Court Opinion

ID: 1080140
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2013-10-09 20:38:08.481801+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T12:33:41.215241
License: Public Domain

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE

                                 EASTERN SECTION

                                                                               FILED
C. SAM ROBERTS,                            )   C/A NO. 03A01-9706-CH-00199
                                                                        December 9, 1997
                                           )
       Plaintiff-Appellee,                 )   UNION CHANCERY                  Cecil Crowson, Jr.
                                           )                                   Appellate C ourt Clerk
v.                                         )   HON. BILLY JOE WHITE
                                           )   CHANCELLOR
JAMES E. HOUSTON,                          )
                                           )   REVERSED AND
       Defendant-Appellant.                )   DISMISSED

MARY E. LOWE and HENRY T. OGLE, Knoxville, for Plaintiff-Appellee.

JOHN P. VALLIANT, JR., Knoxville, for Defendant-Appellant.

                                     OPINION

                                                          Franks, J.

              Plaintiff brought this action against defendant and his wife, Diane,

alleging that defendant “entered into agreement with plaintiff for plaintiff to grade and

excavate . . . in order to make said land usable”. Plaintiff further averred that he

expended over $29,000.00 for heavy equipment and operators on excavation, and

“purchased and installed piping at the cost of $3,604.00, for a total due in the amount

of $33,530.09".

              Defendant denied in his answer that he had contracted with plaintiff for

any work on his property.

              The record shows that defendant’s wife, Diane, was the daughter of

plaintiff and this action was brought after defendant and Diane had separated. In

defendant and Diane’s divorce action, defendant was awarded the property in

question, and plaintiff, before trial, nonsuited Diane as a party defendant.
              At trial, plaintiff testified that he had an agreement with defendant on

the property “to fill it in and in which we would do the grading work for them to cover

it”. He testified that the agreement was made between him and defendant at

defendant’s house, and that defendant’s wife was present when the agreement was

made. He further testified when he was doing work on the property the defendant

observed the work and did not make any complaints about the work. He was then

asked:

              Q.     All right, now how much money did you spend. Did it
                     accumulate in charges the time you were working on this job?

              A.     It was over $30,000.00.

              The defendant flatly denied that he and plaintiff ever entered into any

agreement regarding paying for the work done by plaintiff. Defendant testified that

when he and his wife bought the property it was his understanding that “Sam

improved - to work for a day. And that is what I was thinking it was. He never did

say he was going to charge us anything” and it was only after the divorce was filed

that plaintiff claimed money was owed. He was also asked the question:

              Q.     Are you aware of any agreement or the substance of any
                     agreement between Mr. Roberts and his daughter, Diane?

              A.     He was going to improve that property for Diane. He was doing
                     work for Diane on our property. That is all I know when I talked
                     to him.

At the conclusion of the trial, the Trial Court ruled that defendant had agreed with

plaintiff for the plaintiff “to do this work”. The Court then said that he was familiar

with the property which he deemed “practically worthless, prior to the work being

done, and the property most certainly now is valuable.” He concluded by ruling:

              so, based upon quantum merit theory, the plaintiff would be entitled to
              recover his $33,508.09.

              Our review of the Trial Court’s judgment is de novo with a presumption

that the Trial Court’s findings of fact are correct. T.R.A.P. Rule 13(d). The non-

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suited co-defendant daughter did not testify at trial, and the evidence is sharply

disputed on the position of whether a contract was entered between the plaintiff and

the defendant to do the grading and fill work. The evidence does not preponderate

against the Trial Court’s finding that defendant entered a contract with the plaintiff.

However, the plaintiff did not have a license to engage in “contracting”. See T.C.A.

§62-6-101 et seq. Due to this fact, defendant insists that plaintiff is not entitled to

recover for his work, and relies upon T.C.A. §62-6-103 which provides in pertinent

part:

              Recovery of Expenses by Unlicensed Contractor - (a)(1) . . . It is
              unlawful for any person, firm or corporation to engage in, or offer to
              engage in, contracting as hereinabove described, unless such person,
              firm or corporation has been duly licensed under the provisions of this
              chapter. . .
              (b) Any unlicensed contractor covered by the provisions of this chapter
              shall be permitted in a court of equity to recover actual documented
              expenses only upon a showing of clear and convincing proof.

Plaintiff also called as a witness James Brewer who was a dozer operator, and he

testified that he moved dirt on the lot and “guessed” that he worked seven or eight

months. On cross-examination, he testified that he was paid by cash and that Roberts

never furnished him with a tax form 1099. Plaintiff also called Jake Haynes who

operated Haynes Machinery Sales, Inc. Haynes testified that he had rented plaintiff a

tractor, but he did not keep up with where plaintiff used his machinery. He did

observe the piece of equipment on the lot in question on one occasion, because he had

been called to repair and oil leak. He offered some invoices of hours the equipment

was rented to plaintiff, and testified that payments were made in cash and by third-

party checks. He recalled that on one occasion plaintiff had given him a check for

$4,000.00 and he gave the plaintiff $3,000.00 cash, and applied $1,000.00 to the

account.

              With due deference to the Chancellor, this case was neither pled nor

tried on the theory of quantum merit. See Paschall’s, Inc. v. Dozier, 407 S.W.2d 150

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(Tenn. 1965).

                Plaintiff’s pleadings and evidence are that the defendant entered into an

oral contract with the plaintiff to do the grading and fill work on defendant’s property

and that defendant agreed to pay plaintiff for this work. Plaintiff’s evidence, in effect,

establishes a contract which was illegal under the provisions of the “Contractor’s

Licensing Act of 1994". Moreover, as a general rule, where a cause of action is based

upon an illegal contract, recovery cannot be had on a quantum merit. See Hotel v.

Ewing, 124 Tenn. 536 (Tenn. 1911).

                Plaintiff’s remedy on the evidence before us is provided in the above-

quoted section of T.C.A. §62-6-103 and is limited to “actual documented expenses

only upon a showing of clear and convincing proof.” Plaintiff’s action must fail

because first the evidence does not establish actual documented expenses, and we find

that the proof that was offered on the same is not clear and convincing.

                Accordingly, we reverse the Trial Court’s judgment and dismiss this

action at appellee’s cost.

                                            __________________________
                                            Herschel P. Franks, J.

CONCUR:

___________________________
Houston M. Goddard, P.J.

___________________________
Don T. McMurray, J.

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