Drysdale v. Estate of Drysdale

689 S.W.2d 67, 1985 Mo. App. LEXIS 3226
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 5, 1985
DocketNo. WD 35778
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 689 S.W.2d 67 (Drysdale v. Estate of Drysdale) 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
Drysdale v. Estate of Drysdale, 689 S.W.2d 67, 1985 Mo. App. LEXIS 3226 (Mo. Ct. App. 1985).

Opinion

NUGENT, Judge.

The defendant executrix of the estate of Mabel Drysdale appeals from a judgment directing specific performance by the executrix of decedent’s contract for the sale of a farm to plaintiffs Stephen and Helen Drysdale. We affirm the judgment.

The defendant complains that the trial court erred in finding that the plaintiffs had performed their part of the contract because, she asserts, plaintiffs’ own uncon-troverted evidence at best established that they had refused to pay nearly one-fourth of the contract price.

On November 12, 1970, Leonard and Mabel Drysdale agreed to sell a 328.5 acre farm to their son, Stephen, and his wife, Helen, for $32,850. The written contract provides for payment in eight annual installments as follows: $4,850 on December 28, 1970, $5,000 on December 28, 1971, and $4,000 each succeeding December 28 through 1976, plus a final $3,000 installment due on December 28, 1977. The [69]*69terms of the contract also require the plaintiffs to pay interest at 6% per year on the unpaid balance, and it permits plaintiffs to make additional principal payments in $1,000 increments up to a total of $4,000 with payment of any annual installment. Plaintiffs are to have possession and to pay all taxes and farm expenses incurred after January 1, 1970, but all agricultural program (ASC) payments due the sellers as title holders of the farm after that date were to be assigned upon receipt by the sellers to the purchasers.

The contract was received in evidence over defendant’s objection, but on appeal defendant does not complain of that ruling. Defendant filed an inventory of the estate which acknowledged the existence and terms of the contract and “payments of principal and interest ... through December 28, 1974....”

Leonard Drysdale died in January, 1975; Mabel Drysdale died on August 30, 1975. Defendant Marcella Drysdale Harris, the deceased’s daughter, was appointed executrix of the estate on September 12, 1975.

At trial plaintiff Stephen Drysdale testified to the payment on December 19, 1975, of $1,686.54 by cashier’s check to the Drys-dale estate and to the payment of the 1975 real estate taxes. He also testified that he prepared and gave to the attorney for the estate plaintiffs’ Exhibit 7, including a statement rendered to the estate to support the December payment. The statement was intended to show that plaintiffs were remitting to the estate a principal payment of $4,000 plus $540 interest on the $9,000 balance due on the contract at 6% for one year. It also showed plaintiffs taking $2,853.46 credit due them for ASC payments collected by sellers on November 6, 1975, including $24.18 in interest thereon. According to plaintiffs’ statement of the account, the net due the estate was $1,686.54.

The defendant objected to the exhibit and to plaintiff's testimony that he had delivered a copy of it to the estate’s attorney. The stated grounds for the objections were that the exhibit and the testimony were “self-serving, irrelevant, and hearsay.” The court sustained the objection.

Mr. Drysdale testified that in December, 1976, he made an additional payment of $2,432.58, and to show “how much the payment would be”, prepared and gave another statement of the account to the estate, plaintiffs’ Exhibit 17. The statement shows the principal balance due as $5,000, interest of $300 (6% on $5,000), and an offsetting item of $2,867.42 due buyers for agricultural program payments received by the estate on October 7, 1976, including $38.14 interest, leaving a net due the estate of $2,432.58. Attached to the statement is a recapitulation of the account from its beginning in 1970 showing payment of $32,850 on the principal amount due, plus interest in the total amount of $7,654.80, plus $790.19 in miscellaneous credits due sellers, less $20,060.03, plus $286.29 interest thereon, and $157.87 in miscellaneous credits due buyer. The net result shown is full payment under the contract. Mr. Drysdale also testified that he paid the 1976 taxes. Upon defendant’s objection that Exhibit 17 was self-serving, irrelevant, hearsay, not the best evidence, and violated the Dead Man’s Statute,1 the court excluded the exhibit.

Plaintiffs called William G. Johnson, who had previously served as attorney for the executrix. He identified plaintiffs’ Exhibit 9 as a receipt he signed for a $2,432.58 cashier’s check. He stated that he delivered the check to the defendant. The receipt, admitted over defendant’s objection, reads as follows:

I hereby acknowledge receipt of Mercantile Bank’s Cashier check # 306639 in the amount of $2,432.58 said cheek representing the final payment due on the Leonard I. and Mabel J. Drysdale and Stephen H. and Helen L. Drysdale contract for sale dated November 12, 1970.
/s/ William G. Johnson
Attorney for the Estate of
Mabel J. Drysdale, Dec.

[70]*70At the bottom of the receipt is a photo copy of the cashier’s check showing the plaintiffs as the remitters and the Estate of Mabel J. Drysdale as the payee.

Defendant objected to Mr. Johnson’s testimony and to Exhibit 9 on the grounds that plaintiffs had not shown that the attorney had authority to execute or give such a receipt and that any information he would have obtained from the executrix or the deceased Drysdales before their deaths would be subject to the attorney-client privilege. For good measure, counsel added a Dead Man’s Statute objection, that is, that the testimony about the exhibit was an attempt to elicit testimony that the Drysdales would have been incompetent to give themselves.2 Finally, defendant objected that plaintiff had not shown that Mr. Johnson was the attorney for the estate or for the executrix at the time.

The defendant did not cross-examine Mr. Johnson and rested her case without offering evidence. The record contains no hint of any attempt by the executrix to regain possession of the farm from the plaintiffs despite defendant’s assertion that the plaintiffs have been in default under the contract since 1975 and as of 1977 owed $12,-260 in principal and interest on the contract. The defendant executrix filed no counterclaim for either damages or possession based upon plaintiffs’ alleged default.

At the conclusion of the evidence, the trial court announced that it would give no weight to the part of plaintiffs’ Exhibit 9 reciting that the $2,432.58 was the final payment because it had sustained defendant’s objection to that part of the receipt. The record reflects no such ruling. In fact, the transcript shows that defendant’s two trial attorneys jointly made their last objections to the admission of Exhibit 9 as follows:

MR. OPIE: ....
There’s no showing of authority here, no foundation in an attempt to show that authority and we would also — the best evidence of the check would be the check itself.3 And so, therefore, we would— and again we believe this is attempting to elicit evidence of the Drysdales themselves that they are incompetent to testify to under the dead man’s statute.
THE COURT: Mr. Stout, did you have something you wanted to add?
MR. STOUT: No, I didn’t, Your Honor, except that there is some language in the document that purports to go beyond the act which Mr.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Jhala v. Patel
154 S.W.3d 12 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 2004)
Carroll v. Ghidoni
730 S.W.2d 280 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1987)
Crow v. Bertram
725 S.W.2d 634 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1987)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
689 S.W.2d 67, 1985 Mo. App. LEXIS 3226, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/drysdale-v-estate-of-drysdale-moctapp-1985.