Lemon v. Hufford

84 Va. Cir. 443, 2012 WL 7960050, 2012 Va. Cir. LEXIS 128
CourtRoanoke County Circuit Court
DecidedApril 19, 2012
DocketCase No. CL07-590
StatusPublished

This text of 84 Va. Cir. 443 (Lemon v. Hufford) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Roanoke County Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lemon v. Hufford, 84 Va. Cir. 443, 2012 WL 7960050, 2012 Va. Cir. LEXIS 128 (Va. Super. Ct. 2012).

Opinion

By Judge Robert P. Doherty, Jr.

During the years 2003 and 2004, Defendant Thomas M. Hufford signed a series of unsecured, preprinted, short-term promissory notes, with rates of interest from 10% to 15% per annum, when he borrowed money from the Plaintiffs, David and Sheree Lemon and Lemon Enterprises, Inc. He told Plaintiffs that he was using the money for investments, which were doing well, and consequently he did not mind paying interest at the rates they were charging. Besides, the parties were friends, had dinner at each other’s home, and Thomas Hufford and David Lemon played golf together. Initially, Hufford promptly paid all of his obligations. After a while, he stopped paying the notes when they came due. To make matters worse, Mr. and Mrs. Lemon lost the original notes.

In order to get themselves back to a firm business footing, Thomas M. Hufford, who said he did not have sufficient funds to pay the lost notes at that time, agreed to have his insurance agency, Hufford Insurance and Investment Agency, Inc., sign two new promissory notes to replace the multiple missing notes that he had previously signed personally. These new notes, which were for a greater principal than the original missing notes, [444]*444were treated as payment in Ml of the principal and interest of the original lost notes, to include the one note to David Lemon’s alter ego, Lemon Enterprises, Inc.

The new notes were on preprinted forms and prepared by David and Sheree Lemon. The maker of these two new notes was “Hufford Ins. & Inv. Agency Inc.,” and they were signed by Thomas M. Hufford, President. The two new notes combined were for approximately $15,000.00 more in principal than were the original notes. This increase in principal was designed to cover the unpaid interest on the original lost notes. No money changed hands when the replacement notes were signed. These two new notes simply paid the antecedent principal and interest debt owed by Thomas M. Hufford on the multiple missing notes. The two replacement notes, one dated September 14, 2005, in the amount of $50,736.00, due and payable to Sheree H. Lemon on April 30, 2007, and bearing interest at the rate of 10% per annum, included the original principal of the multiple missing notes and the parties best guess at the interest that should have been earned on those missing notes. The second note, which was payable to David Lemon, was also dated September 14,2005, and was due on April 30, 2007, in the amount of $70,499.00. It also bore interest at the rate of 10% and was designed to cover the principal and interest of the original missing multiple notes to include the one to Lemon Enterprises, Inc.

The Plaintiffs stated that, when negotiating their new agreement, they were concerned with Hufford’s health because he looked sick to them. They asked who would pay the notes if Hufford died or became disabled. Hufford told them that they could contact his wife Ada for payment, as she was vice-president of Hufford Insurance and Investment Agency, Inc. Sheree Lemon then typed a document, which she says was dictated by Hufford, that was signed by Thomas M. Hufford, David L. Lemon, and Sheree H. Lemon and dated September 14, 2005, the same date as the new notes. At a later date, the document was also signed by Ada D. Hufford at the direction of her husband. Copies of the replacement notes were attached as exhibits. The parties agree that this document and the attached copies of the replacement notes constitute all of the terms of their agreement. Plaintiffs claim in their pleadings that this document was a contract that also bound Thomas M. Hufford and Ada D. Hufford, personally, to repay the two replacement notes. Defendant argues that the document was a contract that evidenced the agreement of the parties and explained the reason for the replacement notes. The contract did in fact explain that the new notes from Hufford Insurance and Investment Agency, Inc., Thomas M. Hufford, President, were in Ml payment of “any previous notes issued to David L. and Sheree H. Lemon. In case of disability or death, Ada D. Hufford, (address and telephone number omitted) should be contacted for payment.”

Hufford Insurance and Investment Agency, Inc., did not pay the principal or interest on either of the two notes when they came due on [445]*445April 30, 2007. To date, no payments have been made. Plaintiffs filed suit on these obligations. In their amended complaint they alleged that all of the Defendant’s breached an express contract. They claimed in the alternative that, if no such express contract existed as to the non-corporate defendants, then Thomas M. Hufford and his wife, Ada D. Hufford, were unjustly enriched at the Plaintiff’s expense. Using that theory, Plaintiffs asked that Thomas M. Hufford and Ada D. Hufford be found jointly and severally liable to them and that they be required to repay all of the money that was originally loaned as evidenced by the written notes, together with the bargained for interest.

Thomas Hufford testified that he put the borrowed money into the Hufford Insurance and Investment, Inc., account along with the corporate earnings. He said that he used money from the corporate checking account to pay corporate business expenses and to pay his salary. His salary went into the household checking account that was used by him and his wife, Ada Hufford. Neither Thomas Hufford nor Ada Hufford nor Sheree Lemon nor David Lemon had any idea what, if any, portion of the money originally borrowed went into the Hufford household account. Mrs. Hufford was vice-president of the corporation but had nothing to do with the business, had never written a business check, and did not know anything about her husband’s business. She testified that all financial matters were left to her husband.

Ada Hufford said she was not aware of the original loans and only became aware of the new loans to the corporation when she was asked to sign the document evidencing her intent to pay the notes from corporate funds if her husband died or became disabled. She was not aware of the preexisting debts owed by her husband to the Lemons. Sheree Lemon said that neither she nor her husband ever discussed the loans with Ada Hufford. Mrs. Lemon testified that the only reason they had Ada Hufford sign the document was that they wanted her to know that if Thomas Hufford died, Hufford Insurance and Investment Agency, Inc., owed the money to the Lemons. Mr. Lemon testified that the only reason they had Ada Hufford sign the document was so that they had a “go to,” to access Hufford Insurance and Investment Agency, Inc., funds, if and when Thomas Hufford died or became disabled. Mrs. Lemon testified that she felt that some of the loaned money could have been used by Ada Hufford or for her benefit but that she had no evidence of that fact, nor did she know how much of the money, if any, was actually used for her benefit. David Lemon testified that although he alleged that some of the money that had been loaned was used for Ada Hufford’s benefit, he said he had no evidence to support that.

David Lemons testified that he had loaned the money to Thomas Hufford. He never considered that he was loaning money to the corporation, even though the new replacement notes were signed only by Thomas Hufford in his representative capacity as president of Hufford Insurance and [446]*446Investment Agency, Inc., and not by him individually. Thomas Hufford told the Lemons that he would put the borrowed money with other funds to make investments but steadfastly refused to tell them what the investments were. This went on for more than twenty years.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
84 Va. Cir. 443, 2012 WL 7960050, 2012 Va. Cir. LEXIS 128, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lemon-v-hufford-vaccroanokecty-2012.