Carondelet Savings & Loan Assn. v. Boyer

595 S.W.2d 744, 1980 Mo. App. LEXIS 2459
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 13, 1980
Docket40034
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 595 S.W.2d 744 (Carondelet Savings & Loan Assn. v. Boyer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carondelet Savings & Loan Assn. v. Boyer, 595 S.W.2d 744, 1980 Mo. App. LEXIS 2459 (Mo. Ct. App. 1980).

Opinion

KELLY, Chief Judge.

This is an appeal by defendants below, Roy T. Boyer and Boyer Building Company, Inc. from a summary judgment entered in the circuit court of Jefferson County under Rule 74.04 V.A.M.R. in favor of the plaintiff, Carondelet Savings & Loan Association, in plaintiff’s action for a deficiency after foreclosure on a deed of trust held by Carondelet. Judgment was entered in the amount of $160,926.93 plus costs. 1 On appeal, defendants assert three points of error by the trial court: 1) in dismissing defendants’ counterclaim; 2) in granting plaintiff’s motion for summary judgment; and 3) in denying defendants’ motion to add the successor trustee, Great Eagle Service Corporation, which presided over the foreclosure, as a necessary party. We affirm.

On August 20, 1969, Roy T. Boyer, and Boyer Building Company, Inc., a corporation, borrowed $250,000.00 at 8% interest from the respondent and executed a promissory note — “First Mortgage Note” — payable to the respondent in monthly installments. By the terms of this note, the appellants agreed that should a default on the note occur, they would pay all collection costs and reasonable attorney’s fees. Car-ondelet, as respondent shall hereinafter be identified, secured the notes by a Deed of Trust encumbering a real estate development project in Jefferson County, Missouri, known as Riverview Bend Estates. Five years later, on August 20, 1974, payments stopped on the loan and Carondelet requested the successor trustee on the Deed of Trust, the Great Eagle Service Corporation, to initiate foreclosure proceedings. The Great Eagle Service Corporation sold the Riverview Bend Estates property at a foreclosure sale on September 9, 1976, at which Carondelet purchased the property for $51,-000.00. After adjusting the proceeds for costs, Carondelet claimed a deficiency of $132,294.44 remained due on the note. This amount was later amended to $146,173.36. On October 4, 1976, Carondelet filed suit to recover this deficiency.

On September 22, 1973, prior to the termination of payments on the loan, defendants had conveyed the Riverview Bend Estates property to American Brokers Corporation with title being taken in the name of a straw party, Larry Guess. Defendants took back a second deed of trust. On December 7, 1973, Guess in turn conveyed the property to American Brokers Corporation. In June, 1975, American Brokers Corporation filed for bankruptcy. The Bankruptcy Court then stayed all proceedings against the bankrupt’s estate. Thereafter Boyer Building Company, Inc. filed a complaint in the Bankruptcy Court requesting relief from the Order Staying Foreclosure on the Riverview Bend Estates Property. On June 22,1976, the Bankruptcy Court granted the request for relief and authorized Boyer Building Company, Inc. to proceed with the trustee’s sale of the property. However, the company failed to foreclose on the property and so Carondelet foreclosed on the first deed of trust on September 9, 1976.

*746 On October 4, 1976, Carondelet filed suit for the deficiency, and on April 13, 1977, moved for summary judgment. Prior to the trial court’s action on the motion, the defendants moved to add Great Eagle Service Corporation as a party defendant in the counterclaim and to amend their counterclaim. The trial court granted the appellants leave to amend their counterclaim, denied their motion to add Great Eagle Service Corporation as a party defendant therein, granted Carondelet’s motion for summary judgment and dismissed appellants’ counterclaim on Carondelet’s motion.

On January 18, 1978, Boyer and Boyer Building Company, Inc., appealed to this court. The transcript was filed in this court on March 30, 1978, and on September 15, 1978, respondent Carondelet moved to supplement the transcript by adding several documents, among them an order of the Bankruptcy Court dated August 8, 1978, approving abandonment of the property and the foreclosure sale. That motion is still before this court.

By its Motion to Supplement the transcript Carondelet seeks to add seven documents to the transcript on appeal. Appellants oppose the motion to supplement the transcript on the ground that none of the documents were made part of the record for consideration by the trial court.

The transcript on appeal should contain all of the record, proceedings and evidence necessary to the determination of all questions to be presented to the'appellate court. Rule 81.12(b). An inadvertent omission from the transcript may be corrected by order of the appellate court on a proper suggestion or on its own initiative. Rule 81.12(c). The first document offered, referred to here as Exhibit A, the order of June 22,1976 granting the request of Boyer Building Company, Inc. for relief from the Stay Order authorizing it to foreclose, was presented to the trial court as an exhibit attached to Carondelet’s Reply to appellants’ Memorandum in Opposition to Caron-delet’s Motion for Summary Judgment. Appellants contend that this exhibit attached to a memorandum was not properly before the trial court because it was not introduced into evidence nor identified in any of the pleadings, affidavits, or depositions filed in the trial court. We disagree. Facts stated in affidavits and exhibits may be considered, and if no verified denial to them is made, they are deemed admitted. E. O. Dorsch Electric Co. v. Plaza Construction Co., 413 S.W.2d 167 (Mo.1967). The order was properly before the trial court as an exhibit in support of Carondelet’s motion for summary judgment, in conjunction with the parties’ affidavits and memoranda. The Motion to Supplement the Transcript is granted with respect to Exhibit A.

As to Exhibits B through G, Car-ondelet’s motion must be denied. Exhibits B and C are the complaint filed in the Bankruptcy Court by appellant, Boyer Building Company, Inc., seeking the order shown in Exhibit A, and a motion to amend that complaint; there is no indication that these documents were ever presented to, or considered by, the trial court. Exhibits D and E are an application by Carondelet to the Bankruptcy Court for an order approving Carondelet’s foreclosure sale, and the order giving the court’s approval; as both the application for approval, dated July 5, 1978, and the order granting approval, dated August 3, 1978, post-date the proceedings from which this appeal is taken, they are not proper subjects for this court’s consideration. Exhibits F, G, and H are, respectively, a notice of a federal tax lien, a certificate of discharge of that lien, and a certificate of release of that lien. In the trial court, Carondelet referred to the imposition of the tax lien, its release and its discharge, in the reply to appellants’ affidavit opposing Carondelet’s summary judgment motion, but the documents themselves were not identified, offered, or attached to the affidavit as exhibits in support of the motion. They cannot now be received by this court as supplements to the record of the proceedings below.

Carondelet’s Motion to Supplement the Transcript on appeal is denied with respect to all exhibits except as to Exhibit “A”; it is sustained as to Exhibit “A” and said *747 exhibit is ordered to be made a part of the transcript on appeal and shall be considered by the court in arriving at a decision in this case.

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Bluebook (online)
595 S.W.2d 744, 1980 Mo. App. LEXIS 2459, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carondelet-savings-loan-assn-v-boyer-moctapp-1980.