Sun Nurseries, Inc. v. W. D. Everitt

CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedJuly 12, 2012
DocketA12A0784
StatusPublished

This text of Sun Nurseries, Inc. v. W. D. Everitt (Sun Nurseries, Inc. v. W. D. Everitt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sun Nurseries, Inc. v. W. D. Everitt, (Ga. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

SECOND DIVISION BARNES, P. J., ADAMS and MCFADDEN, JJ.

NOTICE: Motions for reconsideration must be physically received in our clerk’s office within ten days of the date of decision to be deemed timely filed. (Court of Appeals Rule 4 (b) and Rule 37 (b), February 21, 2008) http://www.gaappeals.us/rules/

July 12, 2012

In the Court of Appeals of Georgia A12A0784. SUN NURSERIES, INC. v. LAKE ERMA, LLC., et al. AD-036

ADAMS, Judge.

Sun Nurseries, Inc. (“Sun”) appeals the trial court’s order directing a partial

verdict in its suit for damages arising out of an agreement to provide landscape

installation services, material and labor at the Crystal Lake Golf Course (“Crystal

Lake”) in Henry County. We affirm for the reasons set forth below.

Sun originally filed suit against Lake Erma, LLC (“Lake Erma”) and BEC

Properties and Holdings, LLC (“BEC”) (collectively referred to herein as the

“corporate defendants”) to collect on past due invoices for work it performed at

Crystal Lake. Sun contended that both BEC and Lake Erma owned and developed

Crystal Lake, although BEC disputed any interest in the development. The suit, as

amended, asserted claims for breach of contract, quantum meruit, fraud, attorney fees and conversion. Sun subsequently added David Black, J. P. Evans, Mark Conner, W.

D. Everitt and Talon Equities, Inc. (“Talon”)1 as party defendants. Black, Evans,

Conner, Everitt and Talon were all owners, operators and members of Lake Erma.

Black, Evans and Conner were also members of BEC. BEC shared office space with

Lake Erma, and BEC employees performed work for both companies but were paid

by BEC.

The evidence at trial showed that sometime in or around 2003, Robert Mitchell

Bozzone, Sun’s owner, entered into discussions with Carl Vassallo, a BEC employee,

about the possibility of Sun providing landscaping services for the Crystal Lake

project. Bozzone later met with Evans2 and Vassallo to finalize the terms of a verbal

agreement for Sun to work on the golf course. Sun apparently provided landscaping

services from late 2003 through mid-2005. At the direction of Evans and Vassallo,

Sun submitted its invoices for this work to BEC, but Lake Erma issued the checks to

pay the invoices. Lake Erma’s records reflect that it paid Sun in excess of $238,000

for the work it performed, but Sun’s records reflect that it received only around

1 The corporate defendants, Conner and Talon made no appearance and filed no briefs in this appeal. 2 Evans testified that he did not recall attending this meeting.

2 $210,700 in payment. At issue in the litigation were a series of six invoices that Sun

submitted in 2005, which Sun contends Lake Erma did not pay in full, leaving a

balance due of $30,506.88.

Kevin Burke, who performed accounting services for Lake Erma and BEC,

testified that he cut a check to pay those invoices (the “First Check”), but it

apparently was lost in the mail. Burke told Bozzone that the check had been lost, that

he would stop payment on that check and that Lake Erma would issue another one.

At trial, Burke did not recall cutting a replacement check, but he acknowledged that

Lake Erma could have issued another check that was never signed. In any event, no

replacement check was ever sent to Sun. Although Conner was not called as a witness

at trial, he previously submitted an affidavit on summary judgment indicating that at

some point, he directed that a check in the amount of $30,067.18 made out to Sun (the

“Second Check”) be removed from a stack of payments and then asked Burke to set

up a meeting with Bozzone. Burke had no recollection of being directed to pull the

Sun check from the payment process or of pulling the check himself, but he

acknowledged that someone else could have done so.

Sometime in September 2005, while awaiting payment, Bozzone threatened to

file a lien on the Crystal Lake property, but he testified that he did not file the lien

3 because Burke told him that Sun would be paid. Then in October 2005, Burke

arranged a meeting with Bozzone, Evans and Conner to discuss the outstanding

balance. Evans testified that the meeting was called because Conner and he were

concerned that Sun was overcharging for the work it performed on the golf course

when compared with charges from other subcontractors. Bozzone testified that

Conner told him at the meeting that the Crystal Lake project was over budget and that

they did not have the money to pay Sun. Conner accused Sun of overbilling. Evans

offered to pay Sun $15,000 on the outstanding balance, but Bozzone refused.

Bozzone said that he did not believe that Lake Erma was out of money; he just

thought that Evans and Conner did not want to pay what was owed.

Sun filed the complaint in this case in February 2006. During discovery, Sun

determined from Lake Erma’s 2005 tax return that at some point in 2005, Lake Erma

distributed a total of $8,297,003 to its members. Although the tax returns indicate that

these were cash distributions, Evans said that the members instead received the

distributions in cash and property. For example, Evans testified that although the tax

form indicates that he received $2,103,262 from Lake Erma, only $160,000 of that

distribution was in cash and the remainder was in property. And in March 2006, Lake

Erma transferred 93 lots to Black and Evans, who then used the lots as collateral to

4 secure a $5.216 million loan from First City Bank in Stockbridge (the “Bank”).3

Black and Evans then transferred the proceeds of the loans and quitclaimed the lots

back to Lake Erma. They did not keep any of the proceeds for themselves. Evans

testified that this procedure was employed to pull cash flow out of the property to

cover the 2005 distributions and for the corporation’s future needs. Evans said that

Black and he determined that it was “simpler” to obtain the loan themselves rather

than having Lake Erma obtain the loan directly.

At trial, Sun presented the testimony of an accounting expert, who testified,

based upon documentation provided by Sun, that Lake Erma’s $8 million distribution

rendered the company insolvent as of the end of 2005. On cross-examination,

however, the expert admitted that her original analysis had valued Lake Erma’s

property holdings using a historical cost basis of $1,028,920, which was the

property’s purchase price plus development costs. After reviewing additional

documents provided by the defendants, including a sales contract reflecting an actual

sale of Crystal Lake lots, the expert was able to establish the market value for Lake

3 Sun asserts that the Bank was owned by Everitt and Conner, but the record citations provided by Sun in support of this statement reflect only that Evans was on the Bank’s board of directors at one point; that Evans, Everitt and Conner were on the Bank’s loan committee at various times; that Everitt was chairman of the bank board in 2005; and that Conner owned some bank stock at one point.

5 Erma’s property in 2005 as being in excess of $6.2 million. Using the market value

in her analysis, the expert determined that Lake Erma had sufficient funds to pay its

existing liabilities, with an excess of around $586,000 as of the end of 2005. Sun’s

expert conceded, therefore, that if the market value of Sun’s property were

considered, the company was not insolvent but rather was “marginally solvent.”

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