Clinton v. Staples

423 S.W.2d 1, 1967 Mo. App. LEXIS 552
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 7, 1967
Docket8667
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 423 S.W.2d 1 (Clinton v. Staples) 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
Clinton v. Staples, 423 S.W.2d 1, 1967 Mo. App. LEXIS 552 (Mo. Ct. App. 1967).

Opinion

TITUS, Judge.

Plaintiffs and defendant were financiers and promotor, respectively, of a shopping center in Poplar Bluff, Missouri. The venture eventually aborted and this appeal by defendant from an adverse judgment entered in a court-tried case hosted by the Circuit Court of Mississippi County is the apparent sole survivor of the undertaking.

Defendant had procured real estate options before the parties reached their “understanding” on the center. He later obtained additional options and contracts. On February 15, 1956, plaintiffs gave defendant $6,000 and defendant assigned his interest in the options to the plaintiffs. All agree that $3,500 of the $6,000 was to reimburse defendant for what he had paid or advanced for the options and contracts. The reason the extra $2,500 was paid defendant by plaintiffs constitutes the principal factual fester in this case. Defendant is adamant the $2,500 was profit legitimately due him on the sale of his options to plaintiffs. Defendant categorically denies, as plaintiffs urge, the $2,500 represented an advance on commissions he may have earned had the shopping center become a reality and which he agreed to repay if the adventure came to naught. Plaintiffs insist many demands were made of defendant to repay the $2,500, whereas defendant testified the only request he could recall came on the day he signed the promissory note now in litigation.

On the morning of December 18, 1958, plaintiffs called upon defendant at his home and discussed repayment of the $2,-500. Although defendant related “I told them that I did not owe them anything,” he telephoned his lawyer to prepare a $2,-500 note payable to plaintiffs in ten semiannual installments of $250 commencing *3 July 2, 1959. That afternoon defendant signed the note in his counselor’s office and it was subsequently mailed to plaintiffs by the attorney as defendant directed. Defendant defaulted and plaintiffs filed a suit on the note which they dismissed without prejudice on September 13, 1960, when defendant remitted $750 to bring the note payments to date. Thereafter defendant, verbally and in writing, assured plaintiffs he would pay the balance of the note, but when he reneged, plaintiffs filed this second action on the note and obtained a $2,-334.50 judgment which represents the balance of the principal, interest and attorney fees due thereon. The judgment additionally favored plaintiffs on both counts of defendant’s counterclaim.

Defendant answered the “note was given to plaintiffs” and the $750 payment thereon was made “wholly without consideration.” The initial count of the counterclaim averred defendant’s entitlement to a refund of the $750 note payment and supplicated judgment against plaintiffs in that sum. Defendant petitioned a $3,780 judgment against plaintiffs in the second portion of the counterclaim for unpaid commissions allegedly due under a parol lease-negotiating contract. On this appeal defendant excepts to and by brief' challenges only the judgment of the trial court as it relates to the petition and Count One of the counterclaim. Ergo, we treat and consider all issues involved with Count Two of the counterclaim as forsaken. V. A.M.R. 83.05(a) and (e); Mound City Supply Company v. Woodland Development Corp., Mo.App., 414 S.W.2d 805, 807-808(3); Hastings v. Coppage, Mo., 411 S.W.2d 232, 235(3); Brackett v. Easton Boot and Shoe Company, Mo., 388 S. W.2d 842, 844(1).

Defendant’s charge of failure of consideration is an affirmative defense and his counterclaim seeking refund of the $750 was an independent cause of action. The burden of proof attending both was upon defendant. V.A.M.R. 55.10; V. A.M. S. § 509.090; Town & Country Shoes Federal Credit Union v. Cramer, Mo.App., 350 S.W.2d 281, 285(5); Cross v. Robinson, Mo.App., 281 S.W.2d 22, 26(9). Without recourse, defendant placed all his affirmative and defensive proverbial eggs in a single basket by insisting the reason, and the only reason, no consideration existed for either the note or the payment was that the' $2,500 paid him constituted profit on the sale of the options. Plaintiffs, by denying this and advancing their own divergent reason for the payment, immediately confronted the fact finder with the task of determining whose testimony was the more plausible. Defendant by brief says if his evidence be “believed by the court” his position should be sustained. We need not now pause to dispute this conclusion but neither may we be heedless of the fact a court may decline to believe the testimony of any party. Southwestern Bell Tel. Co. v. Crown Insurance Co., Mo.App., 416 S. W.2d 705, 711(6). Where, as here, the cleavage in the testimony of a court tried case is acute, we cede great deference to the advantageous position of the knowing and skilled trial judge to digest the deportment of the witnesses, appraise their attitudes and interpret their inclinations in the cause. Though we are bound to arrive at our own determination, after a resurvey of the law and the evidence, the trial court’s, judgment “shall not be set aside unless clearly erroneous.” V.A.M.R. 73.01 (d); V.A.M.S. § 510.310, subd. 4; Harrison v.. Harrison, Mo.App., 417 S.W.2d 39, 43(3); Midwestern Realty Corp. v. City of Grandview, Mo.App., 416 S.W.2d 35, 39(6); Wynn v. McMahon Ford Company, Mo. App., 414 S.W.2d 330, 335-336(4-5).

Defendant was no babe in the business world woods. He pictured himself as being “in the shopping center development, business” and one who had “put several shopping centers together.” In the matter-concerned, he bargained for and secured real estate options and contracts, some of which were subject to escrow handling, and additionally negotiated for shopping *4 center leases with representatives of nationally known business corporations. Armed with this information, any bent for credulity possessed by the trial court would be corrected when a man of defendant’s acumen testified: (a) he did not advise the lawyer who drew the note or his able defense counsel in the first suit on the note concerning the “facts” he so readily recounted in the present cause, and (b) with full knowledge of the absence of any obligation to plaintiffs in any sum, he voluntarily executed and delivered to them a $2,500 promissory note, made a payment thereon of $750, and repeatedly promised to pay the balance thereof. No findings of fact were requested or filed. Consequently, we are uncertain the learned fact finder resolved the case simply upon disbelief of defendant’s evidence. Nevertheless, if this was the sole ground for the judgment, we cannot say it was clearly erroneous.

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Bluebook (online)
423 S.W.2d 1, 1967 Mo. App. LEXIS 552, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clinton-v-staples-moctapp-1967.