Sammie Maness and SKM Wood Products, LLC v. Joannie Collins, Mike Smith, Josh Smith, and SKM, LLC

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedNovember 17, 2010
DocketW2008-00941-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Sammie Maness and SKM Wood Products, LLC v. Joannie Collins, Mike Smith, Josh Smith, and SKM, LLC (Sammie Maness and SKM Wood Products, LLC v. Joannie Collins, Mike Smith, Josh Smith, and SKM, LLC) 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
Sammie Maness and SKM Wood Products, LLC v. Joannie Collins, Mike Smith, Josh Smith, and SKM, LLC, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT JACKSON July 27, 2010 Session

SAMMIE MANESS and SKM WOOD PRODUCTS, LLC v. JOANNIE COLLINS, MIKE SMITH, JOSH SMITH and SKM, LLC

Appeal from the Chancery Court for McNairy County No. 8319 William C. Cole, Chancellor

No. W2008-00941-COA-R3-CV - Filed November 17, 2010

This appeal involves an employment contract. The plaintiff employee owned a manufacturing business. He sold the business to the defendant new owners, and agreed to stay on as a management-level employee. To that end, the plaintiff entered into a three-year employment agreement with the company, and signed a non-competition agreement. After a few months, the company’s new owners terminated the plaintiff employee on the basis that he had not fulfilled his job duties. The plaintiff filed this lawsuit against the company and the new owners, alleging breach of the employment agreement. After a bench trial, the trial court held that the company breached the employment agreement by terminating the plaintiff’s employment without cause, finding that one of the new owners prevented the plaintiff from performing his job duties. However, the trial court declined to award damages to the plaintiff employee because the plaintiff did not seek other employment, and thus failed to mitigate his damages. Both parties appeal. We affirm the trial court’s finding that the company breached the employment agreement, finding that one of the new owners prevented the plaintiff from performing his job duties, and therefore the plaintiff’s failure to perform under the employment agreement was excused. We reverse the trial court’s holding on mitigation of damages, finding that the defendant company and the new owners were required to prove the availability of suitable and comparable substitute employment, and failed to do so.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Chancery Court Affirmed in Part, Reversed in Part and Remanded

H OLLY M. K IRBY, J.,, delivered the opinion of the Court, in which D AVID R. F ARMER, J., and J. S TEVEN S TAFFORD, J., joined. Terry L. Wood, Wilson, Hunton & Wood, P.A., Corinth, Mississippi, for Plaintiff/ Appellant, Sammie Maness and SKM Wood Products, LLC.

Terry Abernathy, Selmer, Tennessee, for Defendants/Appellees, Joannie Collins, Mike Smith, Josh Smith, and SKM, LLC.

OPINION

F ACTS AND P ROCEEDINGS BELOW

Plaintiff/Appellant Sammie Maness (“Maness”), in his 50s at all pertinent times, lived most of his life in McNairy County, Tennessee. Much of his work life was spent doing hourly work, such as construction, maintenance, working as a mill operator, or working as a carpenter. In 1997, Maness incorporated his own wood manufacturing business in Adamsville, Tennessee, making table tops for a local sewing company. For a couple of years, Maness worked part-time for his new business. In time, the sewing company business diminished, but Maness’s new company began making wooden bases and support parts for bath tubs for Aqua Glass, a local company whose business apparently involved manufacturing bath tubs. As the work from Aqua Glass increased, by 1999, Maness’s company became his full-time occupation. In 2001, Maness’s manufacturing company, Plaintiff SKM Wood Products, LLC (“ SKM”), moved to a new facility in Adamsville. Within several years, SKM grew to have annual sales of several million dollars, with approximately twenty-five employees. SKM’s primary customer remained bath tub manufacturer Aqua Glass.

In 2005, Defendant/Appellee Joannie Collins (“Collins”) approached Maness about the possibility of purchasing SKM.1 After several meetings, Collins told Maness that her brother-in-law, Defendant/Appellee Mike Smith (“Mike Smith”), and his son, Collins’ nephew, Defendant/ Appellee Josh Smith (“Josh Smith”), would be her partners in purchasing and operating the business. Mike Smith took the lead role in negotiating the sale. Not long before the negotiations began, Josh Smith was hospitalized for treatment for drug addiction issues; this fact was not disclosed to Maness during the negotiations.

The three purchasers expected to take on different roles in the newly acquired business. Collins, a certified public accountant, expected to maintain her full-time employment as a financial advisor and handle the new business’s payroll and financial matters on a part-time

1 Collins had been a friend of Maness’s deceased wife. Maness had known both Collins and Mike Smith for many years. Prior to 2005, Collins and Mike Smith, with others, approached Maness about investing in SKM, but nothing was done at that time.

-2- basis. Similarly, Mike Smith expected to keep his full-time employment elsewhere and work part-time at SKM. Josh Smith had a college degree in business and marketing and had worked for a woodworking company; he was expected to be the “managing member,” that is, to work full-time at SKM, supervising and managing the day-to-day operations. Part of Mike Smith’s motivation in acquiring SKM was to have a business for Josh Smith as well as his other son. All parties expected that, after the acquisition, Maness would remain with SKM as an employee.

In anticipation of the acquisition, in the fall of 2005, Josh Smith was hired by SKM and began working under Maness’s supervision. Maness was somewhat disappointed by Josh Smith’s job performance at that point, but the record does not indicate that he voiced any concerns about Josh Smith to any of the purchasers.

On January 13, 2006, the parties executed an asset purchase agreement under which SKM’s assets were sold to SKM, LLC, with Collins, Mike Smith, and Josh Smith as guarantors.2 Part of the total $1,300,000 purchase price was paid by a $300,000 promissory note guaranteed by Collins, Mike Smith, and Josh Smith. The new ownership of SKM was structured such that Collins owned one-third, Mike Smith owned one-third, and Josh Smith owned one-third.

The asset purchase agreement provided for SKM to employ Maness for three years, at an annual salary of $67,600. It stated:

As an integral part of this Agreement, the Purchaser [SKM, LLC] agrees to employ Sammie Maness, with the beginning date of such employment to be the date of the closing of this transaction for a period thereafter of not less than three (3) years, provided that the Company shall maintain the current sales volume and for so long as the Company shall not suffer any material interruption of its business by causes beyond its control. During the term of Maness’ employment, he shall generally serve as the Company’s Production Manager and shall be paid an annual salary of Sixty-Seven Thousand Six Hundred Dollars ($67,600.00). . . .

2 After the acquisition, the name of the business was changed to SKM, LLC. For simplicity, in this opinion, we shall continue to refer to the business as “SKM.”

-3- Attached to the asset purchase agreement was a job description for Maness as an employee of SKM.3

On the same day, in conjunction with the asset purchase agreement, Maness also signed a non-competition and non-solicitation agreement. The non-competition provision stated that Maness would not:

...for a period of five (5) years following his termination of employment, for whatever reasons, with SKM, LLC by himself or by or through any other person or entity, whether as a shareholder, owner partner, joint venturer, employee, agent, contractor, consultant, directly or indirectly compete with the Company within the Restricted Area. The “Restricted Area” shall mean within the continental United States of America.

Thus, the noncompetition agreement had a geographic area of the entire continental United States, for a time period of five years after Maness’s employment with SKM ended.

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Sammie Maness and SKM Wood Products, LLC v. Joannie Collins, Mike Smith, Josh Smith, and SKM, LLC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sammie-maness-and-skm-wood-products-llc-v-joannie--tennctapp-2010.