Cohen v. Crumpacker

586 S.W.2d 370, 1979 Mo. App. LEXIS 2465
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 31, 1979
DocketKCD 29707
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 586 S.W.2d 370 (Cohen v. Crumpacker) 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
Cohen v. Crumpacker, 586 S.W.2d 370, 1979 Mo. App. LEXIS 2465 (Mo. Ct. App. 1979).

Opinion

CLARK, Judge.

At issue in this appeal is the decree of the trial court ordering specific performance of a contract for the sale of a farm consisting of some 240 acres in Putnam County. That contract was made April 17, 1976 between respondents as buyers and appellant as seller. On the contract date, appellant was acting on behalf of his mother, the owner of the land, pursuant to a general power of attorney she had executed September 16, 1974 and which was filed of record in Put *372 nam County September 27, 1974. By reason of events subsequently described, appellant appears in the action as guardian of his mother’s estate and appeals the judgment ordering completion of the sale according to the contract terms.

Appellant asserts three grounds on which he claims the action of the trial court to be erroneous, (a) that appellant should not have been obligated to proceed to trial without counsel, (b) that the contract was not specifically enforceable because incomplete in its terms, and (c) that the circuit court did not have jurisdiction to order sale of property of an incompetent ward. Affirmed.

By the terms of the real estate sale contract, a printed form with blanks for particular details, the sale was to be closed May 20, 1976 at the office of the realtor. A portion of the purchase price, $84,000.00, was paid at the signing of the contract, additional amounts were payable at closing and on December 1, 1976 and the financed balance of $59,640.00 was to be evidenced by a promissory note payable to the seller by installments during a term of eleven years with interest at eight percent. The debt was to be secured by a first deed of trust on the property and, in the language of the printed contract, was to be “in a form approved by seller.”

At a date undisclosed in this record, appellant’s mother, Mary Crumpacker, was apparently adjudicated an incompetent by proceedings in the Probate Court of Clay County. No information has been supplied as to the nature of the infirmity, mental or physical, which precipitated this adjudication, the onset and prior duration of the disability, nor may it be said with certainty whether appellant was appointed guardian of his mother’s person or of her estate or both. For purposes of this opinion, we assume, as did the parties before the trial court and in their briefs here, the meager factual ingredients of Mary Crumpacker’s adjudication on or about May 20, 1976 and the concurrent appointment of appellant as guardian.

On or prior to the contracted date for closing the sale, May 20, 1976, appellant informed the realtor that closing would be delayed because appraisal of the property and prior approval of the sale by the probate court would be required. After several requests during subsequent months that appellant proceed in whatever manner was necessary to complete the sale were unavailing, respondents commenced this action October 21, 1976. Suit was brought against appellant individually as agent for Mary Crumpacker under the power of attorney as described and as noted in the sale contract.

Appellant employed counsel who filed an answer to respondent’s first petition. In addition to a general denial, the answer alleged that the contract was not binding because the power of attorney had been rendered void by reason of Mary Crumpacker’s incompetency on the contract date. No reference was made to the proceedings in the Clay County Probate Court, the adjudication of incompetency or appellant’s appointment as guardian, all of which apparently had occurred some six months earlier.

Knowledge of the probate court action presumably reached respondents at a later date and on May 2, 1977 they filed an amended petition naming appellant as defendant in his representative capacity as guardian and describing by case number the estate in Clay County. 1 On the eve of trial, the original petition naming appellant as agent was dismissed and the action proceeded against appellant as guardian.

On the date of trial, July 8, 1977, confusion attended the status of appellant’s attorneys. Counsel who had been retained originally and who had filed the answer mentioned above was present throughout *373 the trial, but he disclaimed ability to represent appellant as guardian because of undisclosed grounds of potential conflict of interest. The attorney who had represented appellant in other matters and who, inexplicably, filed an answer on behalf of appellant as guardian the day following the trial, declined to attend the trial although personally contacted by the court by telephone on the morning of trial. No record appears of any request for continuance by either attorney.

As the case was called for trial, a colloquy ensued among appellant, his individual attorney, respondents’ attorney and the court. Appellant at that time made no request for a continuance, indicated that he would represent himself and did so, cross-examining witnesses and testifying in his own behalf. Counsel on this appeal first entered the case after judgment had been rendered adverse to appellant.

In charging the trial court with error for conducting the trial of this case under the circumstances described, appellant contends that his right as a civil litigant to representation by counsel was denied and that the consequent failure of due process is violative of the Missouri Constitution, Art. I, § 10. Implicit is the contention that in civil litigation the court is obligated to provide counsel for a party or to suspend proceedings sua sponte until counsel does appear. No authority so holding is cited by appellant.

The case of Magerstadt v. LaForge, 303 S.W.2d 130 (Mo.1957), cited by appellant contrasts sharply on the facts. with the present case. In Magerstadt, plaintiff’s counsel was permitted to withdraw and substitute counsel who attempted to enter their appearance less than sixty days thereafter were denied leave except upon agreement to immediate trial. Refusal of this condition to appearance resulted in a dismissal of plaintiff’s case by the court. The case stands for the proposition that litigants are entitled to representation by counsel of their own choosing and that need to expedite the court’s docket must be applied with care to avoid sacrifice of due process.

Appellant here was represented by counsel, one attorney being present, although not participating, throughout the trial. The other attorney, contacted on the morning of trial by the court, indicated he did not expect to attend. No request for continuance was made to the court by appellant or either of his attorneys although full opportunity to do so was available both before and after appellant at the suggestion of the court consulted with his attorney present as to the situation in the case. Appellant was content to handle the case himself at the time as indicated by the following testimony given by appellant at a hearing on his motion to set aside the decree:

“Q. So you said you were going to try it then?
A. I said I was going to try to do something. I couldn’t see how I could lose.
Q. Did you then agree to have a hearing on this matter?
A. I guess I did.

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Bluebook (online)
586 S.W.2d 370, 1979 Mo. App. LEXIS 2465, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cohen-v-crumpacker-moctapp-1979.