June Acuff v. Sally Baker

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJanuary 16, 2019
DocketW2018-00687-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of June Acuff v. Sally Baker (June Acuff v. Sally Baker) 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
June Acuff v. Sally Baker, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

01/16/2019 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT JACKSON November 14, 2018 Session

JUNE ACUFF v. SALLY BAKER

Appeal from the Circuit Court for Shelby County No. CT-002525-16 Felicia Corbin Johnson, Judge ___________________________________

No. W2018-00687-COA-R3-CV ___________________________________

This appeal involves a complaint for damages for breach of an alleged oral agreement to conduct an estate sale. After a bench trial, the trial court awarded Appellee damages for breach of contract, negligent bailment, and violation of the Tennessee Consumer Protection Act (“TCPA”). For violation of the TCPA, the trial court trebled the compensatory damages awarded Appellee and also awarded attorney’s fees and costs against Appellant. Because the parties did not have a sufficiently definite agreement to be enforceable, we reverse the trial court’s award of damages for breach of contract. We also reverse the trial court’s findings of negligent bailment and violation of the TCPA, which resulted in the award of treble damages and attorney’s fees. We affirm the trial court’s award of the sale proceeds to Appellee.

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

KENNY ARMSTRONG, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which ARNOLD B. GOLDIN and BRANDON O. GIBSON, JJ., joined.

Scott A. Kramer, Memphis, Tennessee, for the appellant, Sally Baker.

Kevin A. Snider, Germantown, Tennessee, for the appellee, June Acuff.

OPINION

I. Background

The facts of this case are quite protracted; however, in the interest of judicial economy, we will provide a truncated version of the relevant facts and procedure. June Acuff (“Appellee”) and Sally Baker (“Appellant”) orally agreed that Ms. Baker would conduct an estate sale on Ms. Acuff’s behalf. It is undisputed that, at the time of the agreement, Ms. Acuff was experiencing a difficult time due to the recent deaths of her two daughters. Ms. Acuff was also having health issues. In an effort to prepare two of her houses, the McVay Trail house (“McVay house”) and the White Station house (“White Station house”), for sale, Ms. Acuff engaged Ms. Baker to help with organizing and cleaning out these properties, and conducting an estate sale. Ms. Acuff owned several pieces of antique furniture, some of which she wanted to sell and some of which she wanted to keep. Ms. Baker represented to Ms. Acuff that she had an associate, Susan Colwell, who could help in pricing Ms. Acuff’s antiques for the estate sale. There was conflicting testimony regarding whether Ms. Baker represented to Ms. Acuff that Ms. Colwell was an appraiser, or whether she merely represented that Ms. Colwell was familiar with antiques. It is undisputed that the parties orally agreed that Ms. Baker would receive three thousand dollars ($3,000.00) plus fifteen percent (15%) of the estate sale proceeds as her fee. Although the parties never signed a written contract, the terms of Ms. Baker’s fee are not disputed.

As well as helping Ms. Acuff clean out her two houses, there is evidence that Ms. Baker also hired movers to carry Ms. Acuff’s items to and from her homes. The parties dispute whether Ms. Acuff agreed to reimburse Ms. Baker for the moving services. In addition to the White State house and the McVay house, Ms. Baker also cleaned out Ms. Acuff’s son-in-law, Tucker Beck’s, attic at his house on Kaye Road (“Kaye Road house”). The parties dispute whether Ms. Acuff agreed to pay Ms. Baker for these services.

After cleaning and organizing Ms. Acuff’s houses over a three week period, Ms. Baker conducted a three-day estate sale. Ms. Baker claims the estate sale netted six thousand seven hundred and eighty-two dollars ($6,782.00). From this total, she deducted her fee of three thousand dollars ($3,000.00) plus fifteen percent (15%) of the proceeds, which amount totaled one thousand seventeen dollars and thirty cents ($1,017.30). Ms. Baker also deducted, from the sale proceeds, two thousand one hundred and ninety-two dollars and forty cents ($2,192.40) for “additional labor and expenses not included in fee.” The total proceeds left to Ms. Acuff, after these deductions, was five hundred and seventy-two dollars and sixty cents ($572.60). Ms. Baker mailed Ms. Acuff a check for this amount along with receipts from the estate sale. In the same package, Ms. Baker included a Goodwill receipt for donated items. When Ms. Baker and Ms. Colwell finished cleaning up the McVay house after the sale, Ms. Baker left her set of keys to the house on a counter in the house, locked the door, and left.

The facts surrounding the organization, clean out, and sale of items from the houses are largely disputed. The specific disputes are discussed, infra, however, suffice it to say that issues concerning pricing, items offered for sale versus items not for sale, items taken by Ms. Acuff’s family, the net proceeds of the sale, the accounting for the items sold, the donation of certain items to Goodwill, and allegations concerning lost or stolen items, led to the instant lawsuit. We glean from the record that the major issues in -2- this case concern several antiques that Ms. Acuff claims are either missing, were sold at an unreasonably low price, or were stolen. Trial exhibit 14 is a list that Ms. Acuff created of twenty-one “missing items;” this list contains a description of the item and its alleged fair market value. As is relevant to this appeal, Ms. Acuff argues that the receipts from the estate sale do not demonstrate that her Austrian pine mantelpiece,1 English breakfast hutch,2 or Walnut French sideboard were sold.3 Furthermore, Ms. Acuff alleges that she instructed Ms. Baker not to sell three antique clocks,4 and that the clocks were not in the McVay house after the sale. Ms. Baker argues that the Austrian pine mantelpiece, English breakfast hutch, and Walnut French sideboard were all sold at the estate sale. She also argues that the group receipts, admitted into evidence at trial, do not contain all of the receipts she mailed to Ms. Acuff after the sale. Additionally, she alleges that some of Ms. Acuff’s antiques were in a poor condition and not worth as much as Ms. Acuff anticipated. Further, Ms. Baker argues that she did not sell the three antique clocks and that they were left in the McVay house when Ms. Baker locked the house. Essentially, the parties’ theories of the case are as follows: Ms. Acuff argues that Ms. Baker either stole her furniture, sold it for an unreasonably low price, or that the furniture was stolen while in Ms. Baker’s care and keeping; Ms. Baker argues that Ms. Acuff lost some of the sales receipts, that the antiques were not as valuable as Ms. Acuff believed, and that Ms. Acuff’s family members removed the furniture she cannot find.

On October 12, 2015, Ms. Acuff filed a Civil Warrant in the Shelby County General Sessions Court, alleging breach of contract and seeking costs and attorney’s fees. On June 6, 2016, the general sessions court entered judgment in favor of Ms. Baker. On June 7, 2016, Ms. Acuff timely appealed to the Shelby County Circuit Court (“trial court”). In her complaint, filed July 29, 2016, Ms. Acuff alleged: (1) breach of contract; (2) negligent bailment; (3) conversion; and (4) a violation of the Tennessee Consumer Protection Act (“TCPA”). Ms. Baker answered on August 24, 2016.

On February 26 and 27, 2018, the trial court held a bench trial. By order of March 16, 2018, the trial court awarded Ms. Acuff damages for breach of contract, negligent bailment, and violation of the TCPA.5 The trial court did not find conversion. The trial court held that Ms. Baker could not recover for the additional labor and expenses she billed Ms.

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June Acuff v. Sally Baker, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/june-acuff-v-sally-baker-tennctapp-2019.