Farmer v. Arnold

371 S.W.2d 265, 1963 Mo. LEXIS 699
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedSeptember 9, 1963
Docket49895
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 371 S.W.2d 265 (Farmer v. Arnold) 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
Farmer v. Arnold, 371 S.W.2d 265, 1963 Mo. LEXIS 699 (Mo. 1963).

Opinion

BARRETT, Commissioner.

On December 31, 1956, the plaintiff Farmer, driving a 1957 Chevrolet automobile south on Dade County Road D, was involved in a collision with a 1941 Buick automobile driven north by the defendant Arnold. On December 20, 1959, Farmer instituted this action against Arnold to recover $15,000 for personal injuries and $1,-000 property damage, alleging as grounds of recovery the humanitarian doctrine and six specifications of primary negligence. In circumstances hereinafter noted the circuit court sustained Arnold’s motion for summary judgment and Farmer has appealed asserting among other reasons that there was a genuinely controverted issue of fact to be determined and that therefore the remedy of summary judgment was not appropriate.

In response to Farmer’s action for damages Arnold’s answer and motion for summary judgment set up the fact that on January 8, 1957, Farmer paid him the sum of $50 for which, in the language of the document presented by Farmer and signed by Arnold, he “released John William Farmer from all claims and causes of action of the undersigned arising from the above described accident.” This release was sought and executed in these circumstances: Farmer had no automobile liability insurance and was therefore subject to the Motor Vehicle Safety Responsibility Law, Ch. 303, RSMo 1959, V.A.M.S. Since he had no liability insurance and the total damages exceeded $100, it was Farmer’s duty to report the fact of the accident to the motor vehicle safety unit and either deposit security in a sum “determined by the director” of revenue or furnish evidence that he “has been released from liability.” RSMo 1959, §§ 303.030, 303.040, 303.070. After consultation in Jefferson City with the then supervisor of the safety responsibility unit, Farmer was furnished a release form prepared by the department and it was this form that Arnold executed. In addition to the quoted provision releasing Farmer of all claims and causes of *267 action the document recites that it "authorizes the Safety Responsibility Unit to accept this certificate as satisfactory evidence of such release from liability as required by the Safety Responsibility Law.”

In connection with the release Farmer first claims that the records of the safety responsibility unit are confidential and that therefore the release was not admissible in evidence and consequently could not support a 'summary judgment. In the second place,.Farmer asserts that the release did not comprise the entire agreement of the parties. He says that the release was obtained by him for the sole and specific purpose of complying with the safety responsibility law so as to avoid the loss of “his driving privileges.” He claims that immediately following the accident he and Arnold entered into an oral agreement “whereby each agreed to pay the other for his damages” and that this oral contract, which was not reduced to writing, was the entire agreement between the parties. And he urges that the actual terms of this agreement was a question of fact for a jury’s determination, at least, he contends, it made summary judgment procedure inapplicable.

Upon the hearing of the motion for summary judgment the parties stipulated that parts of depositions could be considered and they are set forth in this transcript. The defendant used the deposition of the present supervisor of the safety responsibility unit to prove the filing of the release. In his deposition Farmer testified to the oral agreement. In part he said that he took the release from Arnold, “Yeah, a release to send to the State. I didn’t want to fool with it. I didn’t have any insurance and he said he’d pay or take care of my car and I had just got my car and hadn’t gotten any insurance and I talked to the State about it, I went up there and they said the thing to do was just to get a release ‘and then you can settle with the insurance company.’ I just took a release from him.” Or later, he testified, “I got my release — I didn’t have any insurance and they told me that where I didn’t have any insur-. anee, if it was his fault why he didn’t have . any comeback. His old car wasn’t worth over $50.00 and he offered to take $50.00» Well, I couldn’t afford, well, just like it is now, it is three years and the darned thing ain’t settled, I couldn’t afford for $50.00 when he said he’d pay my damages- and my doctor bills, I took his word for it, which I thought he would.” Or again, “He said he’d take care of my damage and I went to the State and I didn’t have any insurance and of course under the law you’ve got to put up $15,000 and it wasn’t but a $50.00 car, an old $50.00 car, and they said if they was me they would just pay him for it.”

It is not necessary to a disposition of this cause to attempt an authoritative deter-' mination of whether Farmer’s “parol evidence concerning agreements. prior to or contemporaneous with the execution of (the) release must be ignored.” England v. Yellow Transit Co., 240 Mo.App. 968, 975, 225 S.W.2d 366, 368. In this connection it is sufficient to note in passing that the parties have misconceived the applicable theories and have confused the rules relating to best and secondary evidence (Ch. XIX, p. 701, 32 C.J.S. Evidence) and the rules relating to parol or extrinsic evidence affecting writings. Ch. XX, p. 784, 32 C.J.S. The precise point is illustrated by some of the cases relied on, for example Hart v. Riedel (Mo.App.), 51 S.W.2d 891. There, three years after the execution of a warranty deed, the plaintiff sued on an oral contract by which he claimed the defendants had agreed to extend an electric line to the property. In holding that parol evidence was not offered for the purpose of adding to or varying the terms of the deed the court said: “The parol contract which plaintiffs sought to establish was independent of and not inconsistent with the deed. * * * The deed made no reference to the contract upon which plaintiffs seek to recover. * * * The terms of the contract were not of a nature sufficiently related to the *268 subject-matter of the conveyance of the real estate to require their inclusion in the deed as one of the necessary elements, and the terms of the contract upon which plaintiffs seek to recover arc not inherently in conflict with the terms of the deed, and therefore admission of this evidence for the purpose of establishing and proving this contract in no way tended to vary, add to, or contradict the deed.” (Emphasis supplied.) In further illustration of this distinction and principle see Scott v. Asbury (Mo.App.), 198 S.W. 1131, and Mitchell v. Philippi, 359 Mo. 754, 223 S.W.2d 441. 'While not a determinative factor in the decision of this case it should be noted in this connection that the oral contract is •of course inconsistent with the basic theory of the release, and both the release and the contract are so related to the same general subject matter that they should have been included in one document.

On the other hand, the claim that the release filed with the safety responsibility unit is “confidential” and not admissible as evidence is untenable.

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Bluebook (online)
371 S.W.2d 265, 1963 Mo. LEXIS 699, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/farmer-v-arnold-mo-1963.