Frank Shipp v. Ditch Witch Equipment of Tennessee, Inc.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMarch 7, 2007
DocketM2005-02354-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Frank Shipp v. Ditch Witch Equipment of Tennessee, Inc. (Frank Shipp v. Ditch Witch Equipment of Tennessee, 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
Frank Shipp v. Ditch Witch Equipment of Tennessee, Inc., (Tenn. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE November 14, 2006 Session

FRANK SHIPP v. DITCH WITCH EQUIPMENT OF TENNESSEE, INC.

An Appeal from the Chancery Court for Rutherford County No. 03-7133CV Royce Taylor, Judge

No. M2005-02354-COA-R3-CV - Filed on March 7, 2007

This is a breach of contract case. The defendant equipment company sells and leases underground construction equipment. The plaintiff worked for the defendant company as an outside salesman with a sales territory. The plaintiff salesman operated under a verbal employment agreement and was paid a minimum weekly salary plus commissions. During his employment, the plaintiff actively marketed equipment to a customer in his sales territory, and the customer ultimately signed a lease for several pieces of equipment. Soon after the lease was executed, the plaintiff quit working for the defendant. Subsequently, he sought his commissions due on the lease. The defendant equipment company refused to pay the commissions, claiming that the plaintiff salesman was not due any commissions on the lease because he quit work before the customer made any payments on the lease. The plaintiff filed the instant lawsuit for the commissions. After a bench trial, the trial court held that the plaintiff was entitled to commissions on the lease, but only with respect to one of the pieces of leased equipment. The plaintiff now appeals, arguing that he is entitled to commissions on two other pieces of equipment. We reverse, finding that the evidence preponderates in favor of a finding that the plaintiff was entitled to commissions for all three pieces of equipment.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Chancery Court is Affirmed in Part, Reversed in Part, and Modified

HOLLY M. KIRBY , J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which W. FRANK CRAWFORD , P.J., W.S., and FRANK G. CLEMENT , JR., J., joined.

Frank Shipp, appellant, pro se.

Aaron S. Guin, Nashville, Tennessee, for the appellee, Ditch Witch Equipment of Tennessee, Inc.1

1 Appellate counsel for Ditch W itch is not the same attorney who represented the company at trial. OPINION

Defendant/Appellee Ditch Witch Equipment of Tennessee, Inc. (“Ditch Witch”), sells and leases underground construction equipment. In February 2001, the branch manager of Ditch Witch, Kent Northcutt (“Northcutt”), hired Plaintiff/Appellant Frank Shipp (“Shipp”) as an outside salesman. Shipp was assigned to a sales territory in middle Tennessee. Shipp did not have a written employment contract with Ditch Witch; he operated pursuant to a verbal employment agreement. Under the parties’ verbal agreement, Shipp received $150 per week as a base salary, commissions from sales and rentals of equipment, plus a $150 per week draw or advance against any commissions.

Before Shipp was hired, Greater Dickson Gas Authority (“Greater Dickson”) had purchased some older Ditch Witch equipment. Greater Dickson was located in Shipp’s sales territory, and Shipp regularly visited the Greater Dickson office to service its needs on behalf of Ditch Witch. Sometime in 2002, Greater Dickson indicated to Shipp that it wanted to replace some of its Ditch Witch equipment, and indicated as well that it was considering obtaining the new equipment from a different supplier. In an effort to keep Greater Dickson’s business, Shipp took two representatives from Greater Dickson to tour Ditch Witch’s home plant in Perry, Oklahoma, to demonstrate some of Ditch Witch’s “latest and greatest” products. After this, negotiations between Greater Dickson and Ditch Witch ensued regarding the purchase or lease of new equipment.

As the negotiations progressed, they included participation by branch manager Northcutt and Ditch Witch’s general manager, Leroy Hylton (“Hylton”). On approximately July 12, 2002, Shipp and Northcutt drafted the following quotes for Greater Dickson on six pieces of Ditch Witch equipment:

ITEM PURCHASE COST Unit D21-DW Tractor & Trailer $107,329.50 Unit D22-DW Tractor & Trailer 99,593.50 Unit D23-DW Tractor & Trailer 93,377.00 Unit D21-Locator & Transmitter 1,881.02 Unit D22-Locator & Transmitter 1,881.02 Unit D23-Locator & Transmitter 1,881.02 Total Cost: $305,943.06

On the quotes, Shipp is listed as the “salesperson” for Unit D23 and for the three locator and transmitter items. On the quotes for equipment Units D21 and D22, branch manager Northcutt is listed as the “salesperson.”

On August 1, 2002, Greater Dickson and Ditch Witch executed an Equipment Lease Agreement (“lease agreement”), with respect to the six items described above. Under the lease agreement, Greater Dickson agreed to lease the equipment for thirty-six months for $7,245 per month, for a total of $260,820 in lease payments.

-2- Soon after the lease was executed, on approximately August 12, 2002, Shipp terminated his employment with Ditch Witch without notice. At the time Shipp quit, he had not been paid any commissions on the Greater Dickson lease. Greater Dickson’s first lease payment on the equipment was received by Ditch Witch between August 8 and August 13, 2002.

Subsequently, Shipp sent a letter to Ditch Witch seeking payment of his 5% commission on the Greater Dickson lease. In response, the president of Ditch Witch, Aubrey Needham, Jr. (“Needham”), wrote Shipp a letter dated March 20, 2003, telling Shipp that he was not due any commissions for the lease under the terms of Ditch Witch’s commission structure. In the letter, Needham explained his understanding of the commission structure as follows:

[Ditch Witch] Salesmen are paid commission at 5% on equipment sales that are sold at or above the manufacturers suggested list price. Sales of equipment sold for less than MSLP have a commission rate of 2% of net sale. All rentals and monthly leases have a commission rate of 5% of monthly rental payable to a salesman of record on date paid by customer.

Needham took the position that, because Shipp had quit working at Ditch Witch as of the date that Greater Dickson made its first payment on the lease, Shipp was not the “salesman of record” on that date and was not entitled to any commissions. In addition, Needham demanded that Shipp pay Ditch Witch $758.95 in advances made to Shipp that were not offset by commissions earned.

On August 12, 2003, Shipp filed the instant lawsuit against Ditch Witch for the commissions he claimed were due under the Greater Dickson lease agreement. The complaint alleged theories of breach of contract, unjust enrichment, fraud, and violation of Tennessee Code Annotated § 50-1-102 (fraudulent inducement). See Tenn. Code Ann. § 50-1-102 (2005). Ditch Witch filed an answer denying the allegations in the complaint, and also filed a counterclaim against Shipp, alleging that he owed Ditch Witch $758.95 in advances that were not covered by his commissions.

A bench trial was held on August 22, 2005. Shipp testified on his own behalf regarding his employment arrangement with Ditch Witch and his involvement in securing the Greater Dickson lease. Shipp testified that, under his verbal employment agreement with Ditch Witch, he received a base salary of $150 per week plus commissions on any sales or rentals of equipment. Shipp identified the parameters of his sales territory and stated that he was the only salesperson covering this territory. Consistent with Needham’s March 2003 letter to Shipp, Shipp testified that his commission rate was 5%.

In his testimony, Shipp said that he had known the purchasing agent for Greater Dickson since 1989. Prior to Shipp’s employment with Ditch Witch, Ditch Witch had sold equipment to Greater Dickson.

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Frank Shipp v. Ditch Witch Equipment of Tennessee, Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/frank-shipp-v-ditch-witch-equipment-of-tennessee-i-tennctapp-2007.