Douglas Benjamin Gregg v. Estate of Jerry Dean Cupit

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedOctober 31, 2018
DocketM2018-00379-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Douglas Benjamin Gregg v. Estate of Jerry Dean Cupit (Douglas Benjamin Gregg v. Estate of Jerry Dean Cupit) 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
Douglas Benjamin Gregg v. Estate of Jerry Dean Cupit, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

10/31/2018

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE September 5, 2018 Session

DOUGLAS BENJAMIN GREGG v. ESTATE OF JERRY DEAN CUPIT, ET AL

Appeal from the Chancery Court for Davidson County No. 15-1228-II William E. Young, Chancellor ___________________________________

No. M2018-00379-COA-R3-CV ___________________________________

This appeal involves a contract between an aspiring country music artist and a record company owner for promotion of the artist’s songs. After the record company owner died, the artist demanded an accounting from the owner’s widow and filed this lawsuit alleging that the record company and its owner breached the promotion agreement executed by the parties. The trial court found that the record company owner breached the contract by failing “to adequately promote” the artist’s singles and awarded the artist a judgment for $223,069.89. We reverse and remand for further proceedings.

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

BRANDON O. GIBSON, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which FRANK G. CLEMENT, JR., P.J., M.S., and ANDY D. BENNETT, J., joined.

Sawnie Robertson Aldredge, Nashville, Tennessee, for the appellants, Estate of Jerry Dean Cupit, and Janie Michelle Cupit.

Steven Glen Fuller, Madison, Tennessee, for the appellee, Douglas Benjamin Gregg.

OPINION

I. FACTS & PROCEDURAL HISTORY

Douglas Benjamin Gregg was living in the state of Washington and working as an insurance salesman when he became interested in pursuing a career as a country music artist. After researching Nashville recording studios online, he traveled to Nashville in September 2006 to record songs in a studio owned and/or operated by Cupit Records, Inc. Jerry Cupit, the owner of Cupit Records, was a well-known songwriter and record producer. In February 2007, Cupit Records called Mr. Gregg and offered him a record deal.

Thereafter, Mr. Gregg and Mr. Cupit executed a “Production Agreement” for the preparation and production of an eleven-song CD at a project cost of $50,000 to be paid by Mr. Gregg. On March 7, 2007, Mr. Gregg and Mr. Cupit also executed a one-page “Cupit Music Agreement” containing the following provisions pertinent to this appeal:

1. Cupit Music agrees to sign and nationally promote three (3) singles on said artist under The following conditions: 2. A flat fee of one hundred thousand per single will be charged to promote three singles on said artist. This funding will be used at the soul [sic] discretion of Cupit Music. . . . .... 7. Both parties understand the music business is a speculative business and there are no guarantees. Cupit Music makes no guarantee of any level of success. . . .

The Cupit Music Agreement required Mr. Gregg to pay the first payment of $200,000 at the signing of the contract and the next $100,000 once the album was completed and approved by Cupit Records, in order “to set the promotion of the singles in motion.” The Cupit Music Agreement provided that the record label would promote up to three additional singles “at a cost of $100,000 each” if funding was available within thirty days of the release of the third single.

Over the next year, Mr. Gregg traveled back and forth from Washington to Nashville to write songs with Mr. Cupit, participate in singing lessons with him, and record the album. The album was completed approximately two years after the parties signed the contracts, and Mr. Gregg paid $346,080 of the amount owed under the contracts. One single was released in August 2009, another single was released in the latter part of 2011, and a holiday-themed song was released and promoted two years in a row around Christmas.

The parties agree that Mr. Cupit and Cupit Records undertook efforts to promote Mr. Gregg’s singles. Mr. Cupit incurred expenses for Mr. Gregg to appear on a television show called “Music & Motors” on the RFD-TV television network, and Mr. Gregg performed on approximately ten to eleven episodes of the show. Cupit Records produced a music video for one of the songs. Mr. Gregg participated in the annual CMA Fan Fair in downtown Nashville, performing at least three years with accompanying musicians provided by Cupit Records. He also performed at the Wild Horse Saloon in Nashville. An employee of Cupit Records who was in charge of radio promotion

2 traveled to Washington, Oregon, Alabama, and around Tennessee with Mr. Gregg on various radio station tours. Cupit Records employed a publicist who scheduled interviews and wrote articles for Mr. Gregg, which led to him being featured in the “Listen Up” and “Who’s New” editorial features in Country Weekly magazine. Cupit Records used digital distribution services to send Mr. Gregg’s records out to radio stations. When each of the singles was released, the Cupit Records employee in charge of radio promotion devoted sixteen to twenty weeks to calling radio stations in order to promote each song and ask the contacts at the radio stations to listen to it. Cupit Records also paid three third-party independent promoters to call radio stations to promote Mr. Gregg’s singles for periods of sixteen weeks. Cupit Records also recorded a fourth song for Mr. Gregg and sent it to a news network in the hope that it would receive airplay.

Despite these efforts, Mr. Gregg did not reach any level of success in his country music career. According to Mr. Gregg, the radio stations that played his songs were mostly AM stations, internet radio stations, “non-recording” stations, or religious stations, and he only sold twelve CDs. Mr. Gregg was removed from the website for Cupit Records around 2012 or 2013 because his contract had ended. Mr. Gregg and Mr. Cupit maintained a very close friendship throughout this time period and even entered into a real estate venture together. Sadly, however, Mr. Cupit was diagnosed with a serious illness and ultimately died in September 2014.

About a month after Mr. Cupit died, Mr. Gregg called his widow and asked her to review any statements and records maintained by Cupit Records and/or Mr. Cupit dating back to 2007 in order to show him how the $350,000 he paid was spent. Essentially, Mr. Gregg wanted to know whether Cupit Records spent “every dime” of the $350,000 promoting his music or if it was spent on other business or personal expenses or promoting other artists. It was Mr. Gregg’s position that all of the $350,000 “had to be spent on me, not on other artists, not on buildings, not on personal vehicles.” Mr. Gregg told Mr. Cupit’s widow that if any money was spent on other purposes, he wanted her to “just give it back.” Shortly thereafter, Mr. Gregg sent a formal letter to Mrs. Cupit recounting their “painful” telephone conversation but demanding to audit the books and bank accounts of Cupit Records in order to determine whether “all $350,000 was spent on my record and promotion.” He added, “Whatever amount was not spent then of course I want it back.”

The attorney for Mr. Cupit’s estate sent a letter to Mr. Gregg detailing various expenses incurred by Mr. Cupit and Cupit Records over the years, but this did not satisfy Mr. Gregg. On October 13, 2015, Mr. Gregg filed this lawsuit against Cupit Records and Mrs. Cupit as executrix of the Estate of Jerry Cupit asserting claims for breach of

3 contract, fraud, breach of fiduciary duty, and unjust enrichment.1

A bench trial was held on October 18, 2017. Mr. Gregg maintained the position that the efforts made by Mr. Cupit to promote his music did not “meet the level of what was agreed upon between the parties” or utilize all of the funds that were paid by Mr. Gregg. The defendants argued that Mr.

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Douglas Benjamin Gregg v. Estate of Jerry Dean Cupit, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/douglas-benjamin-gregg-v-estate-of-jerry-dean-cupit-tennctapp-2018.