Nashville Ford Tractor v. Great American Insurance Company

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedDecember 29, 2004
DocketM2003-00575-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Nashville Ford Tractor v. Great American Insurance Company (Nashville Ford Tractor v. Great American Insurance Company) 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
Nashville Ford Tractor v. Great American Insurance Company, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE April 16, 2004 Session

NASHVILLE FORD TRACTOR, INC. v. GREAT AMERICAN INSURANCE COMPANY

Appeal from the Circuit Court for Sumner County No. 17235-C C.L. Rogers, Judge

No. M2003-00575-COA-R3-CV - Filed December 29, 2005

This appeal involves a dispute over the payment for leased construction equipment used on two sewer projects for the City of Gallatin. The general contractor was required to take over and complete the work after a subcontractor and sub-subcontractor defaulted. Thereafter, the company that had leased three pieces of construction equipment to the subcontractor and sub-subcontractor submitted claims for payment to the general contractor and the contractor’s bonding company. The general contractor declined to pay for the equipment and filed suit for breach of contract against the subcontractor in the Circuit Court for Sumner County. The contractor also sought a declaratory judgment regarding its rights, as well as those of its bonding company, the subcontractor, and the City, under the construction contract, the subcontracts, and the payment bond. Following a two-day bench trial, the trial court awarded the equipment leasing company a $38,399 judgment against the bonding company and the sub-subcontractor and a $29,232 judgment against the subcontractor. The court also denied the equipment leasing company’s request for pre-judgment interest because it had intentionally falsified documents during the collection process. The bonding company appealed. We have determined that the trial court erred by failing to dismiss all of the equipment leasing company’s claims against the payment bond after expressly finding that the leasing company had committed fraud during the claims process. Accordingly, we reverse the judgment against the contractor’s surety.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Circuit Court Affirmed in Part and Reversed in Part

WILLIAM C. KOCH , JR., P.J., M.S., delivered the opinion of the court, in which WILLIAM B. CAIN and FRANK G. CLEMENT , JR., JJ., joined.

Arthur E. McClellan and Jade A. Rogers, Gallatin, Tennessee, for the appellant, Great American Insurance Co.

John R. Reynolds, Nashville, Tennessee, for the appellee, Nashville Ford Tractor, Inc. OPINION

I.

Ralph M. Webster has been in the construction industry in Gallatin and Sumner County since 1 1954. Beginning in 1994, Mr. Webster subcontracted the underground utility work on his construction projects to Murrell Construction.2 On May 8, 1996, the City of Gallatin awarded Mr. Webster a $532,853 contract to install approximately 14,000 linear feet of sewer lines and appurtenant structures in the area of Lock Four Road. Mr. Webster’s bid for the project was based on cost estimates provided by Murrell Construction, and Mr. Webster entered into a $433,490 subcontract with Murrell Construction to perform all the work required by the prime contract. The difference between the amount of the prime contract and the subcontract represented the value added by Mr. Webster in providing oversight, administrative support, and the performance and payment bonds required by statute and the prime contract.3 The deadline for completion of the Lock Four Road project was November 8, 1996.

Work began in earnest at the Lock Four Road site on June 1, 1996. On that day, Mr. Webster, at Murrell Construction’s request, transported to the construction site a Fiat-Allis Hitachi FX210 excavator (Hitachi excavator) that Murrell Construction had been leasing from Nashville Ford Tractor, Inc. (Nashville Ford Tractor) for approximately one year.4 Murrell Construction used the Hitachi excavator to dig the trenches for the installation of sewer lines and other underground

1 Mr. W ebster does business under the name “W ebster Excavating Co.”

2 Randy Murrell and his father, Jimmy Murrell, incorporated “Murrell Construction, Inc.” as a for-profit Chapter S Corporation on July 19, 1994. Cf. Tenn. Code Ann. § 48-14-101(a)(1) (2002) (“A corporate name . . . [m]ust contain the word ‘corporation,’ ‘incorporated,’ ‘company,’ or the abbreviation ‘corp.,’ ‘inc.,’ ‘co.,’ or words or abbreviations of like import in another language . . . .”). Randy Murrell was president of the corporation, and Jimmy Murrell was vice president. Jimmy Murrell prepared the bids and estimates on the projects while Randy Murrell oversaw and participated in the actual construction. There were never any board of directors meetings, shareholder meetings, or company meetings, and on April 20, 1998, the Tennessee Secretary of State administratively dissolved Murrell Construction, Inc. for failure to file the required corporation annual report. During the time it was in existence, Murrell Construction, Inc. was referred to by the Murrells and their customers alike as “M urrell Construction, Inc.,” “M urrell Construction Co.,” and “Murrell Construction Co., Inc.”

3 Tenn. Code Ann. § 12-4-201(a) (Supp. 2005) provides as follows: No contract shall be let for any public work in this state, by any city, . . . until the contractor shall have first executed a good and solvent bond to the effect that the contractor will pay for all the labor and materials used by the contractor, or any immediate or remote subcontractor under the contractor, in such contract . . . .

4 Randy Murrell and Nashville Ford Tractor’s representative executed the first lease agreement for the Hitachi excavator on June 27, 1995. The term of the lease agreement was four weeks, and the agreement expressly provided that any amendment to the lease must be in writing and signed by both parties. Thus, under the plain language of the lease agreement, Murrell Construction and Nashville Ford Tractor were required to sign a new lease agreement each month to continue the rental of the Hitachi excavator. However, M urrell Construction and Nashville Ford Tractor did not follow this practice. Instead, at the end of each month, Nashville Ford Tractor’s representative would simply prepare and sign a new lease agreement for the following month and send a carbon copy to Murrell Construction. Thus, only the first lease agreement contains the signatures of both parties. The same procedure was followed with all of the lease agreements at issue in this case.

-2- structures on its subcontracts with Mr. Webster. According to Randy Murrell, the Hitachi excavator was at the Lock Four Road site throughout June and July 1996.

On July 8, 1996, the City of Gallatin awarded Mr. Webster a second contract to install approximately 4,000 linear feet of sewer lines and appurtenant structures at the Gallatin Industrial Center. Mr. Webster subcontracted all of the work under the prime contract to Murrell Construction. The City agreed to pay Mr. Webster $256,999 for the work, and Mr. Webster agreed to pay Murrell Construction $218,622. Thus, Mr. Webster’s profit on the Gallatin Industrial Center project would have been $38,377 minus expenses. The deadline for completion of the Gallatin Industrial Center project was January 3, 1997.

Murrell Construction subcontracted with Randy Murrell’s brother, Ted Murrell, to assist on the Lock Four Road project.5 On July 9, 1996, Ted Murrell leased a Samsung SE210 excavator (Samsung excavator) from Nashville Ford Tractor, and on August 20, 1996, he leased a Fiat-Allis FR140 rubber wheel loader (Fiat-Allis wheel loader) for earth moving. With two excavators on the Lock Four Road site, Randy Murrell could continue work in one direction with his crew while Ted Murrell set off in the opposite direction with a second crew. However, in mid-August 1996, Murrell Construction had Mr.

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