Knoxville v. Phillippe

24 Va. Cir. 187, 1991 WL 835016, 1991 Va. Cir. LEXIS 223
CourtFredericksburg County Circuit Court
DecidedJune 12, 1991
DocketCase No. CH90-191
StatusPublished

This text of 24 Va. Cir. 187 (Knoxville v. Phillippe) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Fredericksburg County Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Knoxville v. Phillippe, 24 Va. Cir. 187, 1991 WL 835016, 1991 Va. Cir. LEXIS 223 (Va. Super. Ct. 1991).

Opinion

By JUDGE WILLIAM H. LEDBETTER, JR.

In this case, the question presented is whether the complainant has an ownership interest in The Recreation Center, a commercial venture in which he claims to be a partner with the defendants.

Facts

In April of 1989, Knoxville and Phillippe signed a "Sales Agreement" by which they purchased a business known as The Recreation Center located on William Street in Fredericksburg. Although nothing in that document explains the type of entity Knoxville and Phillippe were creating, and no formal organizational papers were ever prepared, the parties agree that the entity is a partnership, and they have treated it as such throughout this litigation. Further, see Virginia Code § 50-6(1) and Section 50-7.

Knoxville and Phillippe then transferred a one-half interest in the business to Perry and his wife, Lillian. The agreement by which that was done is dated July 26, 1989.

[188]*188On August 7, 1989, Phillippe and Lillian Perry signed a "Purchase/Sale Agreement" by the terms of which Phillippe purchased Lillian Perry’s interest in the business. Knoxville and Perry also executed the agreement, apparently acknowledging and acceding to the transfer.

The document that is the centerpiece of this controversy is dated September 1, 1989. In it Knoxville "irrevocably transfers" his interest in the business to Phillippe and relinquishes "all rights, claims and interest" in the business. Knoxville does not deny that he signed the agreement, and he does not quibble over the meaning of the words used in it. However, he contends that the writing is a sham, intended to shelter his interest in the business from potential claims of creditors. Further, he argues that because the consideration allegedly paid by Phillippe took the form of payment of certain of his gambling debts, the agreement fails for lack of consideration.

After the agreement was signed, Phillippe assumed all managerial responsibilities, maintained exclusive control of the books and records, and barred Knoxville from the premises. This litigation ensued.

Pleadings and Proceedings

In his bill of complaint, Knoxville alleges that he is a partner in the business with Phillippe and Perry and that Phillippe is mismanaging the business and wrongfully denying him access to the records. He seeks injunctive relief, an accounting, appointment of a receiver, dissolution, and return of items used in the business that he claims are his separate property.

Phillippe filed an answer and cross-bill. In her cross-bill, she asks that Knoxville be restrained from "further interference" with the business.

Perry filed an answer in which he professed ignorance of most of the facts giving rise to the dispute between Knoxville and Phillippe, but he specifically denies that Knoxville owns the items claimed by Knoxville in his bill.

Knoxville responded to Phillippe’s cross-bill.

On January 3, 1991, Knoxville filed a motion for the appointment of a receiver for the business and for injunctive relief during the pendency of the suit. The court heard the motion on January 10, 1991, and denied [189]*189the relief. However, by order entered on February 11, 1991, the court did impose restrictions upon Phillippe’s expenditure of partnership funds and required her to maintain proper accounts.

Phillippe moved the court to direct an issue out of chancery for the purpose of ascertaining whether Knoxville owns any interest in the business. Because that issue is, without question, the threshold issue in the case and because that issue must be resolved by reference to irreconcilably conflicting evidence, the court granted the motion.

The court directed an issue out of chancery pursuant to Virginia Code § 8.01-336(E) and on May 2, 1991, the following inquiry was submitted to a jury:

Whether by the paper writing dated September 1, 1989, Mr. Knoxville and Ms. Phillippe intended that Mr. Knoxville transfer his interest in The Recreation Center to Ms. Phillippe.

(The parties agreed to the phrasing of the inquiry. However, Knoxville requested a second inquiry which would address the adequacy of the consideration that Phillippe says she paid for Knoxville’s interest in the business. The court declined to submit that issue to the jury, ruling that the real issue is. the validity, not the adequacy or sufficiency, of consideration and is a matter of law; and, in any event, the court did not deem it necessary or proper to submit that issue to the jury under Section 8.01-336(E) because the evidence on that particular issue is not in the same sort of irreconcilable conflict.)

After a full-day trial, the jury deliberated less than half an hour and returned a verdict finding that Knoxville and Phillippe "intended that the paper writing would transfer Mr. Knoxville’s interest in The Recreation Center to Ms. Phillippe."

No judgment was entered on the verdict. Instead, the court gave counsel the opportunity to submit memoranda on whether the court should accept the jury’s verdict and what further action should be taken in this litigation. The memoranda have been filed. This opinion addresses those matters.

[190]*190 Decision

(1) The Issue Out of Chancery.

As noted above, the court granted Phillippe’s motion to direct an issue out of chancery regarding the efficacy of the paper writing dated September 1, 1989, and that issue was submitted to a jury on May 2, 1991. The jury returned a verdict favorable to Phillippe.

The jury’s findings in an issue out of chancery are not binding but are merely advisory, informing the conscience of the chancellor. Nelms v. Nelms, 236 Va. 281 (1988). But the verdict is persuasive and, as a general proposition, it is "good practice" for the chancellor to abide by the verdict. Harris v. Citizens Bank & Trust Co., 172 Va. 111 (1939); Bryson, Handbook on Virginia Civil Procedure (2d Ed., 1989) p. 315.

In this case, the court has no difficulty in acknowledging the persuasive impact of the jury’s decision. Phillippe contended at trial that the September 1, 1989, agreement represented the parties’ genuine intention that she take over Knoxville’s interest in the business in consideration for her payments on certain of his gambling debts, a payment of cash to him, and the assumption of the debts and obligations associated with the business. She presented evidence in support of that position. Knoxville contended at trial that no consideration passed hands and that the parties never intended for the writing to be binding. Instead, he said, the pretended transfer of his interest in the business was a sham, subterfuge, or ruse, concocted by the parties to shelter his interest in the business from potential claims arising out of an automobile accident in which he was involved. He presented evidence in support of that position. After receiving instructions from the court and hearing arguments of counsel, the jury deliberated and returned a verdict, in response to the court’s inquiry, finding that the September 1, 1989, agreement was intended by the parties to do what it says.

Having heard the evidence, including the conflicting testimony of Knoxville and Phillippe, the chancellor agrees with the jurors.

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Related

Jessee v. Smith
278 S.E.2d 793 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1981)
Nelms v. Nelms
374 S.E.2d 4 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1988)
Harris v. Citizens Bank & Trust Co.
200 S.E. 652 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1939)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
24 Va. Cir. 187, 1991 WL 835016, 1991 Va. Cir. LEXIS 223, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/knoxville-v-phillippe-vaccfredericksb-1991.