James D. Leckrone v. James D. Walker

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedApril 30, 2002
DocketM1998-00974-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of James D. Leckrone v. James D. Walker (James D. Leckrone v. James D. Walker) 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
James D. Leckrone v. James D. Walker, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE September 2, 1999 Session

JAMES D. LECKRONE v. JAMES D. WALKER, ET AL.

Appeal from the Chancery Court for Davidson County No. 96-3056-III Ellen Hobbs Lyle, Chancellor

No. M1998-00974-COA-R3-CV - Filed April 30, 2002

This appeal arises from a dispute over the proceeds from the sale of a Florida condominium unit once owned by a Tennessee partnership but titled in the name of two of its partners. When the successor to the partnership’s interest in the unit undertook to sell it, one of the owners of record agreed to sign the deed only if the proceeds were placed in escrow while the parties attempted to resolve his claim to one-half of the funds. When the parties failed to agree on a distribution of the proceeds, the escrow holder filed an interpleader action in the Chancery Court for Davidson County. Following a bench trial, the trial court awarded the escrowed proceeds to the partnership’s successor after determining that the owner of record was estopped to invoke the statute of frauds to defeat the successor’s claim. We have determined that the trial court reached the correct result because the owner of record no longer possessed a beneficial interest in the unit. Accordingly, we affirm the judgment.1

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

WILLIAM C. KOCH , JR., J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which BEN H. CANTRELL , P.J., M.S., and WILLIAM B. CAIN , J., joined.

John R. Jacobson, Nashville, Tennessee, for the appellant, James D. Walker.

W. Lee Corbett and David F. Lewis, Nashville, Tennessee, for the appellee, Prism Partners, L.P.

OPINION

I.

James D. Walker is a self-employed employee benefits consultant. Sometime in the late 1970s, he struck up a friendship with Larry Cherry who held himself out as a certified financial planner. Messrs. Walker and Cherry became fast friends, and by the early 1980s, Mr. Walker had

1 The Court of Appe als may affirm a judgment on different grounds than those relied on by the trial court when the trial court reached the corre ct result. Continental C as. Co. v. Smith, 720 S.W .2d 4 8, 50 (Te nn. 19 86); Allen v. National Ban k of New port, 839 S.W .2d 7 63, 7 65 (Tenn. Ct. A pp. 1 992 ); Clark v. Metropolitan Gov’t, 827 S.W.2d 312, 317 (T enn. Ct. App. 1991). become one of Mr. Cherry’s clients. According to Mr. Walker, he gave Mr. Cherry virtually free reign to manage his assets with essentially no supervision or accountability.

In 1984, Mr. Cherry invited Mr. Walker to accompany him to Panama City, Florida to inspect a condominium unit at the Dunes of Panama that one of Mr. Cherry’s clients was considering as an investment. After listening to the sales pitch, Messrs. Cherry and Walker decided to purchase a unit for themselves. Later in 1984, they made a ten percent down payment on a $137,000 unit that was under construction. In April 1985, Messrs. Cherry and Walker closed on their unit and had the title placed in their names as joint tenants. Several days after the closing they purchased furnishings for the condominium. The funds used for the down payment, the purchase, and the furnishings came from Money Management III, a “loose investment pool” containing funds entrusted to Mr. Cherry by other clients, and from one of Mr. Cherry’s other clients.2 There is little disagreement that the condominium was, in Mr. Cherry’s words, “highly leveraged.”

In 1986, when the rental income from the condominium did not meet expectations, Mr. Cherry suggested to Mr. Walker that they should “put the condominium into” an existing partnership called Money Management Investment I. Mr. Cherry’s purpose was to spread the risk of the condominium investment and to provide a tax shelter for two of the other partners in Money Management Investment I. Mr. Walker agreed with Mr. Cherry’s proposal, but neither Mr. Cherry nor Mr. Walker executed a deed conveying the condominium unit to Money Management Investment I. In return for transferring his interest in the unit to Money Management Investment I, Mr. Walker received: (1) a twenty percent interest in the Money Management Investment I partnership, (2) a check for the costs he had incurred in connection with the condominium, and (3) Money Management Investment I’s assumption of the remaining condominium-related debts.3

Mr. Walker never again treated the condominium as if it belonged to him personally. Money Management Investment I took over managing the property, paid the operating expenses, and collected the rental income. While Mr. Walker included his interest in the Money Management Investment I partnership as an asset on his financial statements, he did not include the condominium unit itself as an asset. At the same time, he received periodic statements from Money Management Investment I and copies of the partnership’s tax returns in which the condominium unit was identified as a partnership asset. Mr. Walker never questioned these documents, and, when he or his family used the condominium, he paid rent to Mr. Cherry who was managing Money Management Investment I’s affairs.

2 Mr. Cherry arranged the financing and saw to it that neither he nor Mr. W alker signed a note or deed of trust.

3 Money Manage ment Investment I executed two promissory no tes as part of this tran saction . The first note for $123,891.70 to Mone y Managem ent Mortgage Acco unt was for the unpaid purchase price of the condominium. The second note for $23,900 to Don Crace was for the balance of the funds used to purchase the condominium’s furniture.

-2- Mr. Cherry’s financial house of cards began to crumble in 1993 when one of his clients obtained a $75,000 judgment against him.4 In an effort to shield his assets, Mr. Cherry decided to shift the ownership of the condominium unit. Accordingly, in March 1993 Money Management III purchased the unit from Money Management Investment I for $110,000 in cash. Just as in 1986, there is no written contract or deed of conveyance to memorialize this transaction. Money Management III, apparently with Mr. Cherry’s assistance, continued to manage the Dunes condominium property. In October 1995, Money Management III was “formalized” into Prism Partners, L.P., a limited partnership made up of fifteen of the individual investors who had contributed funds to Money Management III.5

Shortly after its creation, Prism Partners entered into a contract to sell the Dunes condominium to a third party for $133,000. When it was discovered that the title to the property was still the Messrs. Cherry’s and Walker’s names, Prism Partners asked them to execute the necessary deeds to accomplish the sale. Mr. Walker declined because Prism Partners would not agree to share the proceeds of the sale with him. However, because the buyer insisted that the sale be completed before the end of 1995, Mr. Walker agreed to sign the deed and to permit the sale to be completed in return for Prism Partners’s agreement to place the proceeds of the sale in escrow pending the resolution of their disagreement.

On December 29, 1995, Prism Partners placed approximately $121,660 with James D. Leckrone. Later, approximately $1,395 in reimbursed Florida property tax payments was added to the original amount. When it became evident that Prism Partners and Mr. Walker would not agree on the disposition of the funds, Mr. Leckrone filed an interpleader action in the Chancery Court for Davidson County, tendering $125,001.77 to the court for disposition. Mr. Walker insisted that he was entitled to one-half of the funds because he owned an undivided one-half interest in the property when it was sold in 1995. He also asserted that the statute of frauds [Tenn. Code Ann.

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