Court Opinion

ID: 8208717
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-23 14:06:23.245673+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:41:35.143592
License: Public Domain

RENDERED: SEPTEMBER 16, 2022; 10:00 A.M.
                      NOT TO BE PUBLISHED

                Commonwealth of Kentucky
                          Court of Appeals

                             NO. 2021-CA-1064-MR

JOHNA ROBY                                                           APPELLANT

                  APPEAL FROM TAYLOR CIRCUIT COURT
v.                 HONORABLE KAELIN G. REED, JUDGE
                         ACTION NO. 17-CI-00215

JAMES RICHARDSON                                                      APPELLEE

                                   OPINION
                                  AFFIRMING

                                  ** ** ** ** **

BEFORE: ACREE, COMBS, AND MAZE, JUDGES.

ACREE, JUDGE: Appellant, Johna Roby, appeals the Taylor Circuit Court’s

September 3, 2021 findings of fact, conclusions of law, and order. The circuit

court awarded restitution to Appellee, James Richardson, Sr., concluding Appellant

was unjustly enriched when she received money from Appellee for a real estate

transaction that was never completed. Finding no error, we affirm.
                                 BACKGROUND

             The facts begin with Appellant’s agreement to rent real property on

Fallen Timber Road in Campbellsville to James Richardson, Jr. (Junior), who is

Appellant’s nephew and Appellee’s son. Appellant and Junior subsequently

discussed Junior’s purchase of the property for $38,500. However, Junior’s bank

declined to finance the transaction.

             Nevertheless, Junior and Appellant continued to discuss the

possibility of the sale. According to Junior’s trial testimony, Appellant needed

money quickly or else her own son would lose his home to foreclosure.

             With this urgency in mind, Junior discussed the matter with his father,

Appellee. Appellee told his son he would be willing to offer Appellant $25,000 to

purchase the property himself. Appellee and Junior agreed that Appellee would

transfer the property to his son once his son repaid him $25,000. Until then, the

property would remain titled in Appellee’s name.

             Junior then returned to Appellant and told her his father was willing to

pay $25,000 for the purchase. Junior testified that Appellant told him she needed

the money and to bring her the check. She told him they would “work out the

other details between me and you later.”

             Appellee then wrote Appellant a check for $25,000, with the memo

line reading “house on Fallen Timber.” Junior delivered the check to Appellant.

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Apparently, Junior and Appellant still believed the purchase price was $38,500,

because Junior told her he would pay an additional $13,500 within three weeks.

Appellant also had an understanding that she would not execute the deed to

Appellee until she received the remaining $13,500.

                Appellant cashed Appellee’s check and used the money to pay down

her son’s home loan. Junior never paid Appellant the additional $13,500.

Appellant, believing she did not receive the entire purchase price, never transferred

the deed to Appellee. Appellant never returned Appellee’s $25,000. Appellant

and Appellee never discussed the purchase of the property directly, and no

agreement between them was ever reduced to writing.

                Appellee then sued Appellant to recover the $25,000 he viewed as

consideration to acquire the property. The circuit court determined no contract

existed between Appellant and Appellee because the two mutually misunderstood

the amount of money required as consideration for the sale. Appellee’s son was

also not Appellee’s agent and thus was unable to agree upon terms in his father’s

stead. The court determined specific performance – i.e., delivery of the property to

Appellee – was not an available remedy because no contract existed; even if a

contract did exist, the court noted such contract would simply be oral and thus

Appellee’s action on the contract would be barred by the Statute of Frauds. KRS1

1
    Kentucky Revised Statutes.

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371.010. With no other remedy available, the circuit court awarded Appellee

$25,000 in restitution because Appellant was unjustly enriched following the failed

transaction. Appellant now appeals.

                            STANDARD OF REVIEW

             “The question of the existence of a contract is a question of fact[.]”

Audiovox Corp. v. Moody, 737 S.W.2d 468, 471 (Ky. App. 1987) (citation

omitted). A trial court’s findings of fact are reviewed for clear error. Miller v.

Eldridge, 146 S.W.3d 909, 915 (Ky. 2004). Findings of fact “are not considered

clearly erroneous if they are ‘supported by substantial evidence.’” Goshorn v.

Wilson, 372 S.W.3d 436, 439 (Ky. App. 2012) (citation omitted). Substantial

evidence is evidence which “has sufficient probative value to induce conviction in

the minds of reasonable men[,]” whether it is considered alone or in light of all the

evidence. Kentucky State Racing Comm’n v. Fuller, 481 S.W.2d 298, 308 (Ky.

App. 1972) (citing Blankenship v. Lloyd Blankenship Coal Co., 463 S.W.2d 62

(Ky. 1970)). As for questions of law, appellate courts review such issues de novo.

Manning v. Lewis, 400 S.W.3d 737, 740 (Ky. 2013) (citing Kentucky Pub. Serv.

Comm’n v. Commonwealth ex rel. Conway, 324 S.W.3d 373, 376 (Ky. 2010)).

                                    ANALYSIS

             First, we find no error in the circuit court’s determination that no

contract existed between Appellant and Appellee “because there was no meeting of

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the minds.” “One of the essential elements of a contract, if not the most essential

element, is the requirement that there be an agreement between the parties.” King

v. Ohio Valley Fire & Marine Ins. Co., 212 Ky. 770, 280 S.W. 127, 129 (1926)

(citing Dixie Fire Ins. Co. v. Wallace, 153 Ky. 677, 156 S.W. 140 (1913)). Or, as

this principle is often stated, “the parties must enter into a meeting of the minds in

order to form an enforceable contract.” Olshan Found. Repair & Waterproofing v.

Otto, 276 S.W.3d 827, 831 (Ky. 2009). While parties to a contract need not have a

mutual understanding as to every minor term in their agreement, the parties must

“demonstrate their mutual assent to the essential terms of [the] agreement” for their

contract to be enforceable. Gen. Steel Corp. v. Collins, 196 S.W.3d 18, 21 (Ky.

App. 2006).

              Appellant and Appellee clearly had different understandings as to the

price Appellee would pay for Appellant’s property. Appellee told Junior he was

willing to pay $25,000 as full consideration for the property, but Appellant

understood this amount to constitute only partial payment. Her conversations with

Junior reflect this, including his representation he would pay an additional $13,500

so that Appellant would receive the total $38,500 she believed to be the purchase

price. Appellant also understood she would not transfer the deed to Appellee until

she received the total amount.

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             Because the parties failed to reach a mutual understanding as to an

obviously essential term, we agree with the circuit court that no meeting of the

minds occurred between Appellant and Appellee and therefore a contract was

never formed. Substantial evidence supports this conclusion, and thus we find no

error.

             The circuit court is also correct that Junior lacked authority to act as

his father’s agent. The record does not indicate whether Appellee ever granted his

son such authority – expressly or impliedly. Nor did Junior possess apparent

authority to accept a different price term; “apparent authority is created when the

principal holds out to others that the agent possesses certain authority that may or

may not have been actually granted to the agent[,]” Kindred Healthcare, Inc. v.

Henson, 481 S.W.3d 825, 830 (Ky. App. 2014), and nothing indicates Appellant

allowed his son to function as anything other than an intermediary in delivering his

offer to purchase of $25,000. The circuit court did not err in this determination.

             However, Appellant primarily takes issue with the circuit court’s

application of the Statute of Frauds, KRS 371.010. As the Statute of Frauds

provides, “[n]o action shall be brought to charge any person . . . [u]pon any

contract for the sale of real estate . . . unless the promise, contract, agreement,

representation, assurance, or ratification, or some memorandum or note thereof, be

in writing and signed by the party to be charged therewith, or by his authorized

                                           -6-
agent.” KRS 371.010(6). Though the circuit court determined no contract existed,

it did note that even if a contract had hypothetically been formed, the Statute of

Frauds would have barred any recovery under that contract. The circuit court

raised this point to illustrate Appellee was not entitled to any contract remedy:

either no contract ever existed, or the Statute of Frauds barred any contract remedy

if an oral contract did exist.

              Appellant argues the actual existence of a contract is irrelevant to

whether the Statute of Frauds prevents a claim; she argues the statute bars actions

arising not only from oral contracts, but also those arising from preliminary

negotiations to contracts, even if no contract results from those negotiations. And,

she argues, because the Statute of Frauds states “[n]o action shall be brought[,]”

KRS 371.010, the Statute of Frauds required the circuit court to dismiss Appellee’s

suit to recover the $25,000, whether a contract was formed or not.

              This argument runs counter to the plain language of the statute itself.

Appellant fails to acknowledge the statute specifically qualifies the prohibitions

against suits to those based “[u]pon any contract for the sale of real estate . . . .”

KRS 371.010(6). Thus KRS 371.010 does not extend to circumstances such as

these in which a contract was never formed at all.

              Appellant cites Bennett v. Horton, 592 S.W.2d 460 (Ky. 1979), as

standing for the proposition that the Statute of Frauds applies to claims arising

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from pre-formation contractual negotiations. It does not. Rather, Bennett stands

for the proposition that, notwithstanding the existence of an oral agreement, actions

to enforce certain species of agreements – including agreements to sell real estate –

are barred by the Statute of Frauds unless by a writing satisfying all requirements

for contract formation. Bennett, 592 S.W.2d at 463. The parties in Bennett had

such an oral agreement, including a price term: the appellees agreed to rent

property from appellant for a year for $200 per month, and thereafter to purchase

the property from him by paying him the remaining balance of a $75,000 purchase

price. Id. at 461. In no way does Bennett define the scope of the Statute of Frauds

to include negotiations where no agreement is ever reached at all. Unlike the

parties in Bennett, Appellant and Appellee never even reached an agreement in – to

use a generous term – the “negotiations” because they never reached agreement to

an essential contract term, the price.

             The circuit court, observing no available contract remedy, awarded

him restitution under a theory of unjust enrichment. This was not error. As the

court correctly notes, where “there was no meeting of the minds, no contract, but a

bona fide misunderstanding[,] . . . parties are entitled to restitution.” Smith v.

Hilliard, 408 S.W.2d 440, 442 (Ky. 1966) (citing Herman v. Jackson, 405 S.W.2d

9 (Ky. 1966)). It is of no consequence that Appellee failed to pursue recovery

under a theory of unjust enrichment; “[a] party’s failure to assert the existence of

                                          -8-
unjust enrichment does not serve to make it nonexistent.” Rose v. Ackerson, 374

S.W.3d 339, 343 (Ky. App. 2012). A trial court “is not precluded from making the

legal conclusion that unjust enrichment exists[,]” id., and so the circuit court did

not err in applying an unjust enrichment theory to this case.

              Three elements must be met for restitution to be available under a

theory of unjust enrichment: (1) the defendant benefitted at the plaintiff’s expense;

(2) resulting appreciation of the benefit by defendant; and (3) defendant

inequitably retained the benefit without payment for its value. Jones v. Sparks,

297 S.W.3d 73, 78 (Ky. App. 2009) (citing Guarantee Elec. Co. v. Big Rivers Elec.

Corp., 669 F. Supp. 1371, 1380-81 (W. D. Ky. 1987)). Further, if a party has an

adequate legal remedy available, recovery for unjust enrichment is barred entirely.

Superior Steel, Inc. v. Ascent at Roebling’s Bridge, LLC, 540 S.W.3d 770, 778

(Ky. 2017).

              The circuit court correctly determined, in the absence of any contract

remedy, Appellee was entitled to restitution for Appellant’s unjust enrichment.

Appellant received $25,000 from Appellee, and Appellant appreciated the benefit

by cashing Appellee’s check and paying down her son’s home loan. Appellant

kept her land, and never repaid Appellee. This is the kind of situation equitable

theories such as unjust enrichment are intended to rectify. It is inequitable for

Appellant to keep Appellee’s money when Appellee received nothing in exchange.

                                          -9-
                                CONCLUSION

            For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the Taylor Circuit Court’s

September 3, 2021 findings of fact, conclusions of law, and judgment.

            ALL CONCUR.

BRIEF FOR APPELLANT:                     BRIEF FOR APPELLEE:

Dawn L. McCauley                         Joseph R. Stewart
Lebanon, Kentucky                        David Higdon
                                         Lebanon, Kentucky

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