VFS Leasing v. Bric Constructors, LLC

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJune 28, 2012
DocketM2011-01894-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of VFS Leasing v. Bric Constructors, LLC (VFS Leasing v. Bric Constructors, 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
VFS Leasing v. Bric Constructors, LLC, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE February 28, 2012 Session

VFS LEASING v. BRIC CONSTRUCTORS, LLC ET AL.

Appeal from the Chancery Court for Williamson County No. 35784 Jeffrey S. Bivins, Judge

No. M2011-01894-COA-R3-CV - Filed June 28, 2012

Secured party brought action against debtors and guarantors, seeking recovery of deficiency which remained after sale of collateral. The trial court granted summary judgment to secured party. Because genuine issues of material fact preclude summary judgment, we reverse.

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

A NDY D. B ENNETT, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which P ATRICIA J. C OTTRELL, P.J., M.S., and R ICHARD H. D INKINS, J., joined.

Geoffrey Coston, Franklin, Tennessee, for the appellants, Bric Constructors, LLC and Patricia A. McIntosh.

Courtney Hunter Gilmer and Kenneth David Waddell, Nashville, Tennessee, for the appellee, VFS Leasing.

OPINION

F ACTUAL AND P ROCEDURAL B ACKGROUND

The appellant, Patricia McIntosh (“Ms. McIntosh”), is the principal member of Bric Constructors, LLC (“Bric”), a grading and utility contracting business based in Williamson County, Tennessee. Bric and Ms. McIntosh entered into two lease agreements, Lease A and Lease B, with VFS Leasing Co. (“VFS”) for Volvo Articulated Haulers. Lease A and Lease B provide that Bric and Ms. McIntosh, respectively, shall be liable for all costs and expenses, together with attorney fees,1 incurred by VFS to enforce the terms of Leases A and B.

I. Undisputed facts 2

Each lease contains a choice of law provision stating that “[t]his Agreement . . . shall be governed by the substantive (and not choice of law or conflicts) laws of the State of North Carolina.” Upon Bric’s and Ms. McIntosh’s default3 on Lease A and Lease B, VFS repossessed and, following notice4 to Bric and Ms. McIntosh, sold the following equipment: (1) 2005 Volvo A35D articulated hauler, serial number ending in 2034; (2) 2005 Volvo A35D articulated hauler, serial number ending in 2035; (3) 2007 Volvo A35 articulated hauler, serial number ending in 2380; and (4) 2007 Volvo A35 articulated hauler, serial number ending in 2352 (collectively “the leased units”).

VFS sells repossessed equipment as follows: If VFS does not have recourse against the original selling dealer, VFS, as a courtesy, notifies the original selling dealer of the upcoming sale. Before the sale date, VFS sends e-mails advertising the sale of the equipment to all Volvo Rents (VRI) and Volvo Construction Equipment Services (VCES). The equipment is then placed for sale through VFS’s exclusive Preferred Offering website accessed through IronPlanet.com (“the Preferred Offering site”). The remarketing department establishes three prices based on its assessment of current market conditions: a starting price, a reserve price, and a “win it now” price. The starting price is the lowest price at which dealers can bid and is designed to entice bidding. The reserve price is the lowest price that VFS will accept and it is hidden from all dealers. The “win it now” price is the price at which dealers may purchase the equipment immediately without waiting for the

1 Bric and Ms. McIntosh admit that “VFS Leasing has incurred attorneys’ fees and costs in the amount of $14,727.60 which it is entitled to recover from [Bric and Ms. McIntosh] under the terms of Lease A and [L]ease B.” 2 Because the trial court decided this case at the summary judgment stage, we take our statement of the facts from the undisputed facts submitted by VFS and admitted by Bric and Ms. McIntosh for purposes of summary judgment. 3 Bric’s and Ms. McIntosh’s default and liability to VFS are not in dispute and are not issues on appeal. 4 VFS sent Bric and Ms. McIntosh via certified mail notices of sale dated September 12, 2008, that read, “You are hereby notified that there has been a default in the payment pursuant to a Fixed Purchase Option signed or guaranteed by you . . . .” and “You are further notified that the above described property will be sold at a private sale after 09/22/2008.” The signed certified mail receipts are in the record. We discuss in greater detail the sufficiency of the notice below.

-2- auction results. If, at the auction’s conclusion, the high bid equals or exceeds the reserve price, the equipment is sold. If the reserve price has not been met at the auction’s conclusion but a dealer has placed a bid, the equipment may be sold to that dealer. In exchange for maintaining the Preferred Offering site, Iron Planet charges a service fee in the amount of 3% of the equipment’s final selling price.

If the equipment is not sold via the Preferred Offering site, it is offered for sale through Iron Planet’s public auction site accessed via IronPlanet.com (“the auction site”). Iron Planet has approximately 450,000 registered users in connection with its auctions and has conducted internet auctions for more than ten years. Iron Planet advertises its auctions on its website, as well as in trade journals and publications. Potential buyers can view equipment offered for sale through the auction site via an internet preview offered before the auction’s start. An auction for each item of equipment begins at a predetermined advertised start time. Iron Planet sets a starting price to entice bidding, and the equipment is sold for the highest bid above this starting price. Each item is allotted six minutes, and any successful bid placed in the last three minutes of an auction will extend the auction by three minutes. In exchange for maintaining the auction site, Iron Planet charges a service fee in the amount of 7% of the equipment’s final selling price.

Here, each leased hauler was repossessed on September 10, 2008, inspected on September 18, 2008, and determined to have a certain number of hours of use. Beginning on October 10, 2008, each repossessed hauler was offered for a certain price on the Volvo Preferred Offering site, but no offers were received. On October 22, 2008, each hauler was assigned a minimum bid and was listed on Iron Planet’s auction site. On October 30, 2008, each hauler was advertised for sale and auctioned on Iron Planet’s worldwide internet sale via the auction site. The auction results for the four haulers were as follows: 1 bid, sale price of $194,000; 39 bids, sale price of $192,000; 33 bids, sale price of $170,000; and 18 bids, sale price of $142,000. The October 30, 2008 Iron Planet auction site sale during which the four haulers were sold involved the sale of 10.98 million dollars of equipment. At the time of the sale, Iron Planet had 415,000 registered users who had access to the sale. The sale had over 1,000 different bidders, and 52% of the items received international bids. The auction had 12,588 viewers/prospective buyers.

II. Procedural History

In its April 13, 2009 complaint against Bric and Ms. McIntosh, VFS asserted claims for breach of contract under Lease A and Lease B and sought a total deficiency balance of $649,375.89 “plus interest at 18% per annum from the date of default and additional costs of collection and litigation, including reasonable legal fees . . . .” Bric and Ms. McIntosh’s answer raised affirmative defenses, including that VFS failed to notify them of the date, time,

-3- and place of the October 30, 2008 public sale and that VFS “failed to conduct the public ‘on- line’ auction of [the haulers] in a commercially reasonable manner therefore resulting in a sale of the property for less than Fair Market Value.”

On August 12, 2009, VFS filed its first motion for summary judgment. Bric and Ms.

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VFS Leasing v. Bric Constructors, LLC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vfs-leasing-v-bric-constructors-llc-tennctapp-2012.