Kayla Nicole Nunley v. Estate of Billy G. Nunley, and Earl Montgomery

925 S.W.2d 538, 1996 Tenn. App. LEXIS 66
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedFebruary 7, 1996
Docket01A01-9508-PB-00350
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 925 S.W.2d 538 (Kayla Nicole Nunley v. Estate of Billy G. Nunley, and Earl Montgomery) 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
Kayla Nicole Nunley v. Estate of Billy G. Nunley, and Earl Montgomery, 925 S.W.2d 538, 1996 Tenn. App. LEXIS 66 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1996).

Opinion

OPINION

CANTRELL, Judge.

This case involves the ownership of the mechanical royalty rights to a catalogue of songs written by the appellant, Earl Montgomery. The appellee, Kayla Nicole Nunley, contends that her late husband, Billy Gene Nunley, purchased the right to collect those royalties from Mr. Montgomery in 1975. Mr. Montgomery testified that he never sold the rights, and that he did not even know Mr. Nunley. He claims that the Nunleys were guilty of converting the funds derived from his ownership rights.

The proof shows that the Nunleys received royalty checks from Mr. Montgomery’s publisher and its successors for almost 20 years, and that Mr. Montgomery did not receive any mechanical royalties after the rights were purportedly sold to Mr. Nunley. Mr. Montgomery admitted that he was aware that he had stopped receiving checks sometime in the mid-1970s, but claimed that he was unable to discover the reason. The trial court found that Mr. Montgomery’s claim for conversion was precluded by laches. We also find that Mr. Montgomery failed to prove his right for the royalties, and, therefore, affirm the lower court’s decision.

I.

Though the testimony of Mr. Montgomery is diametrically opposed to that of Mrs. Nun-ley and two other witnesses, there is no dispute about the nature and origin of the rights at issue. Between 1970 and 1975, songwriter Earl Montgomery worked under an exclusive five year contract with AlTam Music Publishing Company. AlTam was owned by Al Gallico and Tammy Wynette, and the company name was created by combining their first names. Mr. Montgomery wrote numerous songs during his period of employment with AlTam. The publisher paid him monthly advances of $1,000 against the royalties he was expected to receive from the sale of records and tapes containing his songs.

*540 Such royalties are called mechanical royalties. They are generally handled by an agency that specializes in collecting them from record companies. The royalties are forwarded by the agency to the publisher every six months. The publisher then distributes the writer’s share to him. The contract between AlTam and Mr. Montgomery provided that the mechanical royalties would be divided equally between the publisher and the songwriter, with adjustments for the money advanced.

Mr. Montgomery also received (and still receives) performance royalties, which accumulate when a writer’s songs are played on the radio, used in movies or television, or performed in live concerts. Performance royalties are paid directly to the writer by the licensing agency he contracts with. Mr. Montgomery’s licensing agent is Broadcast Music Incorporated (BMI). BMI sends a performance royalty cheek to Mr. Montgomery every three months.

II.

Alsey “Shugg” Baggett, former manager of George Jones, and a friend and associate of Earl Montgomery, testified that around 1975 Mr. Montgomery told him that he needed money, and that Mr. Baggett put him in touch with Bill Nunley, an investor who was not particularly involved in the music business. Mr. Nunley receiving assurances from Mr. Baggett that the deal was a good one, and allegedly agreed to pay Mr. Montgomery $10,000 for the mechanical rights to his songs in the AlTam catalog. Mr. Nunley’s cash was tied up with a ear dealership, so he decided to borrow the money to pay for the rights.

Mr. Nunley, Mr. Montgomery, and Mr. Baggett met a banker named Clarence Reynolds at the Commerce Union Bank and Mr. Nunley borrowed $10,000 on his personal note. Mr. Montgomery admitted that he was present at a meeting with Clarence Reynolds and some other individuals at around that same time, but he insisted the meeting had a different purpose, and he denied that he knew at the time who Mr. Nunley was.

A few months later, Emmy Lou Harris recorded “One of These Days,” one of Mr. Montgomery’s songs from the catalog. It became a huge hit, and Mr. Nunley recouped his investment and was able to pay off the note in very short order. He subsequently moved to Arizona and continued to receive royalty checks. Copies of three of those checks, drawn on AlTam’s account, made out to Mr. Nunley as payee, and each containing a notation that it was for royalties, have been made exhibits to the record in this case.

Because of personal frictions, AlTam chose not to renew Mr. Montgomery’s contract. Paul Ritchie, a publisher for whom Mr. Montgomery subsequently worked, testified that in 1983 or 1984, he and Mr. Montgomery discussed the songwriter’s desire to have the rights to the songs he had written for AlTam restored to him. Mr. Ritchie was going to Phoenix on other business, and he agreed to approach Mr. Nunley about selling the rights back to Mr. Montgomery. Mr. Nunley was not interested in the proposal, and he informed Mr. Ritchie that in any case he no longer had exclusive rights to the proceeds of the AlTam catalog, as he and Mrs. Nunley had divorced in 1983, and one-half of the rights had been transferred to her in the divorce decree.

Subsequent events have complicated the task of proving or disproving the sale of the mechanical royalties. In 1989, Mr. Nunley was diagnosed with brain cancer, and had to undergo surgery, which left him considerably weakened. Also in 1989, Mr. Nunley’s home was completely destroyed by a fire which consumed all his financial records. The ap-pellees were unable to produce a copy of the contract of sale at trial, purportedly because of the fire.

Mr. Nunley and his ex-wife moved back to Tennessee, and their Maricopa County divorce decree was domesticated in Davidson County. Mr. Nunley’s short-term memory was impaired by his condition and its treatment, and he failed to send Kayla Nunley her share of the royalties. She filed a contempt petition that resulted in an agreed order that in tíie future, her share of the AlTam royalties would be paid directly to her by the publisher, rather than being disbursed by Mr. Nunley.

*541 However the agreed order did not solve Mrs. Nunley’s payment problems. The principals in AlTam sold the company. The purchaser was Coca-Cola, which only held the property a short time before selling it to MCA. A check from MCA did come into Mrs. Nunley’s possession, but the check, for $3,423.07, was made out to Earl Montgomery c/o Billy Nunley. Mrs. Nunley called Earl Montgomery, and spoke to his wife Charlene, seeking some guidance on handling the check. The significance of this phone call is that Earl Montgomery subsequently claimed that it provided him with the first clue as to where his royalty checks had been going for so many years.

Mrs. Nunley became convinced that her former husband and Mr. Montgomery were conspiring to deprive her of her rightful share of the royalties. She accordingly filed a second contempt petition, naming both of them, and asking for an accounting of all royalties, and for payment of her share. Mr. Montgomery’s answer contained a cross-claim against Mr.' Nunley, and a counterclaim against Mrs. Nunley. Mr. Montgomery contended that he had never surrendered his royalty rights. He charged the Nunleys with conversion, and asked for an accounting, and for judgment against the Nunleys for sums received.

During trial, Paul Ritchie testified that several months earlier, Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
925 S.W.2d 538, 1996 Tenn. App. LEXIS 66, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kayla-nicole-nunley-v-estate-of-billy-g-nunley-and-earl-montgomery-tennctapp-1996.