Wolf Organization, Inc. v. TNG Contractors, LLC

                                                                                        08/21/2020
               IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
                           AT NASHVILLE
                           Assigned on Briefs July 1, 2020

       WOLF ORGANIZATION, INC. v. TNG CONTRACTORS, LLC

                 Appeal from the Circuit Court for Davidson County
                         No. 16C819 Kelvin D. Jones, Judge
                     ___________________________________

                           No. M2020-00093-COA-R3-CV
                       ___________________________________


This is the second appeal in this case. In the first appeal, we affirmed the trial court’s
enrollment of Appellee’s Pennsylvania judgment. In enrolling the foreign judgment, the
trial court omitted the 1.5% interest awarded by the Pennsylvania court and entered
judgment only for the principal amount of the foreign judgment. In seeking to enforce its
judgment, Appellee filed a bank levy against Appellant, wherein Appellee included the
1.5% interest. Because neither party raised an issue in the first appeal concerning
whether the trial court’s omission of the interest was error, the question is waived, and
Appellee is entitled to only post-judgment interest under Tennessee Code Annotated
section 47-14-121(a). Accordingly, we reverse the trial court’s denial of Appellant’s
motion to quash Appellee’s bank levy in the amount of $40,482.03. The case is
remanded for calculation of post-judgment interest consistent with this opinion.

       Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Circuit Court
                            Reversed and Remanded

KENNY ARMSTRONG, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which D. MICHAEL
SWINEY, C.J., and ANDY D. BENNETT, J. joined.

Benjamin E. Goldammer and Michael A. Johnson, Nashville, Tennessee, for the
appellant, TNG Contractors, LLC.

Joseph P. Rusnak, Nashville, Tennessee, for the appellee, Wolf Organization, Inc.

                                       OPINION

                                     I. Background

      As set out in our first opinion, Wolf Organization, Inc. v. TNG Contractors, LLC,
No. M2018-00073-COA-R3-CV, 2019 WL 2883813 (Tenn. Ct. App. July 3, 2019),
perm. app. denied (Oct. 11, 2019) (“Wolf I”), Appellee Wolf Organization, Inc.
(“Wolf”), a distributor of kitchen cabinets, is headquartered in York, Pennsylvania. Id. at
*1. Wolf extended credit to Appellant TNG Contractors, LLC (“TNG”), a Tennessee
limited liability company. Id. When TNG failed to pay Wolf for invoiced goods, Wolf
filed suit against TNG for breach of contract in the Court of Common Pleas of York
County, Pennsylvania. Id. TNG did not respond to the complaint, and Wolf sought
default judgment. Id. On July 13, 2015, the Pennsylvania Court entered a default
judgment against Wolf “in the amount of $22,493.59 together with interest compounded
monthly at the rate of 1.5%, from March 30, 2015, and legal fees plus costs to be
determined.” Id. at *2.

        On March 23, 2016, Wolf filed a petition, under the Uniform Enforcement of
Foreign Judgments Act, Tenn. Code Ann. §§ 26-6-101 to -108 (“UEFJA”), to enroll and
enforce the Pennsylvania judgment in the Circuit Court for Davidson County, Tennessee
(“trial court”). Wolf I, at *2. In response, TNG raised, for the first time, the issue of
whether the Pennsylvania court lacked personal jurisdiction in the underlying action.
Before discovery was complete, the trial court granted Wolf’s motion and enrolled the
Pennsylvania judgment; however, on TNG’s motion to alter or amend, the trial court set
aside its original order and scheduled a trial to determine the validity of the Pennsylvania
judgment. Id. at *3. TNG then moved for summary judgment arguing that the
Pennsylvania court lacked both general and specific personal jurisdiction. Id. In
response, Wolf argued that TNG was not entitled to summary judgment because TNG
had waived its jurisdictional defense by failing to raise it in the Pennsylvania court. Wolf
also filed its own motion for summary judgment. By order of December 28, 2017, the
trial court granted Wolf’s motion for summary judgment. Id. The trial court reasoned
that

       [b]y failing to timely and properly contest the jurisdiction of the
       Pennsylvania court during the time the case was pending in Pennsylvania,
       TNG waived any objection to the personal jurisdiction of the Pennsylvania
       court. The . . . Pennsylvania judgment entered in favor of Wolf and against
       TNG is a final judgment. Wolf’s Pennsylvania judgment is entitled to be
       given full faith and credit as required by Article 4, Section 1 of the United
       States Constitution.

As such, the trial court’s December 28, 2017 order concluded that “the foreign judgment
of Wolf as to the defendant, TNG, in the amount of $22,493.59 is hereby a judgment of
this Court . . .” Although the Pennsylvania judgment was for the principal amount of
$22,493.59 “together with interest compounded monthly at the rate of 1.5%, from March
30, 2015, and legal fees plus costs to be determined,” the trial court’s order grants Wolf
judgment for the principal but is silent as to interest. Wolf did not file a post-judgment
motion addressing the trial court’s silence as to the interest awarded by the Pennsylvania
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court. Rather, following entry of the December 28, 2017 order, “Wolf asked the trial
court to award an additional $15,950.50 in attorney’s fees and expenses incurred since
March 1, 2016.” Wolf I, at *3. “Wolf argued that TNG had agreed in the credit
application that if the account was referred for collection, it would pay “reasonable costs
incurred, including attorney’s fee[s].” Id. The trial court denied Wolf’s request. Id.

       As in the trial court, on appeal to this Court in Wolf I, Wolf did not raise an issue
concerning the lack of any reference to interest in the trial court’s order enrolling the
Pennsylvania judgment. Rather, Wolf’s sole issue was whether the trial court’s erred in
denying its request for attorney’s fees and expenses. In Wolf I, we upheld the trial
court’s grant of Wolf’s motion for summary judgment and its denial of Wolf’s request for
attorney’s fees and expenses, explaining that

       Wolf did not petition the Pennsylvania court to award post-judgment
       attorney’s fees. Instead, Wolf chose to register and enforce the
       Pennsylvania judgment in Tennessee under the UEFJA. The UEFJA does
       not authorize an award of attorney’s fees.

Wolf I, at *7 (citations omitted).

       Turning to the procedural history giving rise to the instant appeal, following our
mandate in Wolf I, on October 29, 2019, Wolf sent TNG a demand letter stating, in
relevant part:

       TNG Contractors, LLC is now indebted to The Wolf Organization, Inc. in
       the sum of $40,505.90. This amount includes court costs and interest to
       and including November 8, 2019. From and after November 8, 2019,
       interest accrues at the rate of $11.09 per diem. Please immediately forward
       . . . a cashier’s check made payable to The Wolf Organization, Inc. in the
       amount of $40,505.90.

Apparently, Wolf arrived at the $40,505.90 amount by including post-judgment interest
at a rate of 1.5% (the amount set out in the Pennsylvania order) on the principal amount
of $22,493.59. Wolf also served a notice of non-wage garnishment (the “levy”) on
TNG’s bank in the amount of $40,482.03.1

       By letter of November 15, 2019, TNG responded to Wolf’s demand letter and its
levy. In relevant part, TNG’s attorney explained that

       1
         The discrepancy between Wolf’s alleged judgment amount and the amount included on the bank
levy was explained by the trial court in its order on the motion to quash. The bank levy included post-
judgment interest from June 13, 2015, rather than March 30, 2015, resulting in the $23.87 discrepancy.

                                                 -3-
      in response to your correspondence asserting the judgment amount in this
      matter, including interest, is $40,239.74, based on the $22,493.59
      judgment, plus costs of $168.50, plus interest at the contractual rate of 18%
      per year from and after the date of the judgment (June 13, 2015)[,] I
      respectfully disagree with this conclusion for the reasons discussed below.
      Nevertheless, our client will be tendering a check in the amount of
      $30,113.09 on Monday, which comports with our calculation of the
      principal, costs and interest due through that date. There is no dispute that
      your client is entitled to 18% contractual interest until the time of the
      judgment. The contract provides: “If the statement balance is not paid in
      full when due, the customer agrees to pay a service charge of 1.5% per
      month on the unpaid balance.” However, in the same way that merger
      extinguished your client’s claim for post-judgment attorneys’ fees, your
      client is limited to statutory interest post-judgment.

                                           ***

      [T]here can be no dispute that your client’s entitlement to contractual
      interest did not survive the taking of the judgment. Instead, your client is
      limited to statutory interest. Statutory interest in Pennsylvania is 6% and it
      is currently 7.5% in Tennessee. Although our client could rely on the much
      lower statutory interest rates in Tennessee in effect prior to 2019, assuming
      7.5% interest, post-judgment interest through November 13, 2019 (53
      months) would equal $7,451.00. This brings the total judgment to
      $30,113.09.
             Finally, I received notice today of a bank levy . . . in excess of
      $40,000.00. For the reasons outlined above, the levy is a wrongful
      execution for in excess of $10,000.00 of the amount claimed. Given a
      check is being delivered Monday, and given the levy is in excess of the
      judgment amount, this letter serves as a demand for a release of the bank
      levy.

On November 18, 2019, TNG tendered a check to Wolf in the amount of $30,113.09;
Wolf declined to cash the check.

       On December 2, 2019, TNG filed an emergency motion to quash Wolf’s bank
levy. In its motion, TNG explained that, “The dispute between the parties at this juncture
is whether the TN Judgment has accrued interest at the purported contractual rate of 1.5%
per month, or the statutory post-judgment rate.” TNG further noted that

      [t]he PA Judgment awarded “interest compounded monthly at the rate of
      1.5%, from March 30, 2015”— i.e., it awarded interest commencing over
      two months before the PA Judgment was entered, but did not calculate the
                                      -4-
      interest or characterize the interest as pre-judgment or post-judgment. The
      TN Judgment, on the other hand, makes no reference to interest
      whatsoever.

                                           ***

      The contract [] that formed the basis for the PA Judgment and TN
      Judgment did not specifically provide a post-judgment interest rate. Instead,
      it provides: “If the statement balance is not paid in full when due, the
      customer agrees to pay a service charge of 1.5% per month on the unpaid
      balance.” Not only does the contract make no reference to “post-
      judgment”, it also does not actually provide for interest — rather, it
      provides for a “service charge”. As such, Wolf is limited to post-judgment
      interest at the statutory rate.

       In its response in opposition to TNG’s motion to quash the levy, Wolf maintained
its position that it is entitled to “post judgment interest at the rate of 1.5% compounded
monthly from March 30, 2015.”

     The trial court heard TNG’s motion on December 10, 2019.               By order of
December 16, 2019, the trial court denied the motion, explaining:

      [O]n July 13, 2015 a judgment had been entered [by the Pennsylvania
      court] against TNG as follows:

             Judgment in the amount of $22,493.59 together with interest
             compounded monthly at the rate of 1.5% from March 30,
             2015, and legal fees plus costs to be determined.

      IT FURTHER APPEARING that Pennsylvania Statute 41 P.S. § 202
      specifies that a post-judgment default rate of 6% applies only when the
      “applicable rate” is not specified in “any law or document.”

            IT FURTHER APPEARING that upon signing a credit application
      with Wolf on January 27, 2014, TNG agreed at paragraph three of the
      “Wolf Business Credit Account Terms and Conditions of Sale” that it
      would “pay a service charge of 1.5% per month on the unpaid balance.”

             IT FURTHER APPEARING that the bank levy filed November 14,
      2019 on behalf of Wolf reflects post judgment interest from and after June
      13, 2015 (not March 30, 2015) and does not reflect interest compounded
      monthly at the rate of 1.5% as provided in the Pennsylvania judgment.
      Instead, the bank levy specifies post-judgment interest calculated at the
                                         -5-
      lower effective rate of 18% per annum based upon simple interest without
      compounding. Accordingly, IT IS HEREBY ORDERED that the
      “Defendant’s Emergency Motion to Quash Bank Levy” shall be and hereby
      is denied. It is also hereby ORDERED that, consistent with the terms of the
      Pennsylvania judgment, post-judgment interest accrues at the rate of 1.5%
      compounded monthly from March 30, 2015.

             It is also hereby ORDERED that Wolf shall be and hereby is
      allowed to file another bank levy or other execution to reflect the accrual of
      all post-judgment interest at the rate of 1.5% compounded monthly from
      March 30, 2015.

TNG appeals.
                                        II. Issue

      TNG raises one issue for review as stated in its brief:

      Whether the trial court erred in denying Appellant's Motion to Quash Bank
      Levy where the Appellee’s post-judgment bank levy calculated post-
      judgment interest using the pre-judgment rate in the contract rather than the
      lower statutory post-judgment rate.

                                III. Standard of Review

       The decision whether to grant or deny a motion to dissolve a garnishment is a
question of law. 38 C.J.S. Garnishment §353 (citing Bank of Hawaii v. DeYoung, 992
P.2d 42, 46 (Hawaii 2000)); 6 Am. Jur. 2d Attachment and Garnishment §407. This
Court reviews questions of law de novo with no presumption of correctness. Kelly v.
Kelly, 445 S.W.3d 685, 692 (Tenn. 2014) (citing Armbrister v. Armbrister, 414 S.W.3d
685, 692 (Tenn. 2013)).
                                    IV. Analysis

       We reiterate the Wolf I Court’s admonishment that, “Wolf did not petition the
Pennsylvania court to award post-judgment attorney’s fees. Instead, Wolf chose to
register and enforce the Pennsylvania judgment in Tennessee under the UEFJA.” In
short, we are not at liberty to review the propriety of the Pennsylvania court’s judgment
and are limited to review of questions arising directly from the Tennessee trial court’s
enrollment of that judgment. So, notwithstanding the fact that the Pennsylvania court
interpreted what the parties’ contract refers to as a “service charge of 1.5% per month on
the unpaid balance” as the post-judgment interest rate on the $22,493.59 judgment, i.e.,
“Judgment in the amount of $22,493.59 together with interest compounded monthly at
the rate of 1.5% . . . ,” we are precluded from revisiting the Pennsylvania court’s
interpretation of the parties’ contract. In issuing its bank levy, Wolf included the 1.5%
                                            -6-
“interest” awarded by the Pennsylvania court. The problem, however, is that, in enrolling
the Pennsylvania judgment, the Tennessee trial court did not include the 1.5%. In fact,
the trial court’s order is completely silent as to interest, stating only that, “[T]he foreign
judgment of Wolf as to the defendant, TNG, in the amount of $22,493.59 is hereby made
a judgment of this [c]ourt.” Furthermore, the question of whether the trial court erred in
omitting the interest ordered by the Pennsylvania court was not raised as an issue in Wolf
I, and so it was not addressed in our previous opinion.

        Our courts have repeatedly held that parties waive an issue if they do not raise it as
an issue on appeal. Melton v. Melton, No. M2003-01420-COA-R10-CV, 2004 WL
63437, at *2-3 (Tenn. Ct. App. Jan.13, 2004); Bank of Crockett v. Cullipher, 752 S.W.2d
84, 86 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1988); Schoen v. J.C. Bradford & Co., 642 S.W.2d 420 (Tenn.
Ct. App. 1982); Independence One Mortgage Corp. v. State Auto Ins. Co., No. 02A01-
9511-CH-00255, 1996 WL 266651, at *1 (Tenn. Ct. App. May 21, 1996). In the second
Melton appeal, we held that the husband did not raise the propriety of the trial court’s
denial of his motion to enforce the mediation agreement in the first appeal. Melton, 2004
WL 63437, at *2-3. Thus, the husband waived his right to appellate review concerning
the mediation settlement agreement by not raising it on the first appeal. Id. Based on
this authority, Wolf’s failure to raise the question of the trial court’s omission of the 1.5%
in enrolling the Pennsylvania decree in the first appeal constitutes a waiver of the issue in
this appeal. In short, having failed to protect its judgment for the 1.5%, Wolf has
forfeited this amount as either a service charge or as post-judgment interest. Therefore, in
seeking to collect the Tennessee judgment, Wolf erred in including the 1.5% “interest”
amount in its bank levy, and the trial court should have granted TNG’s motion to quash
the levy in the amount of $40,482.03.

        Despite the omission of the 1.5% amount in the trial court’s order, Wolf is entitled
to statutory interest accruing from the date of the enrollment of judgment in Tennessee.
See In re Estate of Todd, No. W2018-01088-COA-R3-CV, 2019 WL 1036080, at *6
(Tenn. Ct. App. Mar. 5, 2019) (stating that judgment creditors are automatically entitled
to post-judgment interest); Tallent v. Cates, 45 S.W.3d 556, 563 (Tenn. Ct. App. 2000)
(explaining that “[i]nterest on judgments in Tennessee is statutorily mandated”)
(citing Tenn. Code Ann. § 47-14-121)). “The failure of any court to expressly provide
such interest in its judgment does not abrogate the statute.” Tallent, 45 S.W.3d at 563
(citing Inman v. Inman, 840 S.W.2d 927, 932 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1992)). The post-
judgment interest rate is computed beginning on the day in which the trial court enrolled
the judgment. See Tenn. Code Ann. § 47-14-122 (“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 a new trial.”). Tennessee Code Annotated section
47-14-121 provides:



                                            -7-
        (a) Except as set forth in subsection (c),2 the interest rate on judgments per
        annum in all courts, including decrees, shall:

              (1) For any judgment entered between July 1 and December 31, be
             equal to two percent (2%) less than the formula rate per annum
             published by the commissioner of financial institutions,3 as required
             by § 47-14-105, for June of the same year; or

             (2) For any judgment entered between January 1 and June 30, be
             equal to two percent (2%) less than the formula rate per annum
             published by the commissioner of financial institutions, as required by
             § 47-14-105, for December of the prior year.

Tenn. Code Ann. § 47-14-121(a). Here, the trial court entered its order enrolling the
Pennsylvania judgment on December 28, 2017. Therefore, Wolf is entitled to statutory
post-judgment interest on its $22,493.59 judgment, accruing from December 28, 2017, at
the statutory rate outlined at Tennessee Code Annotated section 47-14-121(a). We
remand the case to the trial court for calculation of Wolf’s post-judgment interest
consistent with this opinion.

                                                V. Conclusion

       For the foregoing reasons, we reverse the trial court order denying TNG’s motion
to quash Wolf’s bank levy in the amount of $40,482.03. We remand the case for
calculation of interest on Wolf’s $22,493.59 judgment, accruing from December 28,
2017, at the statutory rate outlined at Tennessee Code Annotated section 47-14-121(a),
and for such further proceedings as may be necessary and are consistent with this

        2
            Subsection (c) of the statute states that:

                   (c) Notwithstanding subsection (a) . . . where a judgment is based on a
                   statute, note, contract, or other writing that fixes a rate of interest within
                   the limits provided in § 47-14-103 for particular categories of creditors,
                   lenders or transactions, the judgment shall bear interest at the rate so
                   fixed.1

        As noted, supra, we cannot interpret the parties’ contract concerning whether the 1.5%
        “service charge” was properly treated as interest by the Pennsylvania court. Likewise,
        we cannot reach the question of whether the trial court erred in omitting the 1.5% in
        enrolling the Pennsylvania decree as this question was waived by failure to raise it in
        Wolf I. As such, this portion of the statute is not applicable to our analysis.

        3
          See TN DEPARTMENT OF FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS, HISTORICAL LISTING OF FORMULA RATES,
https://www.tn.gov/content/tn/tdfi/tdfi-how-do-i/info/formula-rate/formula-rate-history.html (last visited
Aug. 4, 2020).
                                                         -8-
opinion. Costs of the appeal are assessed to the Appellee, Wolf Organization, Inc., for all
of which execution may issue if necessary.




                                                 _________________________________
                                                 KENNY ARMSTRONG, JUDGE




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