Silver Dollar Sales, Inc. v. Michael Battah

CourtCourt of Appeals of Mississippi
DecidedJanuary 23, 2024
Docket2022-CA-00476-COA
StatusPublished

This text of Silver Dollar Sales, Inc. v. Michael Battah (Silver Dollar Sales, Inc. v. Michael Battah) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Mississippi primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Silver Dollar Sales, Inc. v. Michael Battah, (Mich. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI

NO. 2022-CA-00476-COA

SILVER DOLLAR SALES, INC. APPELLANT

v.

MICHAEL BATTAH APPELLEE

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 05/02/2022 TRIAL JUDGE: HON. CELESTE EMBREY WILSON COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: DESOTO COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT: GRADY F. TOLLISON JR. TAYLOR HAMILTON WEBB DANIEL HUDSON SPARKS ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE: RICHARD D. UNDERWOOD NATURE OF THE CASE: CIVIL - TORTS-OTHER THAN PERSONAL INJURY & PROPERTY DAMAGE DISPOSITION: AFFIRMED - 01/23/2024 MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED:

EN BANC.

WILSON, P.J., FOR THE COURT:

¶1. Randy Sparks owns Silver Dollar Sales Inc. (Silver Dollar), a Mississippi wholesaler

that primarily buys and sells salvaged, out-of-date, discontinued, and other discounted

groceries. Sparks also owns TBS Traders Inc. (TBS). TBS provided financing to River City

Traders Inc. (River City), a Mississippi grocery wholesaler owned by Scott Olson. In

January 2008, River City went out of business, defaulted on its debts to TBS, and caused

Silver Dollar and TBS to incur substantial losses. TBS later assigned its claims against

Olson and River City to Silver Dollar.

¶2. In 2010, Silver Dollar sued Olson for breach of contract, fraud, and other torts, alleging that Olson was personally liable for River City’s debts and other damages. The

complaint also asserted claims against “John Does 1-10,” alleging that unknown individuals

or entities had conspired to maliciously interfere with Silver Dollar’s business relationship

with River City and Olson. In 2016, Silver Dollar amended its complaint to substitute

Michael Battah for “John Doe 1.” Battah is a Texan who is also in the wholesale grocery

business. One entity that Battah owned, QQB Factors LLC (QQB), did business with River

City for two or three months in late 2007, shortly before River City went out of business.

¶3. A jury trial was held in April 2022 in the DeSoto County Circuit Court. At the close

of Silver Dollar’s case-in-chief, the court granted Battah’s motion for a directed verdict. The

trial then proceeded to verdict, and the jury returned a verdict against Olson, finding that

Olson had committed fraud and that Silver Dollar had sustained damages of $6,618,461.71.

The jury also awarded Silver Dollar punitive damages in the amount of $250,000.1 Olson

did not file any post-trial motions or appeal. However, Silver Dollar filed a notice of appeal

from the grant of a directed verdict and final judgment in favor of Battah.

¶4. On appeal, Silver Dollar argues that the circuit court erred (1) by granting Battah’s

motion for a directed verdict as to Silver Dollar’s claim for tortious interference with

business relations, (2) by sustaining a hearsay objection to an inventory that a nonparty

consultant conducted at River City’s warehouse, and (3) by “failing to control the courtroom”

in response to objections by Battah’s counsel. For the reasons explained below, the circuit

1 The punitive award may have been reduced pursuant to the statutory cap on punitive damages. See Miss. Code Ann. § 11-1-65(3) (Rev. 2019). However, the final judgment against Olson is not part of the record on appeal.

2 court did not err by granting Battah’s motion for a directed verdict because Silver Dollar

presented insufficient evidence to support its claim against Battah. Therefore, we affirm the

judgment of the circuit court. We do not address Silver Dollar’s second and third issues

because they do not affect our resolution of the first issue, which is dispositive.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

¶5. In the mid-1990s, Olson and two other men formed River City, a wholesale grocery

supplier in DeSoto County. In September 1995, one of Sparks’s companies, TBS, began

providing financing to River City. TBS secured a line of credit from a bank, which River

City could use to purchase grocery products for sale to retailers or other wholesalers. River

City paid TBS a fee for the use of the funds.2

¶6. In 2001, River City declared bankruptcy. TBS was a large creditor of River City. To

resolve TBS’s claims and maintain the financing TBS provided, River City executed two

promissory notes in favor of TBS, and the parties entered into a settlement agreement and

a “Sales and Consignment Agreement” (Consignment Agreement). A promissory note for

$1,320,000 required River City to make monthly payments of $7,500 plus interest for ten

years, with the balance of the principal due after ten years. A promissory note for

$512,397.03 required River City to make interest-only payments for ten years with the

principal due after ten years. The parties’ Consignment Agreement included the following

terms:

C TBS would maintain a line of credit of at least $4,000,000 for River

2 Another company Sparks owned had a similar financing relationship with Titan Wholesale Groceries, a competitor of River City.

3 City to buy inventory;3

C the inventory (“consigned products”) would be the property of TBS until sold;

C all sales proceeds would be paid directly or remitted immediately to TBS;

C River City would receive compensation or a “commission” equal to the difference between gross sales proceeds and the cost of goods sold;

C River City would pay TBS a “charge” equal to three percent per annum of the average daily balance of the cost of inventory and accounts receivable;

C River City’s borrowing under the line of credit would not exceed the combined balance of its inventory and accounts receivable by more than $60,000;

C River City would maintain accurate records of inventory and sales and provide such records to TBS upon request;

C River City would permit TBS or its representatives to inventory the consigned products at reasonable times.

¶7. Under the Consignment Agreement, River City primarily utilized TBS’s credit to buy

groceries wholesale from unaffiliated third parties. However, River City purchased

approximately twenty percent of its inventory from Silver Dollar. On those purchases, Silver

Dollar would earn a profit, and TBS would earn a three percent charge or fee under the

Consignment Agreement.

¶8. By 2004, Olson was River City’s sole owner.4 In February 2006, unbeknownst to

3 In 2006, the line of credit was increased to $4,500,000. Olson personally guaranteed the line of credit. 4 One of River City’s co-owners passed away around 2001, and the other left the business in 2003 or 2004.

4 TBS, River City began receiving payments directly from Albertsons, a grocery store chain,

and failed to remit those payments to TBS. Between February 2006 and November 2007,

River City received and retained payments from Albertsons totaling approximately

$1,166,633.14. Under the Consignment Agreement, those payments should have been paid

directly or remitted to TBS. During discovery in this case, Sparks determined that River City

had received an additional $686,854.62 in payments from other customers that should have

been paid directly or remitted to TBS.

¶9. At some point in 2006, River City missed “a couple of” payments to TBS under the

promissory notes but later “caught back up.” Around September 2007, Olson talked to

Sparks about “a guy out in Texas,” Battah, who was interested in providing additional

financing to River City.5 Olson told Sparks that Battah had offered to provide River City an

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