Jalal Bachour v. Devin Mason

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMay 30, 2013
DocketM2012-00092-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Jalal Bachour v. Devin Mason (Jalal Bachour v. Devin Mason) 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
Jalal Bachour v. Devin Mason, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE November 8, 2012 Session

JALAL BACHOUR v. DEVIN MASON, ET AL.

Appeal from the Chancery Court for Cannon County No. 0873 Royce Taylor, Judge

No. M2012-00092-COA-R3-CV - Filed May 30, 2013

This case arose from two contracts between the same parties for the sale of commercial property. A provision in the second contract that was not included in the first provided that the buyer would retain $75,000 of the contract price if an access road to the property was not completed by a certain date. Completion was defined as occurring “upon the dedication and turning the streets over to the town of Woodbury and/or Cannon County, Tennessee.” The buyer subsequently filed a petition for declaratory judgment, asking the court to find that completion had not occurred and that he was therefore entitled to keep the $75,000. The trial court ruled against the buyer, holding that he was obligated to pay the full contract price to the sellers. We affirm the result reached by the trial court because we find that the $75,000 clause was not a valid liquidated clause provision, but rather a penalty.

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

P ATRICIA J. C OTTRELL, P.J., M.S., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which F RANK G. C LEMENT, J R. and A NDY D. B ENNETT, JJ., joined.

Angello Lin Huong, Lebanon, Tennessee, for the appellant, Jalal Bachour.

Jay Jackson, Murfreesboro, Tennessee; Johnathon Clyde Hershman, Woodbury, Tennessee, for the appellees, Devin Mason, Craig Mears and Mason & Mears Properties. OPINION

I. T WO R EAL E STATE C ONTRACTS

On June 27, 2007, Jalal Bachour (“Buyer”) entered into a contract to buy two adjacent lots in Woodbury, Cannon County, from developers Devin Mason and Craig Mears, doing business as Mason and Mears Properties (“Sellers”). The total contract price was $300,000.

On August 8, 2007, the parties executed an addendum to their contract. The addendum did not change the total price for the two lots, but broke them down “for closing and tax purposes” to provide that the price of one of the lots was to be $275,000, and the price of the other $25,000. The proof showed that some time in August of 2007, Buyer also entered into a contract to sell one of the lots to a third party for $325,000, contingent on his ability to close on his purchase from Sellers.

In October of 2007, Sellers entered into a road construction agreement with Southern Villages, Inc., to build roads in their subdivision development. Prior to closing on the property, Sellers sent Buyer a copy of the road construction agreement.

Buyer and Sellers entered into a new contract for the $275,000 lot on November 14, 2007, and closed on the same day.1 The total price for that lot remained unchanged, but Sellers received only $200,000 at closing. The contract provided that the remaining $75,000 was to be paid within thirty days of the completion of the roads. The contract also contained a clause requiring that construction on the streets begin by December 1, 2007 and be completed by January 1, 2008.

The contract provisions at the center of this case are those setting out financial consequences for any failure by Sellers to meet the deadline for completion of the streets. The contract provided that $1,000 was to be deducted from the $75,000 owed by Buyer to Sellers for each month after January 1, 2008 that those streets remained uncompleted. Further, in the event the streets were not completed by July 1, 2008, “the Sellers shall forfeit any balance remaining of the SEVENTY-FIVE THOUSAND AND NO/100 ($75,000.00) final payment. . .” Completion was defined in the contract as occurring “upon the dedication and turning the streets over to the town of Woodbury and/or Cannon County, Tennessee.” The contract also stated that in the event the streets were not completed by the deadline date, the Sellers were liable for damages and would remain obligated to complete the streets.

1 There was testimony that the parties executed a separate contract for the $25,000 lot and that the sale closed on different date. However, that contract was not entered into the record.

-2- Street construction did not begin until May of 2008, but proceeded rapidly. On June 30, 2008, Woodbury Public Works Director Alan Paschal, affixed his signature to a document titled “Dedication and Acceptance of Public Roadways known as Mason Court and Mears Drive.” In that document, Mr. Paschal purported to accept the roads on behalf of the Town of Woodbury, “said roadway having been completed.” The other signatories to the document were Craig Mears and Howard Wilson, representing the contractor, Southern Villages, Inc.

Shortly thereafter, Buyer contracted with Randy Laine, an engineer, to perform a site inspection and assess the level of completion of the roadway. In a letter dated July 7, 2008, Mr. Laine reported that the roadway paving was completed at the time of the inspection, but that shoulder work, grading and drainage were still in progress and far from completion.

II. A C OMPLAINT FOR D ECLARATORY J UDGMENT

On August 5, 2008, Buyer filed a complaint for declaratory judgment in the Chancery Court of Cannon County, naming as defendants Devin Mason, Craig Mears, Mason and Mears Properties, and the Town of Woodbury.2 Buyer alleged that Mr. Paschal was not authorized under the City’s subdivision regulations to accept and adopt a roadway. He accordingly asked for a declaration that the street construction was not completed by July 1, 2008, and that as a result Sellers forfeited the remaining balance of the $75,000 final payment on the property.

Sellers filed a counter-claim for breach of contract and for payment of the remaining contract balance. A four day bench trial was conducted over a period of six months.

When Mr. Bachour took the stand, he was questioned about the circumstances behind the inclusion of the retainage provision in the contract of November 24, 2007, and his reasons for making it part of the contract. He testified that the road was very important to him because if was not finished on time, he risked the loss of potential commercial buyers. Asked about how he arrived at the figure of $75,000, he acknowledged that it was an arbitrary number, not based on any particular estimate of potential damages, but he insisted that “[i]t was based on potential damages, but you cannot estimate them before they happen.”

Mr. Bachour’s deposition testimony was read into the record, wherein he referred to the $75,000 as a “penalty” or as “a heavy penalty” for not finishing the road on time, and stated that he wished he had asked for more, “like $150,000.” On the stand, he declined to characterize the provision as a penalty, but rather insisted that he considered it more like “an

2 The Town of Woodbury was subsequently dismissed as a defendant.

-3- incentive” to finish the road quickly.

At the conclusion of testimony, the trial court issued a ruling from the bench and memorialized it in a judgment filed on December 5, 2011. The court declared that because the contract of November 14 was between the same parties and involved the same subject matter as the contract of July 27, additional consideration was required to make the later contract enforceable. The court stated that it could not find any evidence of additional consideration, and it concluded that, in accordance with the principles enunciated in this court’s opinion in the case of American Fruit Growers v. Hawkinson, 106 S.W.2d 564 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1937), the November 14 contract was void and unenforceable.

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