they lacked “proper certification.”

The casinos did not let the matter drop. As best we can determine, they filed new lawsuits against Mr. Patterson and, on October 21, 1996, obtained new judgments against him in the Special Civil Part of the Superior Court of New Jersey. The New Jersey court awarded the Trump Taj Mahal a $5,730.90 judgment1 and the Boardwalk Regency a $5,760.07 judgment.2 Thereafter, on December 17, 1996, the casinos’ Tennessee lawyer applied to the trial court to enforce these new judgments and provided the court with “exemplified” copies of the judgments and “affidavits” supporting the enforcement of the judgments.3 Mr. Patterson moved to dismiss these applications on two grounds – that the New Jersey court documents did not include a “written [o]rder of [j]udgment” and that these documents contained “different amounts and different signatures of certification.”4

In August 1998, the casinos responded to Mr. Patterson’s motion by filing copies of nunc pro tunc orders entered by the New Jersey court on June 16, 1998 again awarding them default judgments against Mr. Patterson. On this occasion, the New Jersey court granted the Trump Taj Mahal a judgment for $5,558.72 “plus costs of suit” and awarded the Boardwalk Regency a judgment for $5,587.32 “plus costs of suit.” Mr. Patterson renewed his objection to the enforcement of the judgments. He insisted that the June 16, 1998 judgments were not authenticated and that they were “at least the third document one [sic] filed in this [c]ourt purporting to be the final judgment of the New Jersey court against this defendant. Each of these purported judgments is for a separate amount.” He also invoked the doctrine of res judicata and insisted that the trial court’s July 1996 dismissal of the earlier applications to enforce the judgments should bar the current applications.

On February 11, 1999, the trial court filed orders denying both casinos’ applications to enforce their New Jersey judgments. The court concluded that “there was not a properly authenticated foreign judgment in this case” and that the documents purporting to be foreign

1 The judgment included $5,558.72 in damages and $172.18 in costs for a total of $5,730.90.

2 The judgment included $5,587.32 in damages and $172.75 in costs for a total of $5,760.07.

3 The required affidavits of the casinos’ Tennessee lawyer in support of enforcing these foreign judgments were, for some reason, not notarized. The trial court apparently did not deem this oversight material because it granted the casinos’ lawyer perm ission to file properly notarized affidavits.

4 Mr. Patterson argued that “[a] Tennessee court is not obligated to give full faith and credit where the party seeking enforcem ent has filed a string of so-called and inconsistent ‘judgments.’”

-2- judgments were “irregular” and in conflict with “other judgments filed in this record and in the predecessor record.” The trial court also concluded that its previous dismissal of the casinos’ applications to enforce the judgments “applied to bar the present action under the doctrine of res judicata.” The casinos have appealed.

II. THE STANDARD OF REVIEW

Mr. Patterson has not denied that he incurred the debts at the Boardwalk Regency and the Trump Taj Mahal, nor has he asserted that the Superior Court of New Jersey lacked either subject matter jurisdiction over the casinos’ claims or personal jurisdiction over him. Instead, he asserts (1) that the judgments are not entitled to full faith and credit because the Superior Court of New Jersey is not a court of record, (2) that the casinos have not complied with the technical requirements of the Uniform Enforcement of Foreign Judgments Act, and (3) that the doctrine of res judicata bars the casinos’ current efforts to enforce their judgments. All these defenses involve legal rather than factual questions. Accordingly, we will review the trial court’s conclusions de novo without presuming that they are correct. Brown v. Birman Managed Care, Inc., 42 S.W.3d 62, 66 (Tenn. 2001).

III. THE ENFORCEABILITY OF GAMBLING DEBTS

One of the most settled principles of American jurisprudence is the constitutional mandate that each state must give full faith and credit to every other state’s judicial proceedings. U.S. Const. art. IV, § 1. This principle is tempered by only a few narrow and specific qualifications.

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Boardwalk Regency Corp. v. Roy Patterson and Trump Taj Mahal Assoc. v. Roy Patterson, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boardwalk-regency-corp-v-roy-patterson-and-trump-t-tennctapp-1999.