Riverhills Capital Corporation and The Estate of Herbert Stathes v. At Home Care, Inc.

CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 16, 2023
Docket2022-IA-00568-SCT
StatusPublished

This text of Riverhills Capital Corporation and The Estate of Herbert Stathes v. At Home Care, Inc. (Riverhills Capital Corporation and The Estate of Herbert Stathes v. At Home Care, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Riverhills Capital Corporation and The Estate of Herbert Stathes v. At Home Care, Inc., (Mich. 2023).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF MISSISSIPPI

NO. 2022-IA-00568-SCT

RIVERHILLS CAPITAL CORPORATION AND THE ESTATE OF HERBERT STATHES

v.

AT HOME CARE, INC.

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 06/08/2022 TRIAL JUDGE: HON. TOMIKA HARRIS IRVING TRIAL COURT ATTORNEYS: LARRY STAMPS ROBERT BINNION ANDREWS EMERSON BARNEY ROBINSON, III JEFFREY LEE OAKES COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: CLAIBORNE COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANTS: EMERSON BARNEY ROBINSON, III JEFFREY LEE OAKES JOHN A. CRAWFORD, JR. ROBERT BINNION ANDREWS ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE: LARRY STAMPS ANITA M. STAMPS NATURE OF THE CASE: CIVIL - CONTRACT DISPOSITION: AFFIRMED AND REMANDED - 11/16/2023 MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED:

BEFORE KING, P.J., COLEMAN AND BEAM, JJ.

KING, PRESIDING JUSTICE, FOR THE COURT:

¶1. At Home Care filed suit in circuit court against RiverHills Capital Corporation and

others for breach of contract, fraud, and for quiet title surrounding a lease on real property

that At Home Care purchased. RiverHills Capital Corporation filed a motion to transfer the

case to chancery court, alleging that the chancery court has subject-matter jurisdiction because, in essence, At Home Care cannot succeed on the merits of its legal claims. The

circuit court denied its motion. Because the circuit court did not err by denying the motion

to transfer, this Court affirms and remands the case to the circuit court.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

¶2. In March 2018, At Home Care (AHC) and the now-dissolved Hill City Oil Company,

which was owned by Herbert Stathes, now deceased,1 entered into a contract for AHC to

purchase two tracts of real property from Hill City Oil. On March 20, 2018, Hill City Oil and

Stathes entered into a fifteen-year lease with RiverHills Bank for RiverHills Bank to have

an ATM on the same property that was being sold to AHC. The warranty deed between Hill

City Oil and AHC was signed on April 19, 2018, and it provided that the warranty deed was

subject to all leases of record on the property.

¶3. AHC filed suit against RiverHills Bank in 2019, but it voluntarily dismissed that suit.

In September 2021, AHC filed a complaint against Stathes and “RiverHills Capital

Corporation, D/B/A RiverHills Bank” in the Circuit Court of Claiborne County. Upon

learning that Stathes had died, AHC filed an amended complaint in January 2022 substituting

Stathes’s estate for him. RiverHills Capital Corporation (RHCC) is a bank holding company

that wholly owns RiverHills Bank, and they share a CEO. The complaint and amended

complaint refer to them collectively as RiverHills Bank. The amended complaint alleges the

following claims and requests the following remedies:

1 This opinion will generally refer to Stathes and Stathes’s estate collectively as “Stathes.”

2 C Breach of contract against RiverHills Bank: AHC alleges that RiverHills Bank breached the lease by failure to pay rent and requests as damages the full amount of rent due under the entire term of the lease in the amount of $55,235, termination of the lease, and economic damages for depreciated property value and loss of future income.

C Breach of good faith and fair dealing against RiverHills Bank: AHC alleges that RiverHills Bank owed AHC a duty of good faith and fair dealing through the assignment of the lease to AHC and that it breached that duty by failing to comply with the lease.

C Conspiracy to commit fraud against Stathes and RiverHills Bank: AHC alleges that RiverHills Bank made false statements about having knowledge of the sale of the property and that RiverHills Bank and Stathes conspired to enter into the lease and knowingly failed to disclose the lease prior to closing. AHC requests money damages for depreciated property value and loss of future income.

C Breach of contract against Stathes: AHC alleges that Stathes breached the sale agreement by entering into the lease. AHC requests money damages for depreciated property value and loss of future income.

C Breach of good faith and fair dealing against Stathes: AHC alleges that Stathes breached his duty of good faith and fair dealing for the sales agreement by entering into the lease and by failing to inform AHC of the lease. AHC requests money damages for depreciated property value and loss of future income.

C Fraud against Stathes: AHC alleges that Stathes made false statements to AHC about whether he notified RiverHills Bank of the property sale and then wrongfully kept the rent paid by RiverHills Bank. AHC requests money damages for depreciated property value and loss of future income.

C Civil conspiracy to commit fraud against RiverHills Bank and Stathes: AHC alleges that RiverHills Bank and Stathes conspired to enter the lease and give Stathes the benefit of the lease. AHC requests money damages for depreciated property value and loss of future income.

C Remove cloud from title: AHC requests that the court remove cloud from the title of the property, rescind the lease, and remove the ATM from the property.

C Punitive damages: AHC requests punitive damages.

3 ¶4. RHCC filed its answer on April 19, 2022. It raised numerous affirmative defenses,

including lack of jurisdiction and an assertion that the chancery court had exclusive

jurisdiction. Many of its other defenses touched on whether AHC has any viable claims

against RHCC. RHCC then filed a motion to transfer the suit to Claiborne County Chancery

Court. Stathes joined this motion. RHCC argued that the gravamen of the complaint was

a title dispute, thus the circuit court lacked subject-matter jurisdiction over the complaint and

must transfer the case to chancery court. AHC opposed the motion, and the circuit court held

a hearing on the matter. The circuit court ultimately denied the motion to transfer. The

circuit court found that “the substance of the Amended Complaint in this case is one of legal

issues (i.e., breach of contract, breach of fair dealing, fraud, etc.).” It acknowledged that the

removal of cloud from title is an equitable claim, but it noted that cases should not be split

between courts upon each claim and that circuit courts as courts of general jurisdiction may

hear equitable claims that are connected to legal claims.

¶5. RHCC filed a petition to appeal from an interlocutory order, which this Court granted.

RHCC argues that this case is a real property title dispute that must be transferred to chancery

court. Stathes joins RHCC’s briefs.

ANALYSIS

¶6. This Court reviews jurisdiction de novo, and it also reviews rulings on motions to

transfer between chancery and circuit court based on subject-matter jurisdiction de novo.

Germany v. Germany, 123 So. 3d 423, 427 (Miss. 2013). In determining which court has

subject-matter jurisdiction, a court looks at the face of the complaint to ascertain the nature

4 of the controversy and the relief sought. Id. at 428. Courts look at the substance, not the

form, of the claims to make a determination whether the claims are legal or equitable. Id.

In other words, the “fundamental substance” of the claims trumps the claims language used

in the complaint if the substance and language appear less than harmonious. Trustmark

Nat’l Bank v. Johnson, 865 So. 2d 1148, 1151 (Miss. 2004).

¶7. Chancery courts have “full jurisdiction” over, in pertinent part, “[a]ll matters in

equity” and “[a]ll cases of which the said court had jurisdiction under the laws in force when

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