Meese & Associates, Inc. v. Eddie Powers and David Hicks, Rebecca Car Kirklin v. Meese Associates, Inc.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMarch 3, 1998
Docket03A01-9705-CH
StatusPublished

This text of Meese & Associates, Inc. v. Eddie Powers and David Hicks, Rebecca Car Kirklin v. Meese Associates, Inc. (Meese & Associates, Inc. v. Eddie Powers and David Hicks, Rebecca Car Kirklin v. Meese Associates, Inc.) 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
Meese & Associates, Inc. v. Eddie Powers and David Hicks, Rebecca Car Kirklin v. Meese Associates, Inc., (Tenn. Ct. App. 1998).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT KNOXVILLE

MEESE & ASSOCIATES, INC., ) FILED ) March 3, 1998 Plaintiff/Appellant, ) Campbell Chancery No. 14,073 ) Cecil Crowson, Jr. VS. ) Appeal No. 03A01-9705-CH-00197 Appellate C ourt Clerk ) EDDIE POWERS and DAVID HICKS, ) ) Defendants/Appellees. ) ) REBECCA CAR KIRKLIN, ) ) Intervening Plaintiff/ ) Appellee, ) vs. ) ) MEESE & ASSOCIATES, INC., ) ) Defendant/Appellant. )

APPEAL FROM THE CHANCERY COURT OF CAMPBELL COUNTY AT JACKSBORO, TENNESSEE THE HONORABLE BILLY JOE WHITE, CHANCELLOR

A. THOMAS MONCERET Knoxville, Tennessee Attorney for Appellant

TERRY M. BASISTA BASISTA, PRYOR & BALLOFF Jacksboro, Tennessee Attorney for Appellees, Eddie Powers and David Hicks and Intervening Appellee, Rebecca Carr Kirklin

REVERSED AND REMANDED

ALAN E. HIGHERS, J.

CONCUR:

W. FRANK CRAWFORD, P.J., W.S.

WILLIAM H. WILLIAMS, Sr. J. Plaintiff, Meese & Associates, Inc. (“plaintiff”), appeals the judgment of the trial court awarding Intervening Plaintiff/Appellee, Rebecca Kirklin (“Kirklin”), the real estate

commission for the sale of Defendants/Appellees’, Eddie Powers (“Powers”) and David

Hicks (“Hicks”) (collectively “defendants”), property by Kirklin. For reasons stated

hereinafter, we reverse the decision of the trial court and remand.

Defendants contracted with Kirklin of PM Realty for the sale of a piece of property

improved with a single-family home in the Fincastle community in Campbell County,

Tennessee. On November 14, 1994, defendants gave Kirklin exclusive authorization to

sell this property. Kirklin’s contract expired by its own terms on August 14, 1995. Kirklin’s

contract, however, contained an extension clause which provided:

If the property is sold or exchanged by Owner, or by Broker or by any other person to any Purchaser to whom the property was shown by Broker or any representative of Broker within sixty (60) days after the expiration of the period of time mentioned above Owner agrees to pay to Broker a cash fee which shall be [six percent] of the purchase price . . .

Thereafter, on August 21, 1995, defendants entered into a sales agency contract

with Meese to sell the same property. Present at the meeting were Meese, defendant

Powers, Patricia Sitton (“Sitton”), and Kenneth Falls. The contract between the defendants

and plaintiff gave plaintiff the exclusive and irrevocable right to sell the property but did not

become effective until August 24, 1995. This delay in time between execution of the

contract and the effective date was to allow plaintiff sufficient time to learn the identities of

potential buyers (also call “hot prospects”) from Kirklin so as to exclude such persons on

the exclusion list within the contract. This contract also provided for compensation to

plaintiff in the event the property was sold by any person other than the plaintiff.

Specifically, the contract provided in pertinent part:

2. COMPENSATION TO AGENT. I hereby agree to compensate Agent, if during the term hereof or any extension thereof, the property is sold by Agent or any other person, or, if a sales agreement is obtained for the property by Agent or any other person with a buyer who is willing and able to purchase the property upon the price and terms herein set forth or any other price and terms [owner] may accept, or, if the property is withdrawn from sale, transferred, conveyed, leased without consent of Agent or made unmarketable by [owner’s] voluntary act.

The contract signed by defendants granting plaintiff the exclusive right to sell their property

2 was a standard form contract used by real estate professionals. The defendants took

adequate time to review the contract.

When defendants signed the contract making plaintiff their exclusive agent

concerning the sale of the property, defendant Powers indicated to Linda Meese (“Meese”),

as an agent for plaintiff, that this property had been previously listed by another broker.

Meese inquired as to the identities of any potential buyers existing under the former

contract with Kirklin. Plaintiff routinely excludes potential buyers who have dealt with

another broker upon learning the identities of those persons. This is accomplished by

allowing space within the contract in which to write a list of potential buyers in order to

exclude the possibility of commission by plaintiff’s agents if the property is sold to any of

the people enumerated on the list. There is some dispute as to whose responsibility it was

to gather the names of the potential buyers to be excluded from the contract between

plaintiff and defendants. Meese contends that defendant Powers told her that he did not

know the names of any potential buyers but would find out the identities of the individuals

and apprise her of them at a later date. Defendant Powers testified that Meese told him

that she would get the list of potential buyers from Kirklin. Kirklin testified twice, however,

that defendant Powers had told her that he would take care of providing Meese with the

lists of potential buyers.

On August 24, 1995, without any entries placed in the exclusion provisions of the

plaintiff’s contract with defendants, defendant Powers told Meese and Sitton to “go ahead

and sell the property.” Upon plaintiff’s request, plaintiff began running television ads and

placing signs upon the property. Thereafter, however, the property was sold by Kirklin on

August 25, 1995. A closing was had and the monies from the real estate commission were

placed in escrow with Peoples National Bank of Lafollette pending the resolution of this

dispute between the brokers.

At trial, the court awarded Kirklin the commission monies in escrow. The trial court

stated:

3 But Meese knew on August 21st that there was an expired contract with a holdover provision and hot prospects. They held up this contract for beginning execution of their contract until August 24th when they testified they received the call from Mr. Powers telling them to go ahead with the advertising. They put it in their computer and put it on the television for advertising. On the 25th, the very next day, a contract of sale was signed by Kirklin with the hot prospect. In my opinion, there is no question but as to the stake that Kirklin is entitled to the real estate fee. She is in no way in violation of any contract or agreement. She had a contract with a holdover provision. They are in all real estate contracts, and they are generally held to be enforceable. All the parties of these contracts knew about the holdover provision, and they all knew about the hot prospect. The only dispute between the parties really that has bothered me is that assuming that Mr. Powers should have contacted the real estate company or provided to them the names before the 25th and didn’t, I look to ascertain damages and would have granted the cost of the television add [sic] and one of the costs of the two multiple listing service expenses and nominal travel expenses. The pleadings would not justify that. Doing that would be going outside the pleadings in my opinion. The Court cannot do it. But I think that’s the equitable solution to this matter; that Mrs. Kirklin was perfectly in her rights to sell this property and collect the fees.

The sole issue on appeal is whether the trial court erred by denying plaintiff’s right

to a real estate sales commission under plaintiff’s exclusive contract with appellee.

The contract between plaintiff and defendants does not describe any agreement to

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