Douglas Cofer v. Donnie Harris and Marcia Harris

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJanuary 12, 2012
DocketE2011-00242-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Douglas Cofer v. Donnie Harris and Marcia Harris (Douglas Cofer v. Donnie Harris and Marcia 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
Douglas Cofer v. Donnie Harris and Marcia Harris, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT KNOXVILLE November 9, 2011 Session

DOUGLAS COFER v. DONNIE HARRIS AND MARCIA HARRIS

Appeal from the Chancery Court for Bradley County No. CV09195 Jerri S. Bryant, Chancellor

No. E2011-00242-COA-R3-CV-FILED-JANUARY 12, 2012

This case arises from a dispute over an alleged partnership. Douglas Cofer (“Cofer”) filed suit in the Chancery Court for Bradley County (“the Trial Court”) against Donnie Harris and Marcia Harris (“the Harrises”, collectively). Cofer alleged that the Harrises were successors in a partnership established between Cofer and the Harrises’ father, Homer Harris, regarding the development of a trailer park on Homer Harris’s land. After a trial, the Trial Court found that, rather than a partnership, a lease relationship existed between the parties. The Trial Court awarded the Harrises damages for unpaid rent. Cofer appeals, raising various issues. The Harrises raise one issue on appeal concerning the calculation of damages. We affirm the judgment of the Trial Court in all respects.

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

D. M ICHAEL S WINEY, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which C HARLES D . S USANO, J R., and J OHN W. M CC LARTY, JJ., joined.

Randy Sellers, Cleveland, Tennessee, for the appellant, Douglas Cofer.

William J. Brown, Cleveland, Tennessee, for the appellees, Donnie Harris and Marcia Harris. OPINION

Background

Cofer filed suit against the Harrises in the Trial Court in June 2009. In his complaint, Cofer alleged that he had a business relationship with Homer Harris, the father of and predecessor in title to the Harrises, whereby Cofer developed a trailer park on property owned by Homer Harris.1 Cofer alleged that he paid thirty-five percent of the net profits of the venture to Homer Harris and also paid for various developments on the property over the years. Cofer sought, among other things, a declaratory judgment as to his rights to maintain the business venture, or, in the alternative, that the Trial Court declare that a partnership existed.

The Harrises filed an answer and counterclaim in September 2009. The Harrises requested, among others things, that the Trial Court declare that Cofer had no interest in the real property at issue. The Harrises asserted that no partnership existed, but, that if one did, the Harrises wished to end the partnership. The Harrises demanded an accounting from Cofer as well as damages.

In November 2009, the Trial Court entered an agreed order requiring Cofer to answer interrogatories and produce documents subject to the availability of records and his memory. In February 2010, the Trial Court entered an order stating that Cofer had not complied fully with the previous order regarding documentation and interrogatories. In May 2010, the Harrises filed a motion for attorney’s fees and expenses because of Cofer’s failure to comply with the Trial Court’s discovery order.

This case was tried in August 2010. Numerous witnesses testified. As relevant to the issues before us, we will focus on the testimony of Cofer and the accountant who prepared the parties’ tax filings.

Cofer testified. Cofer was a retiree who had worked for DuPont for thirty years. Cofer stated that, in 1995, he proposed to Homer Harris, his brother-in-law, that the two begin a business venture whereby Cofer would develop a trailer park on land owned by Homer Harris. Cofer was to receive sixty-five percent of the income while Homer Harris would receive thirty-five percent of the money earned. Cofer did develop a trailer park on Homer Harris’s land. Homer Harris later conveyed his interest in the real property to his

1 Apparently, the real property was owned at that time by Homer Harris and his wife, Geraldine Harris. Homer Harris later transferred his interest in this property to Geraldine Harris.

-2- wife, Geraldine Harris. Upon Geraldine Harris’s death, the property passed to the Harrises.

Cofer carried on the arrangement with the Harrises for a period of time after Geraldine Harris’s death. In May 2009, Marcia Harris sent Cofer a letter stating that Cofer’s services were no longer required due to his alleged failure to keep proper accounting and tardiness in making payments to the Harrises.

Gerald Fritz Harris (“Fritz Harris”), an accountant, testified. Fritz Harris is a brother of the Harrises and Cofer’s nephew. Fritz Harris performed tax work for both parties in this case. Tax returns for the parties, entered into the record, contain no partnership filings and no indication any partnership existed. Additionally, Cofer depreciated the improvements of the trailer park on his own individual returns.

Following trial, the Trial Court entered an order in favor of the Harrises. In its detailed findings of fact and conclusions of law incorporated into its order, the Trial Court stated, in part:

The Court finds that the defendants were both . . . very polite, reasonable, and credible during their testimony. The Court finds that the [Harrises] have proven that this was a lease, not a partnership.

***

They are requesting in this case possession of the real estate, unpaid rent, damages for any cleanup on the property, and a restraining order for Mr. Cofer to stay away from them.

There was no contract between the parties, no written agreement about time, length, or duration of the agreement between the parties, or the lease. So the most I think the Court could find would been a lease for one year or a month-to-month lease.

There was no sharing of profits other than the lease payments of 35 percent of the rents. The parties didn’t discuss it much more than that. There certainly was no proof of any co-ownership. The parties on their tax returns did not show this as a partnership; and they used, and I think that was another significant factor, they used the same CPA, albeit a relative, to do the tax work of the parties.

The CPA testified, as did Mr. Cofer, gross and net were basically the

-3- same number. It then became who was going to take the deductions of the expenses. The plaintiff took depreciation of the improvements and expenses; the defendant did not. The parties did not hold themselves out as a partnership and so there is no dissolution for the Court to order.

The parties might have gone on in this relationship, even through the change of ownership from Mr. Harris to his wife Mrs. Harris and then as the property was passed down to the two defendants in this case, but the rents became untimely. And the Court finds that the plaintiff breached the lease agreement by failing to timely pay rents and did become behind, at least at one point, as much as five months. At that point the defendants were entitled to evict him, and they did send him a letter to do so in May of 2009.

[Cofer] has come into this court with unclean hands. He doesn’t have documentation and has been obstreperous in producing documentation throughout the court process. The agreement was breached and they are entitled to evict him.

In its order, the Trial Court stated, regarding damages, in part:

The Harris[es] are granted judgment in the amount of $74,950.00 against Mr. Cofer for their damages associated with Mr. Cofer’s improper holding over possession of the property after August 1, 2009. This amount is calculated by multiplying 44 rental units times $175 per month for the period between August 1, 2009 through July 29, 2010 (13 months). This would total $100,100. Mr. Cofer is given credit for $25,150.00 that was paid to the Harris[es] during that period. The credit is subtracted from the gross rentals for that period resulting in amount of $74,950.00.

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Douglas Cofer v. Donnie Harris and Marcia Harris, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/douglas-cofer-v-donnie-harris-and-marcia-harris-tennctapp-2012.