Burchett v. Stephens

794 S.W.2d 745, 1990 Tenn. App. LEXIS 364
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMay 23, 1990
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 794 S.W.2d 745 (Burchett v. Stephens) 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
Burchett v. Stephens, 794 S.W.2d 745, 1990 Tenn. App. LEXIS 364 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1990).

Opinion

OPINION

TODD, Presiding Judge.

The defendants, Barbara Stephens and Frank’s Dry Goods, Inc., have appealed from a non-jury judgment against them and in favor of Mildred Ellis Burchett, executor of the estate of James A. Burchett, deceased, for principal and interest of $32,-700 due upon a debt.

Defendant, Barbara Stephens, is the sole stockholder and controlling officer of Frank’s Dry Goods, Inc. In November, 1986, deceased offered to loan $30,000 to defendant Stephens. She accepted on condition that she sign a note and pay interest. On November 14, 1986, deceased obtained from his bank a cashier’s check payable to him in the amount of $30,000. He endorsed the check to defendant, Stephens, who executed a note to him for a like amount at 9% interest. The maturity, if any, of the note is not shown. Defendant, Stephens, endorsed the check and deposited it to the credit of the defendant, Frank’s Dry Goods, Inc.

Deceased refused the first interest check tendered to him, but thereafter accepted monthly interest checks on the account of Frank’s Dry Goods, Inc., until June 1,1988.

After the death of the husband of defendant, Stephens, in December, 1987, deceased, James A. Burchett, proposed marriage to defendant, but she declined. Thereafter said defendant offered to borrow from the bank to satisfy the $30,000 note, but deceased, Burchett, stated that he had torn up the note and would accept no further payments thereon. On June 19, 1988, James A. Burchett died.

Thereafter the widow of deceased qualified as his executrix and demanded payment of the note. Defendant, Stephens, [747]*747responded that deceased told her he had destroyed the note, but that if it were found it would be paid. The note was never found.

As stated, the Trial Judge found against both defendants who have appealed.

The first issue is whether the evidence supports a judgment against the defendant, Frank’s Dry Goods, Inc.

The only grounds of liability of the corporation are stated by plaintiff as follows:

The $30,000.00 passed from the deceased to the Defendant Stephens and into the bank account of the Defendant Corporation, which Corporation paid interest on the money monthly from the date of the loan, November 14, 1986, through May 31, 1988.

It is undisputed that the corporation received and used the $30,000.00 and paid interest thereon. On the other hand, it is undisputed that the money was loaned to the defendant, Stephens, who signed a note therefor. There is no evidence that any person, acting for the corporation, pledged the corporation to pay the note or the debt represented by it. Said defendant testified as follows:

Q: Isn’t it true, Ms. Stephens that you say that the only way you would have ever accepted the money was to sign a note and pay interest?
A: That’s true, and that he tell his wife.
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Q: Isn’t it true that the first time in testifying in the discovery deposition, you stated that you signed the note as Frank’s, Inc., by you, which would be normal?
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THE WITNESS: I think I said — no, I wasn’t sure how I signed it, but I put it—
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THE COURT: I think you’d better read question and answer.
BY MR. DANCE:
Q: Page twenty-four, line fifteen: (reading)
This is what I’m looking for, are you talking about Ms. Barbara Stephens, individually, or are you talking about Ms. Stephens as the president of Frank’s Dry Goods, doing business as Frank’s Family Fashions.
Your answer was yes. The question was:
(reading)
Yes, and I have asked you two questions.
The answer:
(reading)
Yes, and when I said, I, I was acting for Frank’s
Is that not what you first testified to?
A: I think of myself as Frank’s. But, frankly, you had me so confused on what you were asking, that I really didn’t even remember—
[[Image here]]
Q: Then in your changing, you said, by adding on page twenty-four to line fourteen the following, I loaned the business, Frank’s Dry Goods, Inc., the money given to me personally by Mr. Burchett.
THE WITNESS: Yes.
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Q: In that change, did you not likewise testify that you, quote, I signed the note to Mr. Burchett, personally, as Barbara Stephens?
A: Yes.
Q: Now, Ms. Stephens, isn’t it true that you have likewise testified and told me that when I said I, I was acting for Frank’s, Inc?
A: When I say, I — in fact, I used to say, we, one in the same.
Q: Right now I’m talking about — did you not testify as to the standpoint of when I said, I, I was acting for Frank’s.
[[Image here]]
THE WITNESS: I am Frank’s.
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BY MR. DANCE:
(reading)
At the time you signed this promissory note, did you sign it Barbara Stephens, or did you sign it Frank’s by Barbara Stephens. You answer was: Probably [748]*748Frank’s Inc. I don’t usually include the Dry Goods by me is how I sign all the notes for the company.
[[Image here]]
A: In thinking back, I thought why would I — in looking at the duplicate deposit slip, I thought I have entered it in the journal that it was personal money, and there’s no where in my journal, and there’s no where on the financial statements that show that I owed that to Mr. Burchett, so it would have to have been — if it had been a Frank’s, I would have had it on a — in the liabilities that Frank’s owed Mr. Burchett thirty thousand dollars. It was nowhere. I did not enter that anywhere, so it would have to be personal.

It is seen that the witness was unsure as to the signature on the note until she consulted the records of the corporation which were kept by her and from which she determined that the corporation was not obligated on the note.

The record indicates that plaintiff was able to produce no direct proof of the creation or existence of the debt except by examination of the defendant, Stephens, an adverse party. If the alleged contradictions in her testimony as to the responsible debtor are unexplained, then such contradictions may have the result of cancelling each other leaving no evidence from the witness on that subject. Donaho v. Large, 25 Tenn.App. 433, 158 S.W.2d 447 (1942); Nashville & American Trust Co. v. Aetna Cas. & Sur. Co., 21 Tenn.App.

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Bluebook (online)
794 S.W.2d 745, 1990 Tenn. App. LEXIS 364, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burchett-v-stephens-tennctapp-1990.