Natalie Hagan v. Michael Phipps

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedSeptember 28, 2010
DocketM2010-00002-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Natalie Hagan v. Michael Phipps (Natalie Hagan v. Michael Phipps) 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
Natalie Hagan v. Michael Phipps, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE July 13, 2010 Session

NATALIE HAGAN v. MICHAEL PHIPPS ET AL.

Appeal from the Circuit Court for Wilson County No. 2008-CV-695 Clara W. Byrd, Judge

No. M2010-00002-COA-R3-CV - Filed September 28, 2010

This appeal involves claims by a home purchaser against a licensed contractor and a business associate of the unlicensed builder who built the home in question and sold it to the plaintiff. The trial court granted the contractor defendant’s motion for summary judgment on all claims against him based upon its conclusions that the unlicensed builder was not the agent of the licensed contractor and that there was no predicate tort for civil conspiracy because the builder intended to use the house for his personal residence. Because we find that there are issues of material fact that must be resolved, we reverse the trial court’s grant of summary judgment.

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

A NDY D. B ENNETT, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which P ATRICIA J. C OTTRELL, P.J., M.S., and F RANK G. C LEMENT, J R., J., joined.

Stephen Andrew Lund, Nashville, Tennessee, for the appellant, Natalie Hagan.

Jennifer Garman Rowlett and Marc Bradley Gilmore, Nashville, Tennessee, for the appellee, Alfred L. Hodges.

OPINION

F ACTUAL AND P ROCEDURAL B ACKGROUND

Michael Phipps owned lot 17 in the Quad Oak Valley subdivision in Wilson County, Tennessee, and built a house on the lot in 2006. Mr. Phipps did not have a contractor’s license. Natalie Hagan purchased the house located on lot 17 from Mr. Phipps in April 2007. After she moved into her new house, Ms. Hagan allegedly discovered numerous construction defects. Ms. Hagan filed this lawsuit in August 2008 against Mr. Phipps and Alfred Hodges, a licensed contractor and business associate of Mr. Phipps and whose name appears on the building permit for the house on lot 17.

In her complaint, Ms. Hagan asserted causes of action for breach of warranty, negligence, violations of the Tennessee Consumer Protection Act (“TCPA”), and civil conspiracy.1 With respect to Mr. Hodges, the only defendant involved in this appeal, Ms. Hagan advanced two main theories of liability: (1) she alleged that Mr. Hodges was liable under respondeat superior principles for the actions of Mr. Phipps, namely for breach of warranty, negligence, and violation of the TCPA; and (2) she alleged that Mr. Hodges (and Mr. Phipps) were liable for civil conspiracy to violate the Tennessee Contractors Licensing Act and the TCPA.

Ms. Hagan filed a motion for partial summary judgment on her claim against Mr. Phipps under the TCPA and on the issue of Mr. Hodges’s liability under agency principles for Mr. Phipps’s conduct. In support of her motion, Ms. Hagan submitted a statement of undisputed material facts; portions of the depositions of Mr. Phipps and Mr. Hodges; and the affidavit of Pam Askew, an employee at the Wilson County Building Inspector’s office. It is undisputed that Mr. Phipps went to the building inspector’s office and applied for a building permit for lot 17. The permit lists Alfred Hodges as the applicant and license holder; Mr. Phipps signed the application. In her affidavit, Ms. Askew stated:

On several prior occasions, Mr. Phipps applied for and received building permits on behalf of Mr. Hodges. Both Mr. Phipps and Mr. Hodges represented themselves to me as business partners, and when Mr. Phipps applied for the Permit [for lot 17], my understanding was that he was seeking the Permit as the business partner of Mr. Hodges, just as he had for each permit he had previously pulled.

On March 6, 2006, I sent Mr. Hodges a letter informing him that the affidavit Mr. Phipps submitted for the Permit was unacceptable, as it was a photocopy of a previous affidavit. I also requested that he send a new affidavit in conjunction with the Permit certifying his exemption from worker’s compensation insurance. I later received a newly executed Worker’s Compensation Affidavit of Exemption (“Affidavit”) from Mr. Hodges. . . .

1 Mr. Phipps filed a third-party complaint against a company he hired to perform repairs; the third- party claim is not at issue on appeal.

-2- The Affidavit states that it is for permit #29843 which is Lot 17 of the [Quad Oak] Valley subdivision. Mr. Hodges’ signature is fixed on the Affidavit, and the affidavit is notarized.

Mr. Hodges responded to Ms. Hagan’s statement of undisputed material facts. Mr. Hodges’s filing includes the following pertinent statements and responses:

Mr. Phipps did not inform the Building Inspector’s office that the building permit for the Residence was to be in Mr. Phipps’ name. Response: This characterization is disputed as phrased. It is admitted that Mr. Phipps stated in his deposition that he did not specify the name for the building permit, but he did state in his deposition that he told the office that he was requesting the permit in order to build his personal residence.

Mr. Hodges performed the grading work at the Residence. Response: This characterization is disputed as phrased. It is admitted that Mr. Hodges stated in his deposition that he used his tractor to level dirt in the backyard of the residence.

Mr. Hodges checked the work being done at the Residence at least once a week to ensure it was being done properly. Response: This characterization is disputed as phrased. Mr. Hodges stated in his deposition that he periodically checked on the progress of construction on lot 17, not out of obligation to do so, but because he was in the neighborhood all of the time and was good friends with Mr. Phipps.

Mr. Phipps decided to sell the residence during the course of its construction. Response: Undisputed for purposes of plaintiff’s motion only.

Mr. Hodges filed a motion for summary judgment and a response in opposition to Ms. Hagan’s motion for partial summary judgment. In support of his motion and his response to Ms. Hagan’s motion, Mr. Hodges submitted portions of his deposition and portions of Mr. Phipps’s deposition.

Mr. Phipps, too, filed a response to Ms. Hagan’s statement of material facts. While admitting that he did not have a contractor’s license, Mr. Phipps stated that this fact was immaterial because he “built the residence purchased by the plaintiff with the intention of living there with [my] family.” Mr. Phipps admitted that he had pulled a building permit for lot 68 in his own name on July 28, 2006, to build a residence and that he had sold that

-3- residence to a third party. He further admitted that he had decided during the construction of the house on lot 17 that he would sell the residence.

Mr. Phipps opposed the summary judgment motion of Ms. Hagan and submitted his own motion for summary judgment on the plaintiff’s claim under the TCPA. Mr. Phipps submitted portions of his own deposition and of the depositions of Ms. Hagan and Mr. Hodges. He also submitted an affidavit from his wife, Susan Phipps, in which she stated:

My husband and I planned on building our dream home on Lot 17 in the Quad Oaks Subdivision in Mt. Juliet. We picked out the plans together. We picked the lot together, and selected Lot 17 because of the open back yard and a gazebo that was part of the common area. We picked out the appliances, tile and carpet together.

My husband began building our home in 2006. In the meantime, I investigated the school system in Wilson County. I have a sixteen year old daughter with ADHD and is in a special MIP fragile program with the Metro Schools.

I learned that Wilson County does not have the educational services or programs that my daughter needed to succeed in high school.

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