J.E.T., Inc., d/b/a UPS Store v. Ron Hasty

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMarch 18, 2024
DocketM2023-00253-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of J.E.T., Inc., d/b/a UPS Store v. Ron Hasty (J.E.T., Inc., d/b/a UPS Store v. Ron Hasty) 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
J.E.T., Inc., d/b/a UPS Store v. Ron Hasty, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

03/18/2024 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE Assigned on Briefs November 1, 2023

J.E.T., INC., d/b/a UPS STORE v. RON HASTY

Appeal from the Circuit Court for Davidson County No. 21C642 Lynne T. Ingram, Judge ___________________________________

No. M2023-00253-COA-R3-CV ___________________________________

A tenant sued its landlord for allegedly breaching the parties’ lease agreement. The tenant, however, failed to comply with the parties’ discovery schedule. After conferring, the parties established a new discovery deadline, agreed that failure to meet the deadline would result in dismissal with prejudice, and filed an agreed order to that effect, which was approved by the trial court. The landlord asserted that the tenant failed to meet the new deadline and sought dismissal with prejudice. A hearing was scheduled. Before the hearing, the tenant filed a notice nonsuiting the case, and the trial court granted the tenant a voluntary dismissal without prejudice. The landlord filed a motion to alter or amend, arguing the dismissal should have been with prejudice. The trial court denied that motion. The landlord appeals. We reverse and remand for further proceedings.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Circuit Court Reversed and Remanded

JEFFREY USMAN, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which JOHN W. MCCLARTY and CARMA DENNIS MCGEE, JJ., joined.

Seth McInteer and Howell O’Rear, Nashville, Tennessee, for the appellant, Ronald Hasty.

Randall N. Songstad and Ronald L. Harper, Memphis, Tennessee, for the appellee, J.E.T., Inc., d/b/a UPS Store.

OPINION

I.

Appellant Ron Hasty owns real property at 707 Main Street in Nashville, Tennessee. In April 2017, Mr. Hasty agreed to lease commercial space to the Appellee J.E.T. Incorporated (J.E.T.), a Tennessee corporation. The parties’ lease included a ten-year term and renewal options that could extend the term for an additional ten years.

In March 2020, a series of tornadoes ravaged Middle Tennessee.1 Mr. Hasty’s property sustained significant damage. The storm compromised the roof, leading to water leakage and prolonged power outages. Following delays in repairs, Mr. Hasty asked J.E.T. to temporarily vacate the property. Despite having repeatedly assured J.E.T. that this would only be a temporary arrangement, Mr. Hasty provided notice that this action would be permanent, citing a provision in the parties’ lease agreement that allowed Mr. Hasty to terminate the lease if “the Premises are damaged but not wholly destroyed” by a storm.

J.E.T. objected and filed a complaint in Davidson County Chancery Court in April 2021. The company alleged that Mr. Hasty breached the parties’ lease agreement and sought compensatory damages “in an amount not to exceed $3,500,000.00” as well as attorney’s fees. Mr. Hasty denied breaching the lease agreement, contending that his conduct was sanctioned by the contract’s plain language.

This appeal, however, does not relate to the merits of parties’ divergent interpretations of the lease agreement, but instead their actions during discovery. On August 8, 2022, Mr. Hasty served J.E.T. with written discovery requests, including interrogatories and requests for production. J.E.T. does not dispute that the deadline to respond to these written discovery requests was September 7, 2022, nor does it assert that it complied with that deadline. J.E.T. also does not dispute that it failed to respond to a September 23, 2022 email from Mr. Hasty’s counsel concerning J.E.T.’s noncompliance. When Mr. Hasty contacted J.E.T.’s counsel on October 3, 2022, regarding the company’s failure to respond to the September 23, 2022 email, J.E.T. asked Mr. Hasty if he would allow the company to respond by October 11, 2022. Mr. Hasty agreed to this extension; nevertheless, J.E.T. still did not submit the required documents by this new deadline.

On October 12, 2022, Mr. Hasty’s counsel reached out to J.E.T. once again. The parties disagree about the exact nature of this discussion. According to Mr. Hasty, “the parties entered into a binding agreement regarding an additional extension of time . . . and the consequence of [J.E.T.’s] failure to produce responses by the agreed date.” Mr. Hasty states that the parties agreed to a twenty-day time horizon and that another failure to comply by J.E.T. would result in a dismissal with prejudice. J.E.T. disagrees with the characterization of this conversation as creating a “binding agreement.”

J.E.T., however, concedes that “[i]t was understood by both parties that an Agreed 1 March 2-3, 2020 Tornadoes, National Weather Service (last updated Feb. 24, 2021), https://www.weather.gov/ohx/20200303. According to the National Weather Service, the severe weather event spawned ten tornadoes, which constituted the worst tornado outbreak in Tennessee in nearly a decade. Id.

-2- Order would be entered reflecting these terms.” The Agreed Order J.E.T. references, which both parties signed and the trial court adopted, reads as follows:

[J.E.T.’s] counsel called [Mr. Hasty’s] counsel on October 12, 2022. During that call, the parties agreed that [J.E.T.] would be given an additional 20 days from October 12, 2022, to produce the responses to the Interrogatories and Requests for Production and that, if [J.E.T.] did not produce responses within that 20-day period, [J.E.T.’s] Complaint in this matter would be dismissed with prejudice. The parties agreed to the entry of an order reflecting that agreement.

It is therefore ORDERED that:

...

(2) If [J.E.T.] has not served Defendant with responses and responsive documents by or before November 1, 2022, the Court will enter an order dismissing [J.E.T.’s] Complaint with prejudice.

With J.E.T. allegedly failing to meet the agreed-upon deadline, Mr. Hasty filed a “Motion for Order Dismissing Case with Prejudice” on December 2, 2022. In support thereof, Mr. Hasty relied upon the parties’ agreement as reflected in the Agreed Order. Mr. Hasty represented to the trial court that J.E.T. failed to honor the twenty-day production deadline, though he did explain that his counsel “receive[d] a package . . . ostensibly mailed on October 31, 2022 . . . containing several hard copies of documents and a flash drive containing several digital copies.” This package, Mr. Hasty submitted, did not contain any written responses to his interrogatories or an explanation of the package’s contents. “[B]ecause the documents contain no other organization or notation identifying the specific Requests to which the documents respond, it is virtually impossible for [Mr. Hasty] to determine or articulate the deficiency of the documents actually produced,” he argued. Consistent with the terms of the parties’ agreement as reflected in the Agreed Order, Mr. Hasty asked the trial court to dismiss J.E.T.’s lawsuit with prejudice. A hearing was set for December 16, 2022.

On December 12, 2022—four days before the scheduled hearing on Mr. Hasty’s motion—J.E.T. submitted a notice of voluntary dismissal pursuant to Tennessee Rule of Civil Procedure 41.01. J.E.T. noted that Mr. Hasty had not filed a motion for summary judgment and that the company had not previously given notice of a voluntary dismissal. Accordingly, J.E.T. asserted that it was entitled to a dismissal without prejudice under Rule 41.01. The trial court granted J.E.T. a voluntary dismissal without prejudice the same day Mr. Hasty’s motion to have J.E.T.’s case dismissed with prejudice was set to be heard.

Mr. Hasty filed a motion to alter or amend under Tennessee Rule of Civil Procedure -3- 59.04. He argued that the parties agreed to a dismissal with prejudice, as evidenced by the trial court’s Agreed Order, in the event that J.E.T.

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J.E.T., Inc., d/b/a UPS Store v. Ron Hasty, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jet-inc-dba-ups-store-v-ron-hasty-tennctapp-2024.