COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
AT KNOXVILLE FILED
March 24, 1998
TRULA MUGFORD REALTY, ) C/A NO. 03A01-9709-CV-00412
) Cecil Crowson, Jr.
Plaintiff-Appellant,) Appellate C ourt Clerk
)
)
)
) APPEAL AS OF RIGHT FROM THE
v. ) GRAINGER COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT
)
)
)
)
CLAY LETHCO, )
) HONORABLE BEN W. HOOPER, II,
Defendant-Appellee. ) JUDGE
For Appellant For Appellee
ANDREW J. EVANS, JR. CREED A. DANIEL
Knoxville, Tennessee Rutledge, Tennessee
O P I N IO N
REVERSED
REMANDED WITH INSTRUCTIONS Susano, J.
1
The plaintiff real estate agency brought this civil
action1 to recover a commission allegedly due it for services
rendered with respect to the sale of 114.5 acres of real property
in Grainger County. Following a bench trial, the Circuit Court
dismissed the complaint, predicated primarily on the fact that
the sale did not close. The plaintiff appealed, arguing that it
is entitled to a commission under the terms of the listing
agreement signed by the defendant.
We review this non-jury case pursuant to Rule 13(d),
T.R.A.P. The record comes to us with a presumption of
correctness that we must honor unless the evidence preponderates
against the trial court’s factual findings. Id. There is no
presumption of correctness as to the trial court’s conclusions of
law. Ganzevoort v. Russell, 949 S.W.2d 293, 296 (Tenn. 1997).
On July 21, 1993, the parties entered into a “Sales
Agency Contract,” by the terms of which the plaintiff, Trula
Mugford Realty (“Mugford”), was granted “the sole, exclusive and
irrevocable right,” for a specified period of time, to sell 114.5
acres of real property in Grainger County. The defendant, Clay
Lethco (“Seller”), is reflected on the listing agreement as the
sole owner of the property. There is nothing in the agreement to
indicate that Seller is anything other than the fee simple owner
of the subject property. Included among the agreement’s “Terms
and Conditions” is the following:
1
This action was originally brought in the Grainger County General
Sessions Court. Following an adverse ruling there, the plaintiff appealed to
Circuit Court. Throughout these proceedings, the plaintiff has sought a money
judgment in the amount of $9,999.99.
2
TITLE. I warrant that I am the owner of the
property or have the authority to execute
this contract and sell the property. Should
the property be sold, I agree to furnish the
purchaser a good and sufficient Warranty
Deed.
During the period of the listing agreement, Mugford
showed the property to Chris C. Mynatt (“Purchaser”).
Thereafter, on January 29, 1994, Seller and Purchaser, with the
active involvement of Mugford, entered into a “Sales Contract,”
by the terms of which they agreed that Purchaser would buy the
subject property for $125,000. The Sales Contract provides,
among other things, as follows:
In case merchantable title cannot be shown or
perfected..., earnest money to be returned
and contract cancelled.
The sale was not consummated because Seller’s former wife, Stella
Lethco, who is not a party to either agreement, refused to convey
her one-half interest in the property’s minerals that had been
awarded to her in their 1977 divorce. While Seller was
chargeable with knowledge of this outstanding interest impinging
on his fee simple title when he listed the property with Mugford,
neither Mugford nor Purchaser was aware of it until after the
Sales Contract was executed. A title report ordered and paid for
by Purchaser revealed Ms. Lethco’s interest.
This case is controlled by the decision of the Supreme
Court in Cheatham v. Yarbrough, 90 Tenn. 77, 15 S.W. 1076 (1891).
In that case, the listing agent secured a purchaser who was
willing to purchase the property on terms satisfactory to the
3
seller. The sale was not consummated because of a defect in the
seller’s title. As in the instant case, the defect was not known
to the listing agent until “disclosed by the purchaser.” Id. 90
Tenn. at 78. In holding that the listing agent was entitled to
his commission, the Supreme Court opined as follows:
The just and well-settled rule of law
requires that the agent shall be paid his
compensation when he procures a purchaser who
is acceptable to the principal, and ready,
able, and willing to buy on the agreed terms,
though in fact the sale be not ultimately
consummated, provided its consummation is
prevented by the fault, refusal, or defective
title of the principal. (Citations omitted).
* * *
The objection to the title of [the seller]
was not a captious one. On the contrary, it
was made in good faith, because of a real
defect, by a person who would otherwise have
been glad to purchase the property at the
price and on the terms required by [the
seller]. The contract made by [the seller]
with the plaintiffs was in the ordinary
terms. That they were to receive their
compensation out of the proceeds of sale, did
not make their right to compensation
dependent, at all events, on the completion
of the sale. If they performed their part of
the contract, and the trade was defeated
alone by the inability of their principal to
make a good title, as is conclusively shown
to have been the fact, then they should
receive compensation for their services,
though it cannot be paid as agreed, out of
the purchase money. There is nothing in the
contract, nor in any fact or facts disclosed
in the record, to take the case out of the
operation of the general rule of law stated
above.
Id. at 79-80. See also Loventhal v. Noel, 265 S.W.2d 891, 893
(Tenn. 1954); Parks v. Morris, 914 S.W.2d 545, 548 (Tenn.App.
1995); Smithwick v. Young, 623 S.W.2d 284, 291 (Tenn.App. 1981).
4
In the listing agreement now before us, Seller agrees
“to furnish a good and sufficient Warranty Deed.” It is clear
that “[a]n agreement to convey by a good and sufficient warranty
deed requires a good and perfect title, as well as a good and
sufficient warranty deed.” 7 GEORGE W. THOMPSON, COMMENTARIES ON
THE MODERN LAW OF REAL PROPERTY § 3177 (1962 repl.) (hereinafter
“THOMPSON”). In Hall v. McKee, 147 Ky. 841, 145 S.W. 1129
(1912), the Kentucky Court of Appeals made the following
statement:
A good and sufficient deed is a marketable
deed -- one that will pass a good title to
the land it purports to convey. We do not
agree with counsel that a stipulation in a
contract, providing that the grantor shall
convey “a good and sufficient deed,” is
satisfied by a conveyance of any title he may
have, whether it be good or bad.
Id. 145 S.W. at 1130-31. We agree with the Kentucky court.
Seller argues that he should not be faulted for his
inability to furnish a “good and sufficient Warranty Deed.” He
suggests that his former wife is the “culprit.” He also argues
that Mugford is “at fault in not checking regarding [his] title.”
We disagree on both counts. As previously indicated, Seller’s
warranty on the listing agreement includes an assertion that
amounts to a statement that he has “perfect title.” See
THOMPSON. He does not. Furthermore, there is nothing in the
listing agreement imposing an obligation on Mugford to verify
Seller’s title.
5
In the instant case, the Sales Contract produced as a
result of Mugford’s efforts was not consummated, solely because
the Seller could not deliver a merchantable title as he had
agreed to do. His inability to do so was due to the existence of
his former wife’s interest in the minerals on the property. This
inability to convey good title was unknown to Mugford until after
the Sales Contract was executed. The listing agent was totally
without blame in the failure of the sale to close. It had done
everything it was required to do in order to receive its
commission. The commission sought -- $9,999.99 -- is within the
percentage compensation provided for in the contract, and the
plaintiff is entitled to it.
The judgment of the trial court is reversed. Costs on
appeal are taxed to the appellee. This case is remanded to the
trial court for the entry of an order awarding the appellant a
judgment for $9,999.99 and court costs against the appellee.
__________________________
Charles D. Susano, Jr., J.
CONCUR:
________________________
Herschel P. Franks, J.
________________________
Don T. McMurray, J.
6