Nash Plumbing, Inc. v. Shasco Wholesale Supply, Inc.

CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMay 7, 2001
Docket2002-CA-00678-SCT
StatusPublished

This text of Nash Plumbing, Inc. v. Shasco Wholesale Supply, Inc. (Nash Plumbing, Inc. v. Shasco Wholesale Supply, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nash Plumbing, Inc. v. Shasco Wholesale Supply, Inc., (Mich. 2001).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF MISSISSIPPI

NO. 2002-CA-00678-SCT

NASH PLUMBING, INC. AND MILTON NASH

v.

SHASCO WHOLESALE SUPPLY, INC.

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 5/7/2001 TRIAL JUDGE: HON. HENRY L. LACKEY COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: CHICKASAW COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANTS: ROGER M. TUBBS ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE: REX F. SANDERSON NATURE OF THE CASE: CIVIL - CONTRACT DISPOSITION: AFFIRMED IN PART; REVERSED AND RENDERED IN PART - 06/24/2004 MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED: MANDATE ISSUED:

EN BANC.

COBB, PRESIDING JUSTICE, FOR THE COURT:

¶1. In November, 1999, Shasco Wholesale Supply, Inc. (Shasco) brought suit in the Chickasaw

County Circuit Court, First District, against defendants Milton Nash (Nash), Tommy Turner (Turner), Nash

Plumbing, Inc. (Nash Plumbing), and A.C.T. Services, Inc. (A.C.T.). to recover a debt of $5,630 owed

for plumbing supplies sold by Shasco, invoiced to A.C.T., received by Nash or Nash Plumbing,1 but never

paid for. Milton Nash was president of Nash Plumbing, and Tommy Turner was president of A.C.T.

1 In his written judgment, the circuit court judge found that the goods were delivered to Milton Nash or to a corporation owned or controlled by Milton Nash. ¶2. A bench trial was held on March 20, 2001. A.C.T. was not represented at trial, although Tommy

Turner testified. Milton Nash and Nash Plumbing were represented, but neither put on a defense, nor did

Milton Nash appear during trial to testify. A judgment in the amount of $10,808.45, which included the

$7,010.15 reflected on Shasco’s accounting and $3,798.30 in attorney’s fees, out-of-pocket expenses and

interest, was entered by the circuit court on May 7, 2001, against Milton Nash, Nash Plumbing, Inc., Roto-

Rooter of North Mississippi, Inc., and Nash Services Group, Inc2. No judgment was entered by the circuit

court against A.C.T. or its president, Tommy Turner.

¶3. Although the circuit court judgment did not include an explanation of the legal theories upon which

it based its judgment, the judge stated that he was of the opinion that Nash had “used the corporate shield

to manipulate.” However, due to the contradictions between Turner’s testimony and the documentary

evidence he supplied concerning the relationships between the parties, particularly the corporate entities,

we are unable to affirm the trial court on this basis. Therefore, we hold that Milton Nash, individually, and

Nash Services Group (f/k/a Roto-Rooter of North Mississippi) cannot be held liable, but that based on

equitable estoppel principles, A.C.T. Services is held jointly and severally liable along with Nash Plumbing,

for the judgment in favor of Shasco. We affirm the trial court in all other respects.

FACTS

¶4. These facts are taken from the record and from the uncontested trial testimony of Tommy Turner,

president of A.C.T. Services, Inc. and Kenny Scott, president of Shasco, Inc. Milton Nash was the

2 Neither Roto-Rooter of North Mississippi nor Nash Services Group, Inc. were named in the law suit. Roto-Rooter of North Mississippi changed its name to Nash Services Group, Inc. in May, 1998, per a March 31, 1998, amendment to its articles of incorporation. Tommy Turner is shown in the State's records as president and Milton Nash as vice president of Nash Services Group, Inc.

2 president of at least two corporations, Nash Plumbing, Inc., and Roto-Rooter of North Mississippi, Inc.

According to Turner, these two companies did similar work, but Nash Plumbing performed the larger,

American Institute of Architects (AIA), construction jobs, and Roto-Rooter performed the smaller

residential air conditioning and non-contract jobs. Together, these companies were sometimes referred

to as the Nash Group or simply “Nash.” Turner testified that around September, 1997, Milton Nash

approached him with an offer to purchase A.C.T. Turner testified that this as a good fit because Nash had

no sheet metal or air conditioning capability, so subcontracted out this portion of its construction jobs, and

A.C.T. had a nice sheet metal shop and performed this type of work. Turner further testified that Nash

Plumbing was also in need of a mechanical license, which Turner could supply; and Nash Plumbing was

in a better position to provide the performance bonds for the jobs. In anticipation of a buy-out agreement,

A.C.T. Services, Inc. and Nash Plumbing, Inc. executed a “Management Agreement” 3 in which Milton

Nash was to manage A.C.T. until Turner and Nash could “hammer out” a deal for Nash to acquire A.C.T.

Turner also testified that he (Turner) had been an absentee owner and was not familiar with the daily

operations of A.C.T. The record corroborates that Turner knew very little about the corporate transactions

with which he was involved.

¶5. According to Turner’s testimony, A.C.T. ceased operation as of December 31, 19974, and “Nash”

3 Turner testified that Milton Nash “wrote up” the Management Agreement, which in Paragraph 9 stated: “The parties to this Agreement acknowledge that this Management Agreement is executed in anticipation of the execution of a more detailed acquisition and merger agreement between the parties, the objective of which is to increase the market share of [Nash Plumbing, Inc.] and [ACT Services, Inc.]. The provisions of this Management Agreement shall be interpreted in light of this objective.” 4 Turner testified that the last tax return filed for A.C.T. was at the time of the acquisition agreement in March, 1998.

3 took over all of A.C.T.’s assets and liabilities as of that date. Turner stated that it took until March 12,

1998, to work out the agreement for “Nash” to acquire A.C.T.5 and during this time, A.C.T. was in a

transition period, with employees working one day for A.C.T. and the next day for Nash Plumbing. The

same day that the acquisition agreement was executed, a Consulting Agreement was also executed between

Tommy Turner and the two Nash companies, Nash Plumbing and Roto-rooter of North Mississippi, in

which Turner was to be a paid consultant for the Nash companies.

¶6. Turner further testified that A.C.T. had bid and won several commercial air conditioning jobs, which

Nash Plumbing began managing; that Nash hired supervisors for each job; and with the exception of one

job, Nash Plumbing entirely controlled the jobs. Turner also testified that Milton Nash was managing and

controlling A.C.T. as well as Nash Plumbing and Roto-Rooter (Nash Services Group) and using the assets

and employees of all companies to complete the construction jobs in the names of both Nash Plumbing and

A.C.T.

¶7. When the trial judge questioned Turner about who received payment for the jobs, Turner stated

that Nash received the payments and was in control of all money paid toward the A.C.T. contracts. When

asked how the jobs were handled, Turner testified about one job, the ICC Building in Fulton, which was

an A.C.T. contract, stating “[i]t was 100 percent totally handled by Nash. We never got any checks, never

did any work. I’m sure a lot of these materials went on that job.” Nash did not testify in his own defense,

5 For reasons not explained, the document that Turner offered in support of his testimony that “Nash” took over A.C.T. made no reference to A.C.T. or to Nash Plumbing or Roto-Rooter of North Mississippi, but instead was an agreement between Turner and a “Mississippi corporation” named A.C.T./Roto-Rooter. There is no evidence that A.C.T./Roto-Rooter has ever existed as a Mississippi corporation.

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