Davidson County v. Alfred O. Hibler, II ( 2007 )


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  •                   IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
    AT NASHVILLE
    June 28, 2007 Session
    THE METROPOLITAN GOVERNMENT OF NASHVILLE AND
    DAVIDSON COUNTY v. ALFRED O. HIBLER, II
    Appeal from the Circuit Court for Davidson County
    No. 03C-2126     Marietta M. Shipley, Judge
    No. M2006-1633-COA-R3-CV - Filed on August 28, 2007
    The Metropolitan Government of Nashville and Davidson County (“Metro”) brought this action
    alleging that Alfred O. Hibler, II, had failed to report earned income as required in order to avoid a
    reduction in the amount of his Metro disability pension, resulting in significant pension
    overpayments to Mr. Hibler. The income in dispute consisted of distributions of excess earnings of
    an S corporation owned by Mr. Hibler. The issue is whether this income is properly characterized
    as “earned income,” defined by the Metro Code as including “wage or salary – not rent, interest,
    dividends or capital gains.” After a trial, the trial court ruled that the distributions, labeled “draws”
    by the S corporation, were not earned income required to be reported to Metro for purposes of
    calculating Mr. Hibler’s disability pension, and dismissed the action. We affirm the judgment of the
    trial court.
    Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Circuit Court Affirmed
    SHARON G. LEE, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which HERSCHEL P. FRANKS, P.J., and D.
    MICHAEL SWINEY , J., joined.
    Karl F. Dean, Kevin C. Klein, and John L. Kennedy, Nashville, Tennessee, for the Appellant,
    Metropolitan Government of Nashville and Davidson County.
    Frank J. Scanlon, Nashville, Tennessee, for the Appellee, Alfred O. Hibler, II.
    OPINION
    I. Background
    Mr. Hibler worked for the Metro Police Department from 1979 until 1993, when he suffered
    an on-the-job injury that left him permanently disabled, preventing him from continuing work as a
    police officer. After Mr. Hibler was injured, he applied for and received a disability pension from
    the Metropolitan Employee Benefit Board. The amount of Mr. Hibler’s disability pension, $1,922.87
    a month, is fixed and constant; however, the Metropolitan Code, which governs the calculation of
    a disability pensioner’s benefit, provides that a pensioner’s “allowable earnings,” the amount of
    outside non-pension income he or she may earn without reducing the pension amount, increases over
    time. Every year he received a pension, Mr. Hibler had a calculated amount of allowable outside
    earnings, and any earnings over the allowable limit resulted in a reduction of his pension on a dollar-
    for-dollar basis. Mr. Hibler was required to report his earnings while disabled to Metro on an annual
    questionnaire form.
    From 1993 to the present, Mr. Hibler has worked for his family’s car wash business. At the
    time of trial, Mr. Hibler was president of two S corporations, H&H Car Wash, Inc., and U-Wash
    Auto Systems, Inc. Mr. Hibler owns 100% of the stock of H&H, which owns one car wash facility,
    and 41% of the stock of U-Wash, which owns six car wash facilities in the Nashville area. Mr.
    Hibler’s sister, Alice Hibler Yokosuk, is the secretary of the corporations and is in charge of
    managing the day-to-day operations of the business. Mr. Hibler’s involvement in the business
    consists primarily of periodically driving around to the seven car wash facilities to check if they are
    working properly and consulting with Ms. Yokosuk about management decisions. Mr. Hibler was
    paid a salary by H&H and/or U-Wash of roughly $6,000 per year for the years at issue in this case,
    except for 2001, when U-Wash paid him $28,000 in salary.
    Beginning in 2001, Mr. Hibler began receiving distributions of excess earnings, or draws,
    from H&H. Mr. Hibler did not report his income from the draws paid by H&H on his annual
    disability questionnaires, which required him to report his “earned income.” Metro filed this action
    on July 25, 2003, alleging that the draws paid by H&H were required to be reported on the
    questionnaires, that they applied toward the allowable outside earnings limit, and that Mr. Hibler’s
    failure to report this income resulted in significant overpayments of his disability pension. Metro
    requested that the trial court order Mr. Hibler to repay approximately $185,322 in alleged
    overpayments for the years 1994 through 2002.
    After a trial, the trial court ruled that under the Metro Code, a distribution of profits by an
    S corporation to a shareholder in the form of a draw is not classified as “earned income” for purposes
    of calculating the amount of a Metro disability pension. Therefore, the trial court held that “Mr.
    Hibler has not misrepresented his earned income nor converted pension funds received by failing to
    report any earnings or earned income to Metro.” The trial court dismissed Metro’s action.
    II. Issues Presented
    Metro appeals, raising the following issues:
    1. Whether the trial court erred in its conclusion that the Metro Code does not require a
    disability pensioner to report distributions of excess earnings, classified as “draws,” by a wholly-
    owned S corporation, because the draws are not “earned income.”
    -2-
    2. Whether the trial court erred in refusing to apply the doctrine of “quasi-estoppel” to estop
    Mr. Hibler from arguing that his S corporation income was not required to be reported as “earned
    income” on the annual disability questionnaires because he classified it as “non-passive” on his
    federal income tax returns during the years at issue.
    III. Analysis
    A. Standard of Review
    We review this non-jury case de novo upon the record of the proceedings below, with a
    presumption of correctness as to the trial court’s findings of fact unless the preponderance of the
    evidence is otherwise. Tenn. R. App. P. 13(d); see also Hass v. Knighton, 
    676 S.W.2d 554
    (Tenn.
    1984). When a trial court has seen and heard witnesses, especially where issues of credibility and
    weight of oral testimony are involved, considerable deference must be accorded to the trial court's
    factual findings. Seals v. England/Corsair Upholstery Mfg. Co., Inc., 
    984 S.W.2d 912
    , 915 (Tenn.
    1999). There is no presumption of correctness with regard to the trial court’s conclusions of law.
    Campbell v. Florida Steel Corp., 
    919 S.W.2d 26
    , 35 (Tenn. 1996); Presley v. Bennett, 
    860 S.W.2d 857
    , 859 (Tenn. 1993).
    B. Classification of S Corporation Draws Under Metro Code
    The Metro Code requires a disability pensioner such as Mr. Hibler to annually report
    “whether their earned income (i.e., wage or salary – not rent, interest, dividends or capital gains)
    exceeds their disability income.” Metropolitan Code of Laws, § 3.28.100. The Metro Code also
    requires the reporting of a disability pensioner’s “earnings while disabled,” which is defined as “all
    compensation, gain or profit of a disabled employee who works or engages in any business or
    occupation.” 
    Id. at §
    3.08.010. The amount of a pensioner’s earnings is important for the
    calculation of his or her disability pension because if the earned income exceeds a certain amount
    of “allowable earnings,” the person’s pension is reduced on a dollar-for-dollar basis.
    As stated, the income at issue in this case is income earned by an S corporation owned by Mr.
    Hibler. The Supreme Court, in Taylor v. Fezell, recently discussed how the income of an S
    corporation, an entity recognized under the federal tax code, is treated for income tax purposes:
    An S corporation's income passes through that corporate entity to the
    individual shareholders in proportion to their respective stock
    ownership. This passing through of income takes place for federal
    income tax purposes, regardless of whether the earnings of the
    corporation are retained to enhance the corporation's capital position.
    Thus, the shareholders of an S corporation are required to pay taxes
    on their apportioned shares of the corporation's earnings, regardless
    of the actual sums they are paid.
    -3-
    Taylor, 
    158 S.W.3d 352
    , 355-56 (Tenn. 2005).
    Metro argues that Mr. Hibler’s earned income exceeded his allowable earnings for the years
    1994 to 2005,1 and that the failure to report income from his wholly-owned S corporation, H&H Car
    Wash, resulted in overpayments of his disability pension. Mr. Hibler argues that the draws he
    received from H&H were not “earned income,” but more in the nature of dividends or capital gains,
    and therefore should not be included in his “allowable earnings” under the Code.
    The amount of income Mr. Hibler received during the years at issue is undisputed, and is
    shown by the following chart:
    Allowable                                             Draw                     Amount
    Year           Outside Earnings                Gross Salary         Amount Paid                  Reported
    1994                $9,316.02                      $6,000                     0                   $5,000
    1995                $10,287.54                     $6,000                     0                   $5,000
    1996                $11,121.06                     $6,500                     0                   $5,000
    1997                $12,063.54                     $5,500                     0                   $5,000
    1998                $13,201.56                     $6,000                     0                   $5,000
    1999                $14,290.56                     $6,000                     0                   $5,000
    2000                $14,843.52                     $7,500                     0                   $4,500
    2001                $17,456.04                    $28,000                 $21,000                 $28,000
    2002                $20,716.56                        0                 $37,793.10                    0
    2003                $22,031.58                   $5,528.68                $48,000                  $5,529
    2004                $22,698.60                        0                   $48,000                  $6,000
    2005                $23,418.06                     $5,000                 $54,000                   N/A
    Mr. Hibler admitted that he had made certain mistakes in both reporting and classifying his
    income. As can be seen from the chart, Mr. Hibler reported less than his actual earned income from
    1994 to 2000. Mr. Hibler (and his accountant, Joseph Spivey) also admitted that approximately
    $6,000 should have been classified as Mr. Hibler’s salary for the years 2002 and 2004, both for
    1
    Although the complaint was filed in 2003 and contained allegations involving only the years 1995 through
    2002, the parties presented evidence, and arguments, to the trial court regarding Mr. Hibler’s income through 2005. The
    complaint was never amended to include the years 2003 through 2005, but it is evident from statements of the parties
    and the trial court that the issue of Mr. Hibler’s income for the later years was tried by consent.
    -4-
    federal income tax purposes and on his annual disability questionnaire. However, as Mr. Hibler
    argues, Metro incurred no damages from these errors, because the amount he actually earned was
    still less than his allowable outside earnings limit, and therefore the amount of his pension would
    remain the same if he had correctly reported his salary income. In 2001, the only year his reported
    salary exceeded the allowable earnings limit, Metro reduced Mr. Hibler’s disability pension by the
    amount his salary exceeded the limit.
    Metro argues that the amount of profit earned by H&H and U-Wash that was assigned to Mr.
    Hibler, as a stockholder, for federal income tax purposes should be imputed to him as earned income
    for purposes of calculating his disability pension. Mr. Spivey, the accountant for Mr. Hibler
    personally as well as the two S corporations, testified that the profits of an S corporation are assigned
    to the owners based on their percentage of ownership, and the shareholders pay federal income tax
    on the amount of profits assigned to them. Mr. Spivey explained that in many instances, however,
    the profits are not actually distributed to the shareholders. Whether the S corporation profits are
    distributed to the shareholder in the form of a draw, or whether the corporation uses the profits for
    other purposes, the individual shareholder pays federal income tax on his or her share. Although Mr.
    Hibler’s tax returns show that he was taxed on his percentage of the profits earned by H&H and U-
    Wash, there is no evidence in the record that he actually received any profits other than the income
    classified as a draw in the above chart. Because there is no evidence that the profits made by H&H
    and U-Wash, and shown on Mr. Hibler’s income tax returns, were Mr. Hibler’s “earned income,”
    there is no basis for imputing that income as “earned income” for calculating the pension, and the
    trial court correctly refused to do so. Cf. Taylor v. Fezell, 
    158 S.W.3d 352
    , 354 (Tenn. 2005)
    (concluding that “absent a showing that the retained earnings are excessive or that an obligor is
    actually manipulating his or her income, the retained earnings of an S corporation should not be
    imputed as income to the sole or majority shareholder in calculating a child support obligation.”).
    As noted, Mr. Hibler was employed and paid a salary by U-Wash and H&H, and he served
    as president of both corporations. From 1993 until 2001, U-Wash paid his salary of approximately
    $6,000 per year. Beginning in 2002, H&H paid Mr. Hibler’s salary. The work done by Mr. Hibler
    for the car wash business consisted primarily of driving to visit the seven car wash locations, driving
    his vehicle through the automatic washing systems to check if they worked properly, and visually
    inspecting the premises and reporting any problems. Mr. Hibler testified that he rarely got out of his
    vehicle on these visits, because his disability prevents him from much physical activity. His
    disability occurred during a police K-9 training exercise, when an accidental fall caused a partial
    severance of his spine and crushed three spinal discs. Mr. Hibler suffered a 40% loss of use of his
    legs below the knees and is unable to lift much at all, among other complications. Mr. Hibler
    testified that he visited the car wash locations three or four times a week, and the total time he spent
    to make a round of visiting all seven locations was three to four hours. Both Mr. Hibler and his
    sister, Ms. Yokosuk, testified that Mr. Hibler frequently consulted with Ms. Yokosuk on business
    and management decisions. They both testified without contradiction that Ms. Yokosuk was in
    charge of running the business, and that she made the final management decisions. Ms. Yokosuk
    testified that she has managed the business since her parents died in 2001 and 2002. She is paid a
    -5-
    total salary of $4,000 per month by the S corporations, and at the time of trial she had not taken any
    draws from the corporations.
    As regards the issue of whether the income Mr. Hibler received as draws from the profits of
    H&H Car Wash should be classified as “earned income” for purposes of calculating his disability
    pension, the trial court answered that question in the negative, reasoning as follows:
    The court finds that there are two definitions that have to be analyzed.
    One is [Metro Code] § 3.08.010 defining “earnings while disabled”
    as “all compensation, gain, or profit of a disabled employee who
    works or engages in any business or occupation.” The other
    definition describes what is to be contained in the annual
    questionnaire in [Metro Code § 3.28.100]: “If the person is employed,
    whether their earned income (i.e., wage or salary – not rent, interest,
    dividends or capital gains) exceed their disability income.”
    If you look at the definitions as a whole, it is clear that the [Metro]
    Benefit Board was trying to capture income, generally considered to
    be a salary or earnings generated by the pensioner from an
    employer...Under no definition can S corporation income come under
    the definition of “earned income.” If one is employed by an S
    corporation, that salary will be defined as W-2 income and included
    in [the] wages and salary line on the income tax return. If profits
    from a family business are distributed to the shareholders, that is not
    “earned income.” Working at that same business is immaterial to the
    S corporation shareholder distribution.
    We agree with this analysis, and affirm the holding that under the Metro Code, a distribution of
    profits by an S corporation to a shareholder in the form of a draw is not classified as “earned income”
    for purposes of calculating the amount of a disability pension, absent a showing that a pensioner is
    actually improperly manipulating his or her income to defraud the pension system. The annual
    questionnaires supplied by Metro specifically required Mr. Hibler to state his “earned income” for
    the year, and the Code specifically defines earned income as “wage or salary – not rent, interest, or
    capital gains.” Mr. Spivey testified without contradiction that an S corporation draw is not earned
    income, but rather a return on investment in the nature of rent or a dividend. Further, as the trial
    court noted, the S corporation income is reported on the federal tax return “on the same line as rental
    income, royalties, partnerships, S corporations, trusts, etc. from the K-1 [form] on the front page of
    the return.” Metro presented no evidence suggesting that the profits distributed from an S
    corporation in the form of draws are generally classified as “earned income,” as is salary or wage
    income.
    Under the particular facts presented in this case, it is important to note that Mr. Hibler, as
    president and sole shareholder of H&H Car Wash, had a great deal of discretion in deciding how
    -6-
    income from the business would be classified – whether as salary or as a draw from the corporation’s
    profits. We emphasize that the shareholder’s discretion in such a case must be exercised in an
    objectively reasonable manner, and not in such a way as to defraud the disability pension payor. In
    other words, if Metro had shown that Mr. Hibler routinely worked a regular 40-hour week for the
    business, for instance, and was purportedly paid only $6,000 per year as “salary,” a different case
    would have been presented, and probably a different result reached. But in the instant case, the facts
    demonstrate that Mr. Hibler’s salary was reasonable and not artificially low under the circumstances.
    The trial court so held, noting that the actual work Mr. Hibler performed for H&H and U-Wash was
    fairly minimal:
    Mr. Hibler testified that his only real connection with the business on
    a day to day basis is that he visits each of the sites to see if they are
    operating properly...His sister also confers with him on some
    decisions, but she has the actual say-so. It is quite clear, that his
    “inspection trips” are likely a way for him to feel useful, as he cannot
    repair any of the sites, lift any of the waste barrels or really do any
    significant work.
    *                        *                        *
    To say that Mr. Hibler is actually employed by the car wash
    companies is really not being realistic. He simply helps out the
    business by inspecting the properties. He was paid a small salary in
    most years. If he reported more salary than was allowed in one year,
    that was in 2001, the year his father died and the year he got divorced.
    That year seems like an aberration.
    Thus the court finds that Mr. Hibler did not improperly report his
    “earned income” on his questionnaire.
    We affirm the trial court’s ruling that Mr. Hibler did not misrepresent his “earned income” on the
    annual disability questionnaires, because the draws paid by his S corporation, consisting of
    distributions of corporate profit, were not “earned income.”
    C. Quasi-Estoppel Doctrine
    Metro contends that the trial court erred by refusing to apply the doctrine of “quasi-estoppel”
    to disallow Mr. Hibler from arguing that the S corporation draws were not earned income because
    he classified the portion of S corporation profits allocated to him for federal income tax purposes as
    “non-passive” on his tax returns. As Metro recognizes in its brief, only one Tennessee court has
    made reference to the quasi-estoppel doctrine in an opinion. In the case of In re Kelley, the federal
    Bankruptcy Court for the Eastern District of Tennessee considered the quasi-estoppel doctrine in the
    context of the specific issue of whether, in a dischargeability action, a debtor who had reaped the
    benefit of a federal income tax deduction for payments made to a former spouse was precluded from
    later arguing in bankruptcy court that the payments did not constitute “alimony.” In re Kelley, 216
    -7-
    B.R. 806, 808 (Bankr. E.D. Tenn. 1998). The Kelley court answered in the negative and refused to
    apply the quasi-estoppel doctrine. 
    Id. The near-total
    dearth of Tennessee case law referring to the quasi-estoppel doctrine suggests
    that Tennessee courts have not heretofore recognized the doctrine. Our courts have often stated that
    “generally speaking, the doctrine of estoppel is not favored under our law.” Faust v. Metropolitan
    Gov’t of Nashville, 
    206 S.W.3d 475
    , 497 (Tenn. Ct. App. 2006); see also Hardcastle v. Harris, 
    170 S.W.3d 67
    , 84 (Tenn. Ct. App. 2004) (“estoppels are not favored when they prevent parties from
    asserting claims or defenses to which they would otherwise be entitled.”); O’Brien v. Rutherford
    County, 
    288 S.W.2d 708
    , 710 (Tenn. 1956) (“estoppels are not favored because they ‘may exclude
    the truth, and no one should be deprived of setting up the truth unless it is in direct contradiction of
    his previous conduct and he has thereby induced another to act to his prejudice.’”); Sturkie v.
    Bottoms, 
    310 S.W.2d 451
    , 453 (Tenn. 1958) (“Estoppels are not favored in the law. Indeed, it has
    been said that they are odious.”).
    The Kelley court restated the quasi-estoppel doctrine as follows: “[t]he doctrine of quasi-
    estoppel forbids a party from accepting the benefits of a transaction or statute and then subsequently
    taking an inconsistent position to avoid the corresponding obligations or effects.” 
    Id. at 808
    (citing
    In re Davidson, 
    947 F.2d 1294
    (5th Cir. 1991) (internal quotation marks omitted)). While we do not
    rule out the possibility that a Tennessee court may recognize and apply the quasi-estoppel doctrine
    in a case where the facts clearly warrant it, we are not persuaded that this is such a case. This is
    because the proof presented by Metro did not clearly establish that (1) the position taken by Mr.
    Hibler in this litigation that the draws he received were not “earned income” is a directly inconsistent
    position with what he stated on his federal income tax returns; and (2) Mr. Hibler actually received
    any benefit from classifying his share of the S corporations’ income as “non-passive.” We also
    believe that the quasi-estoppel doctrine should not be applied as an absolute bar to Mr. Hibler’s
    argument that his classification of the S corporation income as non-passive on his federal tax returns
    was an inadvertent mistake.
    Mr. Spivey testified that classifying the S corporation income as non-passive was an error,
    stating as follows:
    THE WITNESS: Passive income is the one where you don’t have any
    labor or effort involved in it. Nonpassive would be where you
    actually do stuff and it’s because of your labors.
    THE COURT: But what’s the difference between passive income and
    salary then?
    THE WITNESS: A salary, you usually earn. Passive income is
    usually something you just receive because of an investment.
    THE COURT: Well, then, it’s hard to understand what nonpassive
    income is that is not earned income. Is that the draws?
    THE WITNESS: No, ma’am.
    THE COURT: What does this figure represent here?
    -8-
    THE WITNESS: That’s the K-1 income.
    THE COURT: The K-1 income from the S corporation?
    THE WITNESS: Right. Yes, ma’am.
    THE COURT: Okay. So it may or may not be income that you
    receive, but you’re taxed on it.
    THE WITNESS: Right.
    THE COURT: Does he have any passive income in any of these
    returns?
    THE WITNESS: I think he did in some of the others. I know one
    year – and I think this is the one where I had it coded as a nonpassive.
    And I’ll be honest with you: I didn’t really notice it when we did the
    return because basically it would be the same thing. It’s all income,
    so he’s going to pay tax on it whether it’s passive or nonpassive.
    THE COURT: Okay. So on this 1998, I guess, is this characterized
    properly?
    THE WITNESS: It probably should have been passive because he
    wasn’t actively – I mean, he didn’t actually work that much to earn
    that. It was just part of his K-1.
    From this testimony, it appears that what Mr. Hibler labeled as “non-passive” on his income
    tax return was not the income he personally received from the draws, but rather his taxable K-1
    income, representing his share of the S corporations’ income, irrespective of whether Mr. Hibler ever
    actually personally received a distribution of that K-1 income. Secondly, Mr. Hibler’s claim that the
    draws were not earned income does not rest on an assertion that he was entirely “passive” relative
    to the income he received from H&H and U-Wash. Mr. Hibler admits he was, to a certain extent,
    “non-passive” in that he worked for the business and drew a salary. Further, notwithstanding his
    mistaken classification of the K-1 income as “non-passive,” there is no indication that that income
    was ever classified or considered to be “earned income” for federal income tax purposes.
    Additionally, Mr. Spivey’s testimony suggests that Mr. Hibler did not receive any tax benefit
    from the erroneous “non-passive” classification of K-1 income:
    THE COURT: Okay. Was it later characterized as passive?
    THE WITNESS: I believe I did in other years, yes, ma’am.
    Q: When did you first realize that it was improperly classified? Do
    you recall?
    A: When this started.
    Q: Okay. Changed since then?
    A: I believe so.
    *                      *                     *
    THE COURT: Could we just look at another tax return, like 2003?
    THE WITNESS: I see 2003. It’s listed as passive income.
    *                      *                     *
    -9-
    THE COURT: Okay. I think I see that. Okay. So then it’s listed as
    passive.
    THE WITNESS: Yes.
    THE COURT: And that’s after they sued Mr. Hibler, then you just
    relooked at that and decided really should be –
    THE WITNESS: That’s the way it should have been done every year.
    THE COURT: Uh-huh.
    THE WITNESS: Like I said, since it’s – it’s all income –
    THE COURT: Uh-huh.
    THE WITNESS: – it really hasn’t mattered because it’s going to get
    taxed no matter what you call it.
    THE COURT: Unless you had some losses or something, some other
    passive losses. Would that come in –
    THE WITNESS: Yeah, if you had some big losses or something like
    that, they would offset, which they don’t normally have.
    *                       *                      *
    THE COURT: So why did you change it to that?
    THE WITNESS: That’s what – it should have been passive all along.
    THE COURT: Uh-huh.
    THE WITNESS: And I just – on that one year, it got coded
    accidentally as – as nonpassive.
    THE COURT: And it just stayed there? It just stayed there?
    THE WITNESS: Pretty much...Because like I said, it was income, but
    I knew it was taxable; so it didn’t really matter what you called it, to
    me.
    THE COURT: Uh-huh. If – it’s really only when there’s a passive
    loss that we try to – any – any passive gain you would have, you can
    offset by passive loss, so then it’s –
    THE WITNESS: Right.
    THE COURT: – Then it’s more significant.
    THE WITNESS: Right. And they didn’t have losses, –
    THE COURT: Right.
    THE WITNESS: – so there wasn’t really any –
    THE COURT: Okay.
    THE WITNESS: – need to worry about it.
    It is apparent that the credibility of both Mr. Hibler’s and Mr. Spivey’s testimony was an important
    factor in the trial court’s decision, and that the trial court credited their testimony. It is well settled
    that the “weight, faith and credit to be given to any witness’ testimony lies in the first instance with
    the trier of fact and the credibility accorded will be given great weight by the appellate court.” Mays
    v. Brighton Bank, 
    832 S.W.2d 347
    , 352 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1992). We affirm the trial court’s decision
    refusing to apply quasi-estoppel to bar Mr. Hibler from arguing that the income at issue was not
    -10-
    required to be reported on Metro’s annual disability questionnaire because it was not properly
    classified as “earned income.”
    IV. Conclusion
    For the aforementioned reasons, the judgment of the trial court is affirmed. Costs on appeal
    are assessed to the Appellant, Metropolitan Government of Nashville and Davidson County.
    _________________________________________
    SHARON G. LEE, JUDGE
    -11-