Debbie Risner v. Nathan Harris

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedDecember 28, 2001
DocketW2001-01041-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Debbie Risner v. Nathan Harris (Debbie Risner v. Nathan Harris) 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
Debbie Risner v. Nathan Harris, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT JACKSON Assigned on Brief December 28, 2001

DEBBIE RISNER v. NATHAN HARRIS

An Appeal from the Circuit Court for Obion County No. 0-428 William B. Acree, Jr., Judge

No. W2001-01041-COA-R3-CV - Filed August 21, 2002

This is an action to recover personal property. The plaintiff and defendant lived together for seventeen years. In November 1999, the plaintiff moved out. She left personal property in the trailer in which the couple was living, in the nearby convenience store owned by the defendant, and in a storage unit in another town. In August 2000, the convenience store caught on fire, and the plaintiff’s personal property in the store was destroyed. Soon thereafter, the defendant took possession of the plaintiff’s other personal property that had been held in the storage unit and called her to come get it. In November 2000, the plaintiff filed a warrant in general sessions court to recover her personal property from the defendant. She claimed that the defendant had prevented her from retrieving any of her personal property. She received a judgment which was appealed to circuit court. The circuit court entered a judgment in favor of the plaintiff, awarded damages, and ordered the defendant to return certain items to the plaintiff. The defendant now appeals. We reverse the trial court’s decision with respect to two of the items ordered returned and the property that the plaintiff had kept in the storage unit in another town, and affirm the remainder of the order.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3; Judgment of the Circuit Court is Affirmed in Part and Reversed in Part

HOLLY KIRBY LILLARD, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which W. FRANK CRAWFORD , P.J., W.S., and ALAN E. HIGHERS, J., joined.

Bruce Moss, Union City, Tennessee, for the appellant, Nathan Harris.

David L. Hamblen, Union City, Tennessee, for the appellee, Debbie Risner.

OPINION

Plaintiff/Appellee Debbie Risner (“Debbie”) and Defendant/Appellant Nathan Harris (“Nathan”) lived together for approximately seventeen years. Their first home was in Dyersburg, Tennessee. After several years, Nathan purchased a small convenience store in Hornbeak, Tennessee. The parties moved into a small trailer near the store and put some of their furniture and belongings into a rented storage unit in Dyersburg, Tennessee. Those items remained in the storage unit for over ten years while the parties were living in the trailer in Hornbeak.

During the time in which the parties lived in the trailer near the convenience store, they also stored personal belongings in a room at the back of the store. Those items included, among other things, Debbie’s clothing, some Home Interior home furnishings, and a hand-painted carousel horse. In addition, Debbie purchased a tanning bed with borrowed funds, and the tanning bed was kept in the store. Customers who visited the store paid for use of the tanning bed.1

During the course of their relationship, the parties separated numerous times. Debbie asserts that their final separation occurred in November 1999, when she left the trailer and took with her just a few of her clothes. In the legal proceedings she later filed, Debbie testified that, after the separation, Nathan refused to allow her to retrieve the remainder of her personal possessions from the trailer or the store. She described an incident in which she spoke with Nathan over the telephone, and he advised her that she could come get her things. However, when Debbie arrived with her husband, Nathan cursed her and told her to leave. Debbie’s husband, Mr. Risner, corroborated Debbie’s testimony that Nathan cursed her and threw her off the property. In contrast, Nathan denied that he prevented Debbie from retrieving her belongings. He said that at times she returned to get some of her belongings, and that on numerous occasions he had asked her to get her possessions. Tammy Ray, a former employee of Nathan, testified that she overheard Nathan speaking to Debbie on the telephone, and that she heard Nathan ask Debbie to retrieve her property. Ray also testified that she was present when Debbie came by to pick up some of her belongings.

In August 2000, Nathan’s store was severely damaged by fire. The fire destroyed the tanning bed, the carousel horse, Debbie’s clothes, autographed pictures, and other personal items that had been stored in the back room at the store. An insurance adjuster representing Nathan’s insurance company testified that Nathan attempted to claim the tanning bed as a loss due to the fire. The adjuster told Nathan that he could not receive insurance proceeds for the loss of any property that belonged to Debbie. The adjuster also said that Nathan’s losses from the fire (including the loss of the building, the inventory, and other personal property) exceeded the policy limit of $100,000. Therefore, Nathan received the full amount of proceeds payable under his insurance policy.

Nathan testified that, some time after the fire, he removed all items from the parties’ storage unit, including Debbie’s belongings. At that time, he discovered that some of the items, including a day bed, had been ruined while in storage.

Debbie testified that, after the fire, Nathan called her. Without mentioning the fire, he told her to come get her belongings. When she arrived at the store, Debbie realized that there had been a fire. She found that the tanning bed and the carousel horse had been destroyed. She saw that the

1 It is unclear from the record whether Debb ie, Nathan, or both received the proceeds from the rental of the tanning bed.

-2- smoke from the fire had covered the floor, and that there was a bare spot on the floor where boxes containing her Home Interior home furnishings had been sitting.

Subsequently, in November 2000, Debbie filed a warrant in the General Sessions Court of Obion County to recover her personal property from Nathan. See Tenn. Code Ann. § 29-30-103. The general sessions court awarded Debbie damages for her personal property in the amount of $10,500. Nathan then appealed the case to the Obion County Circuit Court.

On March 2, 2001, the Circuit Court conducted a bench trial on Nathan’s appeal from the General Sessions judgment. During Debbie’s testimony before the Circuit Court, she submitted a list of personal property belonging to her that was left in Nathan’s possession after their separation in 1999, as well as her estimate of the value of the property (“Exhibit 1”). In the list, she separated the claimed items into a “store” category, listing the items owned by her that had been stored in the back room of Nathan’s store or in his trailer after the parties’ separation, and a “storage” category, listing the items that belonged to Debbie that had been kept in the parties’ storage unit in Dyersburg. The “store” category listed $18,995 in property, including (among other things) the tanning bed ($2,200), a computer ($2,400), a Dodge Colt automobile ($2,000), some Home Interior home furnishings ($1,750), two men’s diamond rings ($2,750), and a woman’s diamond ring ($3,100).2 The “storage” category listed $4,150 in property, including a day bed ($800), some Home Interior home furnishings ($1,500), and clothes ($700).3

Debbie testified that the Dodge Colt automobile and the computer listed on Exhibit 1 had been pledged as collateral for loans. She did not make the payments on those loans following the parties’ separation, purportedly because Nathan would not let her use the items. Nathan claimed that the computer and the automobile were repossessed by financing companies because Debbie stopped making payments.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Merritt v. Nationwide Warehouse Co., Ltd.
605 S.W.2d 250 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 1980)
Jernigan v. Ham
691 S.W.2d 553 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 1984)
Ridings v. Ralph M. Parsons Co.
914 S.W.2d 79 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1996)
Rags, Inc. v. Thoroughbred Motor Cars, Inc.
769 S.W.2d 493 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 1988)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Debbie Risner v. Nathan Harris, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/debbie-risner-v-nathan-harris-tennctapp-2001.