IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
AT KNOXVILLE
November 7, 2011 Session
TENNESSEE RAND, INC. v. AUTOMATION INDUSTRIAL
GROUP, LLC, ET AL.
Appeal from the Chancery Court for Hamilton County
No. 05-0203 W. Frank Brown, III, Chancellor
No. E2011-00280-COA-R3-CV-FILED-JANUARY 12, 2012
The first time this case was before us, see Tennessee Rand, Inc. v. Automation Industrial
Group, LLC, No. E2009-00116-COA-R3-CV, 2010 WL 3852317 (Tenn. Ct. App. E.S., filed
Sept. 29, 2010) (“Rand I”), we reversed that portion of the trial court’s judgment decreeing
that Automation Industrial Group, LLC (“Automation”) was not entitled to recover on its
counterclaim due to its fraud and we reinstated the trial court’s earlier judgment awarding
Automation $2,270,759.22 plus prejudgment interest of $256,705.19. The trial court had
entered its earlier judgment against Tennessee Rand, Inc. (“Rand”) on Automation’s
counterclaim, and then set it aside on Rand’s motion to alter or amend. Although the parties
had not addressed in the first appeal the prejudgment interest portion of the trial court’s
earlier judgment, we, without extended discussion, reinstated the prejudgment interest as
originally calculated by the trial court. What the parties did not put at issue or otherwise
stress in the first appeal was the fact that Rand had challenged, in its motion to alter or
amend, the accuracy of the trial court’s calculation of prejudgment interest. In that motion,
Rand had argued that the trial court had obviously miscalculated prejudgment interest. In
Rand I, we also reversed an award of discretionary costs to Rand because we concluded that
Automation was the new prevailing party. Upon remand following our decision in Rand I,
Rand asked the trial court to correct the miscalculation of prejudgment interest. Rand also
asked the court to start the accrual of post-judgment interest from the date of entry of the trial
court’s judgment on remand. Automation filed a motion for discretionary costs as the new
prevailing party. The trial court on remand determined that it had miscalculated prejudgment
interest but held that our opinion in Rand I prevented it from granting Rand any relief with
respect to the miscalculation as well as with respect to the other relief requested by Rand.
The trial court also denied Automation’s motion for discretionary costs, based, at least in
part, on Automation’s substantial windfall award of prejudgment interest due to the
1
miscalculation. Rand now appeals the denial of its motions, and Automation challenges the
denial of its request for discretionary costs. Automation also asks us to determine an issue
pertaining to interest on the unpaid portion1 of the judgment entered on remand. We
conclude that, in the interest of justice, we must take corrective action pursuant to Tenn. R.
App. P. 36 by granting Rand relief from the miscalculation of prejudgment interest. Since
the erroneous and inflated award of prejudgment interest was one of the reasons given by the
trial court for denying discretionary costs, we vacate that denial and remand for further
consideration of Automation’s request. We affirm that part of the judgment, as modified by
us, holding that Automation is entitled to post-judgment interest from the date of entry of the
original judgment in its favor. Rand obtained a stay of collection of Automation’s judgment
pending appeal upon posting a bond to cover interest accrued between the original judgment
date and the date of the judgment on remand. The amount set by the trial court to obtain a
stay did not include interest accrued on the unpaid portion of the judgment. We hold that
Automation is entitled to recover post-judgment interest accrued on the judgment.
Accordingly, the trial court’s judgment is vacated in part and modified in part. As vacated
and modified, the judgment is affirmed.
Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Chancery Court
Vacated in Part; Modified in Part; and Affirmed in Part; Case Remanded
C HARLES D. S USANO, J R., J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which H ERSCHEL P.
F RANKS, P.J., and D. M ICHAEL S WINEY, J., joined.
Richard W. Bethea and Tom Greenholtz, Chattanooga, Tennessee, for the appellant,
Tennessee Rand, Inc.
Gary R. Patrick, R. Jonathan Guthrie, and McKinley S. Lundy, Jr., Chattanooga, Tennessee,
for the appellee, Automation Industrial Group, LLC.
OPINION
I.
The posture of this “complicated business divorce case” as it came to us in Rand I
was that the parties spent 25 days trying the case after which the trial court entered a
judgment in the amount of $2,270,759.22 plus prejudgment interest on August 29, 2008 (“the
August 2008 judgment”) in favor of Automation and against Rand. As a part of the same
1
Following the entry of the judgment on remand, Rand made a substantial payment on the judgment
to Automation.
2
judgment, the court decreed that Rand was entitled to a judgment against Automation in the
amount of $662,818.80. On December 18, 2008, the trial court entered a new judgment (“the
December 2008 judgment”) – prompted by Rand’s motion to alter or amend – in which
judgment it reversed the August 2008 judgment entered in favor of Automation. The central
issue in Rand I was whether the trial court had erred in setting aside the earlier judgment in
favor of Automation. Other issues included whether the evidence preponderated in favor of
a larger judgment for Automation, the validity and amount of the judgment in favor of Rand,
and the award of discretionary costs to Rand. We held, in our opinion filed September 29,
2010 (“the September 2010 judgment”), that the trial court erred in setting aside the August
2008 judgment in favor of Automation, but that the evidence did not preponderate against
the amount awarded to Automation in that judgment. Therefore, we reinstated that part of the
judgment awarding Automation a recovery against Rand. Our exact language is as follows:
We believe the trial court chose a logical route through a
confusing situation. We hold that the evidence does not
preponderate against the finding that Rand owes Automation
$2,270,759.22.
Although neither party has asked us to deal with the trial court’s
award of prejudgment interest on Automation’s counterclaim,
we will address it briefly. The court calculated interest from the
date the claim was made. Its award is based on a rate of 5% on
[$552,853.79] and a rate of 1.25% on the remainder. The award
is certainly within the reasonable bounds of discretion.
Consistent with our handling of Automation’s claim, we
reinstate this award of prejudgment interest.
Rand I at 19-20 (footnote added).
The miscalculation in prejudgment interest made by the trial court in the August 2008
judgment is fairly obvious upon a close review of the trial court’s explanation of the
prejudgment interest award in that judgment:
With regard to [Automation’s] account receivable claim, the
court awards 5% interest on $552,853.79 from April 25, 2005,
until the entry of this judgment. Prejudgment interest for three
years, four months and four days is $184,890.46.2
2
The prejudgment interest, i.e., $184,890.46, on the $552,853.79 portion of the judgment, is the only
portion of the prejudgment interest award at issue in this case. The remainder of the prejudgment interest
is not now and never has been at issue.
3
By using round numbers, it becomes clear that the trial court’s numeric calculation actually
almost doubled its intended award of prejudgment interest. A principal amount of $500,000
at a rate of 10% would yield $50,000 per year and $150,000 in three years. The lesser rate
of 5% – the rate the trial court said it was using – would yield only $75,000 for 3 years. Rand
has calculated the amount of prejudgment interest on the $552,853.79 portion of the
judgment, using exact figures, to be $92,571.87. While disagreeing with Rand’s position that
the trial court has the authority to correct this error, Automation does not challenge the
mathematical accuracy of Rand’s calculation.
It is important to remember that Rand, in its motion to alter or amend that resulted in
the December 2008 judgment, had specifically challenged the amount of prejudgment interest
on the $552,853.79 as an erroneous calculation. The December 2008 judgment of the trial
court had the effect of pretermitting any issue as to the amount of prejudgment interest on
the award in August 2008. This is because the judgment upon which the prejudgment
interest had been calculated was set aside in its entirety. Given that the issue was effectively
pretermitted by the trial court’s reversal, it was not argued on the merits before this Court in
Rand I. We simply adopted the trial court’s numbers in our opinion and, in doing so,
repeated the trial court’s simple and honest mathematical mistake.
The trial court’s ruling on remand was as follows:
[T]he Court notes that . . . Rand is correct that this Court
inadvertently miscalculated the amount of prejudgment interest
to be awarded on the portion of the judgment representing the
$552,853.79 in held invoices. The Court finds that this
mathematical error would reduce the award of prejudgment
interest [to $92,571.87].3 Nevertheless, this Court does not have
the authority to modify the judgment that the Tennessee Court
of Appeals affirmed as modified and reinstated.
(Footnote and emphasis added.)
3
We have used the preposition “to” instead of the word “by” used by the trial court to correct what
we believe was simply a misstatement. Rand’s assertion that the correct amount of prejudgment interest on
the $552,853.79 portion of the judgment is $92,571.87 is not challenged by Automation as to the amount.
Thus, we believe the court intended to say that the prejudgment interest is reduced “by $92,318.59” which
represents the difference between $184,890.46 and $92,571.87.
4
As we have indicated, Rand asked the trial court to hold that post-judgment interest
on Automation’s judgment against Rand did not begin to run until the trial court entered an
order setting the exact amount of the judgment on remand. That judgment was entered on
January 28, 2011 (“the January 2011 judgment”). Rand specifically argued that post-
judgment interest should not run from the date of the August 2008 judgment. The trial court
found as follows:
The Court finds that the amount of Automation’s judgment as
modified and reinstated by the Tennessee Court of Appeals as
of August 29, 2008 is $2,342,746.004 . . . . Rand is not entitled
to any further adjustments to Automation’s judgment of
$2,342,746.00 as of August 29, 2008. The Court further finds
that Automation is entitled to post-judgment interest at the
statutory rate of ten percent (10%) on Automation’s judgment
against . . . Rand in the amount of $2,342,746.00 from August
29, 2008 to present. The court determines that the amount of
post-judgment interest on Automation’s judgment against . . .
Rand from August 29, 2008 through January 28, 2011 is
$566,163.61. The amount of Automation’s judgment . . . plus
post-judgment interest as of January 28, 2011 is $2,908,909.61.
(Footnote added.) As can be seen, the trial court “rolled” the post-judgment interest into the
judgment of January 28, 2011, making that judgment total $2,908,909.61.
Moving forward, we will be discussing four critical judgment dates. To assist the
reader, we restate those judgments and their significance:
August 2008 First judgment of the trial court awarding
Automation a judgment in excess of $2.5
million, including prejudgment interest.
December 2008 Trial court’s judgment reversing award to
Automation.
September 2010 Court of Appeals judgment.
January 2011 Trial court judgment on remand.
4
We are not sure how the trial court arrived at this figure, but since the amount is not challenged on
this appeal, we assume it is correct.
5
As we have previously stated, Automation filed a motion for discretionary costs based
upon our determination in Rand I that Automation was the new prevailing party.
Automation sought court reporter charges of $17,971.85 and expert witness fees of $1,600
for a total of $19,571.85. Rand opposed the motion arguing that Automation lost as much
or more than it won and therefore its position as “prevailing party” was tenuous and entitled
to “little weight” on the subject of discretionary costs. Rand specifically challenged
$5,946.09 of the request as not being allowable under Tenn. R. Civ. P. 54.
The trial court denied in toto Automation’s request for discretionary costs. The denial
was based upon
equitable reasons, including the Court’s decision that the Court
cannot alter the amount of the (excessive per opinion)
prejudgment interest award to Automation.
Upon the entry of the January 2011 judgment, Rand appears to have paid Automation
the sum of $2,250,423.60. Rand arrived at this amount by subtracting from the January 2011
judgment (1) the challenged prejudgment interest, and (2) the post-judgment interest accrued
between the August 2008 judgment and the January 2011 judgment. Rand then filed a
motion to stay efforts by Automation to collect any part of the judgment that remained
unsatisfied. The trial court granted Rand’s motion and prohibited Automation from
attempting to “execute upon the January 28, 2011 judgment or otherwise issue post-judgment
discovery in aid of execution.” The court further ordered that
Rand may obtain a full stay of execution of the judgment
pending appeal upon payment into Court of $663,125.07 . . . ;
the Court calculates this amount as the sum of (1) $92,344.25
not already paid by . . . Rand on the January 28, 2011 judgment;
(2) an additional six-months of statutory interest on this unpaid
amount in the amount of $4,617.21; and (3) statutory interest
running from August 29, 2008 through January 28, 2011 in the
amount of $566,163.61. . . .
. . . Rand may alternatively obtain a full stay of execution of the
judgment pending appeal by obtaining an irrevocable letter of
credit, with Automation . . . as beneficiary . . . .
Rand supplied the letter of credit and thereby stayed collection of any unpaid portion of the
judgment. It is Rand’s position that payment of the unchallenged portion, i.e.,
6
$2,250.423.60,5 of the principal amount of the January 2011 judgment, prevented the running
of any additional interest. It is Automation’s position that any portion of the judgment that
remained unpaid as of January 28, 2011, whether it is principal, or interest, or some
combination of each, accrues interest from that date at the 10% statutory rate until the date
it is paid.
II.
Rand raises two issues on appeal which we repeat verbatim:
Whether, upon remand of this case . . ., the chancery court
possessed authority to correct an undisputed mathematical error
in the calculation of the judgment, or, alternatively, whether this
Court may act to correct an undisputed mathematical error in the
calculation of the judgment.
Whether, upon remand of this case . . . for further proceedings
to determine judgment, the chancery court improperly held that
post-judgment interest began running from a previous judgment
rather than upon entry of the final judgment.
Automation raises the following issues which we also have quoted verbatim:
Whether Automation is entitled to recover post-judgment
interest on all amounts of the trial court’s final post-remand
Judgment that Rand has not paid.
Whether the trial court erred by failing to award Automation its
discretionary costs after this Court determined that Automation
was the new prevailing party.
III.
With the exception of the trial court’s ruling on discretionary costs, all the issues
raised by the parties present questions of law. A trial court’s conclusions of law are reviewed
5
This figure comes from Rand. The true figure of the unchallenged portion appears to be
$2,250,427.41, i.e., the face amount of the judgment of $2,342,746 found by the trial court in the January
2011 judgment reduced by $92,318.59, which appears to be the amount of the prejudgment interest
miscalculation.
7
de novo with no presumption of correctness. Vantage Technology, LLC v. Cross, 17 S.W.3d
637, 644 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1999).
By the express terms of Tenn. R. Civ. P. 54.04, discretionary costs are “allowable only
in the [trial] court’s discretion.” Therefore, we will not “alter a trial court’s ruling [on
discretionary costs] absent a clear abuse of discretion.” Trinity Industries v. McKinnon
Bridge Co., 77 S.W.3d 159, 180 (Tenn. Ct. App. 2001); see, Owens v. Owens, 241 S.W.3d
478, 497 (Tenn. Ct. App. 2007). Failure to follow the controlling legal standards to the
prejudice of one of the parties can constitute an abuse of discretion. See Overstreet v.
Shoney’s, Inc., 4 S.W.3d 694, 709 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1999).
IV.
A.
The most logical starting place is with the obvious miscalculation of prejudgment
interest. Noticeably absent from Automation’s brief is any affirmative statement that the trial
court’s initial calculation of prejudgment interest is correct or that Rand’s calculation is
mathematically incorrect. Thus, we are convinced that our opinion in Rand I reinstated an
award of prejudgment interest that was mistakenly overstated by $92,318.59. Instead of
challenging Rand’s calculation, Automation concentrates on convincing us that (1) our
opinion in Rand I settled the matter and left no room for the trial court to correct us and (2)
that judicial economy and finality should steer us away from any correction of the
miscalculated interest.
We do not need to spend much time on Rand’s argument that the trial court erred in
not correcting on remand the amount of prejudgment interest. Rand’s argument is based
primarily on language in the mandate remanding the case “for further proceedings and final
determination therein.” However, our September 2010 judgment expressly addressed the
matter of prejudgment interest, stating “[t]hat part of the [August] judgment of the trial court
awarding Automation judgment against Rand in the amount of $2,270,759.22 plus
prejudgment interest in the amount of $256,705.19 is reinstated and, as such, is affirmed.”
The $256,705.19 award included the $184,890.46 award that we reinstated on one particular
portion of the claim, i.e., $552,853.79. We regard to any proceedings on remand, we ordered
that they be “consistent with this opinion.” The mandate has no independent life of its own;
it is simply a form used by the clerk to transmit to another court the operative documents,
such as, in this case, our opinion and judgment. Tenn. R. App. P. 42. Therefore, the mandate
cannot operate to nullify the express language in our opinion and the September 2010
judgment. Further, it is axiomatic that “inferior courts must abide the orders, decrees and
precedents of higher courts.” Weston v. State, 60 S.W.3d 57, 59 (Tenn. 2001). Therefore,
8
the trial court did not err in finding that the September 2010 judgment by us prevented it
from correcting the miscalculated interest.
The determination that the trial court did not err does not end the matter. Rand argues
that we can and should correct the erroneous calculation pursuant to Tenn. R. App. P. 36(a).
That rule provides that we “shall grant the relief on the law and facts to which the party is
entitled or the proceeding otherwise requires . . . including the giving of any judgment and
making of any order . . . .” Id. We have previously noted Automation’s argument that
concerns of finality and judicial economy should persuade us to deny relief. We are not
convinced. Rand raised the miscalculation issue in its motion to alter or amend the August
2008 judgment. The December 2008 judgment had the effect of pretermitting the calculation
issue. We cannot blame Rand for not throwing this issue into the mix in Rand I since the
judgment upon which the interest had been calculated had been reduced by the trial court to
zero. Thus, the issue was never heard on the merits until it was presented to the trial court
on remand. The trial court determined that it had indeed miscalculated the amount of
prejudgment interest but noted that it was without authority to correct the error. We are the
first court to hear the issue on the merits with the authority and ability to grant relief. We
hold that Rand is entitled to have the award of prejudgment interest on the $552,853.79
portion of the judgment reduced to $92,571.87. This represents a reduction in the
$184,890.46 award by $92,318.59. Accordingly, pursuant to Tenn. R. App. P. 36(a), we
modify the January 2011 judgment to reflect a reduction of $92,318.59.
B.
The next issue is whether the trial court erred in allowing post-judgment interest from
the date of entry of the August 2008 judgment. Rand argues that interest should not begin
to accrue on the judgment until the date of entry of the January 2011 judgment on remand,
or, alternatively, from the December 2008 judgment at the very earliest. We are dealing here
with the interplay of a statute and a court rule. Interest on judgments is allowed by Tenn.
Code Ann. § 47-14-122 (2001), which states:
Interest shall be computed on every judgment from the day on
which the jury or the court, sitting without a jury, returned the
verdict without regard to a motion for new trial.
Interest after an appeal is addressed by Tenn. R. App. P. 41, which states:
If a judgment for money in a civil case is affirmed or the appeal
is dismissed, whatever interest is allowed by law shall be
payable computed from the date of the verdict of the jury or the
9
equivalent determination by the court in a non-jury case, which
date shall be set forth in the judgment entered in the trial court.
If a judgment is modified or reversed with a direction that a
judgment for money be entered in the trial court, the mandate
shall contain instructions with respect to allowance of interest.
We have addressed the issue of the accrual date of post-judgment interest in several cases,
including Inman v. Inman, 840 S.W.2d 927 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1992). Inman involved a
divorce that was modified on appeal by this Court and the Supreme Court, the ultimate result
of which was to award wife considerably more assets. On remand, she sought interest on the
judgment, as modified, from the date of entry of the trial court’s original judgment. We
stated:
The principal issues in this appeal are the effective date of an
appellate modification of a Trial Court judgment and the
jurisdiction of the Trial Court to enforce the judgment as
modified by the appellate courts. There is a dearth of published
authority on this subject. It is arguable that the effective date of
such a modification is the date of filing the appellate opinion, or
of the entry of the judgment of the appellate court, or of the
issuance of the mandate of the appellate court or of the entry of
the mandate upon the minutes of the Trial Court. This Court
does not subscribe to any of the foregoing, but adopts the
statement of the Louisiana Supreme Court in Swift & Co. v.
Leon Cahn & Co., 151 La. 837, 92 So. 355 (1922) as follows:
The judgment on appeal, when recorded in the
Appellate Court, stands in the place of the
judgment of the Trial Court, and the legal
situation is as if the judgment so recorded had
been originally rendered by the Trial Court.
Application of this principle to the present controversy produces
an orderly and just result.
Id. at 932.
Inman involved a modification on appeal increasing the original award, but Inman
v. Alexander, 871 S.W.2d 153 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1993), involved a modification decreasing
the amount of the trial court’s judgment by $50,000. Nevertheless the rule established in
10
Inman of allowing interest from the date of the original judgment held true in Alexander as
well. Referring to the last sentence in Tenn. R. App. P. 41, the Alexander opinion stated:
This provision has been the source of some confusion in the
state and federal courts. But, in Inman v. Inman, 840 S.W.2d
927, 932 (Tenn. App. 1992), this court solved one part of the
puzzle by holding that Rule 41 did not affect the statutory
post-judgment interest provided in Tenn. Code Ann. §
47–14–121. Thus, when a judgment is rendered in the trial court
originally or by direction from the appellate courts, the statute
provides that the judgment shall automatically accrue interest
at the statutory rate unless the court specifies that “its action
requires that interest be computed other than as required by
statute.” Inman, 840 S.W.2d at 932.
The opinion remanding the case directed the entry of a judgment
in the lower court for $100,000 as of the date of the original
judgment and provided that pre-judgment interest should be paid
from the date of the original breach to that time. In our opinion
nothing more was required to put into effect the accrual of
post-judgment interest from the date of the original judgment
until the judgment is finally paid.
Id. at 153-54 (emphasis added).
In Wade v. Wade, 897 S.W.2d 702 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1994), husband argued in a
divorce case that certain payments he had made to wife while the case was pending should
relieve him of paying interest on her alimony award. Id. at 720. We held that despite
modification of the award on appeal, wife was “entitled to interest at the statutory rate on the
assets awarded to her from the date of the original divorce decree”:
Furthermore, it is the rule in Tennessee that “when a judgment
is rendered in the trial court originally or by direction from the
appellate courts, the statute [Tenn. Code Ann. Sec. 47–14–121]
provides that the judgment shall automatically accrue interest at
the statutory rate unless the court specifies that ‘its action
requires that interest be computed other than as required by
statute.’ ” Inman v. Alexander, 871 S.W.2d 153, 154 (Tenn.
App. 1993). This court has further held that the “judgment on
appeal, when recorded in the Appellate Court, stands in the
11
place of the judgment of the Trial Court, and the legal situation
is as if the judgment so recorded had been originally rendered
by the Trial Court.” Inman v. Inman, 840 S.W.2d 927, 932
(Tenn.App.1992). Therefore, Wife is entitled to the statutory
interest on the trial court’s judgment as modified by this
opinion.
Id. at *720 (emphasis added; brackets in original).
Rand pays lip service to the rule established in the above cases, but argues that a
different rule applies when the case is remanded for further proceedings. Rand relies on
Watson v. Watson, 309 S.W.3d 483 (Tenn. Ct. App. 2009) and Bunch v. Bunch, No.
03A01–9805–GS–00156, 1999 WL 172674 (Tenn. Ct. App. E.S., filed Mar. 24, 1999), for
this distinction. Watson discusses Bunch in the course of articulating a distinction from
Wade, Alexander and Inman:
The Bunch Court, however, distinguished the cases on which
the wife relied. It noted that, in those cases, “the appellate court
modified the lower court’s judgment, i.e., changed specific
monetary awards therein.” Bunch, 1999 WL 172674, at *4. In
Bunch, however, after determining that one of the marital assets
was undervalued, the appellate court had remanded the case to
allow the trial court to determine the proper distribution. Id.
Therefore, the Bunch Court held that “the date on which the
trial court entered judgment after reapportioning the parties’
marital assets upon remand . . . is the date upon which it
‘returned the verdict’ for purposes of [Tennessee Code
Annotated] § 47–14–122.” Id. at *5. Accordingly, the appellate
court held that the wife was entitled to interest from the date of
the judgment on remand, not the date of the original judgment.
Id.
In the present case, as in Bunch, this Court did not modify the
judgment of the trial court. Rather, it remanded the case to the
trial court for a reconsideration of the distribution of the marital
estate after determining that one of the marital assets was
undervalued. See Watson, 2005 WL 1882413, at *10. Because
this Court remanded the case to allow the trial court to make its
own decision regarding the distribution, the date of the judgment
on remand, not the date of the original divorce decree, is the
12
date on which the trial court “returned the verdict” for the
purposes of Section 47–14–122. See Bunch, 1999 WL 172674,
at *5. Therefore, post-judgment interest on the additional
$13,000 awarded to Wife as her share of the marital estate began
to accrue from November 6, 2007, which was the date of the
judgment on remand. On remand, the trial court is directed to
award post-judgment interest on the additional $13,000 from
November 6, 2007, the date of the judgment on the previous
remand.
Id. at 502 (emphasis in Bunch).
We have no disagreement with the distinction articulated in Watson and Bunch. We
do, however, have a problem with expanding it to cover the present case. We note that
Rand’s restatement of the distinction, to include any case “remanded for further
proceedings,” is overly broad. In Inman, the case was “remanded to the [trial court] for
further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.” 840 S.W.2d at 930. As we have
shown above, Inman, allowed post-judgment interest from the date of the original judgment.
Watson and Bunch do not apply when the remand leaves nothing of substance to be done
by the trial court to determine the amount of the judgment. Our opinion left nothing of
substance to be done by the trial court with regard to the monetary award against Rand. We
reinstated the August 2008 judgment and then affirmed it. Our opinion and judgment stand
as if the August 2008 judgment had never been disturbed.
Rand argues, alternatively, that post-judgment interest should not begin to run any
earlier than the date of entry of the December 2008 judgment. Rand relies on Monday v.
Millsaps, 271 S.W.2d 857 (Tenn. 1954). Monday held that under a previous version of the
post-judgment interest statute, interest did not begin to run until “the date judgment was
entered after overruling the motion for a new trial.” Id. at 858. The “Monday rule” was a
judicial construction of the statute in effect at that time which stated: “Interest shall be
computed on every judgment from the day on which it was entered of record.” Capital
Airlines, Inc. v. Barger, 341 S.W.2d 579, 588 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1960) (quoting Tenn. Code
Ann § 47-1610 and explaining that Monday was a judicial construction of that statute). The
current version dates back to 1979 and expressly states that the computation shall be made
“without regard to a motion for a new trial.” Tenn. Code Ann. § 47-14-122. The change
in the statutory language has been noted by at least one legal scholar and described as having
“set aside” the holding of Monday. Sobieski, The Procedural Details of the Proposed
Tennessee Rules of Appellate Procedure, 46 Tenn. L. Rev. 1, 99 n.540 (1978). In the present
case, we see no reason to treat a motion to alter or amend any different than a motion for new
trial. Accordingly, we decline to follow the holding in Monday.
13
Rand also argues that Automation is guilty of delay with respect to some portion of
the delay during the appellate process and therefore should lose the right to collect post-
judgment interest for those periods. Rand blames Automation for an additional 45 days that
it requested to file its brief and for an unspecified number-of-days delay in having a useable
record filed with us. Rand relies on Staggs v. National Health Corporation, 924 S.W.2d 79
(Tenn. 1996), for the proposition that we can deduct the interest on these periods of delay to
prevent Automation from being unjustly enriched. Staggs recognized that “the legislature
did not intend for a party . . . to be unjustly enriched through the payment of post-judgment
interest.” Id at 81. However, the situation in Staggs is very different than the present case.
The plaintiff employee in Staggs was asking for interest on that part of a judgment that
ordered an employer in a worker’s compensation case to reimburse a third party health
insurer for medical benefits provided to the employee. Id. The Court did not allow it. We
are not aware of any cases that have applied Staggs outside the narrow realm of worker’s
compensation. We are not persuaded that we should let the quoted language from Staggs
lead us away from the well-recognized rule that the right to post-judgment interest is
controlled by statute and that the courts are not free to ignore that right. State v. Thompson,
197 S.W.3d 685, 693 (Tenn. 2006); Bedwell v. Bedwell, 774 S.W.2d 953, 956 (Tenn. Ct.
App. 1989). Moreover, Automation points out that Rand’s argument does not explain how
Automation has power over the court clerk and does not explain how the delay in filing the
record should be blamed on Automation for anything other than failing to make the clerk of
the trial court “work faster.” Rand fails to even contest Automation’s point in its lengthy
reply brief. We decline to suspend post-judgment interest for any alleged periods of delay
in Rand I.
Before moving to the calculation of post-judgment interest in this case, we must first
discuss the effect of our decision to eliminate $92,318.59 of the prejudgment interest
awarded to Automation. In the January 2011 judgment, the trial court stated that “the amount
of Automation’s judgment as modified and reinstated by the . . . Court of Appeals as of
August 29, 2008 [was] $2,342,746.” That figure includes prejudgment interest that we have
now held was inflated by $92,318.59. Thus the new judgment figure is determined as
follows:
$2,342,746.00
<92,318.59>
$2,250,427.41
Because of this adjustment – and through no fault of the trial court – the post-judgment
interest figure calculated by the trial court, i.e., $566,163.61, is no longer correct. Using the
10% statutory per annum interest rate, the per diem interest on Automation’s modified
judgment is $616.56. There are 882 days from August 29, 2008, the effective date of that
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judgment, to January 28, 2011, the date of the January 2011 judgment of the trial court. This
means that the new post-judgment interest as of January 28, 2011, is $543,805.92 and we
modify the January 2011 judgment of the trial court to reflect this new figure for post-
judgment interest for the relevant time period.
C.
We must now consider the issue of whether Automation is entitled to recover statutory
post-judgment interest on the accrued interest awarded in the January 2011 judgment, as
modified by us. We agree with Automation that Long v. Mattingly, 817 S.W.2d 325 (Tenn.
Ct. App. 1991) is directly on point and requires that Automation be allowed to recover
interest on the interest awarded in the January 2011 judgment, as we have modified it.
In order to provide some focus, we will reiterate our understanding of the pertinent
facts and respective arguments on this point. The January 2011 judgment determined the
exact dollar amount Rand owed to Automation, including prejudgment interest and post-
judgment interest from August 29, 2008 to January 28, 2011. Rand paid Automation
$2,250,423.606 on January 28, 2011. The trial court held that Rand could secure a stay of
execution by presenting Automation a letter of credit in the amount of $663,125.07, which
represented the unpaid portion of the judgment without regard to any interest that accrued
after January 28, 2011.
Rand argues that the trial court has ruled on the matter in its order allowing a stay of
execution and that it has acted well within its authority to apportion partial payments on a
judgment according to the equities of the case as allowed by Mason v. Smith, 79 Tenn. 67
(1883). We are not convinced that Mason helps Rand. One of the issues in Mason was how
to apply a payment made before the judgment was rendered. Id. at 74. Mason states
The money was realized, and paid into court before the trial of
the cause in the circuit court, and applied by the court after the
rendition of the judgment. Treated as a payment either upon the
debt or the judgment, there was no application of the payment
by any of the parties. The application must therefore be made
by the law. No objection is taken to the ruling of the circuit
judge that so much of the fund as was necessary should be
applied to the payment of the costs of the cause. The general
6
In its reply brief, Rand indicates, in one place, that it made a payment on the judgment in the amount
of $2,250,401.75. It also alludes to the figure of $2,250,423.60. We believe the latter figure is the correct
one because it is closer to the figure arrived at by us in Section III (B) of this opinion.
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rule in the application of payments by law is that a partial
payment shall first be applied to the discharge of interest due,
and the balance in discharge of principal: Jones v. Ward, 10
Yer., 161. Another rule on the subject adopted in this State is
that the law will apply a payment according to the intrinsic
justice and equity of the case: Bussey v. Gant, 10 Hum., 238.
Taking these two rules together, the money should be applied to
the interest by way of damages which is given by law upon the
amount of the justice’s judgment.
As we read Mason, the ultimate result was the application of the payments first to interest,
which amounted to damages by the surety, and then to principal. We should also note that
we are not entirely convinced that the trial court’s order allowing a stay of collection efforts
was meant to be its final say with regard to the amount owed on the judgment. If the trial
court had intended it as the final word, it is unlikely it would have given the parties, as it did,
the option of allowing them to ask for “reconsideration of this Order at any time should
circumstances warrant such reconsideration.” We acknowledge that, if the order staying
collection was not intended to determine the exact and final amount owed by Rand, we are
at risk of supplying an advisory opinion. To the extent our consideration of this issue could
be viewed as advisory, we have no doubt any guidance we furnish will be helpful on remand.
Automation argues that Mattingly is directly on point. Automation also argues that
we should adopt the “American Rule,” followed in the majority of jurisdictions of applying
any partial payment first to interest and then to principal. As we have agreed with
Automation on the first point, we will not reach the issue of adopting blanket rules from
outside this jurisdiction. Mattingly, like the present case, involved two appeals of the same
case. In the first trial and appeal, the husband and wife plaintiffs secured combined
judgments totaling $125,000 which were remitted, under protest, by the trial court to
$105,000 and then reduced by this court to $60,000. Id. at 326. While an application for
permission to appeal to the Supreme Court was pending, the defendants paid $60,000 into
court which was deposited into an interest bearing account. Id. at 327. Later, the Supreme
Court denied the application for permission to appeal and the trial court was called upon to
determine the exact amount the defendants owed after the plaintiffs were paid the $60,000
plus $292.80 in interest that the money had earned while on deposit with the clerk. Id. The
court entered judgments holding that the defendants owed exactly $11,378.60 in post-
judgment interest on the plaintiffs’ unsatisfied judgments. Id. The defendants appealed and
the plaintiffs raised the issue of whether they were entitled to post-judgment interest from the
date the judgments were entered until the date they were paid in full. Id. at 328. This Court
stated:
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Plaintiffs’ third issue presents the thorny question of their right
to “interest on interest”, that is, interest upon the unpaid interest
which accumulated on the judgment from the jury verdict until
payment. As stated, the Trial Court rendered judgments for that
interest on November 29, 1990, and those judgments are the
subject of this appeal.
T.C.A. §§ 47–14–121 and 122 mandate interest on judgments.
There was a dispute as to the amount of interest which the Trial
Court resolved by judgment. Upon the rendition of that
judgement plaintiffs were entitled to their money and the
defendants were under a duty to pay it and to pay the statutory
interest charges from the date of entry of the judgment to the
date of payment.
Id. at 330.
The only distinction Rand offers is that there were “separate” judgments in Mattingly
for interest. We cannot see how that makes Mattingly different from the present case. The
important fact is that the January 2011 judgment in the present case determines the exact
amount of all interest owed to Automation as of the date of that judgment. Through no fault
of the trial court, that judgment is being modified by this opinion so that the amount will be
somewhat less. Nevertheless, it is a judgment holding Rand liable for interest accrued as of
that date. We follow Mattingly and hold that Automation is entitled to recover post-
judgment interest at the statutory rate on the unpaid balance of the January judgment as
modified by this opinion. We cannot render an exact figure because we are not sure of the
exact amount of Rand’s earlier payment or when its next payment will be made.
D.
We conclude with the issue of whether the trial court erred in denying Automation an
award of discretionary costs. This puts us in the position of considering whether the trial
court abused its discretion when, in considering Automation’s request, it relied, in part, on
its inability to grant Rand relief from the miscalculated prejudgment interest. It is a strange
position because we have now held that the trial court was correct in not modifying the
prejudgment interest on remand, but we have, on our own order, removed the erroneous
prejudgment interest from the judgment. The result of this modification is that the trial court,
through no fault of its own, considered the equities of discretionary costs, including a factor
that is no longer in the case; i.e., a windfall of $92,318.59 excess interest to a party who was
asking for $19,571.85 in discretionary costs. The trial court denied Automation any recovery
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of discretionary costs for “equitable reasons, including” the erroneous and excessive
prejudgment interest. Automation argues that its discretionary costs should have been
allowed because Rand did not even challenge the necessity and reasonableness of most of
the charges. We reject this argument because we read Rand’s papers filed in opposition to
the motion to argue that the particulars of the case justify denying any recover whatsoever
and, alternatively, if some are awarded, some should also be denied.
Rand argues that the trial court should be affirmed because the court spoke in plural
terms of “reasons” and there are numerous equitable reasons, according to Rand, for denying
discretionary costs. The problem with this approach is that we are unable to discern whether
the trial court would have awarded some or all of the discretionary costs claimed by
Automation, had it not been troubled by the prejudgment interest windfall. We think the
best course in this situation is to vacate the order denying discretionary costs and remand the
case to the trial court for consideration anew of Automation’s motion for discretionary costs.
This approach will allow the court to articulate whether it has serious equitable concerns –
other than the former but now corrected miscalculation of prejudgment interest – that justify
denying Automation an award of all or part of its claimed discretionary costs. If the court
decides to award some or all of the costs claimed, it will have the opportunity to make
“individualized determinations regarding the reasonableness and necessity” of the claimed
expenses. Stalsworth v. Grummons, 36 S.W.3d 832, 835 (Tenn. Ct. App. 2000).
V.
The judgment of the trial court is modified in part, vacated in part and affirmed in
part. Even though the trial court was without authority to depart from our reinstatement of
the monetary award to Automation, along with the prejudgment interest, pursuant to Tenn.
R. App. P. 36(a) we order that Rand is entitled to have the award of prejudgment interest
reduced by $92,318.59. The January 2011 judgment is modified to reflect a principal amount
due of $2,250,427.41, including the corrected figure for prejudgment interest. That part of
the January judgment holding that post-judgment interest is to be calculated from the date
of entry of the August 2008 judgment is affirmed, but modified to reflect accrued interest of
$543,805.92 as of January 28, 2011. That part of the judgment denying Automation an
award of discretionary costs is vacated and the trial court is directed to consider the motion
anew. On remand, Automation shall be entitled to collect interest from January 28, 2011
until the date of payment on any part of the judgment, as modified, that remains unpaid.
Costs on appeal are taxed equally to the appellant, Tennessee Rand, Inc, and the appellee,
Automation Industrial Group, LLC. This case is remanded, pursuant to applicable law, for
a hearing on Automation’s motion for discretionary costs and for enforcement of the
judgment as changed by us.
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_______________________________
CHARLES D. SUSANO, JR., JUDGE
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