Gipson v. Taylor

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedAugust 27, 1999
Docket01A01-9811-CH-00611
StatusPublished

This text of Gipson v. Taylor (Gipson v. Taylor) 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
Gipson v. Taylor, (Tenn. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE

FILED JOHN and ELIZABETH GIPSON ) August 27, 1999 ) 01A01-9811-CH-00611 Plaintiffs/Appellants ) Cecil Crowson, Jr. ) Appellate Court Clerk vs. ) Appeal As Of Right From The ) Wilson County Chancery Court STEVE TAYLOR; ROBERT E. ENGLISH ) and his wife, CATHY Y. ENGLISH; TMS ) MORTGAGE, INC. d/b/a THE MONEY STORE ) THE HONORABLE C. K. SMITH ) CHANCELLOR Defendant/Appellee )

For the Appellants For the Appellee TMS Mortgage, Inc.

JERRY GONZALEZ DOUGLAS A. BRACE GRIFFITH & GONZALEZ, P.C. JOHN C. ROCHFORD Lebanon, Tennessee ORTALE,KELLEY,HERBERT & CRAWFORD Nashville, Tennessee

REVERSED & REMANDED Swiney, J.

OPINION

Appellants John and Elizabeth Gipson (" Plaintiffs") asked, among other requested

relief, for the Trial Court to determine the priority between Appellee's TMS Mortgage, Inc.'s

("TMS") mortgage lien interest and the mortgage lien interest of the Plaintiffs in certain property

owned by the individual defendant Steve Taylor. Plaintiffs also raised a fraud claim against the

original Defendant, Taylor. The Trial Court, after treating TMS' Motion to Dismiss as a motion for

Summary Judgment pursuant to Rule 56 as the Trial Court considered matters outside the pleadings,

granted summary judgment in favor of TMS and dismissed with prejudice Plaintiffs' suit against

TMS. Plaintiffs then took a voluntary dismissal without prejudice of their suit against the individual

defendants. After a complicated procedural odyssey due to the bankruptcy filing of Defendant

1 Taylor, this appeal by Plaintiffs of the Trial Court's Amended Order granting summary judgment

to TMS was submitted on briefs. Plaintiffs raise several issues in their brief. Plaintiffs first claim

error by the Trial Court's granting of summary judgment to TMS when the Plaintiffs had not been

served thirty or more days before the hearing on TMS' motion. Plaintiffs raise as an additional issue

their claim that the Trial Court erred in dismissing Plaintiffs' case with prejudice as to TMS "when

there existed an 11 U.S.C. § 362 bankruptcy stay on the determination of lien priorities." For the

reasons herein stated, we reverse the Trial Court's grant of summary judgment and dismissal of the

Plaintiffs' complaint against TMS and remand the case to the Trial Court.

FACTS

Plaintiffs held three promissory notes for loans made to Steve Taylor in the aggregate

amount of $159,982.55, which were secured by Deeds of Trust on several parcels of real property

owned by Taylor. These Deeds of Trust were recorded on February 7, May 27, and July 30, 1997.

Taylor sought to obtain a new loan from TMS, but his application was denied because of the

existence of the Plaintiffs' liens. To remedy the problem, Taylor obtained, on November 17, 1997,

the Plaintiffs' signatures on three documents styled "Full Release of Lien," which purported to

release the three Plaintiffs' Deeds of Trust. The Plaintiffs allege that in return, Taylor made the

following oral representation to them, which we reproduce from Plaintiffs' appellate brief:

. . . [that] a release of the Deeds of Trust would not affect his debt to Plaintiffs and that he would still pay back every penny he owed . . . [and]that the purpose of the release was to show Defendant TMS Mortgage, Inc., that he did not owe any money.

The Plaintiffs' releases were recorded November 21, 1997, and Taylor made no

further payments on the notes. The Plaintiffs allege that Taylor "has further made representations

to others that he does not intend to pay back any of the money owed to Plaintiffs."

On November 17, 1997, Taylor signed a Deed of Trust in favor of TMS Mortgage,

Inc., d/b/a The Money Store, to secure a note in the amount of $76,000.00, on property that was the

subject of Plaintiffs' Deeds of Trust and Release Deeds. The TMS Deed was recorded on November

21, 1997.

On August 12, 1998, TMS filed a Motion to Dismiss the Plaintiffs' Complaint under

T.R.C.P. 12.02(6), and for grounds stated that "TMS was an innocent third party with a properly

recorded first deed of trust on the subject property, without actual or record notice of any other

2 outstanding mortgage." The Motion was marked at the bottom of the first page with the following

notation:

THIS MOTION IS EXPECTED TO BE HEARD ON THE 8th DAY OF SEPTEMBER, 1998 AT 9:00 A.M. FAILURE TO FILE, SERVE, AND IN CHANCERY CASES, ENTER IN THE MOTION BOOK, A TIMELY WRITTEN RESPONSE TO THIS MOTION WILL RESULT IN THE MOTION BEING GRANTED WITHOUT FURTHER HEARING.

TMS attached a Memorandum of Law to its Motion to Dismiss, along with a copy of its Deed of

Trust and copies of the Plaintiffs' Releases.1

On September 3, 1998, the Plaintiffs filed a Brief in Opposition to TMS' Motion to

Dismiss, protesting that the requirements of the Rules of Civil Procedure had not been met:

A Rule 12.02(6) presenting factual matters outside the pleadings will be treated as a motion for summary judgment under Rule 56 . . . a Rule 56 Motion for Summary Judgment must be supported by affidavits, depositions, etc. It must also be served 30 days before the hearing. T.R.C.P. 56.04 (A requirement not met here.) Also, a motion for summary judgment is improper if no discovery has been obtained in the case. * * *

Moreover, summary judgment shall be denied if [there is] 'any doubt whether or not a genuine issue exists.' Defendant TMS' memorandum states that it was an 'innocent third party . . . without actual or record notice of any other outstanding mortgage.' This is an issue of material fact and is unsupported by affidavits or other evidence . ...

* * * Even if the Court excludes outside evidence and treats defendant's motion as a Rule 12.02(6) Motion, the pleadings, taken as true, assert a claim for which relief may be granted.

Plaintiffs filed with their brief their counsel's Affidavit stating that further discovery

was required and that "any motion for summary judgment at this stage of the case is premature."

A hearing on TMS' Motion was held on September 8, 1998, following which counsel

for TMS sent a proposed order to counsel for the Plaintiffs on September 10, 1998. On the same

day, the Plaintiffs filed an "Objection to Proposed Order" under Local Rule 18.02:

. . . [Plaintiffs] object to the contents of the proposed order of Defendant TMS Mortgage, received by Plaintiffs' counsel on September 10,1998. Plaintiff's proposed order is attached showing the true date of the hearing as September 8, 1998 (not September 7 as shown by Defendant) and dismissal without due to the proceedings in U.S. Bankruptcy Court.2

1 Only the Release of Lien documents were alread y a part of the re cord, hav ing been attac hed as Ex hibits to Pla intif f's Comp laint, along with the Gipson D eeds of T rust, Promisso ry Notes, M odifications a nd Secur ity Agreeme nt.

2 Pla intif f's proposed order is not in the record on appeal. We suppose that the underlined "without" was intended to read "without prejudice."

3 On September 15, 1998, the Chancellor signed and filed TMS's Order, finding that

"TMS is not a proper party to this lawsuit and that its Motion to Dismiss should be granted . . . the

claims asserted on behalf of the plaintiffs against defendant TMS Mortgage, Inc. are hereby

dismissed with prejudice."

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