Hannon, Inc. v. Ronny Scott, D/B/A Dollar Land

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 12, 2011
Docket02-10-00012-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Hannon, Inc. v. Ronny Scott, D/B/A Dollar Land (Hannon, Inc. v. Ronny Scott, D/B/A Dollar Land) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hannon, Inc. v. Ronny Scott, D/B/A Dollar Land, (Tex. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

02-10-012-CV

COURT OF APPEALS

SECOND DISTRICT OF TEXAS

FORT WORTH

NO. 02-10-00012-CV

Hannon, Inc.

APPELLANT

V.

Ronny Scott, d/b/a Dollar Land

APPELLEE

------------

FROM THE 141st District Court OF Tarrant COUNTY

MEMORANDUM OPINION[1]

I.  Introduction

          Appellant Hannon, Inc. appeals from an adverse judgment in favor of Appellee Ronny Scott, d/b/a Dollar Land.  In ten issues, Hannon challenges the trial court’s findings and conclusions regarding Hannon’s breach of contract claim and Ronny’s fraud counterclaim.  We will suggest a remittitur of damages, but in all other respects, we will affirm.

II.  Factual and Procedural Background

          Hannon is a Texas corporation.  Between May 2003 and July 2004, it operated a dollar store retail business located in Haltom City named Dollar Land through Aziz Hannon.  According to Aziz, sometime in March or April 2004, Hannon decided to sell Dollar Land because one of Aziz’s brothers had agreed to donate a kidney to another one of Aziz’s brothers and Aziz could not manage Dollar Land in addition to two other businesses that he, his brother, or both had just opened together.  Ronny and his wife, Elizabeth, expressed interest in purchasing Dollar Land, and Elizabeth visited the store three to five times, discussing with Aziz the store’s revenue, the situation surrounding Aziz’s brother’s need for a kidney transplant, and the low volume of inventory at the store, which was due to the kidney issue, according to Aziz.[2]  As a result of conversations with Aziz, the Scotts had the understanding that Dollar Land made sales totaling approximately $800 a day during the week and $1,000 a day on the weekend, that those figures would double if they invested another $20,000 towards the store’s inventory, and that the store was “busy” and “bustling.”

          On or about May 26, 2004, Ronny agreed to purchase Dollar Land for $80,000.  The purchase agreement and earnest money receipt executed by Ronny and Aziz on May 26, 2004, recited that the $80,000 purchase price consisted of a down payment in the amount of $40,000, including a $2,500 earnest money deposit, which the Scotts paid on May 26, 2004, and the remaining balance of $40,000 paid over ten months at six percent interest.  According to Aziz, the $80,000 purchase price accounted for $30,000 to $35,000 worth of inventory and $53,000 worth of fixtures.  The Scotts were led to believe that the purchase price included everything on the store’s front floor but excluded any items in the back warehouse, which was used by one of Aziz’s brothers to operate a separate business.  The Scotts asked to review Dollar Land’s financial records before agreeing to purchase the store, but they were unable to review the records because Aziz said that he could not find them.

          When the Scotts were unsuccessful in obtaining a business loan for any part of the purchase price of the store, they listed their house for $47,000 but sold it for approximately $37,000.  At some point during the loan application process, Aziz prepared a document dated June 17, 2004, for the Scotts, which was addressed “To Whom it may concern” and stated in part, “With the store in the condition it is in[,] I am making around $800 a day during weekday and $1000 on weekends sometimes more sometimes a little less.”

          On June 30, 2004, Ronny and Aziz signed (a) a bill and contract of sale, which recited that Hannon sold to Ronny Hannon’s “right and title to that name [Dollar Land], the goodwill, management, revenues, and trade fixtures from that business and the inventory and equipment”;[3] (b) a promissory note stating that Ronny agreed to pay Aziz $4,109.30 per month over ten months and acknowledging that Ronny had paid Hannon a $40,000 down payment;[4] and (c) a security agreement, pursuant to which Ronny granted Hannon a security interest “in the assets of [Dollar Land].”  When Ronny signed the documents, he did not think that he was entering into a binding agreement; due to several patent errors in the language of the documents,[5] he thought that he was merely agreeing to “guidelines” or provisions that were going to be used in “something a little more professional.”[6]  However, Ronny soon realized that he had entered into a binding agreement, so he and Aziz made several agreed changes to the documents, and Ronny signed a check for the proceeds from the sale of his house over to Aziz to cover the amount of the down payment.[7]

          Elizabeth began operating Dollar Land on July 2, 2004.  She and her two daughters performed an inventory and calculated a total of only 29,182 items in the store—at $1 per item, this amounted to less than the figure that Aziz had represented to the Scotts and that Elizabeth thought was present in the store at the time of the sale.[8]  The Scotts also learned that several items that had been located on the floor of the front of the store had been removed before the Scotts took over because Aziz had agreements to lease the items.[9]

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Bluebook (online)
Hannon, Inc. v. Ronny Scott, D/B/A Dollar Land, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hannon-inc-v-ronny-scott-dba-dollar-land-texapp-2011.