Court Opinion

ID: 1075897
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2013-10-09 20:16:46.528302+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:40:18.378033
License: Public Domain

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
                                                   FILED
                         AT KNOXVILLE
                                                                      June 25, 1999

                                                                    Cecil Crowson, Jr.
                                                                    Appellate C ourt
                                                                        Clerk
KENNETH GRISSIM,                       )      WASHINGTON CIRCUIT
                                       )      (No. 18506)
      Plaintiff/Appellant                     )
                                       )      NO. 03A01-9807-CV-00222
v.                                     )
                                       )      HON. THOMAS J. SEELEY, JR.
POWELL CONSTRUCTION                    )      JUDGE
COMPANY, INC.,                         )
                                       )      AFFIRMED
      Defendant/Appellee               )

James H. Price, Knoxville, for Appellant.
Rick J. Bearfield, Johnson City, for Appellee.

                                 OPINION

                                              INMAN, Senior Judge

      In this jury case the plaintiff successfully sought damages for wrongful

discharge from employment, and this is not an issue on appeal.

      The plaintiff also sought damages pursuant to T.C.A. § 50-1-102, alleging

that he was induced by false or deceptive statements to accept employment by the

defendant. This theory of recovery was the subject of a motion for a directed

verdict which was granted. The issue for determination is the propriety of a

directed verdict.

      In ruling on a motion for directed verdict, a trial judge must take the

strongest legitimate view of evidence in favor of the non-moving party, allow all

reasonable inferences from that evidence in the non-moving party’s favor, discard

all countervailing evidence, and grant a directed verdict if reasonable minds could

draw but one conclusion. Bland v. Allstate Ins. Co., 944 S.W.2d 372 (Tenn. App.

1996). However, if a dispute exists as to any material fact or if there is any doubt

as to the conclusions to be drawn from the evidence, the motion must be denied.
Arcata Graphics Co. v. Heidelberg Harris, Inc., 874 S.W.2d 15, 21 (Tenn. App.

1993), citing Country Maid Dairy, Inc. v. Hunter, 416 S.W.2d 367, 372 (Tenn.

App. 1967).         T.C.A. § 50-1-102 provides, in pertinent part, as follows:

      § 50-1-102. False or deceptive representations, false advertising
      or false pretenses; damages:
      (a)(1) It is unlawful for any person to induce, influence, persuade or
      engage workers to change from one (1) place to another in this state,
      or to bring workers of any class or calling into this state to work in
      any type of labor in this state through or by means of false or
      deceptive representations, false advertising or false pretenses,
      concerning the kind and character of the work to be done, or amount
      and character of the compensation to be paid for such work, or the
      sanitary or other conditions of the employment, or as to the existence
      or nonexistence of a strike, or other trouble pending between
      employer and employees, at the time of or prior to such engagement.

      The evidence offered by the plaintiff revealed that on August 19, 1992, he

met with the President of Powell Construction Company (PCC) to discuss

employment. He testified that he was offered a contract, which he accepted, for a

stipulated salary plus annual bonuses of five percent of the profits of the Utility

Division of PCC.

      The method of accounting by construction companies is not disputed.

Because construction jobs may span two or more years with potentially large

profits (or losses), the Internal Revenue Service requires a construction company

to recognize profit (or loss) from that job each fiscal year, even though the job is

not complete at the end of the year. To accomplish this, contractors prepare what

are known in the industry as “over/under statements” to show the anticipated profit

(or loss) for each job. The over/under statement is generally prepared on a monthly

basis, but the profit or loss shown on the over/under for the last month of the fiscal

year is the profit or loss that is recognized for that tax year.

      When the first over/under statement for a job is prepared, it will show the

estimated profit at the time the job was bid because nothing has altered that

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original projection. As the job progresses, the estimated profit or loss will be

adjusted as various factors dictate, as for instance, if cost of materials increase or

construction delays occur in a given month, the ensuing over/under statement will

change to reflect the increased expenses and lower estimated profit. This method

of accounting necessarily requires that profits and costs be estimated, and they

fluctuate significantly over the course of the contract. But, a construction company

has a very real incentive to accurately predict profit and loss and to recognize its

losses as soon as it knows of them, because failure to do so causes the company to

pay income tax on anticipated profit that will never be realized.

      Plaintiff, long experienced in the construction field, testified that he was

shown a July 1992 over/under statement for the Powell Utility Division at the time

he met representatives of PCC to discuss employment in August, 1992. He

knowledged that he understood that the over/under statement given to him during

his interview showed only projected or anticipated profits for the Division.

Specifically, he testified:

      Q:     So are you telling the jury that Mr. Powell promised to pay you
             five percent of [the estimated profit on the July 1992
             over/under statement] $4,854,852.00?

      A:     If all of these jobs projected out as the projection showed, that
             would be it, yes, sir.

After some discussion, the parties agreed that $3,849,499.00 was the estimated

profit on the July 1992 over/under statement.

      Q:     Okay. Are you telling this jury that Mr. Powell promised that
             he’s give you five percent of $3,849,499.00?

      A:     We never discussed what the profits were at that date.
             This was handed to me and showed me and told me that
             he would give me five percent of a net profit of the
             organization at the end of that year.

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      Q:     . . . I want you to tell the jury, if you can, what that
             something is that you’re asking them to give you five
             percent of?

      A:     Sir, the only think I can do is ask the jury to say that I was
             expected to get five percent of the profits earned for that year,
             which this [over/under statement] does not disclose. This only
             discloses up to July.

      Q:     . . . I’m asking you about July. Do you have any evidence . . .

      A:     I do not.

      Q:     . . . that when this [over/under statement] was made in July that
             it was untrue at the time it was made?

      A:     I’ll have to say no because that was the only thing I had.

      Q:     Okay. And it’s the only thing you have today, isn’t it?

      A:     As far as I’m concerned.

      Q:     Okay. And it’s true, isn’t it, that the only basis for your claim
             under the statute 50-1-102 - the only basis, the only false thing
             that you’re contending was said to you was the profit and loss
             statement - the over and under. Isn’t that right?

      A:     I’m not saying today that it was false at that time. But it turned
             out to be that it was probably a false statement that I was
             shown.

      Q:     Well, it changed, didn’t it?

      A:     It changed.

      Q:     That’s different than being false, isn’t it?

      A:     Well, yes, it is.

      Q:     It changed?

      A:     It changed.

      The plaintiff’s testimony indicates that he understood the July 1992

over/under statement to be only a projection of anticipated profit, and that he was

cognizant of the fluctuating nature of over/under statements. He further conceded

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that PCC never represented the July 1992 over/under statement to be a statement

of actual profits, which could not be determined until the end of the year.

      A former employee of PCC, Bruce Hawks, testified that the July, 1992

over/under statement contained inaccurate information which inflated the estimated

profit of the Utility Division. He testified that the estimated profit on the Rockfish

Job should have been about $650,000.00 rather than $893,000.00 as shown by the

July statement. As it developed, the Rockfish Job eventually resulted in a loss in

excess of one million dollars, thus depriving the plaintiff of a bonus.

      Recognizing that the testimony of Mr. Hawks created a factual dispute as to

the accuracy of the July, 1992 statement, the trial judge discussed the significance,

as a matter of law, of the variance. He found

      If you subtract $184,852.00, the amount that Mr. Hawks said was
      profit that should not have been recognized on Rockfish Creek, you
      come up with a figure of $4,670,000.00 . . . [T]he revised estimated
      figure that Mr. Grissim should have been looking at would have been
      $4,670,000.00 instead of $4,854,852.00. That’s a variance of point
      .038; in other words, it’s a variance of less than 4 percent. That is not
      a significant variance . . . It’s just a relatively small amount when
      considered as part of the total revised estimated profit figure. The
      Court finds that no reasonable mind would find that Mr. Grissim
      would have looked at $4,670,000.00 and come to any other
      conclusion than the one he came to at the time, was that it would be
      better for him to go to work for Powell Construction Company.

      By adjusting the July, 1992, estimated profit downward according to Mr.

Hawks’ testimony, the trial judge acknowledged that he had taken the strongest

legitimate view of the evidence in favor of Mr. Grissim, reasoning that a

$184,852.00 reduction in the July 1992 estimated profits, a variance of less than

4 percent, would not have affected Mr. Grissim’s decision to accept PCC’s offer.

      The appellant argues that T.C.A. § 50-1-102 does not require that any

misrepresentation be a material one, and that a material misrepresentation is not

required to state a claim for negligent misrepresentation.          As to the latter

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insistence, suffice to state that the plaintiff did not allege negligent

misrepresentation, and did not present this issue to the trial court. He cannot raise

the issue on appeal. Simpson v. Frontier C. C. Union, 810 S.W.2d 147 (Tenn.

1991).

      At common law, an action for fraudulent misrepresentation requires that it

be so material as to determine the conduct of the parties, Atkins v. Kirkpatrick, 823
S.W.2d 547 (Tenn. App. 1993), and the materiality of a misrepresentation, if one

is found, is a question of law for the court. Bauer v. Mutual of Omaha, 460 S.W.2d
366 (Tenn. App. 1969).

      The appellant argues that since the Legislature did not provide that any false

representation proscribed by T.C.A. § 50-1-102(a)(1) must be a material one, it

follows that the lack of materiality as found by the trial judge is an impermissible

engraftment on the statute. The appellee responds by arguing that the courts

should not displace common law more than is necessarily required for statutory

construction and should take care neither to restrict the coverage of the statute nor

expand its scope, citing Michaels v. Atrip, 844 S.W.2d 655 (Tenn. App. 1992).

The materiality of any fact in a contested proceeding is basic to our judicial system,

and we agree with the trial judge that from the plaintiff’s best perspective, the

reduction in the July, 1992 statement would not have affected the plaintiff’s

decision to accept PCC’s offer and was thus immaterial.

      The appellant does not respond to the argument of the appellee that he

cannot prevail for yet another reason: that fraud cannot be based on erroneous

projections and representations as to the future success of a business or

corporation. This principle was alluded to in Waring v. Polymer Materials, Inc.,

1997 WL32736, Tenn. App. 1997, citing Zar v. Omni Industries, 813 F.2d 689 (5th

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Cir. 1987), Sharp v. Idaho Invest. Corp., 504 P.2d 386 (Idaho 1972), Dorr v.

Janssen, 378 P.2d 999 (Oregon 1963) and Evans v. Gray, 215 S.2d 40 (Fla. App.

1968). The record reflects no evidence that PCC ever represented the over/under

statement to be more than a mere projection of profit. A projection is simply an

informed estimate, but we are not disposed to hold that, as an absolute, fraud

cannot be based on incorrect projections. In the case at Bar, however, the principle

announced in Waring is appropo in light of the testimony of the plaintiff.

      The trial judge ruled that the plaintiff was not entitled to recover because

there was no proof of a material misrepresentation in projected profits for 1992 and

no proof of profits for 1993 and 1994. The only proof offered concerned the

Rockfish project, which, had it not lost a million dollars plus, would have shown

profit for 1993. But the plaintiff admitted that he had no idea of the profits for the

years in question, and, as found by the trial judge, “there is no proof in the record

as to what, if any, profits PCC had in those three years.”

      The judgment is affirmed at the costs of the appellant.

                                        _______________________________
                                        William H. Inman, Senior Judge
CONCUR:

_____________________
Herschel P. Franks, Judge

_______________________
Charles D. Susano, Jr., Judge

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