Fredrico A. Dixon, III v. Patricia Grissom ( 2015 )


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  •                 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
    AT KNOXVILLE
    March 10, 2015 Session
    FREDRICO A. DIXON, III v. PATRICIA GRISSOM
    Interlocutory Appeal from the Chancery Court for Knox County
    No. 183583-3    Michael W. Moyers, Chancellor
    No. E2014-00947-COA-R9-CV-FILED-JUNE 12, 2015
    The dispute central to this interlocutory appeal involves a failed real estate transaction
    and alleged breach of a real estate agent‘s fiduciary duty to her client. The plaintiff buyer
    entered into an agreement to purchase improved real property from the seller but failed to
    obtain financing to complete the purchase. In a previous action brought by the seller
    against the buyer, the trial court found that the buyer‘s attempted termination of the
    contract was ineffective and that he therefore breached the contract. On appeal, this
    Court affirmed that judgment in favor of the seller. The buyer subsequently brought the
    instant action against the defendant real estate agent, alleging breach of fiduciary duty
    based on the agent‘s failure to confirm delivery of the buyer‘s credit declination letter to
    the seller. The agent filed a motion for summary judgment, averring that the buyer had
    filed this action outside the time parameters of the applicable statute of limitations.
    Following a hearing, the trial court applied the discovery rule to find that knowledge of
    the agent‘s alleged failure to terminate the contract could not be imputed to the buyer
    before April 22, 2010, when the seller‘s counsel had raised the issue during trial in the
    original action. Upon therefore determining that the buyer had commenced this action
    within the applicable three-year statute of limitations, the trial court denied the agent‘s
    motion for summary judgment. The agent sought permission to file an interlocutory
    appeal, which the trial court granted upon the certified issue of when the statute of
    limitations began to run. This Court subsequently granted permission for interlocutory
    appeal pursuant to Tennessee Rule of Appellate Procedure 9. We determine that the
    buyer knew or should have known that he had a potential cause of action against the
    agent by August 10, 2009, when he admittedly had knowledge of a facsimile
    transmission from the seller alleging that she had not received the termination
    documentation and demanding distribution to her of the seller‘s earnest money deposit.
    Having therefore determined that the statute of limitations began to run more than three
    years before the buyer commenced this action, we reverse the trial court‘s judgment and
    grant summary judgment in favor of the agent.
    Tenn. R. App. P. 9 Interlocutory Appeal; Judgment of the Chancery Court
    Reversed; Case Remanded
    THOMAS R. FRIERSON, II, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which CHARLES D.
    SUSANO, JR., C.J., and D. MICHAEL SWINEY, J., joined.
    Jon G. Roach and Brian R. Bibb, Knoxville, Tennessee, for the appellant, Patricia
    Grissom.
    James B. Johnson, Nashville, Tennessee, for the appellee, Fredrico A. Dixon, III.
    OPINION
    I. Factual and Procedural Background
    On June 9, 2008, the plaintiff, Dr. Fredrico A. Dixon, III, entered into a ―Purchase
    and Sale Agreement‖ (―the Agreement‖) to purchase improved real property and two
    adjoining unimproved land parcels from the seller, Elizabeth C. Wright, for the total price
    of $1,775,000. Upon execution of the Agreement, Dr. Dixon deposited earnest money in
    the amount of $20,000 with his real estate agent, the defendant, Patricia Grissom, and
    Realty Executives Associates, Inc. (―Realty Executives‖), one of the brokerage
    companies with which Ms. Grissom was associated. The purchase was conditioned upon
    Dr. Dixon‘s ability to obtain a loan financing 100% of the purchase price by the agreed
    closing date of the transaction. Pursuant to the latest amendment to the Agreement, the
    closing date was set for June 27, 2008. Dr. Dixon subsequently failed to obtain a loan
    financing 100% of the purchase price and therefore sought to terminate the Agreement.
    In a previous action brought by Ms. Wright against Dr. Dixon, the trial court
    found that Dr. Dixon‘s attempted termination of the contract was ineffective and that he
    therefore breached the contract. Ms. Wright had eventually sold the subject real property
    for an amount less than the purchase price to which Dr. Dixon had agreed. The trial court
    awarded Ms. Wright compensatory damages in the amount of $36,541.55 and attorney‘s
    fees in the amount of $43,280.76. Dr. Dixon appealed, and this Court affirmed the
    judgment. See Wright v. Dixon, No. E2012-00542-COA-R3-CV, 
    2012 WL 5954650
    (Tenn. Ct. App. Nov. 29, 2012) (―Wright II‖); see also Wright v. Dixon, No. E2010-
    01647-COA-R3-CV, 
    2011 WL 1648088
    (Tenn. Ct. App. May 2, 2011) (―Wright I‖)
    (reversing the trial court‘s initial finding that Dr. Dixon had failed to make reasonable
    efforts to obtain 100% financing and remanding for a determination of whether Dr. Dixon
    effectively terminated the contract).
    2
    On August 22, 2012, Dr. Dixon filed the instant action, alleging that Ms. Grissom,
    as his real estate agent, breached her fiduciary duty to him. Dr. Dixon averred that Ms.
    Grissom failed to timely provide Ms. Wright with written documentation of SunTrust
    Bank‘s denial of financing to Dr. Dixon. Regarding the requirement that Dr. Dixon
    provide such documentation, the Agreement provides in pertinent part:
    This Agreement is conditioned upon Buyer‘s ability to obtain a
    loan(s) in the principal amount of 100% of the purchase price listed above .
    . . . In the event Buyer, having acted in good faith and in accordance with
    the terms below, is unable to obtain financing, Buyer may terminate this
    [A]greement by providing written notice and a copy of Lender‘s loan denial
    letter. Upon termination, Buyer is entitled to a refund of the Earnest
    Money.
    ***
    Should Buyer default hereunder, the Earnest Money shall be
    forfeited as damages to the Seller, and Seller may sue, in contract or tort,
    for additional damages or specific performance of the Agreement, or both. .
    . . In the event that any party hereto shall file suit for breach or
    enforcement of this Agreement . . . the prevailing party shall be entitled to
    recover all costs of such enforcement, including reasonable attorney‘s fees.
    ***
    Time is of the essence of this Agreement.
    ***
    Except as otherwise provided herein, all notices and demands
    required or permitted hereunder shall be in writing and delivered either (1)
    in person, (2) by a prepaid overnight delivery service, (3) by facsimile
    transmission (FAX), (4) by the United States Postal Service, postage
    prepaid, registered or certified return receipt requested or (5) Email.
    NOTICE shall be deemed to have been given as of the date and time it is
    actually received. Receipt of notice by the real estate licensee or their
    Broker assisting a party as a client or customer shall be deemed to be notice
    to that party for all purposes under this Agreement as may be amended,
    unless otherwise provided in writing.
    (Paragraph numbering and headings omitted.)
    3
    Although the instant action is separate from Wright v. Dixon, the factual and
    procedural background summarized in Wright II highlights the question at issue here. In
    relevant part, this Court summarized:
    On remand [from Wright I], the parties and the court focused on
    whether the Seller received written notice of termination. The Seller
    testified that she did not receive a one-page fax dated June 27, 2008 (―the
    Alleged Fax‖), which the Buyer‘s agent, Patricia Grissom (―the Agent‖),
    claimed to have sent to the Seller‘s office fax machine. The Alleged Fax
    contains a handwritten note stating:
    Elizabeth, The Dixon[s] are withdrawing from the . . .
    Agreement due to their financing falling through. Please see
    the Denial letter attached from SunTrust.
    The Seller testified that, when she is absent from the office, faxes received
    during normal business hours are placed by administrative help in her
    physical office mailbox. Faxes received after office hours ―would be sitting
    on the fax machine.‖ The Seller did not arrive back in Knoxville from her
    family vacation until late Friday night. The Seller waited until early
    Saturday morning, June 28, to go to the office. There was no fax from the
    Agent either in her office mailbox or on the fax machine. On July 2, 2008,
    the Seller did receive a copy of the denial of credit document under a fax
    cover sheet misdated July 1, 2008. The Seller testified that the first time
    she saw the Alleged Fax was after the first trial.
    The Agent testified that she called the Seller on June 27 and
    informed her that the Buyer had not been able to obtain financing and that
    he was terminating the Agreement. She also asked her assistant, Tessa
    Moore, to send the Seller a fax dated June 27, 2008, as well as the letter
    from SunTrust denying financing. The Agent‘s ―personal‖ file contained
    the Alleged Fax, with a handwritten confirmation by Tessa Moore that it
    was sent. The Agent testified that, when the Seller said that she did not
    receive the Alleged Fax she resent the denial of financing document on
    either July 1 or July 2. On cross-examination the Agent admitted that she
    had received a subpoena to appear at the first trial and bring with her all
    documents pertaining to the termination. The documents she produced at
    the first trial did not include the Alleged Fax. The Agent testified that she
    met with the Buyer‘s attorney before trial and gave him the office file.
    According to the Agent, it was after the first trial that she searched her
    4
    personal files and found the Alleged Fax. The Agent testified that it was
    after the first trial that she realized the Seller was claiming that she did not
    receive the Alleged Fax. This prompted her to search her personal files.
    Wright II, 
    2012 WL 5954650
    at *2 (italicized emphasis in original). In affirming the trial
    court‘s ruling, this Court determined that the evidence did not preponderate against ―the
    trial court‘s finding that the termination document was not received on the closing date.‖
    
    Id. at *4.
    This Court further noted: ―We agree with the trial court that, in a transaction
    involving a million dollar piece of property, it is ‗inconceivable‘ that if the fax had truly
    gone through, the Agent would not have provided the machine printed confirmation of
    transmission.‖ 
    Id. Although Dr.
    Dixon filed his complaint against Ms. Grissom on August 22, 2012,
    it is undisputed that summons were not issued upon Ms. Grissom and the other
    defendants until January 7, 2013. The other defendants originally included Realty
    Executives and another brokerage entity, Debbie Elliott Sexton, LLC f/k/a Debbie Elliott
    and Associates (―Debbie Elliott‖). All of the defendants filed one motion for summary
    judgment on September 5, 2013. Following a hearing, the trial court granted summary
    judgment in favor of Realty Executives and Debbie Elliott upon its determinations that
    Ms. Grissom was an independent contractor and that the other defendants were not
    vicariously liable for her actions. The trial court entered an order to this effect on
    December 20, 2013. Realty Executive Associates and Debbie Elliott are not parties to
    this appeal.
    Ms. Grissom argued in her motion for summary judgment that Dr. Dixon‘s claim
    against her was barred by the applicable statute of limitations. It is undisputed that the
    three-year statute of limitations provided by Tennessee Code Annotated § 28-3-105(1)
    (Supp. 2014) for injuries to personal property applies to Dr. Dixon‘s claim for breach of
    fiduciary duty against Ms. Grissom. At the close of the December 2013 hearing, the trial
    court reserved ruling on Ms. Grissom‘s motion for summary judgment and requested
    briefing from the parties on the issue of whether and when knowledge of Ms. Grissom‘s
    alleged failure to terminate the contract could be imputed to Dr. Dixon and thus
    commence the running of the statute of limitations pursuant to the discovery rule. See
    PNC Multifamily Capital Institutional Fund XXVI Ltd. P’ship v. Bluff City Cmty. Dev.
    Corp., 
    387 S.W.3d 525
    , 544 (Tenn. Ct. App. 2012) (―Under the discovery rule, a cause of
    action accrues when the plaintiff knows or in the exercise of reasonable care and
    diligence should know that an injury has been sustained as a result of wrongful or tortious
    conduct by the defendant.‖).
    In its remarks voiced upon the conclusion of the December 2013 hearing, the trial
    court identified three events as possibly beginning the applicable limitation period.
    5
    These events and corresponding dates are as follows:
     August 12, 2008: The date that Ms. Wright filed her complaint against Dr.
    Dixon in the first action.
     August 10, 2009: The date that Dr. Dixon filed a ―Statement of Material
    Facts‖ in Wright v. Dixon that included acknowledgment of the June 28, 2008
    facsimile transmission received by Ms. Grissom in which Ms. Wright stated
    that she had not received a copy of the Lender‘s declination letter. Ms. Wright
    had attached to this transmission an earnest money distribution form
    demanding that the $20,000 in earnest money be distributed to her.
     April 22, 2010: The date of trial when Ms. Wright‘s counsel stated to the
    acknowledged surprise of the trial court: ―Your Honor, I think the pivotal
    issue in this case is did [Dr. Dixon] properly terminate the contract?‖
    The latest date, April 22, 2010, is the only one that is within the three-year limitation
    period.
    Ms. Grissom filed a supplemental brief on January 15, 2014, and Dr. Dixon
    subsequently filed a response on March 6, 2014. Following a hearing, the trial court
    denied Ms. Grissom‘s motion for summary judgment in an order entered April 8, 2014.
    Specifically, the court found that the three-year statute of limitations began to run when
    ―Elizabeth Wright alleged for the first time during the April 22, 2010 trial that Dr. Dixon
    failed to properly terminate the contract at issue.‖ The court therefore found that
    ―whether measured by the filing of the Complaint or the date that process was issued,‖
    Dr. Dixon‘s action against Ms. Grissom was timely filed.
    Ms. Grissom filed a motion for a Tennessee Rule of Appellate Procedure 9
    interlocutory appeal on April 14, 2014. In an order entered May 15, 2014, the trial court
    granted the motion, certifying the issue for review as ―whether the statute of limitations,
    Tenn. Code Ann. § 28-3-105 bars the present action.‖ The court further clarified the
    issue as whether the statute of limitations began running ―as early as August 12, 2008,
    but in no event later than August 10, 2009,‖ or ―only as of the April 22, 2010 trial in
    [Wright v. Dixon] when the plaintiff advanced at trial that Dr. Dixon had not properly
    terminated the Purchase and Sale Agreement.‖ This Court subsequently granted
    permission for an interlocutory appeal in an order entered September 12, 2014.
    6
    II. Issue Presented
    Pursuant to Tennessee Rule of Appellate Procedure 9, ―we are limited on appeal to
    the questions certified by the trial court in its order granting permission to seek an
    interlocutory appeal and in this Court‘s order granting the appeal.‖               In re
    Bridgestone/Firestone & Ford Motor Co. Litig., 
    286 S.W.3d 898
    , 902 (Tenn. Ct. App.
    2008). As noted above, the trial court in its order granting permission for interlocutory
    appeal briefly stated the certified issue and then further clarified the issue. We have
    consolidated and restated slightly the sole issue certified by the trial court for this
    interlocutory appeal as follows:
    Whether, pursuant to the discovery rule, the applicable three-year
    statute of limitations provided by Tennessee Code Annotated § 28-3-105
    began running no later than August 10, 2009, and so bars the present action,
    or only as of the April 22, 2010 trial in Wright I, and therefore does not bar
    the present action.
    III. Standard of Review
    For actions initiated on or after July 1, 2011, such as the one at bar, the standard of
    review for summary judgment delineated in Tennessee Code Annotated § 20-16-101
    (Supp. 2013) applies. See Sykes v. Chattanooga Hous. Auth., 
    343 S.W.3d 18
    , 25 n.2
    (Tenn. 2011). The statute provides:
    In motions for summary judgment in any civil action in Tennessee, the
    moving party who does not bear the burden of proof at trial shall prevail on
    its motion for summary judgment if it:
    (1)     Submits affirmative evidence that negates an essential element of the
    nonmoving party‘s claim; or
    (2)     Demonstrates to the court that the nonmoving party‘s evidence is
    insufficient to establish an essential element of the nonmoving
    party‘s claim.
    Tenn. Code Ann. § 20-16-101.1
    1
    As this Court has explained:
    Section 20-16-101 was enacted to abrogate the summary-judgment standard set
    forth in Hannan [v. Alltell Publ’g Co., 
    270 S.W.3d 1
    , 5 (Tenn. 2008)], which permitted a
    trial court to grant summary judgment only if the moving party could either (1)
    7
    The grant or denial of a motion for summary judgment is a matter of law;
    therefore, our standard of review is de novo with no presumption of correctness. Dick
    Broad. Co., Inc. of Tenn. v. Oak Ridge FM, Inc., 
    395 S.W.3d 653
    , 671 (Tenn. 2013)
    (citing Kinsler v. Berkline, LLC, 
    320 S.W.3d 796
    , 799 (Tenn. 2010)). ―A summary
    judgment is appropriate only when the moving party can demonstrate that there is no
    genuine issue of material fact and that it is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.‖ Dick
    Broad. 
    Co., 395 S.W.3d at 671
    (citing Tenn. R. Civ. P. 56.04; Hannan v. Alltell Publ’g
    Co., 
    270 S.W.3d 1
    , 5 (Tenn. 2008)). Pursuant to Tennessee Rule of Civil Procedure
    56.04, the trial court must ―state the legal grounds upon which the court denies or grants
    the motion‖ for summary judgment, and our Supreme Court has instructed that the trial
    court must state these grounds ―before it invites or requests the prevailing party to draft a
    proposed order.‖ Smith v. UHS of Lakeside, Inc., 
    439 S.W.3d 303
    , 316 (Tenn. 2014).
    IV. Statute of Limitations Period Pursuant to Discovery Rule
    Ms. Grissom contends that the trial court erred by dismissing her motion for
    summary judgment because this action is barred by application of the three-year statute
    of limitations. She argues that Dr. Dixon knew or should have known that he had a
    potential claim against Ms. Grissom when Ms. Wright filed a complaint against him on
    August 12, 2008, or in the alternative, no later than August 10, 2009, when Dr. Dixon
    acknowledged discovery of Ms. Wright‘s June 28, 2008 facsimile transmission to Ms.
    Grissom. Dr. Dixon asserts that the trial court properly found that he could not have
    discovered the injury allegedly caused by Ms. Grissom prior to April 22, 2010, during the
    original trial testimony in Wright v. Dixon. We conclude that Dr. Dixon knew or should
    have known that he had a potential cause of action against Ms. Grissom no later than
    August 10, 2009, when he filed a statement of material facts in Wright v. Dixon with a
    copy of the first page of the June 28, 2008 facsimile transmission attached. Having
    determined that the three-year statute of limitations began to run more than three years
    before Dr. Dixon filed this action on August 22, 2012, we further determine that the
    action is barred by the statute of limitations and that the trial court therefore erred by
    denying Ms. Grissom‘s motion for summary judgment.
    affirmatively negate an essential element of the nonmoving party‘s claim or (2) show that
    the nonmoving party cannot prove an essential element of the claim at trial. 
    Hannan, 270 S.W.3d at 5
    . The statute is intended ―to return the summary judgment burden-shifting
    analytical framework to that which existed prior to Hannan, reinstating the ‗put up or
    shut up‘ standard.‖ Coleman v. S. Tenn. Oil Inc., No. M2011-01329-COA-R3-CV, 
    2012 WL 2628617
    , at *5 n.3 (Tenn. Ct. App. July 5, 2012).
    Walker v. Bradley County Gov’t, No. E2013-01053-COA-R3-CV, 
    2014 WL 1493193
    at
    *3 n.3 (Tenn. Ct. App. Apr. 15, 2014). See also 
    Sykes, 343 S.W.3d at 25
    n.2.
    8
    It is undisputed that the applicable statute of limitations for this action alleging
    economic injury through breach of fiduciary duty is three years. See Tenn. Code Ann. §
    28-3-105(1) (Supp. 2014) (providing that actions alleging injury to personal property
    ―shall be commenced within three (3) years from the accruing of the cause of action.‖);
    see also Keller v. Colgems—EMI Music, Inc., 
    924 S.W.2d 357
    , 361 (Tenn. Ct. App.
    1996) (concluding that ―an economic loss . . . which is a consequence of property damage
    is within the three year statute found in Tenn. Code Ann. 28-3-105.‖). The issue certified
    for interlocutory review concerns the date when the three-year limitation period began to
    run.
    The trial court applied the discovery rule to determine when Dr. Dixon knew or
    should have known that he suffered an injury due to Ms. Grissom‘s failure to ensure
    timely delivery of the loan declination letter. See McCroskey v. Bryant Air Conditioning
    Co., 
    524 S.W.2d 487
    , 491 (Tenn. 1975) (establishing the discovery rule for tort actions
    and explaining that in such actions, ―the cause of action accrues and the statute of
    limitations commences to run when the injury occurs or is discovered, or when in the
    exercise of reasonable care and diligence, it should have been discovered.‖); see also
    Pero’s Steak & Spaghetti House v. Lee, 
    90 S.W.3d 614
    , 621 (Tenn. 2002) (―[W]here
    applicable, the discovery rule is an equitable exception that tolls the running of the statute
    of limitations until the plaintiff knows, or in the exercise of reasonable care and diligence,
    should know that an injury has been sustained.‖). Ms. Grissom does not dispute the trial
    court‘s decision to apply the discovery rule, and we determine such application to be
    proper under the circumstances of this action.
    Pursuant to the discovery rule, ―the statute is tolled only during the period when
    the plaintiff had no knowledge at all that the wrong had occurred and, as a reasonable
    person, was not put on inquiry.‖ Potts v. Celotex Corp., 
    796 S.W.2d 678
    , 680-81 (Tenn.
    1990). As this Court has explained:
    The knowledge component of the discovery rule may be established
    by evidence of actual or constructive knowledge of the injury. Carvell [v.
    Bottoms], 900 S.W.2d [23,] 29 [(Tenn. 1995)]. Accordingly, the statute of
    limitations begins to run when the plaintiff has actual knowledge of the
    injury as where, for example, the defendant [attorney] admits to having
    committed malpractice or the plaintiff is informed by another attorney of
    the malpractice. Under the theory of constructive knowledge, however, the
    statute may begin to run at an earlier date—whenever the plaintiff becomes
    aware or reasonably should have become aware of facts sufficient to put a
    reasonable person on notice that an injury has been sustained as a result of
    the defendant‘s negligent or wrongful conduct. 
    Id. Our Supreme
    Court has
    9
    stressed, however, that there is no requirement that the plaintiff actually
    know the specific type of legal claim he or she has, or that the injury
    constituted a breach of the appropriate legal standard. Shadrick [v. Coker],
    963 S.W.2d [726,] 733 [(Tenn. 1998)]. Rather, ―the plaintiff is deemed to
    have discovered the right of action if he is aware of facts sufficient to put a
    reasonable person on notice that he has suffered an injury as a result of
    wrongful conduct.‖ 
    Carvell, 900 S.W.2d at 29
    (quoting Roe v. Jefferson,
    
    875 S.W.2d 653
    , 657 (Tenn. 1994)). ―It is knowledge of facts sufficient to
    put a plaintiff on notice that an injury has been sustained which is crucial.‖
    Stanbury [v. Bacardi], 953 S.W.2d [671,] 678 [(Tenn. 1997)]. A plaintiff
    may not, of course, delay filing suit until all the injurious effects or
    consequences of the alleged wrong are actually known to the plaintiff.
    
    Shadrick, 963 S.W.2d at 733
    ; Wyatt v. A-Best Company, 
    910 S.W.2d 851
    ,
    855 (Tenn. 1995). Allowing suit to be filed once all the injurious effects
    and consequences are known would defeat the rationale for the existence of
    statutes of limitations, which is to avoid the uncertainties and burdens
    inherent in pursuing and defending stale claims. 
    Wyatt, 910 S.W.2d at 855
    .
    PNC Multifamily Capital Institutional Fund XXVI Ltd. 
    P’ship, 387 S.W.3d at 545
    . In
    addition, ―a cause of action in tort does not exist until a judicial remedy is available to the
    plaintiff,‖ including ―(1) a breach of some legally recognized duty owed by the defendant
    to the plaintiff and (2) some legally cognizable damage caused to the plaintiff by the
    breach of duty.‖). 
    Potts, 796 S.W.2d at 681
    .
    In its order denying summary judgment, the trial court stated the following
    findings in relevant part:
    Specifically, this Court having participated in two previous trials
    which ultimately resulted in the filing of this case, finds that prior to April
    22, 2010, the totality of the facts were insufficient to place a reasonable
    person on inquiry or actual notice that a potential cause of action existed
    against Ms. Grissom until Elizabeth Wright alleged for the first time during
    the April 22, 2010 trial that Dr. Dixon failed to properly terminate the
    contract at issue.
    Furthermore, this Court finds that the three year statute of limitations
    began to run on April 22, 2010 and that Dr. Dixon‘s case in this matter,
    whether measured by the filing of the Complaint or the date that process
    was issued, was timely filed.
    10
    Dr. Dixon attached to his response to the motion for summary judgment an excerpt
    of the transcript from the trial in Wright v. Dixon on April 22, 2010. This excerpt
    demonstrates that the following exchange occurred during the trial:
    [Ms. Wright‘s Counsel]:     Your Honor, I think the pivotal issue in this
    case is did he properly ever terminate the
    contract? Patricia Grissom has testified, with
    absolutely no documentary evidence to support
    her intention whatsoever, that she faxed the
    declination letter on June 27th. There‘s nothing
    to support that whatsoever.
    The Court:                  Let‘s assume that it was on July 1st. What does
    that mean?
    [Ms. Wright‘s Counsel]:     That means that it‘s outside – it‘s not effective.
    It‘s past the closing date. The closing date
    under the contract was June 27 by virtue of the
    closing date possession . . . .
    (Ellipsis indicates end of excerpt.) Dr. Dixon asserts that the trial court correctly found
    the above statement made by Ms. Wright‘s counsel on April 22, 2010, to be the triggering
    event that placed Dr. Dixon on notice that he had suffered an injury due to Ms. Grissom‘s
    alleged breach of fiduciary duty. We disagree.
    Ms. Grissom‘s contention that the statute of limitations bars this action is based on
    her assertion that Dr. Dixon discovered his alleged injury on one of two dates that would
    place the filing of the instant action beyond the statute of limitations period. First, Ms.
    Grissom argues that the filing of Ms. Wright‘s complaint against Dr. Dixon on August
    13, 2008, operated as notice that Ms. Grissom may have failed to properly terminate the
    contract. Second, Ms. Grissom argues that at least by the date of Dr. Dixon‘s discovery
    of the June 28, 2008 facsimile from Ms. Wright to Ms. Grissom, Dr. Dixon knew that
    Ms. Grissom‘s alleged failure to timely deliver the loan declination letter in writing could
    result in a ruling that he had failed to properly terminate the Agreement. It is undisputed
    that Dr. Dixon had opportunity to review at least the first page of the facsimile
    transmission at issue by August 10, 2009, when he filed his statement of material facts in
    Wright v. Dixon. We will address each of these proposed dates for the commencement of
    the limitations period in turn.
    As a threshold matter, we note that Ms. Grissom presents an argument regarding
    whether the limitation period was tolled by commencement of the action when Dr. Dixon
    11
    filed the complaint on August 22, 2012, or when he caused summons to be issued on
    January 7, 2013. See, e.g., Jones v. Vasu, 
    326 S.W.3d 577
    , 577-81 (Tenn. Ct. App. 2010)
    (concluding that the plaintiff‘s counsel‘s intentional ―delay of prompt service of process
    rendered the filing of the complaint ineffective to commence the action and stop the
    running of the statute of limitations‖ pursuant to Tennessee Rule of Civil Procedure
    4.01(3)). We determine Ms. Grissom‘s tolling argument to be moot, as did the trial court.
    Both of the two earlier dates set forth by Ms. Grissom as the beginning of the limitations
    period occurred more than three years before Dr. Dixon filed his complaint. Moreover,
    the later date proposed by Dr. Dixon occurred within three years of both the filing of the
    complaint and the issuance of summons.
    Ms. Grissom first argues that Dr. Dixon was placed on constructive notice of his
    alleged injury on August 13, 2008, when Ms. Wright filed her original complaint alleging
    that Dr. Dixon had breached the Agreement. During the December 16, 2013 hearing on
    Ms. Grissom‘s motion for summary judgment, the trial court repeatedly questioned Ms.
    Grissom‘s counsel regarding whether the 2008 complaint alleged that Dr. Dixon had
    failed to properly terminate the contract. Through her counsel, Ms. Grissom argued, as
    she does on appeal, that Ms. Wright‘s allegation that Dr. Dixon had breached the
    Agreement operated as constructive notice to Dr. Dixon that he was accused of breaching
    individual requirements within the Agreement, including the requirement that Ms. Wright
    receive a loan declination letter by the established deadline to effectuate termination of
    the Agreement. At the close of the hearing, the trial court found that Dr. Dixon was not
    placed on constructive notice ―simply because of the lawsuit being filed, because it was
    not sufficiently clear.‖ As the trial court noted, an allegation of failure to terminate the
    Agreement was not raised specifically in the complaint, during discovery, or in any
    pretrial motion. In her ―Trial Brief,‖ Ms. Wright also did not raise an allegation of failure
    to properly terminate the Agreement.1
    In the August 2008 complaint, Ms. Wright first identified the essential facts
    underlying the Agreement. She then alleged the following against Dr. Dixon:
    The Contract provided for a closing date of June 13, 2008. The
    closing date was subsequently extended by amendment to June 20, 2008.
    Thereafter, [Dr. Dixon] failed and refused to close on the Contract and
    failed and refused to provide his mortgage broker with necessary and
    requested financial information to process his loan application.
    [Ms. Wright] has complied with all contingencies of the Contract
    and is ready, willing and able to close on the purchase of the Subject
    1
    Copies of Ms. Wright‘s complaint and trial brief are included in the record before us as attachments to
    Dr. Dixon‘s response to Ms. Grissom‘s undisputed facts.
    12
    Property. [Dr. Dixon] has breached the Contract by failing to timely pursue
    financing, refusing to close on the Contract and accept conveyance of the
    Subject Property by [Ms. Wright], and failing to release the earnest money
    deposit to [Ms. Wright].
    Due to the unique characteristics of real property in general, [Ms.
    Wright] cannot be adequately compensated with monetary damages and
    therefore seek[s] an Order for specific performance of the Contract.
    In the alternative, [Ms. Wright] avers that as a result of the breach of
    the Contract by [Dr. Dixon], [Dr. Dixon] is liable to [Ms. Wright] for
    compensatory and special damages resulting therefrom, together with
    attorney‘s fees as provided by the Contract.
    (Paragraph numbering omitted.)
    Ms. Wright‘s complaint delineated four specific ways in which Dr. Dixon was
    alleged to have breached the Agreement ―by failing to timely pursue financing, refusing
    to close on the Contract and accept conveyance of the Subject Property by [Ms. Wright],
    and failing to release the earnest money deposit to Ms. Wright.‖ In contrast to these
    specific allegations, Ms. Wright‘s complaint omitted any specific allegation that Dr.
    Dixon had breached the Agreement by failing to properly terminate it. We agree with the
    trial court that the breach of contract allegation contained within Ms. Wright‘s complaint
    was insufficient to operate as constructive notice to Dr. Dixon that he had suffered an
    injury through his agent‘s failure to ensure timely delivery of the declination letter.
    We do, however, find Ms. Grissom‘s second argument regarding August 10, 2009,
    to be persuasive. On August 10, 2009, Dr. Dixon filed a statement of material facts in
    Wright v. Dixon. This filing included a description of the June 28, 2008 facsimile
    transmission from Ms. Wright to Ms. Grissom with a copy of the transmission‘s first
    page attached. Under the heading, ―Comments,‖ on the first page of the facsimile
    transmission, Ms. Wright had handwritten the following:
    Earnest Money Disbursement Form in this fax
    Patricia –
    I did not receive a fax at the office of the denial letter from lender
    you spoke of yesterday. I also did not receive the signed copy of Closing
    Date/Possession Date Amendment #2 that you said you would fax on
    Friday, June 20th.
    — Elizabeth
    13
    The entire facsimile transmission from Ms. Wright to Ms. Grissom is attached as
    an exhibit to Ms. Grissom‘s motion for summary judgment in the instant action. Ms.
    Wright had attached to the transmission a form, also dated June 28, 2008, in which she
    requested disbursement of the $20,000 earnest money to her. On the form, entitled
    ―Earnest Money Disbursement and Mutual Release of Purchase and Sale Agreement,‖
    Ms. Wright had checked a box indicating: ―EARNEST MONEY IS BEING
    DISBURSED AS FOLLOWS . . . Forfeited by the Buyer(s) and paid to the Seller(s) as
    defined in the Purchase and Sale Agreement.‖ Regarding distribution of the earnest
    money, the referenced Agreement states in relevant part:
    In the event Buyer, having acted in good faith and in accordance with the
    terms below, is unable to obtain financing, Buyer may terminate this
    [A]greement by providing written notice and a copy of Lender‘s loan denial
    letter. Upon termination, Buyer is entitled to a refund of the Earnest
    Money.
    ***
    Should Buyer default hereunder, the Earnest Money shall be
    forfeited as damages to the Seller, and Seller may sue, in contract or tort,
    for additional damages or specific performance of the Agreement, or both.
    (Emphasis added.)
    Pursuant to the Agreement, Ms. Wright was entitled to demand disbursement of
    the earnest money deposit to her for any default of the Agreement committed by Dr.
    Dixon. The juxtaposition, however, of the disbursement demand with Ms. Wright‘s
    message that she had not received the declination letter indicates that the two were
    connected. Clearly, a ―Buyer,‖ in this case Dr. Dixon, receiving Ms. Wright‘s June 28,
    2008 facsimile transmission and disbursement demand would have actual knowledge that
    Ms. Wright claimed not to have received the loan declination letter by the June 27, 2008
    deadline. We further determine that Dr. Dixon, having previously entered into the
    Agreement referenced in the disbursement demand, would have been placed on
    constructive notice by this facsimile transmission that Ms. Wright considered the failure
    to timely deliver the declination letter to be a default warranting forfeiture of the earnest
    money deposit. We note that Dr. Dixon testified through deposition that he read the
    Agreement before signing it and would nonetheless be chargeable with knowledge of its
    contents. See Sikora v. Vanderploeg, 
    212 S.W.3d 277
    , 290 (Tenn. Ct. App. 2006)
    (―[P]arties have a duty to read the written contracts they enter into and are ordinarily
    14
    chargeable with knowledge of their contents regardless of whether they have actually
    read them.‖).
    Dr. Dixon testified through deposition that although he had known that Ms.
    Wright requested an earnest money disbursement in June 2008, he first learned of the
    existence of Ms. Wright‘s June 28, 2008 facsimile message stating that she had not
    received the declination letter when he appeared in court on April 22, 2010. However,
    through his filing of the statement of material facts on August 10, 2009, Dr. Dixon
    asserted knowledge of, at the very least, the first page of this message, which included the
    juxtaposition of the statement, ―Earnest money disbursement form in this fax,‖ alongside
    Ms. Wright‘s claim that she had not received the loan declination letter by the closing
    date of June 27, 2008. On appeal, Dr. Dixon concedes that ―[i]n August 2009, Dr. Dixon
    discovered the June 28, 2008 fax that Ms. Grissom received from Ms. Wright stating that
    she had not received a copy of the Lender‘s declination letter.‖
    During the December 2013 hearing on the instant summary judgment motion and
    on appeal, Dr. Dixon has asserted that acting through counsel, he conducted an inquiry in
    August 2009 in response to discovery of Ms. Wright‘s June 2008 facsimile. He
    maintains that through this inquiry, he was satisfied at the time that no reasonable person
    in his position would have had a cause of action against Ms. Grissom. Upon his inquiry,
    Dr. Dixon learned that (1) Ms. Wright‘s complaint against Dr. Dixon did not allege
    improper termination through failure to send the loan declination letter; (2) Ms. Grissom
    did fax the loan declination letter to Ms. Wright three days after the deadline on July 1,
    2008; and (3) Ms. Grissom maintained that her assistant had in fact faxed the loan
    declination letter to Ms. Wright within the deadline on June 27, 2008. As this Court
    noted in Wright II, however, Ms. Grissom failed to produce at any time a ―machine
    printed confirmation of transmission‖ on June 27, 2008. See Wright II, 
    2012 WL 5954650
    at *4. Dr. Dixon clearly acknowledges that his review of the June 28, 2008
    facsimile transmission from Ms. Wright to Ms. Grissom in August 2009 caused him to
    inquire into whether Ms. Grissom had effectively delivered the loan declination letter.
    Dr. Dixon‘s inquiry revealed the same lack of documentation that he now alleges was a
    breach of his real estate agent‘s fiduciary duty to him. See, e.g., Dennison v. Overton,
    No. E2013-02290-COA-R3-CV, 
    2014 WL 4180810
    at *7-8 (Tenn. Ct. App. Aug. 25,
    2014) (explaining that a client‘s constructive notice of an attorney‘s breach of duty is not
    eradicated by the attorney‘s assurance that the resulting injury can be corrected).
    Finally, we recognize that when the trial court requested that the parties brief the
    issue of when the applicable limitations period began to run, the court had concluded that
    knowledge of the alleged injury could be imputed to Dr. Dixon prior to April 22, 2010,
    only if it were possible for such knowledge to be imputed through the agency relationship
    between real estate licensee and client. See Tenn. Code Ann. § 62-13-402(a) (2009) (―If
    15
    a real estate licensee is engaged as an agent, the real estate licensee serves as a limited
    agent retained to provide real estate services to a client.‖); -402(c) (2009)
    (―Notwithstanding any law to the contrary, the duties enumerated in §§ 62-13-403
    [Duties owed to all parties] and 62-13-404 [Duties owed to licensee‘s client] shall
    supersede any fiduciary or common law duties owed by a licensee to the licensee‘s client
    on January 1, 1996.‖). Having determined, however, that Dr. Dixon conceded his
    knowledge of Ms. Wright‘s June 28, 2008 facsimile message by August 10, 2009, we
    further determine that the issue of knowledge imputed by agency is pretermitted as moot.
    Upon a careful and thorough review of the record, we conclude that Dr. Dixon was
    placed on constructive notice of his alleged injury by at least August 10, 2009, and that
    this constructive notice caused the running of the limitations period to begin. This action
    is therefore barred by the three-year statute of limitations provided by Tennessee Code
    Annotated § 28-3-105. Accordingly, we reverse the trial court‘s denial of Ms. Grissom‘s
    motion for summary judgment.
    V. Conclusion
    For the reasons stated above, we reverse the trial court‘s judgment denying Ms.
    Grissom‘s motion for summary judgment and grant summary judgment in favor of Ms.
    Grissom. This case is remanded to the trial court, pursuant to applicable law, for
    collection of costs assessed below. Costs on appeal are taxed to the appellee, Fredrico A.
    Dixon, III.
    _________________________________
    THOMAS R. FRIERSON, II, JUDGE
    16