Gary Montgomery v. Sonja K. Schedin

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedOctober 5, 2004
DocketE2003-02600-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Gary Montgomery v. Sonja K. Schedin (Gary Montgomery v. Sonja K. Schedin) 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
Gary Montgomery v. Sonja K. Schedin, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT KNOXVILLE August 12, 2004 Session

GARY MONTGOMERY v. SONJA K. SCHEDIN

Appeal from the Circuit Court for Anderson County No. A3LA0284 James B. Scott, Judge

No. E2003-02600-COA-R3-CV - FILED OCTOBER 5, 2004

Gary Robert Montgomery (“Plaintiff”) and Sonja K. Schedin (“Defendant”) were engaged to be married. After the engagement ended, Plaintiff filed a Writ of Possession in the General Sessions Court claiming Defendant refused to allow him to retrieve his personal property. At issue in the General Sessions Court was who was entitled to a boat and trailer, an ATV, an engagement ring, a trailer, and a 1998 Chevy pick-up truck. Plaintiff claimed Defendant bought the ATV for him as a gift, and that she also gave him $13,500 as a gift to buy the truck. After the General Sessions Court entered its judgment concluding, among other things, that the money was loaned to Plaintiff and was not a gift, Plaintiff appealed to the Circuit Court. The Circuit Court likewise concluded the money was loaned to Plaintiff and was not a gift. Plaintiff appeals. We modify the judgment of the Circuit Court and affirm the judgment as modified.

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

D. MICHAEL SWINEY, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which HERSCHEL P. FRANKS , P.J., and SHARON G. LEE, J., joined.

Wendell K. Hall, Knoxville, Tennessee, for the Appellant Gary Montgomery.

David R. Dunkirk, Oak Ridge, Tennessee, for the Appellee Sonja K. Schedin. OPINION

Background

Plaintiff and Defendant were engaged to be married and had recently moved from Michigan to Tennessee to operate a kennel. Love ended, and this litigation began when Plaintiff filed a Complaint to Recover Personal Property in the Anderson County General Sessions Court (“Sessions Court”). According to the complaint, in January of 2003 Plaintiff was “forced out of the residence and to live in a hotel room.” Thereafter, Defendant refused to allow him to return to the residence to recover his personal property. Plaintiff attached to the complaint an exhibit detailing numerous items of personal property which he claimed he was entitled to recover. Plaintiff requested the Sessions Court issue a Writ of Possession and give him immediate possession of the property listed in the exhibit.

A trial was conducted in April of 2003 and the Sessions Court entered an Order setting forth its findings the following month.1 The Sessions Court noted in its order that the parties had stipulated that the only remaining items in dispute were: a boat and trailer, an ATV, an engagement ring, a trailer, and a 1998 Chevy pick-up truck. Based on the evidence presented at trial, the Sessions Court held: 1) Plaintiff was entitled to the engagement ring; 2) neither party was entitled to the trailer since it belonged to Defendant’s mother; 3) Plaintiff was entitled to possession of the boat and boat trailer but Defendant was entitled to a lien against those assets in the amount of $1,550; 4) Defendant was entitled to the ATV but Plaintiff was entitled to a lien against that asset in the amount of $200; and 5) Plaintiff was entitled to the Chevy truck but Defendant was entitled to a lien against that asset in the amount of $13,200.

Plaintiff immediately filed a de novo appeal to the Circuit Court. Approximately four days after the appeal was filed, the Circuit Court Clerk informed the parties that the case had been assigned a trial date of July 28, 2003. The de novo trial took place as scheduled and the Circuit Court thereafter entered a judgment which later was amended. In the amended judgment, the Circuit Court noted that the parties had stipulated in the Sessions Court that the only remaining items in dispute were the boat and trailer, an ATV, the engagement ring, a trailer, and the Chevy pick-up truck. In addressing these items, the Circuit Court held: 1) neither party was entitled to the trailer because it belonged to Defendant’s mother; 2) Plaintiff was entitled to the engagement ring, and 3) Plaintiff was entitled to the boat and trailer but Defendant should be awarded a lien against that property in the amount of $1,550. With regard to the remaining items, we quote the following from the Circuit Court’s judgment:

4. That the ATV is awarded to the defendant in lieu of its original cost of $5150.00.

1 The reco rd on app eal do es not contain a transc ript from the Sessions C ourt trial.

-2- 5. That the defendant is awarded a judgment against the plaintiff of $19,200.00 minus the original debt of the ATV of $5150.00.

6. That the defendant is awarded a lien of $14,050 against the 1998 Chevy Pick Up Truck … that is currently in the possession of the plaintiff. The defendant is awarded the title so that she may record the appropriate lien against said vehicle.

****

8. That all other property ownership stipulated in the original lawsuit not addressed in this Honorable Court, remain in the jurisdiction of the General Sessions Court.

After the Circuit Court’s amended judgment was entered, Plaintiff filed an application for execution in the Circuit Court claiming Defendant still was refusing to give him possession of the engagement ring. In response, Defendant filed a Request for Hearing to Clarify Judgment and essentially requested the Circuit Court take possession of both the ring and the truck so its judgment could be enforced. Defendant further requested that she be allowed to present evidence on the value of the ring and the truck. Although not entirely clear, it appears Defendant was reluctant to turn over the engagement ring since Plaintiff was in possession of the truck.

After the amended judgment was entered in the Circuit Court, Plaintiff filed a Writ of Possession in the Sessions Court seeking some of the items which the parties apparently had previously stipulated were no longer at issue. The record does not contain a copy of the Writ, but it does contain an order by the Sessions Court refusing to issue the Writ. According to the Sessions Court:

1. No stipulations were at any time entered with this Court pertaining to any of the matters relevant herein, including any property in dispute or not in dispute.

2. This Court does not and cannot retain jurisdiction in this cause over any matters relevant hereto at any time after the date of Plaintiff’s appeal de novo to the Anderson County Circuit Court. No jurisdiction remains with this Court after the appeal to Circuit Court.

Plaintiff appeals from the Circuit Court’s amended judgment and raises several issues. First, Plaintiff claims the Circuit Court erred when it ruled that the Sessions Court was to retain jurisdiction over the stipulated items of personal property. Second, Plaintiff claims the Circuit Court erred when it awarded Defendant a monetary judgment for $19,200 when Defendant neither plead

-3- nor requested such relief. Third, Plaintiff claims the Circuit Court erred when it concluded Defendant had “loaned” Plaintiff money to buy the Chevy pick-up truck when in fact Defendant had purchased the truck for Plaintiff as a gift. Plaintiff’s final issue on appeal is his claim that the Trial Court erred when it granted Defendant a $1,550 lien against the boat and boat trailer when that property is owned not by Plaintiff but by Plaintiff’s mother. Defendant also appeals and raises two issues. First, Defendant claims she should have been awarded the truck instead of only a lien. Defendant’s second issue is a claim that Plaintiff’s appeal is frivolous.

Discussion

The factual findings of the Trial Court are accorded a presumption of correctness, and we will not overturn those factual findings unless the evidence preponderates against them. See Tenn. R. App. P. 13(d); Bogan v.

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Bluebook (online)
Gary Montgomery v. Sonja K. Schedin, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gary-montgomery-v-sonja-k-schedin-tennctapp-2004.