Community Land Corporation v. Stuenkel

436 S.W.2d 11, 1968 Mo. LEXIS 738
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 31, 1968
Docket53266
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 436 S.W.2d 11 (Community Land Corporation v. Stuenkel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Community Land Corporation v. Stuenkel, 436 S.W.2d 11, 1968 Mo. LEXIS 738 (Mo. 1968).

Opinion

DONNELLY, Judge.

This is a suit for specific performance. Plaintiff is a not-for-profit corporation, incorporated October 26, 1966. Defendants are owners of a 28-acre tract in Lafayette County, Missouri. On the morning of May 21, 1966, before the corporation was incorporated, three members of its board of directors, Melvin J. Frerking, Earl Brock-man, and Wendell Olson, went to see defendants for the purpose of purchasing land for the development of a residential area for homes for senior citizens. The northeast portion of defendants’ tract was discussed. Later the same day, Frerking and William Vinnedge, another member of the group, returned to defendants’ home, a discussion ensued, and the following document was prepared by William Stuenkel and signed by William Stuenkel and Marie Stuenkel:

“Received of Melvin J. Frerking Treasurer of the Community Land Corp. $100.00 down payt. on the following described property. This property can be described before an actual survey is made as follows— Starting in North East corner lot number 15, 14, 13, 12, 11, 10 and part of nine, ap-proximaily 92 ft. then south across the 40 ft. street into east bay lot number 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7 then east across the street to the south lot line of lot 3. and then go north to the survey line and follow this line all the way to the point of beginning. In these boundary would be 5 acres more or less. No construction shall start untili the full amount is paid which is at the rate of $2000.00 per acre for as many acres as the actual survey shows. All parties agree that streets as laid out on plat shall remain.”

The plat referred to is of an undeveloped 28-acre tract. It was prepared for defendants in 1959. It shows proposed residential lots and streets. Its north boundary line adjoins the south right-of-way line of Interstate 70 to which there is no access. Its south boundary line adjoins old U.S. 40, which is now maintained by the Concordia Special Road District, and which affords the only means of access to the tract. The tract claimed by plaintiff, containing 6.34 acres, lies in the northeast corner of the plat. Its south boundary line lies 290 feet north of old U.S. 40. The plat shows a street, thirty feet wide, extending north and south, from old U.S. 40 to the south boundary line of the 6.34-acre tract claimed by plaintiff. The plat also shows a street, with a circular drive, extending through the 6.34-acre tract claimed by plaintiff, together with other streets placed generally over the 28-acre platted area.

On September 9, 1966, defendants were asked to sign a deed to the property claimed by plaintiff, which deed included the street extending from the south boundary line of the 6.34-acre tract to old U.S. 40. Defendants refused to sign the deed.

Plaintiff brought suit for specific performance. Trial was had before the court without a jury. The trial court ordered payment by plaintiff of the sum of $12,580, established title in plaintiff to the 6.34-acre tract, vested in plaintiff a right of ingress and egress over the street, thirty feet wide, described on the plat, and decreed that all streets as laid out on the plat shall remain as laid out on the plat, with certain exceptions not material here. Defendants appeal.

Appellants first contend “the trial court erred in granting plaintiff an easement for *14 ingress and egress because such was not included as part of the alleged agreement.” The agreement contained the words, “All parties agree that streets as laid out on plat shall remainWe must determine the legal effect of these words.

Defendant William Stuenkel testified as follows:

“Q Any other conversation take place at that first meeting on the 21st day of May, 1966? A Any other conversation?
O Yes. A No, sir.
Q Well, was there a second meeting between you and any other persons ? A Yes, sir, within an hour Melvin Frer-king and Mr. Vinnedge came back.
Q That morning? A That same morning within an hour, because I looked at my watch, or clock.
Q What transpired at that second meeting? A Well, those two came down and Mr. Vinnedge, he just stood there; he stood there like that (indicating), and my wife asked him to please sit down; he didn’t speak; he wouldn’t say anything; he wouldn’t sit down; he stood there like a statue.
Q Then, what happened? A Well, then, Mr. Frerking said, ‘we would like to make a down payment on this land.’ ‘Oh,’ I said, ‘I don’t think that is necessary; my word is good.’ ‘But we want a down payment.’ ‘All right — ’ well, I said, ‘all right.’ He got out two fifty dollar bills and laid them down there and he said, ‘now, we would like to have a receipt.’ I said, ‘why don’t you just give me a check?’ But no, he — Mr. Vinnedge, I sold him some acreage last year and he wouldn’t give me a check; Mr. Bellamy had to give me a check; I had to go to Marshall to get it. So I said, ‘that isn’t necessary.’ ‘We want a receipt.’ ‘All right.’ I started writing a receipt, and I believe you have had it here, and then I got to the point, I said, ‘now, remember, Air. Frerking, we talked about this a moment ago, that I want this circular drive open,’ and I told both of them right there and then; I said, ‘now, I want it that way.’ I said, ‘all you have to do is say no and we’ll be as good a friends as before,’ and they said, ‘all right.’ Then, I got to this circular drive, and I noticed that it had rounded corners, so I said, ‘now, I don’t know how to describe that; you know that I want to keep that drive open,’ and I said, ‘my Attorney can, I guess, put that in there in the proper way,’ so I said, ‘all right; I want to be sure that stays open.’ So I thought a while and I finally came up with this answer I wrote down: that all roads, I believe, remain open as now, or as they now are.
Q On that receipt, that piece of paper?
A Yes, sir, that is right; that means the roads in here that I was referring to.
Q Referring to your circular drive?
A That is right.”
Melvin J. Frerking testified as follows:
“Q * * *
Mr. Stuenkel was concerned about this circular driveway, was he not, that was in the land that you all were wanting? A The morning we were there, on May the 21st, he expressed that he was very fond of the way the plot was laid out and he was very proud of it, yes.
Q And that is what he wanted to keep open, isn’t that right ? A Yes.
Q And this area right here (indicating), I’m referring to the circular driveway on the eastern part of this Plat, is what he was concerned with keeping open, was he not ? A That is right.
Q And after he talked about— A Not only that, all of it.
Q Was he mainly concerned with this circular driveway? A He was proud of the whole—
Q I understand; I’m not asking whether he was proud; what he talked about, *15

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Bluebook (online)
436 S.W.2d 11, 1968 Mo. LEXIS 738, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/community-land-corporation-v-stuenkel-mo-1968.