Tareco Properties, Inc. v. Steve Morriss

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedNovember 18, 2004
DocketM2002-02950-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Tareco Properties, Inc. v. Steve Morriss (Tareco Properties, Inc. v. Steve Morriss) 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
Tareco Properties, Inc. v. Steve Morriss, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE Assigned on Briefs November 7, 2003

TARECO PROPERTIES, INC. v. STEVE MORRISS

Appeal from the Chancery Court for Williamson County No. I-26593 R. E. Lee Davies, Chancellor

No. M2002-02950-COA-R3-CV - Filed November 18, 2004

The assignee of a judgment rendered by a federal district court in Texas attempted to enforce that judgment in Tennessee. The trial court entered an order granting summary judgment to the plaintiff and enforcing the judgment. The defendant subsequently filed a Tenn. R. Civ. P. 60 motion for relief, arguing that the judgment of the federal court was void. The trial court agreed and set aside its previous order. After the Texas federal court that had rendered the original judgment reached the opposite conclusion, the plaintiff filed a Tenn. R. Civ. P. 60 motion asking the trial court to set aside its earlier order setting aside the summary judgment enforcing the Texas judgment. The trial court denied this motion. By final order, the trial court dismissed the plaintiff’s action to enforce the Texas judgment. We reverse the trial court on this issue and also vacate the order of expungement granted to Mr. Morriss related to a holding of criminal contempt.

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

PATRICIA J. COTTRELL, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which WILLIAM C. KOCH , JR., P.J., M.S., and FRANK G. CLEMENT , JR., J., joined.

Jeffrey A. Greene, Daniel W. Small, Nashville, Tennessee, for the appellant, Tareco Properties, Inc.

John Konvalinka, Chattanooga, Tennessee; Roger Reid Street, Jr., Franklin, Tennessee, for the appellee, Steve Morriss.

OPINION

I. PROCEEDINGS IN TEXAS - THE JUDGMENT

This case began with a complaint filed in 1987 by the Tesoro Savings & Loan Association in state court in Webb County, Texas. The defendants were a real estate partnership named Gold Park Development Partnership and fifteen named individuals who were all general partners in the Gold Park entity. Steve Morriss was both a general partner and the managing partner of Gold Park. The complaint arose from a loan that the Tesoro Bank had made to Gold Park. Mr. Morriss and the other general partners had guaranteed the loan, but had failed to repay it. The bank subsequently went into receivership, and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) took over its assets. The case was eventually restyled with the FDIC as plaintiff.

On January 17, 1992, the FDIC filed a notice of removal of the case from state court to federal court.1 On May 28, 1993, the United States District Court for the Southern District of Texas granted summary judgment to the FDIC and entered a final judgment against Gold Park and the six remaining individual defendants, holding them jointly and severally liable on the debt in the amount of $1,939,051.36 plus prejudgment interest and postjudgment interest at the rate of 3.54% per annum.

In 1999 the FDIC assigned the judgment (“1993 Texas judgment”) by sale to another entity and, after other transfers, it was sold to the plaintiff in the case before us, Tareco Properties, Inc, (“Tareco”) a California corporation.

II. PROCEEDINGS IN TENNESSEE

Other judgments had been entered by Texas courts against Mr. Morriss stemming from failed real estate development projects. In the early 1990s, Mr. Morriss was living in California. In 1990 he met Mr. Corliss, a neighbor who was an attorney. He stated in sworn filings that in 1993,2 he hired the California law firm of his neighbor, Corliss & Geringer, to attempt to settle, resolve, or “workout” debts and several judgments that existed against Mr. Morriss, specifically including the one that is the basis of the action before us.

Mr. Morriss moved to Middle Tennessee. He became involved in a number of real estate development projects in this state and elsewhere. In a number of those projects, Mr. Geringer and Mr. Corliss, the attorneys in California, and another Californian, Mr. Pressman, among others, were also involved as investors, partners, or principals.

Problems arose in these development projects. In 1999 Mr. Morriss and others, including various entities he had created, sued Mr. Corliss, Mr. Geringer, Mr. Pressman, and others over these business enterprises in the Chancery Court of Williamson County. Other suits between these groups

1 A M emorandum and Order of the United States District Court for the Southern District of Texas states that the case was removed to federal court in December of 1988, that it was remanded to state court in September of 1990, and that it was removed again in January of 1992. After the second removal, the FDIC filed a motion, which was granted, to dismiss nine of the fifteen individual defendants from the case because they had placed themselves under the protection of the United States Bankruptcy Court.

2 W hile M r. Morriss most frequently refers to the time he retained these lawyers as “in or around” 1993, he also stated that he hired this firm “beginning as early as 1992" to represent him in various capacities. In testimony in federal court, he testified he first started dealing with the law firm in 1991.

-2- of parties followed, both in state and federal court. With this backdrop of litigation, the case now under appeal was begun.

In October of 1999, Tareco began collection activities against Mr. Morriss in both state and federal courts in Tennessee.3 The present complaint was filed in the Chancery Court of Williamson County and named Mr. Morriss as the sole defendant. Tareco asked the court to enforce the 1993 Texas judgment and to enjoin Mr. Morriss from transferring any property that might be available to satisfy that judgment to a third party for less than full consideration. Tareco furnished the court with a list of entities owned or controlled by Mr. Morriss, including thirteen in Texas and fifteen in Tennessee.4 The court granted Tareco the temporary restraining order it sought, followed in short order by a preliminary injunction.

Mr. Morriss responded to the complaint with motions for a protective order to prevent his deposition and for relief from judgment under Tenn. R. Civ. P. 60.02. He also answered and asserted a counterclaim against Tareco and six other parties. He asserted that the conduct of Tareco was illegal and that Tareco should be estopped from pursuing the relief it sought. He also asked the court to enjoin various parties from pursuing any of three different Texas judgments that had been rendered against him, including the one placed in issue by Tareco’s complaint herein. Mr. Morriss argued that the trial court should deny full faith and credit to the 1993 Texas judgment and declare that judgment void, “at least in the hands of Tareco.” The gist of all these filings was that Tareco and other parties, principally those who were involved in the pending litigation over business ventures, were conspiring to perpetrate a fraud on the court and to deprive Mr. Morriss of the financial ability to pursue his legal remedies.5 This “web of deceit,” including his former lawyer’s alleged use of confidential information to Mr. Morriss’s detriment, formed the basis of Mr. Morriss’s claim of misconduct and fraud - not any fraud in the FDIC’s initial securing of the 1993 Texas judgment.

3 In addition to this action, on December 14, 1999, Tareco filed an action in the United States District Court for the Middle District of Tennessee to enforce and collect the 1993 Texas judgment, having begun federal collection efforts in October. Tareco Properties v. Steve Morriss, No. 3:99-1160.

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