Nathaniel Hicks v. Thomas Chears

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJuly 29, 2021
DocketM2019-01428-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Nathaniel Hicks v. Thomas Chears (Nathaniel Hicks v. Thomas Chears) 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
Nathaniel Hicks v. Thomas Chears, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

07/29/2021 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE November 9, 2020 Session

NATHANIEL HICKS ET AL. v. THOMAS CHEARS ET AL.

Appeal from the Circuit Court for Davidson County No. 17C1453 Amanda Jane McClendon, Judge ___________________________________

No. M2019-01428-COA-R3-CV ___________________________________

Property owners sued lessees for possession and back rent. Lessees counterclaimed, alleging anticipatory breach, fraud, unjust enrichment, promissory estoppel, and breach of the duty of good faith and fair dealing in conjunction with a purchase option. Property owners moved for summary judgment on their claim for possession, arguing that lessees never exercised their option to purchase. In response, lessees asserted anticipatory breach. The trial court granted partial summary judgment to property owners. After a bench trial, the court dismissed the remaining counterclaims. On appeal, lessees challenge both decisions. Discerning no reversible error, we affirm.

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

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

Nancy K. Corley and James W. Edwards, Hendersonville, Tennessee, for the appellants, Thomas Chears and Geneva Chears.

James B. Johnson, Nashville, Tennessee, for the appellees, Nathaniel Hicks and Lynette Hicks. OPINION

I.

A.

Thomas and Geneva Chears wanted to buy a house. Nathaniel Hicks had a house on Curdwood Boulevard he was willing to sell. After viewing the property, the Chearses expressed interest in buying, but they lacked both the funds and sufficient credit. So Mr. Hicks suggested a lease with a purchase option.

In October 2007, Mr. Chears gave Mr. Hicks $20,000 in cash as a down payment to purchase the Curdwood property. The receipt, signed by both men, contained the words “depending on paperwork” and “contingent on both parties agreeing.” The Chearses met with both Mr. Hicks and his wife, Lynette Hicks, several times before signing a written agreement that specified the purchase terms.

At their fourth meeting, Mr. Hicks gave the Chearses a copy of a form agreement he had obtained at Office Depot. The form was captioned “Lease with Purchase Option.” It contained a series of pre-printed terms including a purchase option. The Chearses took the lease form with them at the conclusion of the meeting.

The Chearses and Mr. Hicks later signed two contracts. In one, Mr. Hicks agreed to sell the Curdwood property to the Chearses for $190,000 “as a lease purchase with option to buy.” The second contract was a lease with purchase option. Although Mrs. Hicks had an ownership interest in the Curdwood property, she was not a party to either contract. She was present, however, when the contracts were signed and filled in the blanks in the lease form.

The signed lease had a stated term of two years—November 1, 2007, to October 31, 2009—with “the option to extend at lessor discretion.” The Chearses agreed to pay $1,600 per month “as rent . . . of which $1,600 shall be applied to [the] downpayment to purchase the premises.” The Chearses were responsible for “all maintenance, repairs, and upkeep” on the leased premises. The lease also granted the Chearses the following purchase option:

36. Purchase Option. It is agreed that L e shall have Oe option to purchase real estate known as: 106 nt :/141-;- 40 , iid9 MISfriri L //e...!/7714272/4, for the purchase price offi 1-2ard,--.ed You.s/vollars($ /90,006,64")with a down payment of 2:3 Low-7 haz-dr-vd Dotrars($ 140').,616 )payable upon exercise of said purchase option, and with a closing date no later than. 36 days thereafter. This purchase option must be exer'cised in writing no later than ..5e/0Vetnhte-- / ,20 6 q , but shall not be effective should the Lessee be in default under any terms of this lease or upon any termination of this lease. 2 The Chearses made monthly payments during the lease term, but they never exercised the purchase option. At the conclusion of the lease term, they continued to live on the property and make monthly payments to Mr. Hicks. According to the lease, any holdover by the lessee created “a new month-to-month tenancy” subject to “all the terms and conditions” in the lease.

Two years later, the Hickses and the Chearses met and approved another agreement. Instead of starting anew, they made a copy of the previously signed lease and altered the dates. The new lease term began on November 1, 2011, and ended on October 31, 2013. The deadline for exercising the purchase option was also changed to September 1, 2013. No other alterations were made. No one re-signed the modified agreement. Neither did anyone object.

Once again, the Chearses failed to exercise the purchase option by the deadline. Rather, they continued to make monthly payments both during and after the term specified in the second lease.

Fourteen months after the second lease term expired, the parties met and approved a third lease. Following the same procedure as before, they made a copy of the previous lease and changed the dates. The lease term became January 1, 2015, to December 31, 2019. And the deadline for exercising the purchase option became June 30, 2019. This third, and final, lease also contained an additional provision requiring the Chearses to pay both taxes and insurance on the property. Mr. Chears signed the third lease on January 8, 2015. His wife initialed it. As with the previous leases, the Chearses made monthly payments to Mr. Hicks, but they did not exercise the purchase option.

Mr. Chears began asking Mr. Hicks for a “payoff balance” in 2016. According to the Chearses, Mr. Hicks never gave them a number. More ominously, the Chearses discovered that the Hickses were refinancing the existing mortgage. The refinance increased the debt on the property to $218,500.

In February 2017, the Chearses suspended their monthly payments. Mr. Hicks declared a default and terminated the lease.

B.

The Hickses filed a detainer warrant against the Chearses, seeking both possession and unpaid rent. The Hickses won the first round, and the Chearses appealed for a de novo hearing in circuit court. In a countercomplaint, the Chearses sought specific performance or damages under a variety of theories, such as anticipatory breach, fraud, and unjust enrichment.

3 The Hickses moved for summary judgment as to their right to possession of the Curdwood property. According to the Hickses, the Chearses never exercised the purchase option before the lease terminated. In response, the Chearses argued that their default should be excused because Mr. Hicks had repudiated the purchase option.

The trial court granted partial summary judgment to the Hickses. The court ruled that the parties had entered into three separate lease agreements, each containing a purchase option. And the Chearses never exercised the purchase option as required in the written agreements. The court also found that Mr. Hicks’s conduct did not rise to the level of anticipatory breach.

After the grant of summary judgment, the focus of the litigation shifted to the remaining counterclaims.1 The Chearses sought damages for fraud, unjust enrichment, promissory estoppel, and breach of the duty of good faith and fair dealing.

At trial, the Chearses claimed that they intended to purchase, not rent, the Curdwood property. They made a $20,000 down payment. And Mr. Hicks agreed to sell them the Curdwood property for $190,000, payable over time. In Mr. Chears’s words, the written agreements were “just paperwork.” He never fully read any of them or consulted an attorney. Still, he admitted that he probably would have understood the written terms had he bothered to read them.

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Nathaniel Hicks v. Thomas Chears, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nathaniel-hicks-v-thomas-chears-tennctapp-2021.