Mohammad Naser Chorazghiazad v. Mohammad Chorazghiazad

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMay 3, 2019
DocketM2018-01579-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Mohammad Naser Chorazghiazad v. Mohammad Chorazghiazad (Mohammad Naser Chorazghiazad v. Mohammad Chorazghiazad) 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
Mohammad Naser Chorazghiazad v. Mohammad Chorazghiazad, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

05/03/2019 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE April 2, 2019 Session

MOHAMMAD NASER CHORAZGHIAZAD v. MOHAMMAD CHORAZGHIAZAD

Appeal from the Chancery Court for Wilson County No. 2016CV276 Charles K. Smith, Chancellor

No. M2018-01579-COA-R3-CV

This appeal concerns whether a quitclaim deed was forged. Mohammad Naser Chorazghiazad (“Plaintiff”) sued Mohammad Chorazghiazad (“Defendant”) in the Chancery Court for Wilson County (“the Trial Court”) alleging that Defendant took certain of Plaintiff’s properties by means of a forged deed (“the Quitclaim Deed”). The Trial Court found by clear and convincing evidence that Defendant had indeed forged the Quitclaim Deed to give himself three additional properties that Plaintiff never agreed to transfer. Defendant appeals to this Court, arguing among other things that the evidence did not rise to the level of clear and convincing necessary to prove forgery. Given the testimony and evidence including the attendant circumstances surrounding the drafting and signing of the Quitclaim Deed, as well as the Trial Court’s credibility determinations, we find, as did the Trial Court, that Plaintiff met his burden of proving forgery by clear and convincing evidence. We affirm the judgment of the Trial Court.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Chancery Court Affirmed; Case Remanded

D. MICHAEL SWINEY, C.J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which FRANK G. CLEMENT, JR., P.J., M.S., and W. NEAL MCBRAYER, J., joined.

Angello L. Huong, Lebanon, Tennessee, for the appellant, Mohammad Chorazghiazad.

Erin Alexander White and Dan R. Alexander, Nashville, Tennessee, for the appellee, Mohammad Naser Chorazghiazad. OPINION

Background

The parties, who are relatives, are embroiled in litigation over the transfer—or non-transfer—of certain properties. In 1993, Defendant bought the three disputed properties at auction. Defendant at that time put these properties in Plaintiff’s name. Plaintiff purportedly later paid Defendant $46,000 for the properties and paid property taxes on them for years, as well.

Years later, Defendant wanted the three properties. In March 2016, Defendant drafted the Quitclaim Deed. The Quitclaim Deed had no page numbers and the signature page had no reference to any properties being conveyed. The property descriptions were contained in the body of the deed. According to Defendant, Plaintiff agreed to transfer seven properties to him, including the three disputed properties. Plaintiff’s position is that only four properties were agreed upon and that Defendant subsequently altered the Quitclaim Deed to include the three disputed properties.

In July 2016, Plaintiff sued Defendant to void transfer of the three properties. Plaintiff alleged forgery, fraud, misrepresentation, and breach of contract among other claims. This case was tried in May 2018.

At trial, Plaintiff testified to the transaction at issue:

Q. So, let’s flash forward to March 2016. A. Yes. Q. Did you get a call from the Defendant? A. Yes. Q. Tell me about that. A. He called me to meet me in UPS Office on Thompson Lane, and I did. Q. Did he tell you why he wanted to meet you? A. He wanted to have those four properties back under his own name, Defendant name. Q. So, what happened? Did you go to the - A. Yes, I did. I met him over there and - Q. Tell me about the Quitclaim Deed that the Defendant presented to you. A. Yeah, he gave me this Quitclaim Deed for property, Tract One, Two, Three, Four was in that deed. I read and everything was normal and I signed the Quitclaim Deed. Q. Were the three properties in dispute in this case in the Quitclaim Deed that you signed in March of 2016? -2- A. No, it wasn’t. Q. Did the Defendant pay any consideration, any money of any kind, for that Quitclaim Deed that you signed? A. No. Q. So, you signed this Quitclaim Deed conveying Tracts One, Two, Three and Four. A. Yes. Q. Was there a Notary there? A. Yes. Q. Did the Notary acknowledge your signature? A. Yes. Q. What happened next? A. He say goodbye and he left. Q. Who had the Quitclaim Deed? A. He did. Q. Who was supposed to record it? A. Defendant. Q. Did you get a copy? A. No, he didn’t give me a copy. Q. Is that your signature on the back of that Quitclaim Deed? A. Yes, it is. Q. The Quitclaim Deed in dispute, is it your signature on that last page of the Quitclaim Deed in dispute? A. Yes, it is. Q. But you did not sign a Quitclaim Deed for the three properties in dispute? A. No, I did not. Q. Did the Defendant tell you who typed up that Quitclaim Deed that’s in dispute? A. He said he did his self. Q. I believe you have a copy of the Quitclaim Deed that’s at issue, dated March 23; could you turn to that? A. Yes. Q. This Quitclaim Deed that’s at issue, are there any page numbers on this Quitclaim Deed? A. No. Q. Other than the recording? A. No, there is no page number. Q. Turn to the last page that has your signature. A. Okay. Q. Is there any reference to what properties are conveyed? -3- A. No. Q. Is there any reference to how many pages the Quitclaim Deed is comprised of? A. No. Q. This Quitclaim Deed that’s in dispute, turn to that first page of that Quitclaim Deed at issue. Does it say that anything was paid in consideration? A. The first line it says sum of a dollar, yes, cash. Q. But were you paid a dollar? A. No.

Plaintiff also testified that Defendant had threatened and cursed him at a deposition. Proceeding with our review of the pertinent testimony, Plaintiff’s wife Maryam Sangchap took the stand and testified to a contentious telephone conversation she had with Defendant in April following execution of the Quitclaim Deed:

THE WITNESS: When he calling me he just started to talk like 10, 15 minutes, talking behind my husband and my husband’s family, and as he talked more his voice just got little more angry. First he was calm but after that his voice just got little angry and that time he said, “I’m angry at Naser.” And I said, “Why? He didn’t do anything wrong.” And he said, “No, I wanted three lands and he doesn’t want to sell it to me.” And I said, “But that was agreement between you and Naser to sell just one land.” At that time he said, “Tell Naser I took three lands.”

Defendant, in his first of two appearances testifying at trial, denied threatening anyone. Defendant testified, in part:

Q. And is it also your testimony that you’ve never - have you ever, and again, I think you may have already testified to this, but have you ever been in trouble with the IRS for not paying tax? A. No.

***

Q. Were you in the courtroom when the Plaintiff testified that you threatened him? A. I didn’t threaten him, no. Q. So, it’s your testimony that you did not say, you know, “F . . . you, I’m going to take care of you.” A. No, that’s ridiculous. I’m 59 years old; I don’t talk like this. -4- Q. Have you ever threatened anyone that you had business transactions with, whether it was property or any other kind of transactions - A. Don’t remember. Q. - have you made threats to other people who you’ve had business transactions with? A. Can you specify who? Q. Anyone. A. No.

Following Defendant’s denials of threats and other misbehavior, Plaintiff called Shawn Touloeisani (“Touloeisani”), an acquaintance of Defendant’s, to testify to Defendant’s untruthful character:

Q. Could you please state your name for the record? A. Shawn Touloeisani. Q. And do you know the Defendant and the Plaintiff? A. Yes. Q. Are you related to either party? A. No. Q. How long have you known the Defendant? A. I would say 36, 37, 38 years old. Q. And do you have an opinion as to the Defendant’s character for truthfulness and veracity? MR. HUONG: Objection. He can state specific acts but opinion as to character is too general. MS. WHITE: 608(a), I believe -- THE COURT: Let me look at 608(a). MS.

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Mohammad Naser Chorazghiazad v. Mohammad Chorazghiazad, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mohammad-naser-chorazghiazad-v-mohammad-chorazghiazad-tennctapp-2019.