Collins v. Burg

996 S.W.2d 512, 1999 Mo. App. LEXIS 130, 1999 WL 55344
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 9, 1999
DocketNo. 74285
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 996 S.W.2d 512 (Collins v. Burg) 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
Collins v. Burg, 996 S.W.2d 512, 1999 Mo. App. LEXIS 130, 1999 WL 55344 (Mo. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

RICHARD B. TEITELMAN, Judge.

Lucille Collins (Plaintiff) appeals from the judgment sustaining the motion of Linda Burg (Defendant) to dismiss Plaintiffs cause of action against Defendant for trespass to real property. The court granted the motion to dismiss because it found that Plaintiff had previously brought an action against Defendant involving the same nucleus of operative facts in federal district court. The court thus concluded that Plaintiffs subsequent trespass suit against Defendant was barred by the rule in Missouri that prohibits a party from splitting a single cause of action. In her sole point on appeal, Plaintiff contends the court erred and that the rule against splitting a cause of action is inapplicable because her claims against Defendant in the federal action and in the subsequent state court trespass action involved two separate and distinct causes of action. We reverse and remand.

BACKGROUND AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

This matter involves a rancorous dispute between two parties, each of whom contends the other exercised or attempted to exercise improper influence over Plaintiffs elderly sister during the last nine or ten months of sister’s life.

In March of 1996 Plaintiffs sister, Ever-etta Moody, who owned her home at 8311 Braddock in University City, Missouri, became seriously ill. She was admitted to St. John’s Mercy Skilled Nursing Center, after having been diagnosed with cancer. While Moody was at the Nursing Center, Plaintiff, who resided in San Francisco, California, approached Moody and presented her with some papers to sign. One of the documents was a power of attorney. Another of the documents was a deed, in which Moody conveyed her house in University City to Plaintiff. Later that year, after Moody had returned home from the Nursing Center, she signed an affidavit stating that she was incapacitated at the time she signed the deed to her house and the other documents that Plaintiff had had her sign in the Nursing Center; that she did not read those documents when she signed them; that she was unaware of the nature and contents of the documents at the time she signed them; that she had no memory of signing them; that she had not learned until just recently that one of the documents she had signed was a deed purporting to convey her house to Plaintiff; and that she had never intended to convey her house to Plaintiff or anyone else.

Sometime after Plaintiff obtained the deed to the house, Moody, though still suffering from cancer, recuperated sufficiently to be able to leave the Nursing Center and return home. At about that same time or shortly thereafter, Defendant, who knew Moody because Moody had been employed as a domestic worker in the home of Defendant’s parents for a number of years when Defendant was a child, began staying with Moody at her residence in University City and acting as Moody’s caretaker. Defendant continued serving as Moody’s caretaker until Moody died, on December 15,1996.

Three days following her sister’s death, on December 18, 1996, Plaintiff filed a three-count lawsuit against Defendant in [514]*514the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Missouri. In her federal lawsuit, Plaintiff alleged that Defendant had either intentionally or negligently inflicted severe emotional distress upon her, by engaging in a pattern of acts that intruded into Plaintiffs private family affairs relating to Moody during the last nine or ten months of Moody’s life. The suit, which sought compensatory and punitive damages of at least $200,000, claimed that Defendant had engaged in a number of extreme and outrageous acts. Among the alleged acts were: that Defendant had accompanied Moody home from the Nursing Center and “proceeded to completely take over her household and life, including staying [at the residence] for long periods of time;” that Defendant had changed the locks to the residence; that Defendant had made decisions as to the hiring and firing of housekeepers and home health care providers for Moody, and had caused such providers that had been hired by plaintiff to quit; that Defendant had interfered in decisions regarding Moody’s medical treatment by countermanding Plaintiffs decisions made pursuant to a proper power of attorney; that Defendant had caused Moody’s long-time physician to terminate his doctor-patient relationship with Moody; that Defendant had isolated Moody by preventing Plaintiff and other relatives from visiting privately with Moody at the residence; and that Defendant had improperly attempted to make funeral and burial arrangements for Moody.

Plaintiffs federal lawsuit also raised allegations against Defendant of fraud and undue influence. Plaintiff alleged that through the exertion of undue influence and deception Defendant had caused Moody to revoke a power of attorney previously granted by Moody to Plaintiff, and to replace it with a new power of attorney granted to Defendant. Similarly, the suit also alleged that through undue influence Defendant had caused Moody “to execute a purported will.” The will was executed by Moody on August 22, 1996, after she was released from the Nursing Center, and approximately three months before Moody executed her sworn affidavit stating that she had not been aware of the documents she had signed while in the Nursing Center and had only recently learned that one of those documents was a deed purporting to convey her house in University City to Plaintiff. The will which Plaintiff complained of provided, in part:

Article III: I give and bequeath my dog, Snoopy, to [Defendant] LINDA M. BURG, and further direct that Linda M. Burg may reside in my home until such time as my home is sold.

Eventually, Plaintiffs federal lawsuit against Defendant was dismissed with prejudice. First, the claims alleging undue influence were dismissed on grounds that such estate-related claims were not a proper subject of federal court jurisdiction. Then, on February 26, 1998, the federal district court granted summary judgment in favor of Defendant on the remaining two counts, which alleged negligent or intentional infliction of emotional distress; the court did so based on its finding that Plaintiff had failed to establish that her alleged emotional distress was either medically diagnosable or medically significant.

On December 20, 1996, two days after she filed her federal lawsuit against Defendant, Plaintiff made an oral demand upon Defendant that she vacate the premises at 8311 Braddock. Plaintiff then made a written demand that Defendant vacate, on December 24, 1996. Defendant refused to vacate, however, and apparently continues to occupy the premises.

On June 4, 1997, while her federal lawsuit was still pending, Plaintiff filed the present action for trespass against Defendant in the circuit court of St. Louis County. In this action Plaintiff alleges that she is the lawful owner of the residence at 8811 Braddock, that Defendant began occupying the residence sometime prior to Moody’s death on December 15, 1996, and that Defendant has continued to occupy the residence and refused to leave despite the demands to vacate the premises that Defendant made upon her on December 20 [515]*515and December 24, 1996. Plaintiffs action seeks recovery of possession of the premises, actual damages resulting from the alleged trespass and for lost use of the property, and punitive damages in the amount of $50,000. The punitive damages claim alleges that although Defendant “is not related by blood or marriage to plaintiff nor plaintiffs late sister, Everetta Moody,” the alleged trespass “has intruded into the lives of plaintiff and her family.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
996 S.W.2d 512, 1999 Mo. App. LEXIS 130, 1999 WL 55344, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/collins-v-burg-moctapp-1999.