v.
Robert Newman
03/26/2019 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT KNOXVILLE December 6, 2018 Session
INNERIMAGES, INC. v. ROBERT NEWMAN ET AL.
Appeal from the Circuit Court for Sevier County No. 15-410-I Carter Scott Moore, Judge ___________________________________
No. E2018-00375-COA-R3-CV ___________________________________
Innerimages, Inc. (“Innerimages” or “the developer”) filed suit against homeowners Robert Newman, David and Melba White,1 and David and Susan Schilt as trustees for the David Schilt and Susan Schilt Trust. It sought to recover unpaid maintenance fees required by the restrictive covenants governing their real property. The homeowners filed a counterclaim, seeking various forms of relief. The homeowners also joined the following third-party defendants: Sandra Gunn, the president of Innerimages, homeowners David and Joan Barrett, and property owner Cupid’s Rose, LLC.[2] After a bench trial, the court dismissed the collection action filed by the developer. The court determined: (1) that the restrictive covenants are unenforceable as to the four homeowners and their successors in title; (2) that the developer is liable for breach of fiduciary duty for its failure to honor its obligations under the restrictive covenants; and (3) that Sandra Gunn is personally liable under an alter ego theory of piercing the corporate veil. Finally, the court awarded the homeowners damages in the amount of all fees paid since taking ownership of their property or, in the case of the Schilt family, fees paid over the last three years. In a subsequent order, the trial court clarified that only Mr. Newman was entitled to money damages because the other homeowners had not paid fees to the developer during the relevant time period. The court also denied the homeowners’ request for attorney’s fees. Innerimages, Sandra Gunn, and Cupid’s Rose, LLC appeal. Because this appeal presents novel issues relating to the enforceability of restrictive covenants, we take this opportunity to adopt the Restatement (Third) of Property: Servitudes § 6.19(1)-(2) (Am. Law Inst. 2000). We modify the trial court’s judgment pursuant to the principles set forth in the Restatement. As modified, we affirm the judgment of the trial court.
[*30]The Village remain residents of Shagbark. Consequently, property owners in The Village must continue to abide by the Shagbark Restrictions and must also pay fees to the Shagbark POA.
The Village Restrictions impose additional restrictive covenants governing the use and appearance of property in The Village. In some ways, these restrictive covenants are more stringent than the Shagbark Restrictions. The Village Restrictions also require property owners to pay a monthly maintenance fee to the developer – forty dollars per month for an unimproved vacant lot and eighty dollars per month for an improved lot. According to The Village Restrictions, these fees
shall be used by The Developer for: the maintenance of THE VILLAGE roadways; the overall security of the development; the maintenance of the utility plants, security entrance features and landscaping; the Shagbark [POA] maintenance fees and assessments when appropriate; and for such other purposes as The Developer or Association pursuant to its by- laws, deem necessary for property maintenance of services. It is anticipated that private recreational facilities will be constructed within THE VILLAGE. Said monthly fees will increase for improved lots in order to defer operational costs, maintenance, insurance and utilities at the time that these recreational facilities are constructed and in use for THE VILLAGE owners and guests.
(Capitalization in original.)
Finally, The Village Restrictions provide that until seventy-five percent of the lots in The Village have been sold, “[t]he [d]eveloper shall exercise all rights herein.” When this occurs, “[a]ll owners of property shall automatically become members of The Village Property Owners Association,” and the association will exercise the rights and responsibilities formerly exercised by the developer.
In 1996, the developer recorded two plats that identified how The Village would be subdivided. Together, the plats depicted eighty-six lots,5 several recreation areas, and
Shagbark, Inc. conveyed its interest in the land to Innerimages approximately one month prior to the recordation of The Village Restrictions. That quitclaim deed was later recorded in December 1993.
[*31]a network of private roads. The property would be developed in five phases (Phases A – E). One of the plats showed an “Inn of the Clouds Conference Center” and a “Conference Center & Executive Suites” adjacent to The Village. At some point, the developer combined various lots, which reduced the total number of lots to eighty-two.
Since 1993, the developer has only sold six lots in Phase A of The Village.[6] Four of those lots are improved with homes. One lot, owned by the White family, is used as a septic drain field. The other lot, which is owned by Cupid’s Rose, LLC, remained unimproved at the time of trial. Development of Phase B began on the eve of trial. The remainder of the property is unimproved. No property owners association has ever been formed.
David and Susan Schilt purchased their home on Lot 25/12B in March 2007.7 At the time, the Schilts lived in Florida. They used their home in The Village as a vacation home and went there about four times a year. In 2012, the Schilts conveyed their home by quitclaim deed to the David Schilt and Susan Schilt Trust. In 2014, they moved from Florida to Seymour and began using their home in The Village about once a month. From 2007 to 2014, the Schilts paid monthly maintenance fees to the developer. They stopped paying the fees in 2015.
David and Joan Barrett bought their home on Lot 6A in August 2011. Their permanent residence is in Baxter. When they still owned their home in The Village, they used it about once a month. The Barretts always paid maintenance fees to the developer and did not wish to be parties to this litigation; however, they were subsequently joined as necessary and indispensable parties. After trial, the Barretts sold their home to Daniel Montgomery, who was substituted for the Barretts as an appellee. For convenience sake, we will continue to refer to this property as the Barretts’ home.
Robert Newman purchased his home on Lot 1A in November 2013. He and his wife reside in The Village for about six months of the year. The Newmans also have a home in Louisiana. Mr. Newman paid maintenance fees to the developer in 2014. He stopped paying maintenance fees in 2015.
David and Melba White purchased their home on Lot 26/12B in April 2014. Because the Whites’ septic tank was tied to a drain field on Lot 3A, the Whites also purchased Lot 3A. The Whites are permanent residents in The Village. They have never paid maintenance fees to the developer.
[*32]This litigation began in February 2015 when the developer filed three sworn accounts against Mr. Newman, the Whites, and the Schilts in the General Sessions Court for Sevier County, seeking the collection of unpaid maintenance fees. According to the developer, Mr. Newman and the Schilts both owed $650 plus interest, attorney’s fees, and costs. The Whites allegedly owed $1,125 plus interest, attorney’s fees, and costs. Each of the three families filed an answer and counterclaim.
By agreed order, the general sessions court consolidated the three cases and transferred them to the trial court. The trial court ordered the joinder of necessary and indispensable parties. Thereafter, the defendant homeowners filed an amended counterclaim and third party complaint, naming the following third-party defendants: Sandra Gunn, the president of Innerimages, homeowners David and Joan Barrett, and property owner Cupid’s Rose, LLC.
The homeowners sought the following forms of relief: an order declaring The Village Restrictions to be unenforceable; an order compelling the developer to account for all funds allegedly spent on common expenses; a money judgment equal to the amount of any misappropriated funds; punitive damages for willful or intentional misconduct in the misappropriation or misuse of funds, breach of fiduciary duty, and conflict of interest; an order enjoining the developer from further interference with the homeowners’ use of their property; and an award of attorney’s fees and costs. The homeowners also alleged that Ms. Gunn should be held personally liable under an alter ego theory of piercing the corporate veil. In response, the developer filed a motion for summary judgment, which the trial court denied.
A four-day bench trial followed.[8] The parties stipulated as to the amount of fees that each homeowner allegedly owed. All homeowners, except Mr. Newman, also stipulated that The Village Restrictions were in their respective chains of title. The developer called the following witnesses: Ms. Gunn (the president of Innerimages), Stephen Gunn (Ms. Gunn’s ex-husband and the vice-president of Innerimages), Janie Click (a lawn care and maintenance worker), Dan Hager (a board member of the Shagbark POA), Mark Gaisser (security chief and facility manager for Shagbark POA), and Rick Bearfield (an attorney qualified as an expert in title searches). The homeowners called: Mr. Barrett, Ms. Schilt, Mr. Newman, Mr. White, Michael Atchley (an employee of the Tennessee Department of Environment and Conservation (TDEC)), Daniel Ferguson (an environmental specialist for Sevier County Environmental Health Department), and James Temple (former assistant director of the Sevier County Planning Department). Witnesses testified about the relationship between Shagbark and The Village, the enforcement of The Village Restrictions, the services provided (or not provided) by the developer, the developer’s lack of accounting, etc. From this testimony, two radically different stories emerged.
[*33]According to the appellants, the developer has always intended to use its property to establish a residential community. Ms. Gunn testified about her plans to use The Village to support “Leslie’s Week,” a non-profit organization founded by Ms. Gunn that gives breast cancer patients and their families a one-week paid vacation. According to Ms. Gunn, the developer will eventually build a “spa” in Phase B of The Village and women will be able to rent certain homes in The Village for one week per year.
Ms. Gunn testified that development of The Village has been delayed due to “downturns in the economy,” low appraisals, and federal laws that have restricted lending policies. Nevertheless, Ms. Gunn claimed that the developer has invested significant amounts of time and money into the project. According to her, the developer has: graded roads, recorded plats, paid for engineering and surveying services, applied for various permits from regulatory agencies, and installed underground utilities (conduits for electric, telephone, and cable as well as pipes for water and sewer collection). Mr. Gunn, the “project manager” of The Village, testified that the developer spent “close to sixty thousand dollars” on an experimental “Anflow system” that was designed to treat sewage for about sixty homes.[9] Although the Anflow system was never operational,10 Ms. Gunn testified that it will eventually be modified to operate as a drip system. Ms. Gunn also testified that the developer continues to maintain roads in The Village and pays lawn care workers to weed-eat along the edges of roads, clear debris from ditches and culverts, and mow a drain field that services the septic systems of two homeowners in The Village. Ms. Gunn also testified that she has consistently enforced the architectural review restrictions.
According to the homeowners, The Village is virtually non-existent. The homeowners testified that the developer has only constructed four homes in twenty-four years, the last of which was built in 2007. The community’s one paved road – Village Summit Drive – was actually paved pursuant to a private agreement between the homeowners and the developer; costs were shared equally. Although the developer and all residents in The Village have an easement to use the road, the homeowners insist that it rests entirely on their private property. There is also a gravel road leading to the Barretts’ home. There was an unresolved factual dispute regarding the extent to which the developer maintained these roads.
[*34]The Barretts’ home and the Newmans’ home have traditional septic tank systems that tie into a common drain field allegedly maintained by the developer. The Schilts’ home has a traditional septic tank system that ties into a drain field that the Schilts own and privately maintain. The Whites’ septic system is a low pressure piping system that ties into a drain field on Lot 3A, which the Whites own and privately maintain.
Although the developer installed underground utilities (conduits and piping), the homeowners testified that the developer does not provide water. Instead, all four homeowners receive water from a well that is located on the Whites’ property. The homeowners entered into a private well agreement that governs their use of the well.
In 2008, the Schilts demanded an accounting from the developer. Other homeowners demanded an accounting in October 2014. Although Ms. Gunn testified that the developer kept records of all expenses, she did not produce a complete accounting until litigation was underway. At trial, Ms. Gunn testified that, until shortly before trial, she deposited the homeowners’ maintenance fees into the developer’s operating account, which was used to pay expenses incurred by both The Village and Innerimages. Ms. Gunn insisted, however, that she kept track of how the maintenance fees were being spent. The homeowners argued that many of the “expenses” listed in the accounting were not “common expenses.” The homeowners also alleged that Ms. Gunn comingled funds. Finally, the homeowners testified about Ms. Gunn’s enforcement of the architectural review restrictions. All of the homeowners recounted stories of Ms. Gunn’s strict interpretation and/or arbitrary application of the restrictions. This became a severe source of distress for the Schilt, Newman, and White families.[11]
After trial, the court produced a forty-page memorandum opinion. Findings of fact and credibility determinations were scattered throughout the court’s summary of the testimony and the court’s subsequent legal analysis. Although the court did not resolve all factual disputes that arose from the parties’ testimony, the court clearly determined that the developer “cannot and has not fulfilled her obligations to the landowners under [The Village Restrictions].” The court also found that the developer never intended to relinquish control of The Village to a homeowners association. Instead, the court found that Innerimages “is used as a business conduit or a place to divert assets to the detriment of creditors” and is “purely an instrument for the enrichment of Sandra Gunn.”
Ultimately, the court ruled that The Village Restrictions appear in the homeowners’ respective chains of title and “run with the land.” However, the court also determined: (1) that the restrictive covenants governing The Village are unenforceable as to the four homeowners and their successors in title; (2) that the developer is liable for breach of fiduciary duty for failing to honor its obligations under The Village Restrictions; and (3) that Sandra Gunn is subject to personal liability under an alter ego theory of piercing the corporate veil. Finally, the court awarded damages to the homeowners in the amount of all fees paid since taking ownership of their respective property or, in the case of the Schilt family, fees paid over the last three years. The court reserved the issue of attorney’s fees as well as the calculation of the aforementioned money judgments.
[*35]On February 21, 2018, the trial court entered an order resolving the issues previously reserved. The order stated that only Mr. Newman was entitled to money damages because the other homeowners had not paid fees to the developer during the time period identified in the court’s memorandum opinion. The trial court also denied the homeowners’ request for attorney’s fees. This order was certified as final pursuant to Tenn. R. Civ. P. 54. Innerimages, Sandra Gunn, and Cupid’s Rose, LLC appealed.
II.
We restate and consolidate the issues raised by the appellants as follows:
Whether the trial court committed reversible error by admitting extrinsic evidence that was offered at trial for the purpose of impeaching Ms. Gunn’s character for truthfulness?
Whether the trial court erred in holding that The Village Restrictions are unenforceable as to the four homeowners.[12]
Whether the trial court erred in determining that the developer owed and breached a fiduciary duty to the homeowners.
Whether the trial court erred in piercing the corporate veil to hold Ms. Gunn personally liable for the developer’s alleged breach of fiduciary duty.
The homeowners raise the additional issue of whether the trial court erred in denying their request for attorney’s fees.
[*36]III.
We begin by considering the potentially dispositive issue of whether the trial court committed reversible error when it admitted extrinsic evidence that was offered at trial for the purpose of impeaching Ms. Gunn’s character for truthfulness. Questions regarding the admissibility of evidence are reviewed for abuse of discretion. Shipley v. Williams, 350 S.W.3d 527, 552 (Tenn. 2011). Even when a trial court abused its discretion, however, this Court will not reverse the judgment of the trial court “unless, considering the whole record, error involving a substantial right more probably than not affected the judgment . . . .” Tenn. R. App. P. 36(b).
Counsel for the homeowners apparently asked the trial court in a post-trial brief to admit into evidence an exhibit that was previously marked for identification purposes only.[13] The exhibit contained several court documents relating to a 1989 judgment of the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Tennessee that afforded full faith and credit to judgments entered in a Colorado state court in favor of First Federal Savings Bank and against Mr. Gunn and Caltennco-Colorado, Inc. In that case, the federal court concluded that “Caltennco was a mere alter ego or instrumentality of Stephen A. Gunn, used as a conduit for passing loan proceeds siphoned from [a real estate development] project on to other entities for the personal benefit of Mr. Gunn, his wife Sandra W. Gunn, and the objects of their affections.” The federal court also determined that Ms. Gunn “participated knowingly and voluntarily in her husband’s fraudulent scheme to divert loan proceeds to personal uses.” According to the federal court, Mr. and Mrs. Gunn were not credible witnesses. Various documents relating to that federal court case were offered at trial for the purpose of impeaching Ms. Gunn’s character for truthfulness. Ms. Gunn’s counsel immediately objected, citing Rule 608(b) of the Tennessee Rules of Evidence. The trial court sustained the Rule 608(b) objection but allowed the evidence to be entered as exhibit twenty-five and marked for identification purposes.
In its memorandum opinion, the trial court in this case reversed its earlier evidentiary ruling and admitted exhibit twenty-five into evidence pursuant to Rules 405(b) and 406 of the Tennessee Rules of Evidence. Appellants argue that the trial court erred by admitting this exhibit into evidence. They argued that this error demands outright reversal. According to the appellants, exhibit twenty-five “played a large role” in the trial court’s judgment because the court heavily relied upon the federal court’s memorandum opinions in that exhibit. Appellants also argue that the trial court “made credibility determinations about witnesses” based on exhibit twenty-five, which “colored the entire process.”
We decline to address whether the trial court erred in admitting exhibit twenty-five into evidence because, after considering the whole record, we cannot say that the evidence “more probably than not affected the judgment . . . .” Tenn. R. App. P. 36(b). The trial court primarily relied on the evidence in exhibit twenty-five to substantiate the trial court’s own independent findings that (1) Sandra and Stephen Gunn were not credible witnesses; and (2) that Innerimages is the alter ego of Ms. Gunn.
[*37]For example, after considering the evidence in exhibit twenty-five, the trial court remarked that the credibility of Ms. Gunn and her ex-husband “has been destroyed.” Standing alone, it would appear that the trial court’s credibility determination was significantly, if not entirely, based on the evidence in exhibit twenty-five. A closer review of the trial court’s memorandum opinion, however, reveals that the court had already independently determined that
the credibility of Sandra Gunn and Stephen Gunn had been seriously damaged by their demeanor while testifying and their bold assertions in responding to questions not only at trial but in pretrial depositions without ever producing any evidence to support their claims[.]
(Emphasis added.) To support this conclusion, the court specifically and repeatedly identified portions of the Gunns’ testimony that the trial court found incredible.
Similarly, in the trial court’s alter ego/veil-piercing analysis, the court cited a “very convenient expression of the applicable law” as set forth in a federal court memorandum opinion in exhibit twenty-five. The quoted passage, however, merely articulated factors that a court should consider when conducting an alter ego/veil-piercing analysis. The trial court proceeded to conduct its own independent analysis and made numerous factual findings based on the testimony and exhibits introduced at trial. Although the trial court also quoted liberally from other passages in the federal court memorandum opinions, the court’s purpose in doing so is not entirely clear. Some quotations seem to establish the general relevancy of the evidence (i.e., the names of the parties, overlapping dates, etc.). Other quotations contain harsh language directed at the Gunns, which the trial court apparently incorporated for dramatic effect. On balance, however, it appears that the trial court placed greater weight on its own factual findings and legal analysis than on the evidence presented in exhibit twenty-five.
Viewing the trial court’s memorandum opinion in its totality, we do not think the court’s consideration of exhibit twenty-five “more probably than not affected the judgment . . . .” Tenn. R. App. P. 36(b). Consequently, the consideration of exhibit twenty-five, if erroneous, was harmless.
- 10 - IV. Turning to the substantive issues raised in this appeal, we now consider whether The Village Restrictions are enforceable by the developer against the homeowners. This presents a question of law that we review de novo without affording a presumption of correctness to the conclusions of the trial court. See Harris v. Aldmon, No. E2014- 002303-COA-R3-CV, 2015 WL 1518599, at *4 (Tenn. Ct. App., filed Mar. 30, 2015), rehearing granted in part (Apr. [21], 2015), no appl. perm. app. filed. In conducting our legal analysis, however, we will afford a presumption of correctness to the trial court’s factual findings, unless the preponderance of the evidence requires otherwise. Hicks v. Cox, 978 S.W.2d 544, 547 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1998). We will also give significant weight to factual findings that “are dependent upon the credibility of the witnesses,” because the trial court had the “opportunity to observe the appearance and demeanor of the witnesses.” St. Clair v. Evans, 857 S.W.2d 49, 51 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1993) (citing Tenn– Tex Properties v. Brownell–Electro, Inc., 778 S.W.2d 423 (Tenn. 1989)). “A property owner’s right to own, use, and enjoy private property is a fundamental right.” Hughes v. New Life Dev. Corp., 387 S.W.3d 453, 474 (Tenn. 2012) (citations omitted). “Not surprisingly, then, Tennessee law does not favor restrictive covenants, because they are in derogation of the rights of free use and enjoyment of property.” Id. at 474-75. Generally, restrictive covenants are only enforceable in equity if: (1) the restrictions “ ‘touch and concern’ the land”; (2) the original parties intended that the restrictions would “run with the land and bind remote grantees”; and (3) the remote grantees had notice of the restrictions. Gambrell v. Nivens, 275 S.W.3d 429, 437 (Tenn. Ct. App. 2008) (quoting Tennsco Corp. v. Attea, No. M2001-01378-COA-R3-CV, 2002 WL 1298808, at *2 (Tenn. Ct. App., filed June 13, 2002)). Here, the trial court determined that The Village Restrictions, as initially drafted, were valid and therefore binding on remote grantees. We agree. The restrictions, which govern the use and appearance of property in The Village, certainly “touch and concern the land.” The restrictions also expressly state the developer’s intent that the restrictions “run with the title to said land[.]” Finally, the developer presented proof that the restrictions were recorded and appear in the chain of title to each of the defendants’ properties, thus putting the defendants on constructive notice.[14]