Custom Interiors & Supply Company v. Inn-Way, Inc.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMay 5, 2000
DocketW1999-02191-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Custom Interiors & Supply Company v. Inn-Way, Inc. (Custom Interiors & Supply Company v. Inn-Way, Inc.) 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
Custom Interiors & Supply Company v. Inn-Way, Inc., (Tenn. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT JACKSON

CUSTOM INTERIORS & SUPPLY CO., INC. v. INN-WAY, INC., ET AL.

Direct Appeal from the Circuit Court for Henry County No. 1120 Julian P. Guinn, Judge

No. W1999-02191-COA-R3-CV - Decided May 5, 2000

This appeal arises from a dispute over whether Defendant Robert Shropshire personally guaranteed the debts of Defendant Inn-Way, Inc., to Plaintiff Custom Interiors & Supply Company, Inc. Custom Interiors sued Inn-Way to recover the sum of $54,537.30 for orders placed by Inn-Way after October 1996. Custom Interiors also sued Inn-Way’s president and owner, Robert Shropshire, contending that Shropshire had personally guaranteed Inn-Way’s debts to Custom Interiors. After Inn-Way filed for bankruptcy protection, Custom Interiors proceeded to trial against Shropshire. The trial court entered a judgment finding that Custom Interiors had failed to carry its burden of proof and that Shropshire was not a personal guarantor of Inn-Way’s debts to Custom Interiors. We affirm the trial court’s judgment based upon our conclusion that the evidence does not preponderate against these findings.

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

FARMER , J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which CRAWFORD , P.J., W.S., and LILLARD , J., joined.

David A. Riddick, Jackson, Tennessee, for the appellant, Custom Interiors & Supply Co., Inc.

Estelle C. Gaerig, Memphis, Tennessee, for the appellee, Robert Shropshire.

OPINION

Custom Interiors filed this action against Inn-Way and Shropshire after Inn-Way failed to pay $54,537.30 for orders that it placed with Custom Interiors after October 1996. Custom Interiors manufactures draperies and bedspreads for the hospitality industry. Inn-Way was one of Custom Interiors’ authorized dealers, and it sold Custom Interiors’ products to hotels and motels. In a typical transaction, Inn-Way placed an order with Custom Interiors, and Custom Interiors shipped the finished products directly to Inn-Way’s customer. Inn-Way placed its orders by sending a purchase order to Custom Interiors specifying the products it wished to order. After receiving a purchase order, Custom Interiors sent Inn-Way a form entitled Order Acknowledgement and Sales Contract that confirmed Inn-Way’s order, specified the products ordered, and indicated the price of the products. Inn-Way then verified that the information on the form was correct, signed the form, and returned it to Custom Interiors.

Throughout this business relationship, Inn-Way did not pay in a timely manner for the products it ordered. At one point, Inn-Way owed Custom Interiors almost $200,000 for previous orders. In early 1998, therefore, Custom Interiors ceased processing orders for Inn-Way unless Inn- Way’s customers agreed to pay for the products in cash. Custom Interiors filed this action against Inn-Way in May 1998.

In its initial complaint, Custom Interiors named Inn-Way and Ricky Lovelace, Inn-Way’s vice president, as defendants. In support of its claim against Lovelace, Custom Interiors alleged that Lovelace had personally guaranteed the payment of Inn-Way’s debts to Custom Interiors. Custom Interiors later amended its complaint, however, to name Robert Shropshire, Inn-Way’s president and owner, as a defendant and to assert that Shropshire was the one who personally guaranteed Inn- Way’s debts to Custom Interiors.

In February 1999, Inn-Way filed a petition seeking bankruptcy protection in federal court. Inn-Way’s petition listed Custom Interiors as one of its creditors, and Inn-Way’s debts to Custom Interiors were subsequently discharged. Custom Interiors was unable to serve Defendant Ricky Lovelace with process, so Custom Interiors proceeded to trial against only Robert Shropshire.

At trial, Custom Interiors presented the testimony of its president, Gary Jones. Through Jones’ testimony, Custom Interiors introduced a copy of a document that Custom Interiors contended constituted a personal guaranty by Robert Shropshire to pay Inn-Way’s future debts to Custom Interiors. The document was one of Custom Interiors’ Order Acknowledgement and Sales Contracts, and it contained the following language: “It is also agreed that all orders processed hereafter shall be guaranteed by the principals of Inn-Way, Inc.” In the space beside “Order Acknowledged By,” someone had signed his or her initials. Gary Jones testified that, although he was not present when the Acknowledgement form was signed, he was familiar with Robert Shropshire’s signature and knew that Shropshire was the person who signed his initials on the form. Jones testified that Shropshire signed the Acknowledgement form containing the guaranty language after the two men had a discussion about Inn-Way’s failure to pay for its orders in a timely manner. Jones further testified that the entire $54,537.30 indebtedness was incurred by Inn-Way after October 1996, when Shropshire signed the Acknowledgement form.

Robert Shropshire did not dispute that, since October 1996, Inn-Way had incurred debts to Custom Interiors totaling $54,537.30. Through his counsel, however, Shropshire did dispute whether he had personally guaranteed these debts. Bonnie Shropshire, Robert Shropshire’s wife and Inn-Way’s secretary-treasurer, testified on behalf of her husband. According to Bonnie Shropshire, Robert Shropshire was completely bedridden as a result of suffering three separate strokes. Bonnie Shropshire acknowledged that, after his first stroke in July 1995, Robert Shropshire continued to come into the office to work. She insisted, however, that her husband could not have signed the Acknowledgement form containing the guaranty language because, after his July 1995 stroke, he

-2- could no longer write or sign his name. Bonnie Shropshire had been married to her husband for twenty-two years, and she was familiar with his signature. She testified that the signature on the Acknowledgement form was not that of her husband. Moreover, she testified that Robert Shropshire had not and would not have signed a document personally guaranteeing Inn-Way’s debts. Bonnie Shropshire and her husband had discussed this issue in the past, and he had consistently stated that he would not sign a personal guaranty.

In rebuttal, Gary Jones testified that he was certain that Robert Shropshire signed the Acknowledgement form because Jones received the signed form shortly after the two men discussed the personal guaranty. According to Jones, Shropshire signed the form at Jones’ insistence when Jones informed Shropshire that, if he did not execute a personal guaranty, Custom Interiors would not ship any more orders for Inn-Way. Jones reiterated that he was familiar with Shropshire’s signature, and he indicated that he had no doubt the signature on the form was Shropshire’s.

At the trial’s conclusion, the trial court made some brief comments that indicated the court’s intention to rule in favor of Robert Shropshire. The trial court later entered a final judgment in favor of Shropshire. In its judgment, the trial court made the following findings:

That [Custom Interiors] failed to carry its burden of proof; That the defendant Bob Shropshire is not a personal guarantor of any alleged debt owed to [Custom Interiors] by Inn-Way, Inc., a Tennessee corporation which previously filed a Chapter 7 Bankruptcy; That the defendant Bob Shropshire is entitled to a judgment in his favor and that this case should be dismissed on the merits.

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