Paul Seaton v. Richard Rowe

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedAugust 29, 2001
DocketE2000-02304-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Paul Seaton v. Richard Rowe (Paul Seaton v. Richard Rowe) 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
Paul Seaton v. Richard Rowe, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT KNOXVILLE July 9, 2001 Session

PAUL RAY SEATON, ET AL. v. RICHARD ROWE, ET AL.

Appeal from the Chancery Court for Monroe County No. 12,385 John B. Hagler, Jr., Judge

FILED AUGUST 29, 2001

No. E2000-02304-COA-R3-CV

This is an action for specific performance of an option agreement for the sale of some farmland acreage, from which a 60-acre tract was excepted. The trial court dismissed the action, holding that the option agreement did not satisfy the statute of frauds because the description of the excepted property was inadequate and that the deficiency could not be remedied by parol evidence. Thereafter, the plaintiffs filed a motion to “reopen the proof” to introduce evidence to support reformation of the description of the excepted property. The motion was denied. The plaintiffs appeal, arguing that the trial court erred in (1) finding that the option agreement did not satisfy the statute of frauds; (2) refusing to consider parol evidence of the location of the excepted property; and (3) refusing to “reopen the proof” on the issue of reformation. The defendants argue that the appeal is frivolous. We find that the option agreement is sufficiently definite to satisfy the statute of frauds and that parol evidence should have been admitted to locate the excepted property. We therefore vacate the judgment of the trial court and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

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

CHARLES D. SUSANO, JR., J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which HERSCHEL P. FRANKS and D. MICHAEL SWINEY, JJ., joined.

William T. Alt, Chattanooga, Tennessee, for the appellants, Paul Ray Seaton and John Nolan Seaton.

John W. Cleveland, Sweetwater, Tennessee, for the appellees, Richard Rowe, Individually and as Personal Representative of the Estate of Zola G. Howell, Faye Howell Jones, David Howell, Fredrick Howell, Frankie Howell, Steven Howell, Roger Howell, Debbie Howell, James D. Parks, and Brian Jones.

OPINION I. Facts

On March 8, 1988, the plaintiffs, Paul Ray Seaton and John Nolan Seaton, entered into a ten- year option contract with Carl R. Howell and his wife, Zola G. Howell (collectively “the optionors”), for the purchase of the Howells’ farm. The plaintiffs exercised their option on January 13, 1998, following the death of both optionors.1 The personal representative and heirs of Ms. Howell’s estate (collectively “the defendants”) refused to sell the property to the plaintiffs, and this lawsuit ensued. In their answer, the defendants allege that the option is unenforceable because it was unfairly or fraudulently procured.

The option agreement describes the Howells’ farm as two tracts, one consisting of 318 acres and another consisting of 263.5 acres, located in the First Civil District of Monroe County. The metes and bounds of these two tracts are accurately set forth in the option agreement and are not disputed. The option agreement provides, however, for two exceptions2 to these tracts. The exception pertinent to our discussion provides as follows:

ALSO EXCEPTED from the above described property that portion of property leased by Carl R. Howell and wife, Zola G. Howell to Diversified Systems, Inc., a Tennessee corporation, which Lease Agreement was entered into on July 11, 1985, and which has not been recorded as of the date of execution of this agreement, a copy of which is attached hereto as an exhibit, and it further being understood by and between the parties hereto that said Lease Agreement includes approximately sixty (60) acres, more or less, all in accordance with the terms thereof.

The plaintiffs and Mr. Howell were shareholders of Diversified Systems, Inc., a corporation engaged in the business of solid waste disposal. The lease provides that the property was to be used as a landfill. Although Diversified Systems paid rent under the lease until the lease was discontinued in 1990, a landfill was never operated on the property.

The referenced lease is attached to the option agreement and is signed by the Howells as lessors and by the plaintiff Paul Ray Seaton as the president of Diversified Systems. The lease describes the leased property as follows:

LYING AND BEING in the First Civil District of Monroe County, Tennessee, and being more particularly described as follows:

1 Mr. Howell died in March, 1996; Ms. Howell died later, in October, 1997.

2 One of these exceptions was for a portion of the farm previously conveyed by the Howells to Red Ridge Company. This exception is not at issue in the instant case.

-2- BEGINNING at a stake at the southeast corner of the property herein conveyed with property of Frankie Howell, other lands of the grantors herein; thence westwardly with the line of other lands of the grantors herein, 2,664 feet to a stake at the southwest corner of the property herein conveyed with Fridley and other lands of the grantors herein; thence northwardly with Fridley, 988 feet to a stake at the northwest corner of the property herein conveyed with Fridley and Whited; thence eastwardly with Whited, 2,664 feet to a stake at the northeast corner of the property herein conveyed with Whited and Frankie Howell; thence southwardly with Frankie Howell, 988 feet to the point of beginning, containing approximately 60 acres, more or less.

It appears that shortly before trial, the parties learned that the property description in the lease agreement exhibited to the option agreement is erroneous. The problem, as outlined by the trial court in its memorandum opinion, is as follows:

The description in the lease...does not work and cannot be fixed so that the leased premises can be located. In short, it describes nothing; it does not close except as a rectangle containing sixty acres without a point of reference except the general grant. If one uses the distances and directions to describe a rectangular tract from the beginning point, it describes a tract of approximately sixty acres running east- west. Plaintiffs assert that the actual leased sixty acres ran north- south and are in another part of the farm.

As illustrated by an exhibit in the record, the metes and bounds description does not touch the Fridley property, contrary to the assertion in the description that the subject rectangle shares a common corner to Fridley’s property.

At the trial, the defendants raised – for the first time – the defense of the statute of frauds, and they argued that parol evidence was inadmissible to locate the property. The plaintiffs maintained, on the other hand, that the leased property could properly be located by parol evidence. Recognizing that the parties had just recently discovered the discrepancy and had not had time to brief the legal issues involved, the trial court allowed the plaintiffs to introduce extrinsic evidence as to the location of the leased property and reserved ruling on the issue of the statute of frauds.

Following the trial, the court below entered a memorandum opinion3, finding that the option was “neither clear nor definite, nor complete,” in that the “failure to describe in writing the exception to a grant is necessarily a failure to describe clearly and definitely the grant itself.” The trial court found that the description contained in the lease “does not work except as a rectangle of precise

3 In its memorandum opinion, the trial court rejected the defendants’ argument that the option agreement was fraudulently pr ocured. T hat ruling is not a su bject of this ap peal.

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Bluebook (online)
Paul Seaton v. Richard Rowe, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/paul-seaton-v-richard-rowe-tennctapp-2001.