Paul Shearer v. Fred McArthur

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedNovember 5, 2012
DocketM2012-00584-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Paul Shearer v. Fred McArthur (Paul Shearer v. Fred McArthur) 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 Shearer v. Fred McArthur, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE September 21, 2012 Session

PAUL SHEARER ET AL. v. FRED MCARTHUR ET AL.

Appeal from the Chancery Court for Marion County No. 7440 Jeffrey F. Stewart, Chancellor

No. M2012-00584-COA-R3-CV - Filed November 5, 2012

This appeal involves an option contract under which the defendants agreed to buy a piece of property from the plaintiffs at any time. We find no error in the trial court’s determination that the option contract was supported by consideration, that the plaintiffs exercised the option within a reasonable time, and that the plaintiffs did not waive the option by pursuing an inconsistent remedy. We, therefore, affirm the judgment of the trial court.

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

A NDY D. B ENNETT, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which P ATRICIA J. C OTTRELL, M.S., P.J., and R ICHARD H. D INKINS, J., joined.

David Thomas Black, Maryville, Tennessee, for the appellant, Fred McArthur.

Thomas Ray, Chattanooga, Tennessee, for the appellee, Paul Shearer.

OPINION

F ACTUAL AND P ROCEDURAL B ACKGROUND

On December 9, 2006, Paul and Patricia Shearer attended a sales event held by Rarity Communities, Inc. (“Rarity”) to promote the Rarity Club on Lake Nickajack, a subdivision in Marion County, Tennessee. That same day, the Shearers signed a Homesite Purchase Agreement (“HPA”) to buy a waterfront lot, lot 142, in the new subdivision for $490,000. The seller of the lot was Nickajack Shores Holdings, LLC, and Rarity was the listing broker. The sale closed in January 2007, and a deed and deed of trust were recorded on February 20, 2007.

The Shearers filed this lawsuit on February 23, 2010 against Fred McArthur, executive vice-president for sales and marketing for Rarity, and Robert Young, a sales agent for Rarity. The plaintiffs alleged that Mr. McArthur and Mr. Young induced them to enter into the HPA by promising in writing to purchase the lot from them at any time for $441,000.1 The written option agreement (“option agreement”) relied upon by the plaintiffs is as follows:

This is a seperate [sic] agreement between 1st party of Fred McArthur and Robert Young and 2nd party of Paul and Patricia Shearer.

*At any time the 1st party of Fred McArthur and Robert Young will buy back homesite #142 at the same price it was sold at the priority selection event at Rarity Club on Lake Nickajack on December 9th , 2006. Cost $441,000.

/Signature of McArthur/ /Signature of Young/

Acceptance: /Signature of Paul Shearer/ 12/9/06 /Signature of Patricia Shearer/ 12/9/06

According to their complaint, the Shearers made demand on the defendants to purchase lot 142 from them on January 22, 2010, but the defendants refused to do so.

Testimony

The case was tried without a jury on September 20, 2011. Mr. and Ms. Shearer both testified. Patricia Shearer described their meeting with Mr. McArthur and Mr. Young at the promotional event on December 9, 2006. According to Ms. Shearer, she and her husband told Mr. Young that they were not ready to make a decision about buying a lot that day. Mr. McArthur joined the conversation, told them about the substantial increases in value of lots in other Rarity developments, and encouraged them to buy a piece of property. When the Shearers continued to hedge, Mr. McArthur told them that he had so much confidence in the property that he would buy it back from them if they ever wanted to sell it. Mr. Shearer agreed to this deal if they would put it in writing. Ms. Shearer testified that the Shearers “never would have gone through with this [HPA] had it not been for this separate

1 The difference between this figure and the total purchase price of $490,000 reflects a 10% developer credit pursuant to which the developer paid the interest on the Shearers’ mortgage for approximately the first seventeen months.

-2- agreement.”

After the Shearers bought their property, the marina planned for the development had to be moved in order to meet TVA requirements. The new plan put the marina in front of lot 142. Ms. Shearer testified that, around October 2008, she and her husband told Michael Ross, the head of Rarity, that the lot was no longer the quiet, serene lot they had purchased; it was “going to be a thoroughfare for boats coming in and out of the marina and we were very unhappy.” Mr. Ross offered to buy the property back from them, but no agreement was put in writing. According to Ms. Shearer, Mr. Ross stated:

I can’t do it today. I’m waiting for a deal to close, and that should happen around Thanksgiving. And he said, in the meantime I’ll just make your payment until my deal closes and then I can go through with the purchase.

Mr. Ross began making payments to the Shearers. In the summer of 2009, Rarity’s financial situation was in decline, and Mr. Ross told the Shearers that he would continue to make the monthly interest payments as long as he could, but he did not know how long that would be. Ms. Shearer testified that Mr. Ross had paid a total of $91,971 to them, and that she and her husband had paid a total of $120,323 to their lender.

Paul Shearer’s testimony was similar to Ms. Shearer’s testimony. He, too, testified that Mr. McArthur stated that he thought “this property is going to be so good that I would be willing to buy it back from you-all at any time if you ask us to do that.” Mr. Young agreed to this arrangement, and the two agents went to draw up a written agreement. Asked if this option agreement was an important factor in the Shearers’ purchase of the lot, Mr. Shearer stated, “It was the only factor.”

Mr. Ross, the president of Rarity Communities, testified about the agreement he made with the Shearers to purchase lot 142 from them. He stated that he had been trying to make monthly payments to the Shearers and had made a total of twenty-two payments to them. Mr. Ross did not sign a written agreement to buy the lot back from the Shearers. When asked whether this was a “personal representation by you or was that one of your entities,” Mr. Ross stated that “[i]t would have been one of my entities.” He testified that he “didn’t really specify, just one of the companies.” Mr. Ross further stated that foreclosure proceedings had been brought against several of the communities developed by Rarity and that the real estate market had changed dramatically since he initially made the promise to the Shearers. It was Mr. Ross’s understanding that his payments to the Shearers basically covered their interest payments.

Mr. McArthur testified that he did not remember the conversation with the Shearers

-3- on December 9, 2006. Presented with a copy of the option agreement, Mr. McArthur stated: “It doesn’t look like my signature, but I’m not denying that it could be.” He denied ever agreeing to buy lot 142 from the Shearers.

When asked about his purported signature on the option agreement, Mr. Young testified that the signature “appears to be very close” to other examples of his signature. He acknowledged that he and Mr. McArthur received a commission on each sale at closing. Like Mr. McArthur, Mr. Young denied that they agreed to buy lot 142 from the Shearers.

The plaintiffs’ final witness was a handwriting expert, Roy Cooper, Jr., who testified that, with machine copies such as the exhibit of the option agreement, an expert could only testify with 85 to 90% certainty. He was asked to compare the signatures on the option agreement with examples of the signatures of Mr. Young and Mr. McArthur and opined with 85% certainty that the signatures on the option agreement had been written by Mr. Young and Mr. McArthur.

Decision of trial court

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Bluebook (online)
Paul Shearer v. Fred McArthur, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/paul-shearer-v-fred-mcarthur-tennctapp-2012.