Diehr v. Thompson Chemicals Corp.

281 S.W.2d 572, 1955 Mo. App. LEXIS 17
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 19, 1955
Docket29062
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 281 S.W.2d 572 (Diehr v. Thompson Chemicals Corp.) 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
Diehr v. Thompson Chemicals Corp., 281 S.W.2d 572, 1955 Mo. App. LEXIS 17 (Mo. Ct. App. 1955).

Opinion

SAM C. BLAIR, Special Judge.

Adolph H. Winheim was sole proprietor and operator of Planetary Chemical Company. He processed chemicals and produced chemical mixtures. Some processes were beyond the facilities of his plant. For ■one of these he relied on Thompson Chemicals Corporation. Its president was William T. Thompson. Winheim and Thompson orally agreed that Winheim would deliver to Thompson’s company quantities of ¡acid and alcohol which that company would process for him. Processing was to be done only when Winheim ordered it, not before, and then only in the quantities he specified. 'The processed chemicals were to be returned to Winheim in metal drums - furnished Thompson’s company by Winheim for that purpose. Large quantities of the two chemicals were delivered by Winheim. At intervals Winheim ordered specified quantities of these chemicals processed and returned to him. This was done as ordered.

Winheim died on June 3, 1950. His wife, Mildred K. Winheim, now Mildred K. Diehr, took over and operated Planetary Chemical Company as executrix. She tried to settle the accounts between Planetary and the Thompson company. There were differences of opinion regarding the mutual obligations of the two companies. Finally, on October 6, 1950, her attorneys wrote the Thompson company reciting the quantities of Planetary’s acid and alcohol, and the number of its metal drums, which the executrix claimed were in the possession of the Thompson company on August 31, 1950. The letter proposed arrangements for securing the return of the acid, alcohol, and drums to Planetary. It acknowledged that Planetary owed the Thompson company $4,-692 on August 31, 1950. It offered to pay this sum promptly. It requested confirmation of these recitals of mutual obligations and acceptance of the proposed arrangements for return of the chemicals and drums. 1 William T. Thompson, for his company, by endorsement on the bottom of the letter, confirmed the accounts and accepted the proposed arrangements. 2 Then *575 he returned the letter and endorsement, as he had been requested, to Planetary’s accountants.

The agreement expressed by the letter and endorsement did not bring the results it contemplated. Delays and disputes arose and lasted for almost a year. Then the Thompson company refused to perform unless the executrix agreed to conditions it tried to add to the agreement. The executrix then sued the Thompson company for conversion of the acid, alcohol, and drums. She claimed $10,363.22 as the value of this property. She acknowledged the indebtedness of Winheim’s estate to the Thompson company to be $4,692 as had been agreed. Her prayer was for the balance, $5,671.22. The Thompson company answered by denying the conversion and all other aver-ments of the petition. It counterclaimed. It agreed the estate owed it $4,692 for chemicals processed for Planetary as stated in the petition and in the letter agreement. But it also claimed an additional $2,665 for processing other chemicals.

Trial by the court without a jury resulted in a finding for the executrix, both on her petition for conversion and on the Thompson company’s counterclaim. She was awarded judgment for $5,405.22. The sufficiency of the pleadings is not questioned and this description suffices in consequence. Thompson company appeals. We shall designate the parties as they were styled in the trial court.

Before ruling other features of this case, we consider the exclusion by the trial court of all evidence offered by defendant to substantiate its counterclaim. For if the ruling on the counterclaim was wrong, as defendant argues, this cause has not been completely adjudged even though the ruling for the plaintiff may be found correct. Defendant believes this exclusion resulted from application of the Dead Man’s Statute, Section 491.010 RSMo 1949, V.A.M.S. The Dead Man’s Statute was not invoked or applied. It was defendant’s theory that the agreement expressed by the letter and endorsement could be treated as only a partial settlement of the estate’s indebtedness and as not embracing the subject of the counterclaim. But the execution of the agreement stood unquestioned. It was free from ambiguity. There was no claim that it was ambiguous. There was no claim or evidence of fraud or mistake, and none of an understanding that the subject of the counterclaim had been left open for future adjustment. The signatories to the agreement had plainly adjusted all of the estate’s indebtedness to defendant prior to August 31, 1950. That indebtedness had been agreed to be $4,692. The counterclaim was for an alleged further indebtedness of $2,665 claimed to have arisen also prior to August 31, 1950. The ruling was that the agreement was conclusive and could not be reopened, contradicted, or varied by parol evidence, and that it stood an absolute bar to the counterclaim. This was correct. In Pickel v. St. Louis Chamber of Commerce Ass’n, 10 Mo.App. 191, 194, affirmed 80 Mo. 65, this court said: “Almost the entire contest in the court below and in this court, related to the merits of this counter-claim. We shall not consider this question at all, for there is, at the very threshold of the case, a well-settled principle of law which excludes it from consideration entirely. That principle of law is this: That when parties, having mutual matters of account between them, growing out of a contract, deliberately account together and state a balance, and the party who, on such accounting, is found indebted to the other, pays the debt or gives a written obligation for its payment, this settlement is so far conclusive between the parties that it cannot be reopened or gone into, either at law or in equity, except upon clear proof of fraud, or mistake, or of an express understanding that certain matters were left open for future adjustment. * * * And where such an account is thus settled, the presumption is that all previous dealings between the parties relating to the subject-matter of the account, are adjusted. * * * These rules are founded in plain justice and good sense. For the preventing of litigation, the law favors and upholds the settlement of differences between the parties; and when men deliberately meet together and go over the entire subject-matter of a contract,. *576 make what purports to be a final settlement of that contract, and pay and receive the money found .due, or give and receive a written obligation in lieu of the money, the law considers that they mean something by so doing, and that what they mean is that every element entering into the contract, which might have been there settled, was settled, and that the settlement was intended to be a finality. The law further considers that, in the absence of fraud, mutual mistake, or' an express agreement that certain matters which might' have entered into the settlement should be left open for future consideration, an attempt to reopen such a settlement and litigate antecedent'matters which ought to have been, and might- have been embraced in it, is unjust, vexatious, productive of fraud * *. *, and in every way contrary to .sound policy.” McCormick v. Interstate Consol. Rapid-Transit Ry. Co., 154 Mo. 191, 200, 55 S.W. 252, 254; Caneer v. Kent, 342 Mo. 878, 882, 119 S.W.2d 214, 216. There is no substance in defendant’s argument that Gerstner v. Lithocraft Studios, Inc., Mo.App.,

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Bluebook (online)
281 S.W.2d 572, 1955 Mo. App. LEXIS 17, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/diehr-v-thompson-chemicals-corp-moctapp-1955.