Clinton v. Gant

337 S.W.2d 761, 47 Tenn. App. 242, 1960 Tenn. App. LEXIS 79
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJuly 1, 1960
StatusPublished

This text of 337 S.W.2d 761 (Clinton v. Gant) 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
Clinton v. Gant, 337 S.W.2d 761, 47 Tenn. App. 242, 1960 Tenn. App. LEXIS 79 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1960).

Opinion

HUMPHREYS, J.

This is an appeal by Paul W. Gant, defendant below, from a decree of the Chancery Court at McMinnville, in favor of Darrell Walling, guardian for B. F. Clinton, incompetent, in the amount of $6,500.

These are the facts out of which this controversy arose: In the summer of 1948, defendant, Gant, who was working as a sales representative for Gulf Oil Company, learned the company contemplated a change in the Mc-Minnville distributorship then held by complainant, B. F. [244]*244Clinton. Grant contacted Clinton, and after negotiations the two drew up different contracts, trying to arrive at terms suitable to themselves and to Gulf Oil Company, represented in the proceedings by Mr. J. W. Bye, Jr., the District Manager, with offices in Chattanooga. Clinton and Gant went to Chattanooga to discuss the matter with Bye taking at least two different contracts duly signed and acknowledged before notaries public. As the result of these negotiations, one of the contracts was agreed on and the parties understood there was a written contract existing between them, and on September 1, 1948, Gant took over the Gulf Oil distributorship at McMinn-ville and began paying Clinton $250 per month, making such payments through December, 1957, in accordance with the understanding of both parties. On January 3, 1958, Gant wrote Clinton a letter in which he advised him no further payments would be made under the contract until another contract could be negotiated clarifying the old contract, and that payments would be held in escrow until such time. This action was taken by Gant for the following reasons. He had interpreted the contract between himself and Clinton as creating a partnership arrangement which would permit him to deduct in determining his net income for federal income tax purposes the money paid to Clinton. The Collector of Internal Revenue declined to put this interpretation upon Gant’s contract, so Gant entered into proceedings in the United States Tax Court where it was determined the contract did not create a partnership. Thereafter, Gant wrote the letter aforementioned. In July, 1958, Clinton, who at that time was residing in Madison County, Alabama, employed counsel, "Walter Griswold and J ohn Green, and brought suit against Gant for the monthly payments of [245]*245$250 each for the months of January, February, March, April, May, and June of 1958, under the contract of August, 1948. The contract on which Clinton declared was exhibited to his bill. By this contract, which was signed by both Clinton and Gant and acknowledged by each before a notary public, it was stipulated that Clinton, a distributor of Gulf Oil products under contract with Gulf Refining Company in certain territory, owned equipment valued at $6,565; that Clinton desired to retire and turn over his contract to Gant for which a new contract would be issued by the Gulf Refining Company in the name of Gant; that Gant would purchase a one-half interest in the equipment for $3,282.50; that in further consideration of transfer of the distributorship Gant agreed to pay Clinton $250 a month out of the income of the business for Clinton’s life and such payments “are to be guaranteed to me by the said Gant, or his successors or assigns in the contract aforesaid”, the contract between Gant and Gulf pertaining to the distributorship. It was further stipulated: That the one-half interest in the equipment not transferred by the contract to Clinton should be amortized over a period of two years from the date of the contract and at the expiration of the two years the whole of the equipment should become the property of Gant; that Gant bound himself to see the provisions of the contract were carried out in any contract between himself and the Gulf Refining Company, “the mutual prime object of this agreement being that said B. F. Clinton should be assured of a monthly pension income of $250.00 per month on account of his long service with Gulf Refining Company.” The agreement became effective in September 1948.

[246]*246In February, 1959, defendant answered denying be was indebted to tbe complainant in tbe amounts sued for. He averred tbe contract exhibited by Clinton to bis bill, although signed by both Clinton and himself, was not tbe contract between tbe parties. That be did not have and never had a copy thereof and bad assumed that a contract bearing the signatures of complainant and himself and acknowledged by tbe parties on August 14, 1948, and exhibited to bis answer, was tbe contract between tbe parties, but that there were such material differences in tbe two contracts, tbe one sued on and tbe one presented by bis answer, that it now appeared tbe parties never reached an agreement, and there was no contract. Tbe answer set up that defendant bad honestly believed and understood tbe contract exhibited to bis answer was the only written contract between tbe parties and bad relied on it as such in tbe United States Tax Court for redeter-mination of tax deficiencies with respect to tbe joint income tax returns of himself and bis wife. Tbe answer averred further that any contract which might be implied in fact or law from tbe facts and circumstances of tbe transaction between himself and complainant bad been fully discharged by tbe payment to complainant by defendant of an amount far in excess of the reasonable value of tbe property and tbe distributorship.

Tbe contract exhibited to tbe answer is practically identical with the contract exhibited to tbe bill except that it obligates Cant to pay Clinton the sum of $250 per month “out of tbe income of tbe business” only as long as tbe distributorship contract continued with Culf, while the contract exhibited to tbe bill provides that tbe payments of $250 per month for tbe life of Clinton “are to be guaranteed to me by the said Cant, or his successors or [247]*247assigns in the contract aforesaid,” that is, the contract between Gant and the Gnlf Company pertaining to the distributorship.

In October, 1959, the suit was revived in the name of Darrell Walling, guardian of B. F. Clinton, Clinton having been decreed incompetent, and Walling having been appointed his guardian. In February, 1960, Darrell Walling, as guardian, amended to sue for all of the monthly payments to that date, and, in addition, amended the original bill by averring that at the time of the filing of the original bill Clinton had in his possession the contract filed as exhibit thereto, and also had in his possession the original copy of the contract filed as an exhibit to the defendant’s answer. It was averred that since defendant had no copy of the contract filed originally as an exhibit to the bill and since both complainant and defendant had copies of the contract filed as exhibit to defendant’s answer, and that since defendant had recognized the contract exhibited to his answer as the contract between the parties and had complied with the terms and conditions thereof from August 14, 1948, up to and including December, 1957, by paying the sum of $250 per month to the complainant, the court should hold it to be the contract between the parties. To this amendment the defendant pleaded estoppel.

Upon these facts and pleadings the Chancellor held: That by his answer the defendant had assumed the burden of affirmatively showing there was no contract because of an alleged repugnancy between provisions of the instrument averred by him to constitute the contract between the parties and that sued on in the original bill by complainant; that the only repugnancy between the [248]

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Bluebook (online)
337 S.W.2d 761, 47 Tenn. App. 242, 1960 Tenn. App. LEXIS 79, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clinton-v-gant-tennctapp-1960.