Clinton Grice Rotenberry, Jr. v. Scottye R. Hooker

CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 20, 2001
Docket2002-CA-00096-SCT
StatusPublished

This text of Clinton Grice Rotenberry, Jr. v. Scottye R. Hooker (Clinton Grice Rotenberry, Jr. v. Scottye R. Hooker) 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
Clinton Grice Rotenberry, Jr. v. Scottye R. Hooker, (Mich. 2001).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF MISSISSIPPI

NO. 2002-CA-00096-SCT

CLINTON GRICE ROTENBERRY, JR.

v.

SCOTTYE R. HOOKER

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 12/20/2001 TRIAL JUDGE: HON. DENISE OWENS COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: HINDS COUNTY CHANCERY COURT ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT: VAUGHN DAVIS ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE: DANA J. SWAN NATURE OF THE CASE: CIVIL - CONTRACT DISPOSITION: AFFIRMED - 11/06/2003 MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED: MANDATE ISSUED:

EN BANC.

WALLER, JUSTICE, FOR THE COURT:

¶1. Scottye R. Hooker and Clinton Grice Rotenberry, Jr., were sole and equal beneficiaries of a trust.

Hooker made an offer to sell Rotenberry her one-half interest in a farm held by the trust. Rotenberry

accepted the offer, but Hooker rejected the acceptance because of a perceived misconstruction of the

offer. Rotenberry's claim for specific performance was denied because the chancery court found that there

was never an agreement with regard to the contract price and a unilateral mistake permitted recission of

the contract. We find that the chancellor was not manifestly wrong in finding unilateral mistake which

warranted rescission of the contract.

FACTS ¶2. Clinton Gilliam Rotenberry established a trust, the corpus of which consisted of farm land, bank

stocks, and other accounts. The trust provided for distribution to the remainder beneficiaries, Clinton G.

Rotenberry, Jr., and Scottye R. Hooker, upon the death of the last remaining income beneficiary. The last

remaining income beneficiary died in 1997. At the time of termination, the trust's corpus consisted of

Trustmark bank stock, various bank accounts, a leasehold interest in two lots on the reservoir, a judgment

entered against a prior trustee, several policies of life insurance, and a 3,262 acre farm in Panola and

Tallahatchie Counties.

¶3. The farm is the asset at issue in this litigation. Rotenberry and Hooker each had a one-half interest

in the remainder assets. A prior trustee had borrowed money from the Met Life Company and had given

a deed of trust on the farmland to secure the indebtedness. This debt had a balance of $459,000 at the

time of the termination of the trust,

¶4. Upon termination, the trustee began preparing for distribution of the assets. Efforts were made to

distribute separate assets to Rotenberry and Hooker. Rotenberry made it known that he was interested

in purchasing Hooker's portion of the farmland. The trustee had been able to collect $150,000 a year from

leasing the farmland. If Rotenberry and Hooker were unable to reach an agreement on the 3,262 acres,

then the trustee was prepared to partition the property, with the result being that each would take one-half

of the property and each would assume one-half of the Met Life debt.

¶5. On December 2, 1998, Patrick H. Johnson, as attorney for Hooker, communicated an offer to sell

her interest in the farmland to Rotenberry's attorney. The letter specifically stated, "Earlier today I spoke

with Scottye and she authorized me to offer to sell to Clint her undivided one-half interest in the 3,262 acres

of the Panola and Tallahatchie County farm land for $1,062,500 less the balance of the debt due Met Life."

The offer made "time of the essence" and allowed only one day for acceptance.

2 ¶6. On December 3, 1998, Rotenberry authorized his attorney to accept the offer. His offer was

communicated by letter transmitted by facsimile which stated, "I am authorized by Clint to accept and do

hereby accept the offer of Scottye Hooker to sell to Clint her undivided one-half interest in the 3,262 acres

of the Panola and Tallahatchie County farm land for $1,062,500 less the balance of the debt due Met Life."

¶7. On December 7, 1998, Rotenberry, through his attorney, sent a second letter to Hooker's counsel

stating that he was willing to place $100,000 in escrow pending the completion of the sale if Hooker would

sign a document authorizing Rotenberry to enter into a farm lease pending the closing. The farm lease from

the preceding year had expired, and Hooker was attempting to secure a new farm lease to ensure the land

would continue to be active and income producing.

¶8. On December 9, 1998, Rotenberry, through his attorney, sent a third letter to Hooker's counsel

stating he was immediately ready to tender the sum of $603,500.00 ($1,062,500.00 less the $459,000.00

balance due on the Met Life debt) to finalize the transaction. This letter brought an immediate response

from Hooker's attorney who considered the assessment of all of the debt instead of one-half as a

counteroffer and rejected the same. The December 9 letter stated:

It was my client's intent on December 3, 1998, as it has been over the last several months of negotiations, to establish a price for her interest in the farmland and to proceed from there with negotiating the remainder of the transaction once the offer was accepted . . . . The facts and pattern of conduct state a very clear and convincing case that this sale was and continued up to this point to be in the process of negotiation and had never been finalized . . . . Your client's December 9, 1998 offer to purchase Scottye's one half undivided interest less the total on the entire piece of property rather than the debt attributable to her one half interest flies in the face of equity and is totally unacceptable and is hereby rejected.

Rotenberry's attorney disagreed with this assessment and responded with a letter dated December 9, 1998,

indicating a deal was struck and he was ready to perform. This letter stated:

3 You attempt to characterize my earlier letter of December 9, 1998, as a new offer but it obviously is not. It is merely a letter tendering full payment of the purchase price which had been agreed to in prior written communications between us which were authorized and approved by our clients. . . . [T]he original offer by your client was not for $1,062,500 less one half of the debt due to Met Life but was for the amount 'less the balance of the debt due Met Life' This offer has been made by your client and accepted by mine. It only remains to be fulfilled by both of our clients and, as I have informed you, my client stands ready to perform.

¶9. Rotenberry thereafter filed a complaint seeking specific performance. A bench trial was held in

which testimony was heard from only two witnesses, the attorneys who represented the parties at the time

of the alleged offer and the alleged acceptance. The chancellor denied Rotenberry's request for specific

performance and found that there was no meeting of the minds regarding the amount of Met Life debt to

be deducted. She then applied the doctrine of unilateral mistake and rescinded the contract.

STANDARD OF REVIEW

¶10. The initial question of whether a contract is ambiguous is a matter of law. Lamb Constr. Co. v.

Town of Renova, 573 So. 2d 1378, 1383 (Miss. 1990). If found ambiguous, the subsequent

interpretation of the contract is a finding of fact. Id. We will uphold a chancellor's findings of facts unless

they are manifestly wrong or against the overwhelming weight of the evidence. Richardson v. Riley, 355

So. 2d 667, 668 (Miss. 1978).

DISCUSSION

I. WHETHER THE CHANCERY COURT ERRED BY FINDING THAT THERE HAD BEEN NO MEETING OF THE MINDS OF THE PARTIES.

¶11. Rotenberry argues that Hooker is procedurally barred from raising the issue of ambiguity because

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