DeMean v. Ledl

796 S.W.2d 415, 1990 Mo. App. LEXIS 1438, 1990 WL 140316
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 27, 1990
DocketNo. 16409
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 796 S.W.2d 415 (DeMean v. Ledl) 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
DeMean v. Ledl, 796 S.W.2d 415, 1990 Mo. App. LEXIS 1438, 1990 WL 140316 (Mo. Ct. App. 1990).

Opinion

SHRUM, Judge.

Plaintiffs’ Harry and Dorothy DeMean appeal from the judgment of the trial court entered in favor of defendant Diana Sue [416]*416Ledl following jury verdict in her favor on plaintiffs’ claim1 that defendant had paid herself more money than a written employment agreement entitled her to. After a motion for new trial was overruled, this appeal followed.

Plaintiffs owned an office building2 in Springfield, Missouri, and had hired defendant in December 1982, pursuant to a written contract, to manage the building. Only one written contract existed. No written modification of the agreement occurred. Plaintiffs’ suit claimed defendant, in managing the office building, took money in excess of that agreed to in the written contract as her management salary or fee. Defendant contended the original written agreement was modified by oral agreement, or by implied consent, of plaintiffs.

The written contract provided that in exchange for defendant’s full time employment in the management of plaintiffs’ office building, defendant was to be paid $550.00 per month base salary, a monthly bonus not to exceed $600.00 per month based on the occupancy rate of the building, and a $25.00 monthly gasoline allowance. Defendant was to devote her full time to plaintiffs’ business. Despite that provision, defendant took on the management of other properties beginning in 1983. She claimed she undertook management of additional properties with the full knowledge of plaintiffs, and that plaintiffs had told her on numerous occasions that so long as she took care of their interests and tried to minimize expenses, anything else she did was her business. The written employment agreement did not detail or spell out what defendant was to do in the management of the office building. However, defendant’s duties, as they evolved, included hiring and payment of personnel necessary to maintain, clean and run the building. From time to time she would hire others to maintain the building, such as carpenters for remodeling. Defendant paid those individuals from the rental proceeds of the building, although the written agreement did not specifically authorize her to do so. Initially, defendant opened a checking account in the name of Courtyard Office Center; defendant was authorized to use this account and, in fact, maintained the checkbook for the account. It was into this account that defendant initially deposited rents and out of which she paid all expenses incurred on behalf of the Courtyard Office Center, including her management salary, bonus and gasoline allowance.

In February 1985, defendant visited plaintiffs at their Iowa home. Recollections of the business discussions held during that visit are disparate. Plaintiffs recalled defendant talking about starting her own management firm and wanting plaintiffs as one of her clients. Plaintiffs say their response was that she had to put something in writing that they could look at and agree to in order to make it work. They claim that when defendant left their home, they were still operating under the written agreement and that they never orally agreed with defendant to change defendant’s pay. Defendant claimed that she went to Iowa on February 27, 1985, for the purpose of going over some changes with plaintiffs and to get their approval of some changes she wanted to make in the system. When asked to explain, defendant said she was referring to the accounting system [417]*417change. This was a change wherein all of the rental income from plaintiffs’ property ceased going into the plaintiffs’ Courtyard Office Center account but, rather, was to be placed into defendant’s management company trust account. Prom defendant’s trust account the expenses previously paid out of plaintiffs’ Courtyard Office Center account would be paid, defendant’s new management fee would be paid, and the balance would be paid to plaintiffs.

Defendant also testified that during her visit, she and plaintiffs agreed that: (a) she would no longer be on a salary, but would collect 8 percent of the gross income as her management fee; (b) payments on leased equipment (a typewriter, answering machine and pager) which had previously been leased on behalf of plaintiffs would be taken over by defendant who would make the balance of the lease payments but would then be entitled to the equipment; (c) the maintenance men and janitor would be paid out of defendant’s trust account as would the employees’ withholding taxes and workman’s compensation; and (d) defendant was to begin paying for the telephone system that was in the office complex.3 Summarizing, defendant said:

A. ... [W]e made a certain set of agreements at our meeting on February 28th in their home. I spent the night there, we came up to our conclusions of what we were going to do from there on, they were happy, agreeable, I was happy and agreeable, I would have liked it in a contract but Harry and I did business on handshakes and this was very important to him. And we shook hands at their kitchen table on this agreement that we had made.
Q. After you went back ... did you start that new system?
A. Yes, I did.

Upon her return to Springfield from Iowa, defendant instituted the new accounting system, began paying herself the 8 percent management fee, and began to engage in activities which defendant claims were agreed to in the Iowa meeting. Plaintiffs deny any such agreement was made, and that they continued in the belief that the office building was being managed by defendant under the original written employment agreement.

Throughout the period defendant managed the office building for plaintiffs, she sent them detailed financial records each month relating to the Courtyard Office Center operation. Defendant continued to furnish monthly financial statements to plaintiffs after the February 1985 meeting in Iowa. Those monthly financial statements detailed the income and expenses, including the increased management fees being received by defendant, the lack of lease payments on the leased equipment, and other changes in the management arrangement which defendant claimed had been agreed to in the February 1985 meeting in Iowa. Throughout their relationship, there were monthly telephone conversations between the parties about the business and that continued after the February 1985 meeting in Iowa.

Plaintiffs acknowledged receiving the monthly financial statements and noticed that the accounting was different as of April or May 1985. Plaintiffs were in Springfield in May at which time plaintiffs asked defendant about what she was doing. Plaintiff Dorothy DeMean testified that defendant told her “she was combining different things and paying them herself with our funds ... she was taking like the typewriter and the answer machines and those type of things and she was paying them with our money.... I didn’t know how she did it.” When asked if August was when “the whole problem” began, plaintiff Harry DeMean said:

A. No, about March, about the 1st of March because she come [sic] there in February and after she went home first part of March, then she started to changing her bookkeeping.
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[418]*418Q. ... I thought your testimony was March is when it started to occur, the problems?
A.

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Bluebook (online)
796 S.W.2d 415, 1990 Mo. App. LEXIS 1438, 1990 WL 140316, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/demean-v-ledl-moctapp-1990.