MEMORANDUM DECISION
Pursuant to Ind. Appellate Rule 65(D),
this Memorandum Decision shall not be FILED
regarded as precedent or cited before any Nov 30 2017, 8:51 am
court except for the purpose of establishing CLERK
the defense of res judicata, collateral Indiana Supreme Court
Court of Appeals
and Tax Court
estoppel, or the law of the case.
ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEES
Leanna Weissmann Eric N. Allen
Lawrenceburg, Indiana Thomas S. Bowman
Allen Wellman McNew Harvey,
LLP
Greenfield, Indiana
IN THE
COURT OF APPEALS OF INDIANA
Everett Quinton, November 30, 2017
Appellant-Defendant, Court of Appeals Case No.
24A01-1706-CC-1271
v. Appeal from the
Franklin Circuit Court
Christie Cain and The Estate of The Honorable
Roger Cain, J. Steven Cox, Judge
Appellees-Plaintiffs. Trial Court Cause No.
24C01-1604-CC-216
Kirsch, Judge.
[1] Everett Quinton (“Quinton”) entered into a contract with spouses Roger and
Christie Cain (together “the Cains”), in which Quinton agreed to rent
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approximately 100 acres of his farmland to the Cains, who paid an annual sum
of cash rent and agreed to farm the land and raise crops. Following Roger’s
death, a dispute arose stemming from the contract, and Christie, in her
individual capacity and as personal representative of the Estate of Roger Cain
(“the Estate”), brought a breach of contract action against Quinton. Following
a bench trial, the trial court determined that Quinton had breached the contract,
and it entered judgment in favor of Christie and the Estate. Quinton now
appeals and raises two issues, which we restate as:
I. Whether the trial court’s judgment in favor of the Estate was
clearly erroneous; and
II. Whether the trial court’s determination of damages was
supported by the evidence.
[2] We affirm.
Facts and Procedural History
[3] On March 1, 2009, Quinton and the Cains entered into a Rental Contract (“the
Contract”), in which Quinton rented to the Cains approximately 100 acres of
his farmland in Franklin County, for the annual sum of $10,000.00, covering
the period of March 1, 2009 to December 31, 2009; Quinton signed the
Contract, and both Roger and Christie signed it as well. The Cains agreed “to
manage and perform all labor in connection with the operation of said farms
and agreed to cultivate and harvest the soybeans and corn crops thereon, all in a
good and husbandlike manner and in accordance with the practices of good
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farming.” Appellant’s App. Vol. II at 16. The Contract renewed automatically
“unless either party gives written notice by September 1.” Id. at 17. Rent was
to be paid by March 1 of each year. The Contract also provided as follows:
[The Cains] further covenant[] and agree[] that [they] will not re-
lease or sublet said premises or any part thereof or will not assign
this lease or any part thereof, without the written consent of
[Quinton], and shall, at the expiration of the lease or upon the
non-performance of said lease by [the Cains] or any of the
covenants mentioned therein, deliver peaceable possession of
said premises to [Quinton], upon demand of [Quinton.]
Id. at 16. Although the Contract provided for rent in the sum of $10,000.00, the
parties verbally agreed, at some point in past years, to an increase, such that the
Cains paid $12,000.00 to rent the land.
[4] The Cains continued to rent the land continuously since 2009, and they paid
their rent in March 2015. In October 2015, the Cains purchased $19,978.09 in
fertilizer from Helena Chemical Company (“Helena Chemical”) for the rented
farmland. The Cains provided barley seed to Helena Chemical, who applied
the fertilizer and barley to the rented 100 acres in the fall of 2015, in preparation
for the 2016 crops.1 At the Cains’ request, Helena Chemical applied a “double
spread,” or “double spray,” of the fertilizer, which, according to a Helena
Chemical employee, provided “a nice even pattern [] for the field.” Tr. Vol. II
1
The barley was not an income-producing crop; it was planted only as a “cover crop,” spread with the
fertilizer, intended to help improve the soil and reduce erosion concerns. Tr. Vol. II at 19-20, 44.
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at 30, 78; Plaintiffs’ Ex. 3. On January 13, 2016, Roger died unexpectedly. His
death occurred before the time for planting of the 2016 crops.
[5] The parties present differing versions of what happened thereafter. According
to Christie, (1) she contacted Quinton by phone in late January 2016 and
advised him that she intended to perform the obligations under the Contract,
had found someone to farm the property for her in 2016, and would pay the
rent by March 1, 2016; and (2) Quinton indicated to Christie that this
arrangement would be “fine.” Tr. Vol. II at 13. According to Quinton, (1)
Christie told him that she did not intend to farm the property, as she did not
have the money or farming knowledge to do so; (2) Christie did not pay or offer
to pay the rent by March 1 as required by the Contract; and (3) therefore,
Quinton rented the farmland to another individual on March 7, 2016.
[6] In April 2016, Christie, in her individual capacity and as the appointed personal
representative of the Estate, brought a breach of contract action against
Quinton, alleging that she and the Estate had a valid contract and that Quinton
refused her offer to pay the March 2016 rent for the year 2016 and rented the
land to someone else, thereby not allowing her “or her agent” to farm it, and
that Quinton refused to refund the out-of-pocket fertilizer expenses. Appellant’s
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App. Vol. II at 14. Christie and the Estate sought as damages the $19,978.09 in
fertilizer that had been applied to the property in the fall of 2015.2
[7] A bench trial was held on November 29, 2016, which was recessed and
continued on February 23, 2017. At trial, Christie described the family’s
farming operation, stating that she did the paperwork, payroll, maintained
records, obtained parts, and other non-farming tasks, while Roger “was the
brains of the business” and did the farming. Tr. Vol. II at 11. The business
planned to farm 3,500 acres in 2016, some owned and some rented. Christie
said that Roger “firmly believed in fertilizing and doing a cover crop” to make
“the ground [] worth more” and explained that the fertilizer and cover crop
“went down [on the land] at the same time.” Id. at 17-18. Christie testified to
receiving and paying the invoice from Helena Chemical for the fertilizer, which
had been placed on Quinton’s land before Roger’s death.
[8] Christie testified that, approximately two weeks after Roger’s death, at the end
of January, she began “calling all the [] landlords[,]” including Quinton, and
she told him that she would be performing her obligations under the Contract,
including paying the rent, and that she had “picked out someone to . . . be an
agent to help [her]” with the farming, “and [Quinton] agreed. He said that was
fine.” Id. at 12-13, 16, 20. Christie stated that during her late-January phone
2
The complaint also requested lost profits. Appellant’s App. Vol. II at 14. However, Christie and the Estate
later advised the trial court that they were “not seeking lost profits as damages,” and were only seeking to
recover the cost of the fertilizer. Id. at 22, 33.
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call to Quinton, she advised Quinton that the fertilizer that the Cains put on his
ground cost them approximately $20,000.00. Id. at 27. The person that
Christie hired to farm the Quinton ground, and other rented ground, was Brad
Tressler (“Tressler”). Christie testified that her arrangements with Tressler were
as follows: Tressler would physically farm the ground on her behalf, pay the
rent, reimburse her for the fertilizer, and later receive all the crop income. Id. at
18, 26. She stated that she made similar arrangements on other rented farms as
well, and “this is the only farm that it didn’t happen.” Id. at 18.
[9] Tressler was the next to testify. He considered himself a “good friend” of
Roger’s, and he knew Christie, too. Id. at 28. Sometime after Roger’s death,
Christie contacted him and proposed that he assist her in the performance of at
least a couple of farming contracts, including Quinton’s. Like Christie, Tressler
described the terms: He would pay the cash rent due on March 1 and pay
Christie the amount of the fertilizer bill, “And then, whatever money [] was
made off the farm, I would keep that[.]” Id. at 29.
[10] Tressler testified that he contacted Quinton by phone and arranged a date and
time to come to Quinton’s home to make the rent payment, recalling that, in
that conversation, Quinton appeared to be aware and understood that Tressler
was the person who “would be farming the farm” in place of Roger. Id. at 33,
45. Tressler went to Quinton’s home near the end of February, bringing with
him his own blank check. Id. at 45. Tressler described that they first engaged in
some “small talk,” because they did not know each other, and eventually
Tressler told Quinton that he was there “to pay him.” Id. at 33. Tressler was
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aware the Cains and Quinton had agreed to an increase from the $10,000.00
Contract price to $12,000.00, and he was prepared to pay the $12,000.00.
[11] According to Tressler, Quinton expressed reluctance at accepting payment,
indicating to Tressler that he was not who Quinton thought he was, and
Quinton also told Tressler that he had received one or more offers from other
farmers who were willing to pay $50 to $75 more per acre for the same land.
Tressler testified that he told Quinton that he “would match whatever that
person offered to pay him.”3 Id. at 34. Quinton indicated he needed some time
to think about it, and Tressler left Quinton’s house without paying. Before
leaving, Tressler told Quinton that “there’s a $19,000 fertilizer bill that
somebody needs to pay Christie, [] if I don’t farm it.” Id. at 35. During his
testimony, Tressler acknowledged that he was not a party to the Contract and
had not received any assignment of Christie’s rights under it, but, rather, was
acting on her behalf when he was at Quinton’s house. Id. at 40, 42, 47.
[12] Quinton also testified at trial. He stated that he attended Roger’s visitation and
funeral and that, when Christie saw him, she pointed at him, raised her voice,
and said that he was one of “those landowners” who had been calling her and
that she told Quinton that she would not be farming his ground because (1) she
did not have the money to pay rent, (2) did not have money to buy fertilizer, (3)
3
Tressler acknowledged that he had not received authority from Christie to renegotiate the Contract terms,
but that he “just really wanted [] her to get that money for the fertilizer,” so “if that’s what it was gonna take,
for me to pay the extra money, I was willing to do that.” Tr. Vol. II at 39-40.
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did not have anyone to do the work for her, and (4) she did not know how to
farm herself. Id. at 52. Quinton testified that Christie called him a number of
times in February and that in those calls he told her that the rent was due
March 1, and “when she failed to pay it, the rent, I figured she broke the
[C]ontract[,]” and he rented it to someone else, Dirk Ricke (“Ricke”), on March
7. Id. at 53.
[13] As to Tressler’s visit to Quinton’s home, Quinton testified that Tressler did not
offer him any payment for rent on the Contract, and, instead, Tressler (1) told
Quinton that Christie had said that “somebody owed her the fertilize[r]
money,” and (2) indicated that he wanted to rent the land from Quinton. Id. at
55, 66. Quinton refused to pay for the fertilizer, as he never had done so before,
and refused to “make a contract” with Tressler, telling Tressler, “[Christie]’s got
a contract, and it’s in effect til the 1st of March, and I don’t want to discuss it
anymore.” Id. at 66. Quinton maintained that when he rented the property to
Ricke on March 7, neither Christie nor Tressler had offered to pay him rent on
the Contract. Id. at 57, 60-61. Upon cross-examination, Quinton
acknowledged that Tressler told Quinton that he was at Quinton’s house, “for
Christie Cain[,]” but maintained that Tressler “never said anything about
paying the rent[.]” Id. at 61, 64. Quinton rented the farmland to Ricke for
$15,000.00 on March 7, but Quinton explained that he did not accept a check
from Ricke until April “to give [Christie] a chance to [] pay the rent[.]” Id. at
64.
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[14] Christie stated that she had no recollection whether Quinton was at the
visitation or funeral, and she did not recall any conversation with him. Id. at
27. Christie stated that she never spoke to Quinton in February because there
was no need, as “I talked to him in January[;] the rent was due [] March 1 st.”
Id. at 17. However, after she learned from Tressler that Quinton was not
accepting the rent, Christie stated that she called Quinton six times between
March 14 and March 18, reaching him only once. Id. at 22. She testified that
she reviewed her phone bill but found no phone calls to or from Quinton in
February 2016. Id.
[15] Christie and the Estate (together “the Plaintiffs”) requested that the trial court
issue findings of fact and conclusions of law thereon. The trial court took the
matter under advisement and issued Findings of Fact, Conclusions of Law, and
Judgment (“Order”) in May 2017. In its Order, the trial court found, among
other things, that the Contract, due to its automatic renewal provisions, was in
full force and effect in the winter of 2015 and spring of 2016; Christie hired
Tressler to farm the ground for the crop year 2016, and she told Quinton that
she would be performing the Contract and would be sending Tressler to pay the
rent; Tressler contacted Quinton and went to Quinton’s home “and was
prepared to pay rent,” but Quinton did not accept it. Appellant’s App. Vol. II at
8-9. The trial court further found:
9. On March 7, 2016, [Quinton] entered into a new contract, for
the same ground rented to [the Cains] under the [] Contract, with
Dirk Ricke. At no time did he notify the Plaintiffs that he had
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entered into a new contract, and by doing so was attempting to
rescind the existing Rental Contract.
12. [Quinton]’s attempted rescission of the Rental Contract is
invalid because he provided to the Plaintiffs no notice of default,
he did not give the Plaintiffs an opportunity to cure the alleged
default, and he failed to give the Plaintiffs any notice of his
attempted rescission.
....
14. While the attempted rescission of the Contract by [Quinton]
was ineffective, if it were to be effective, [Quinton] would have
been required to restore to the Plaintiffs everything of value that
he had received from the Plaintiffs in anticipation of performing
the Contract. That amount, not coincidentally, is the cost of the
fertilizer or $19,978.09.
15. Regardless of whether [Quinton] breached the Contract or
was justified in rescinding the Contract, the Plaintiffs are entitled
to recover damages in the amount of $19,978.09.
Id. at 10-11. The trial court concluded that “the Plaintiffs did not voluntarily
refuse or neglect to pay rent,” “rescission was not available as a remedy to
[Quinton,]” and Quinton “breached the Contract [] by failing to comply with
Indiana statutory and case law regarding termination of lease agreements and
rescission of contracts.” Id. at 12. Quinton now appeals, seeking a reversal of
the Order finding him in breach of contract, or, if we affirm the breach of
contract determination, then a reduction in the damage award.
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Discussion and Decision
[16] Pursuant to the request of Christie and the Estate, the trial court entered
Indiana Trial Rule 52(A) findings of fact and conclusions thereon. We may not
set aside the findings or judgment unless they are clearly erroneous. Gabriel v.
Windsor, Inc., 843 N.E.2d 29, 44 (Ind. Ct. App. 2006). In our review, we first
consider whether the evidence supports the factual findings. Id. Second, we
consider whether the findings support the judgment. Id. “‘Findings are clearly
erroneous only when the record contains no facts to support them either
directly or by inference.’” Id. (quoting Quillen v. Quillen, 671 N.E.2d 98, 102
(Ind. 1996)). We give due regard to the trial court’s ability to assess the
credibility of witnesses, and we do not reweigh the evidence. Id. Rather, we
consider the evidence most favorable to the judgment with all reasonable
inferences drawn in favor of the judgment. Id. While we defer substantially to
findings of fact, we do not do so with conclusions of law, which are reviewed de
novo. Fraley v. Minger, 829 N.E.2d 476, 482 (Ind. 2005). “‘In order to determine
that a finding or conclusion is clearly erroneous, an appellate court’s review of
the evidence must leave it with the firm conviction that a mistake has been
made.’” Id. (quoting Yanoff v. Muncy, 688 N.E.2d 1259, 1262 (Ind. 1997)). A
judgment is clearly erroneous if no evidence supports the findings, the findings
do not support the judgment, or the trial court applied the wrong legal standard.
Abernathy v. Bertram, 967 N.E.2d 510, 512 (Ind. Ct. App. 2012).
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I. Breach of Contract
[17] Quinton argues that Christie effectively either re-leased, sublet, or assigned her
rights to Tressler, which was in violation of the Contract’s provisions and
allowed him to rent the land to someone else. Thus, he argues, the trial court
erred when it found that he breached the Contract. In particular, Quinton
challenges those portions of Finding Nos. 4, 5, and 8, which determined that
Tressler was Christie’s “agent” who went to Quinton’s home to pay the rent
“on behalf of” Christie and the Estate. Appellant’s App. Vol. II at 9. Quinton’s
position is that, contrary to those Findings, the evidence was that Tressler
would farm the land, would pay Quinton, and would retain profits from the
crops; this arrangement, he argues, illustrates that Christie and Tressler
“intended for this to be a lease assignment not an agency relationship.”
Appellant’s Br. at 14. Keeping in mind that we consider the evidence most
favorable to the judgment, we disagree with Quinton’s assertion that Christie
assigned or sublet the land to Tressler and that Tressler was not acting on
Christie’s behalf.
[18] Christie testified that she intended to perform on the Contract and told Quinton
so in late January 2016 and made arrangements with Tressler to physically farm
the land for her, sending him on her behalf to Quinton’s home before March 1
to pay the rent due under the Contract, and when she learned from Tressler that
Quinton would not accept it, she called him six times to try and reach him.
Tressler testified that Christie did not assign the Contract to him, nor did he
enter into any separate written contract with her, and he expressly stated that he
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went to Quinton’s home to pay the rent on Christie’s behalf pursuant to the
Contract. Thus, evidence supports the trial court’s findings that Tressler, acting
on Christie’s behalf, went to Quinton’s home and attempted to pay the rent due
on the Contract. However, even assuming that Christie sublet the land to
Tressler or assigned the Contract to him, as Quinton claims, the Contract does
not automatically become void. Rather, the Contract provides:
[The Cains] further covenant[] and agree[] that [they] will not re-
lease or sublet said premises or any part thereof or will not assign
this lease or any part thereof, without the written consent of
[Quinton], and shall, . . . upon the non-performance of said lease by
[the Cains] or any of the covenants mentioned therein, deliver peaceable
possession of said premises to [Quinton], upon demand of [Quinton.]
Appellant’s App. Vol. II at 16 (emphasis added). Thus, according to the terms of
the Contract, if the Cains failed to perform “any of the covenants,” the Cains –
and later Christie and the Estate – were required to “deliver peaceable
possession” of the land to Quinton upon his demand. Id. It is undisputed that
Quinton never made any such demand for possession. Accordingly, we agree
with the trial court that the Contract remained “in full force and effect . . . at all
pertinent times[,]” and Quinton breached the Contract by renting the same land
to Ricke. Id. at 8.
[19] Quinton also asserts that Christie failed to pay the rent, “and once she failed to
pay the rent on time, Mr. Quinton was entitled to lease his land to whomever
he pleased.” Appellant’s Br. at 19. Whether Christie and the Estate failed to pay
rent was a disputed issue of fact at trial. That is, Christie stated that she told
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Quinton several weeks after her husband’s death that she intended to perform
on the Contract, including paying the rent and having someone farm the land
for her, and she sent Tressler over to Quinton’s home on her behalf to pay the
rent due on the Contract; Tressler testified that he went prepared to pay the
rent, but that Quinton did not accept it. Quinton, on the other hand,
maintained that “nobody” offered to pay him rent on the Contract. Tr. Vol. II
at 57. The trial court chose to believe Christie’s version, finding that Tressler,
acting as Christie’s agent, went to Quinton’s home to pay the March 1 rent on
Christie’s behalf. To the extent that Quinton argues that Christie told him she
would not be performing and never offered to pay him, he merely invites us to
reweigh evidence and judge witness credibility, which we may not do.
Abernathy, 967 N.E.2d at 513. Based on the foregoing, we conclude that the
evidence supports the trial court’s findings that Quinton breached the Contract
by “refusing to accept the contracted for amount of rent, by attempting to
renegotiate the rental amount, and by entering into the new contract with Dirk
Ricke on March 7, 2016[,]” and the findings support the judgment in favor of
Christie and the Estate. Appellant’s App. Vol. II at 10.
II. Damages
[20] The trial court’s Order found that the Cains contracted with Helena Chemical
to spread fertilizer and a cover crop on Quinton’s land and that Christie and the
Estate incurred out-of-pocket expenses in the amount of $19,978.09 “in
anticipation of being able to farm the ground for the crop year 2016.” Id. at 8,
10. Christie and the Estate sought and received a judgment against Quinton in
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that amount, plus pre-judgment and post-judgment interest. Id. at 12. Quinton
asks that, if we agree with the trial court on the breach of contract
determination, we find that the award of damages was excessive and not
supported by the evidence.
[21] Our review of a trial court’s award of damages is limited. Abernathy, 967
N.E.2d at 512. We affirm if the amount of damages is supported by evidence
on the record, and we do not reweigh the evidence or judge the credibility of
witnesses. Id. We consider only the evidence favorable to the award and affirm
if the award is “within the scope of the evidence before the finder of fact.” Id.
[22] According to the record before us, the Cains hired Helena Chemical to apply
$19,978.09 in fertilizer in or around October 2015. The Cains expended this
sum on the reasonable expectation that they would farm the 100-acre tract in
2016. Due to Quinton’s breach, Christie and the Estate were not able to do so,
and the trial court found that Christie and the Estate were entitled to recover
the cost of the fertilizer as damages for the breach. We find the trial court’s
damages determination was within the scope of the evidence before the trial
court.
[23] Affirmed.
[24] Najam, J., and Brown, J., concur.
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