On appeal from The SHARKEY COUNTY CHANCERY COURT ">

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Date: 06-20-2022

Case Style:

Sel Business Services, LLC and Skip Lloyd v. Wilburn Lord, Jr., Sharkey County, Mississippi, Issaquena County, Mississippi and Sharkey-Issaquena Community Hospital

Case Number: 2021-CA-00368-COA

Judge:

David Neil McCarty


JAYE A. BRADLEY

Court:

COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI

On appeal from The SHARKEY COUNTY CHANCERY COURT

Plaintiff's Attorney:





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Defendant's Attorney: FRANK J. DANTONE JR.
JOHN P. SNEED
CHARLES EDWARD COWAN
EDWARD D. LAMAR

Description:

Jackson, MS - Civil Litigation lawyer represented APPELLANTS with a purchase of a building and property dispute.



In November 2019, SEL Business Services LLC and its manager Skip Lloyd entered
into an oral agreement with Dr. Wilburn Lord, Jr. SEL agreed to purchase property located
at 64 South 4th Street in Rolling Fork, Mississippi, for $60,000.
¶3. Based on this promise, SEL “moved into and began to do business” in a building on
the property. According to SEL’s lawyer, over the next eight months, SEL paid the taxes and
utilities on the building, installed a new air conditioning unit, and rewired the building among
other updates and maintenance.
¶4. The parties never reduced their oral agreement to a writing. SEL never made any
payments to Dr. Lord for the property. Nor was there a written lease between the parties.
SEL later admitted there was no “one document, sole document, that purported to be a
written contract.”
¶5. Despite SEL’s presence in the building, Dr. Lord negotiated to sell the property to
Sharkey and Issaquena Counties for the benefit of the Sharkey-Issaquena Community
Hospital. Once aware of the negotiations, SEL filed a petition for injunctive relief against
Dr. Lord, who, on the date of filing, was still the record owner of the property. Particularly,
SEL asked “the Court [to] disgorge all funds paid to Defendants and/or otherwise award all
monetary damages available under Mississippi law.”
¶6. The day after SEL filed this petition, Dr. Lord sold the property to the two counties
for $110,000. Five days later, SEL filed a lis pendens in the land records, giving notice of
its lawsuit.
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¶7. In July 2020, the Counties sent SEL a letter asking it to vacate the premises within one
week. Attached to this letter was the warranty deed conveying the property from Dr. Lord
to the Counties. A few days later, SEL amended its petition to add both the Hospital and the
two Counties as defendants. The Counties responded to the petition, stating, “[A]ny
agreement the Plaintiffs might have had to purchase the property was and is invalid,
nonbinding and unenforceable” because there was no written contract. Two days later, Dr.
Lord responded, “[T]he alleged contract to purchase the property was oral; and as such, was
not a valid contract under the Statute of Frauds.”1
¶8. Both the Counties and Dr. Lord moved for summary judgment, but SEL never
responded to either motion. The chancery court then conducted a hearing. No evidence was
presented at the hearing; however, the Court accepted all factual statements of SEL as true.
¶9. At the hearing, counsel for SEL stated it was “out of the building. Everything is out
of the building.” SEL “no longer [sought] possession of the property.” Instead, the
remaining claim was for “equitable reimbursement of the money they put into the building
. . . almost total[ing] $80,000.”
¶10. The chancery court then inquired into SEL’s request:
THE COURT: [A]re you saying that you’re relying on
some type of promise – I’m not sure.
[COUNSEL FOR SEL]: Well, in reliance on the promise of the sale
of the property made by Dr. Lord . . . .
SEL put money into the building. They
paid the taxes on the building; they paid
the utilities on the building; they put new
1
SEL was later evicted from the property in a separate proceeding in justice court.
3
air conditioning in the building; they
leveled the floors in the building; they took
out a tree that was affecting the foundation
and rewired the building.
¶11. Despite SEL’s alleged investment in the property, the chancellor granted summary
judgment in favor of both defendants. The trial court found the agreement between the
parties was unenforceable under the statute of frauds, declaring from the bench:
[T]he . . . sale of land has to be in writing. That is just clear. And I think that
the alleged oral contract fails under the statute of frauds, and any equitable
remedy, estoppel, lien it’s going to fail, too, for the same reasons.
¶12. Aggrieved, SEL appeals.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
¶13. “We review the grant or denial of a motion for summary judgment de novo[.]” Lefler
v. Wasson, 295 So. 3d 1007, 1009 (¶7) (Miss. Ct. App. 2020). “If, upon review of all
pleadings, depositions, interrogatory answers, and admissions on file, there is no genuine
issue of material fact, summary judgment in favor of the moving party is proper.” Alfonso
v. Gulf Pub. Co., 87 So. 3d 1055, 1060 (¶15) (Miss. 2012); See MRCP 56(c). “All
evidentiary matters must be viewed in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party.”
Alfonso, 87 So. 3d at 1060 (¶15). “A grant of summary judgment will be upheld only when,
viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party, there are no genuine
issues of material fact and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Id.
(internal quotation marks omitted).
DISCUSSION
¶14. SEL argues the trial court erred in holding that the underlying contract for the sale of
4
real property was unenforceable under the statute of frauds. SEL also argues the equitable
remedy of unjust enrichment should have been applied.
¶15. “An equitable lien is the right by which a creditor is entitled to obtain satisfaction of
his debt by resort to specified property belonging to the debtor when it is clear that the debtor
intended to create an encumbrance.” Barriffe v. Est. of Nelson, 153 So. 3d 613, 620 (¶36)
(Miss. 2014). “But an equitable lien is not appropriate to enforce a contract that otherwise
fails to meet the requirements of the statute of frauds.” Id. at 620-21 (¶36). “Under
Mississippi’s statute of frauds, contracts involving the transfer of real property must be in
writing.” Id.
¶16. Here, it is undisputed that the parties never reduced the contract for the sale of the
Rolling Fork property to writing. Therefore, pursuant to the statute of frauds, the agreement
was and is invalid. See White v. White, 325 So. 3d 666, 671 (¶16) (Miss. Ct. App. 2019)
(affirming that mother could not recover on a demand for her son to transfer title to land to
her, even though she had paid the note, because the contract was never reduced to writing).
¶17. The Barriffe decision also controls the result as to equitable estoppel. In that case, the
plaintiffs’ home was destroyed after Hurricane Katrina. Barriffe, 153 So. 3d at 616 (¶8). A
family member allowed the couple to move into an apartment on their land. Id. In reliance
on the promise to convey the property, the couple made substantial improvements totaling
nearly $73,000. Id. Several years later, the couple asked the family member to deed the
property to them as promised; the family member refused, so the couple sued. Id.
Specifically, the plaintiffs sought to enforce an equitable lien on the family member’s
5
property for the value of the improvements. Id.
¶18. The Supreme Court ultimately ruled that the couple was not entitled to an equitable
lien on the property because there was no written agreement. Id. at 620 (¶35). The Court
further reasoned that because the couple had made improvements to land theyknew belonged
to the family member, they did not “qualify for the protection granted to those who have a
good-faith–though mistaken–belief that theywere making improvements to their own land.”
Id.; see White, 325 So. 3d at 671 (¶16) (finding that a lien against property was improper
when the contract violated the statute of frauds).
¶19. While SEL cites other cases that predate the Barriffe decision, the case at bar is almost
identical to Barriffe. Even the amount requested by SEL, about $80,000, is near the amount
requested in Barriffe. Despite the approximate eight months between SEL occupying the
property and Dr. Lord selling the property to the Counties, the parties never reduced their
oral contract to a writing. SEL had no deed to the property, nor did SEL make any payments
to Dr. Lord that would have given the impression it owned the property. Also, no evidence
was presented that SEL ever sought to close on the transaction. Although SEL made
improvements to the land, it was never under the mistaken belief that the property actually
belonged to SEL. At all times, SEL knew the property belonged to Dr. Lord. Just as the
Supreme Court ruled in Barriffe, the statute of frauds applies, and the equitable remedy of
unjust enrichment is unavailable.

Outcome: We find that because the oral contract between SEL and Dr. Lord fails under the
statute of frauds, the equitable remedy of unjust enrichment is unavailable. We affirm the trial court’s ruling granting summary judgment to Dr. Lord, the Counties, and the Hospital.

AFFIRMED

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