Broderick Autry v. Charles Boston, Jr.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedApril 28, 2006
Docket01030-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Broderick Autry v. Charles Boston, Jr. (Broderick Autry v. Charles Boston, Jr.) 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
Broderick Autry v. Charles Boston, Jr., (Tenn. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT KNOXVILLE Assigned on Briefs February 6, 2006

BRODERICK AUTRY v. CHARLES BOSTON, JR., ET AL.

Appeal from the Circuit Court for Hamilton County No. 04-C-284 Samuel H. Payne, Judge

No. E2005-001030-COA-R3-CV - FILED APRIL 28, 2006

Broderick Autry (“Plaintiff”) sued Charles Boston, Jr. and Corrine Boston (“Defendants”) claiming that Defendants had contracted to sell Plaintiff real property located at 2512 Ocoee Street in Chattanooga, Tennessee (“the Property”) and had breached the contract. Defendants raised, among other things, a statute of frauds defense under Tenn. Code Ann. § 29-2-101. After a bench trial, the Trial Court held, inter alia, that Plaintiff had a valid contract for the purchase of the Property, and ordered Defendants to execute and deliver a warranty deed for the Property to Plaintiff within thirty days of the payment of the balance due by Plaintiff. Defendants appeal to this Court. We affirm by holding that although the writing produced as evidence of the contract does not satisfy the statute of frauds, Defendants are estopped from denying the existence and enforceability of the contract.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Circuit Court Affirmed; Case Remanded

D. MICHAEL SWINEY , J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which HERSCHEL P. FRANKS, P.J., and CHARLES D. SUSANO , JR., J., joined.

Hallie H. McFadden, Chattanooga, Tennessee for the Appellants, Charles Boston, Jr., and Corrine Boston.

Howard Barnwell, Chattanooga, Tennessee for the Appellee, Broderick Autry. OPINION

Background

Plaintiff was married to Charles Boston’s daughter (“Pam”)1. Plaintiff claims that he and Defendants entered into an oral agreement in 2000, for Plaintiff and Pam to purchase the Property from Defendants. Plaintiff paid $2,000 to Mr. Boston and in return, Mr. Boston gave Plaintiff an undated receipt showing that Plaintiff paid $2,000 on an account of $10,000 leaving a balance of $8,000. This receipt stated that the $2,000 was paid for “down payment Ocoee.” The receipt was signed by Charles Boston alone. No other writings were made in regard to the claimed oral agreement.

Plaintiff and Pam made extensive repairs to the Property and eventually moved into the house on the Property where they lived until Pam died “from cancer.” After Pam’s death, Plaintiff attempted to tender the $8,000 balance to Defendants who refused to accept it. Defendants denied ever making a contract to sell the Property to Plaintiff. Defendants sought a detainer warrant and had Plaintiff evicted from the Property. Plaintiff then filed this suit. The case was tried without a jury in January of 2005.

At trial, Plaintiff produced the original receipt as evidence of the alleged oral agreement and testified regarding the circumstances surrounding the making of the contract. Plaintiff testified:

me and my wife went to Wilson Street, and that’s where Mrs. Corrine was staying with her daughter - - her and Mr. Boston at this time - - and it was like in 2000, and I gave Mr. Boston a 2,000-dollar down payment on the property. His wife was present.…She was present, and that was the first step as far as the property. That’s what you asked about, right, how it first came about? I got the receipt. I got the original receipt.

Plaintiff testified he paid the $2,000 prior to starting work on the Property and that both Defendants were present when he paid this money. Plaintiff testified that he and both Defendants discussed the fact that “I was giving them $2,000 down payment on the house on Ocoee Street.” Plaintiff further testified that they also discussed at that time: “It was $10,000 for the whole house. I gave him $2,000, and it left 8,000, and then he said give him $200 a month. That’s what he wanted during that time.” Plaintiff testified that at the time he paid the $2,000, he and Pam were taking care of Mr. Boston’s mother and were living at her house.

1 Pam Autry was the biological daughter of Mr. Boston, but was adopted by Mr. Boston’s mother making Pam Autry legally Mr. Boston’s sister. For purposes of simplicity, we refer to Pam Autry in this Opinion by her first name with no disrespect intended.

-2- Plaintiff testified:

Basically, that’s it. After we did the business with the receipt and the money, I went to working on the house. The house was condemned so I had to go to a meeting with them at the City with Mr. Boston and Mrs. Corrine. Here’s the paper right here (indicating) where we went to the City, and the house was condemned. I went with both of them. Both of them were present.

Plaintiff testified that “Mr. Boston never would accept the $200 a month because it was his daughter.” Plaintiff testified:

I gave [Mr. Boston] a couple of payments, and then he wouldn’t take them anymore because he was like he really didn’t know how - - the reason why he wouldn’t take it was because the house was so ragged. Me and my wife just got married. He said that he didn’t know how to charge us for the house. He said he only paid $4,000 for the house. He didn’t want to overcharge us for the house. He was with Ms. Amanda at the time. She was like how are you going to charge them for that house and that house so ragged. That’s how we started giving him no money. At this particular time, the house was still empty and condemned, and then me and my wife started working on this house.

Plaintiff testified that he and Pam fixed up the house and lived in it for at least a year and a half prior to Pam’s death. He testified that it took them two years to repair the house. Plaintiff testified that he spent “almost 30 or [$]40,000" in materials repairing the house. When asked his opinion of the value of the repairs he and Pam did, Plaintiff stated: “Basically, when you do work like that, they charge twice the material, something like that, but I just cut it in half, about half price.”

Plaintiff testified that he tried to pay the remaining $8,000 after Pam died, but Defendants would not accept this payment. Plaintiff testified:

When my wife passed, I went to Mr. Boston, and I talked to him. He said well, it’s just $8,000. You know you owe me that. I said well, I’ll pay you that. I’ll give you a check. He said - - well, at that particular time, he said okay because that’s when my wife first passed because I wanted to know what was going on. Then I went to Mrs. Boston. When I went to Mrs. Boston, I said I was going to let her know - - I let her know that I was going to give her her $4,000 out of the money because they were still separated and making sure that I gave both of them their equal share where I could get my title and go on about my business. That’s all I wanted.…I just wanted my house, and then he just went crazy and started talking crazy so I went and got a lawyer.

Plaintiff testified that prior to Pam’s death, they were a close family and that Mrs. Boston saw him working on the house and saw it completed.

-3- Mr. Boston testified the he purchased the Property “in about ‘97 or something like that” for “I think it was about $5,000, and then there was another payment to the man that was selling it to Mr. Durham which was about $2,000.” Mr. Boston disputed Plaintiff’s version of how the house was repaired. Mr. Boston testified:

What happened, there was the back porch that was in bad shape. So the inspectors, I guess, came around, and then they sent me a notice, and then I had it fixed and everything. So I had to get a roof, and I went and got a permit for a roof, and I had that fixed. Really, the house was livable after that.…First of all, I had cabinets built, brand new cabinets built from top and bottom, and then sinks and everything all the way around.

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