Smithwick v. Young

623 S.W.2d 284, 28 A.L.R. 4th 994, 1981 Tenn. App. LEXIS 550
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedSeptember 9, 1981
DocketNo. 80-290-II
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 623 S.W.2d 284 (Smithwick v. Young) 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
Smithwick v. Young, 623 S.W.2d 284, 28 A.L.R. 4th 994, 1981 Tenn. App. LEXIS 550 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1981).

Opinion

OPINION

CONNER, Judge.

(Filed with concurrence of participating judges)

This is a dispute over a real estate commission. The chancellor in a bench trial awarded some, but not all of the claimed amount. The sellers of the property and the agent were dissatisfied with the ruling and both have appealed.

The caption in this cause is confusing as the owners of the property were initially involved in partition dispute in which appellant Sam N. Young, intervened as a third-party plaintiff seeking his commission. He will hereafter be referred to by name or as the plaintiff. The people with whom he contracted to sell real estate owned in part by them, Walter Smithwick, Jr., Dr. Walter Smithwick, III, and E. R. Woolard, will hereafter be referred to collectively as the defendants or individually as Smithwick, Jr., Smithwick, III and Woolard, respectively-

Most of the proof adduced at trial is uncontroverted, though procedurally the matter followed an unusual course.

On April 28, 1978, the two Smithwicks and Woolard filed suit in the chancery court to obtain a partition sale of the Village Shopping Center in Lebanon. The initial defendant was Loy Dean Smithwick, the former wife of Smithwick, III, who also had an ownership interest in the property. The shopping center was subsequently sold at a court ordered sale for $253,000.00 and the proceeds of that sale were distributed among the three Smithwicks and Woolard. That portion of the proceeding is not now before us.

On April 6, 1979, plaintiff filed an intervening complaint against Smithwick, Jr., Smithwick, III and Woolard to collect his real estate commission in the amount of $18,250.00 under contract dated December 2, 1975, for the sale of the subject shopping center. The bases of the suit were breach of contract and misrepresentation. The defendants in answer denied that any commission was due on the grounds that plaintiff did not produce a ready, willing and able buyer and that Loy Dean Smithwick, an owner, had refused to join in the sale. Thereafter, the Smithwicks and Woolard filed a cross-claim against the said Loy Dean Smithwick, but this cross-claim was ultimately dismissed and is not the subject of this appeal.

The chancellor found for the plaintiff and against all the defendants on the ground of negligent misrepresentation — not breach of contract — and awarded damages in the amount of $7,500.00. After post-trial motions were overruled, both plaintiff and defendants have appealed the trial court’s ruling.

These facts appear from the record and the memorandum opinion of the chancellor. On June 12, 1971, Smithwick, III and his then wife, Loy Dean Smithwick, became owners by warranty deed of a one-third undivided interest in the subject shopping center by virtue of a deed prepared by Woolard, then and now a practicing attorney in Lebanon. Title to the balance of the center was held by Woolard and his wife and Smithwick, Jr. and his wife.

[287]*287On April 8, 1976, Smithwick, Jr., on behalf of himself, Woolard and Smithwick, III signed a listing contract with plaintiff, a Madison broker, giving him the exclusive right to sell the center at a price of $365,-000.00 at a commission of 6%. The exclusive listing agreement on its face represented ownership in the center to be vested in Smithwick, Jr., Smithwick, III and Woo-lard.

Some time after the listing contract was executed but before May 17, 1976, according to Smithwick Jr., he and plaintiff had a discussion wherein Smithwick, Jr. explained that he was “sad” because his son, Smith-wick, III, and daughter-in-law, who were then Florida residents, were having marital problems. Smithwick, Jr. did not, however, then notify the plaintiff that Loy Dean Smithwick had any ownership interest in the shopping center which plaintiff was attempting to sell. Plaintiff had no recollection of the conversation.

Plaintiff spent considerable time attempting to acquire a purchaser for the property and in making an economic survey to determine the true value of the property based upon then existing leases. An offer to purchase the property by one Leon May for $339,000.00 was secured, but rejected by the Smithwicks and Woolard. Had such offer been accepted by the defendants the real estate commission earned by plaintiff would have been 6% or $20,340.00.

On May 17,1976, plaintiff secured a written offer from Robert Ziegler, trustee for Jerry Rittenberry, to purchase the subject property for $365,000.00 with a commission to plaintiff of 5% or $18,250.00. The offer was accompanied by an earnest money check for $5,000.00. Thereafter, the offer was accepted by Smithwick, Jr., Smithwick, III and Woolard. Nowhere on this contract did the name of Loy Dean Smithwick appear, and plaintiff testified that even at this late date he was not made aware that she had any ownership interest in the property. In order to facilitate the closing of the sale, one day later, on May 18, 1976, Smithwick, III, the Florida resident, executed a full power of attorney to his father, Smithwick, Jr.

The May 17 contract was contingent upon Rittenberry being able to obtain a loan of $285,000.00. That contract also provided to The Kroger Company a right of first refusal to purchase the center. This right of first refusal had previously been granted Kroger under its lease agreement of April 20, 1962. However, between May 18, 1976, and June 24, 1976, the plaintiff was able to obtain the oral consent of Kroger to give up that right of first refusal.

Thereafter, on July 9, 1976, plaintiff Young secured a written commitment from Fidelity Federal Savings & Loan Association of Nashville of its willingness to pursue making a loan of $255,000.00 as needed by Rittenberry. Shortly thereafter, plaintiff had made arrangements for secondary financing for Rittenberry for the balance of $30,000.00 of financing required.

In follow-up of the requirements of the Fidelity Federal commitment, on August 19, 1976, at his own expense, $1,600.00, plaintiff Young obtained a MAI appraisal from the Douglas C. Smith Company. It showed the value of the center to be $350,-000.00.

In the interim, on August 4, 1976, but unknown to the plaintiff, the divorce case of Smithwick, III and Loy Dean Smithwick was tried in Jacksonville. This fact was known by both defendants Smithwick, at the minimum. The final judgment dissolving that marriage was entered on October 15,1976, and defendant Smithwick, III and his former wife were each given an undivided interest as tenants in common in their portion (⅛ each) of the shopping center. All of the defendants were aware of the divorce prior to December 2, 1976, but no disclosure thereof was made to the plaintiff. Woolard testified that he knew that decree had been entered on October 15, 1976, and that some time between that date and December 2, 1976, he requested a certified copy of the judgment from Smithwick, III. Thereafter, he made no further efforts to obtain a copy of the judgment or to determine what the court had done concerning the interest in the property of Smithwick, [288]*288III, and his former wife. Woolard did testify that as of December 2, 1976, that he was “led to believe” that Loy Dean Smithwick was no longer an owner of the shopping center. He testified that he communicated this fact to the plaintiff.

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Bluebook (online)
623 S.W.2d 284, 28 A.L.R. 4th 994, 1981 Tenn. App. LEXIS 550, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smithwick-v-young-tennctapp-1981.