Gamel v. Lewis

373 S.W.2d 184, 1963 Mo. App. LEXIS 428
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 2, 1963
Docket23800
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 373 S.W.2d 184 (Gamel v. Lewis) 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
Gamel v. Lewis, 373 S.W.2d 184, 1963 Mo. App. LEXIS 428 (Mo. Ct. App. 1963).

Opinion

SAMUEL A. DEW, Special Commissioner.

The respondents brought this suit to recover $20,000 damages claimed to have been sustained by them as purchasers of certain real estate and personal property, due to alleged fraud and deceit on the part of the appellants, the sellers. The parties will hereinafter be referred to as plaintiffs and defendants, respectively. Defendants filed an answer and a counterclaim for specific performance. There was a jury verdict in plaintiffs’ favor on their petition in the sum of $6500, for which judgment was entered.

The court found in defendants’ favor on their counterclaim, ordering defendants to deposit with the clerk of the court their general warranty deed conveying the real estate in question to the plaintiffs, subject to a deed of trust therein described, securing the balance of $18,546.34, with interest prorated, which plaintiffs were to assume; and further ordered plaintiffs to pay to the clerk for use of the defendants, $16,614.14 principal and $556.57 interest, to August 2, 1962, representing the purchase price of the property, less interest paid by plaintiffs on behalf of defendants, plus city and county taxes and liability insurance prorated to October 5, 1961. Thereupon the clerk was ordered to pay to defendants the sum so deposited, and upon plaintiffs’ failure to so deposit the same, judgment to be entered in favor of defendants in the sum of $17,-170.71. From the foregoing judgment and decree the defendants have appealed.

Plaintiffs’ petition pleads a contract entered into by them with defendants for *186 plaintiffs to purchase from defendants certain real estate and personal property thereon, located on Highway 63, in Moberly, Missouri, known and operated as Al’s Restaurant, Motel and Trailer Court. The contract provided for a purchase price of $55,-000 upon the closing of the transaction, assumption of the balance due on a deed of trust in the sum of $18,546.34, and a final amount to be paid defendants of $16,453.66, or a total of $55,000, subject to certain prorated items. It was alleged that plaintiffs had promptly executed the contract, paid defendants $20,000 and entered into possession, but had not yet paid the prorated taxes, nor the balance of the purchase price, nor had received a warranty deed from the defendants. The petition stated that plaintiffs were ready, willing and able to perform all of their obligations under the contract.

The petition alleged that at all times one Hugh Kelly acted as real estate agent for and in behalf of defendants; that the execution and performance of the contract were procured through the fraud and deceit on the part of defendants, their agents and servants, through willful, false and fraudulent representations and statements, to-wit: that the property known as Al’s Restaurant, Motel and Trailer Court was properly licensed in conformity with the state, county and municipal laws, and concealed the fact that defendants had been ordered by the City of Moberly to pave all of the trailer court driveways and streets with asphaltic or concrete pavement, and concealed the fact that defendants had promised the city to meet those requirements; that defendants, their agents and employees, represented that the trailer court housed 22 trailer spaces of 40 x 75 feet each, and that they had complied with state, county and municipal regulations, whereas, defendants concealed the fact that 12 of the 22 trailer spaces were subject to an order made by the City of Moberly that required the back line to be moved 10 feet further from the north line of the property, thereby reducing the trailer spaces to 40 x 45 feet, rendering the present patios and plumbing connections useless, and making the 12 spaces too small for 55 foot trailers; that defendants concealed the fact from plaintiffs that they had promised the City of Moberly to increase the back line of the property from 20 to 30 feet, as ordered.

The petition stated further that defendants made certain representations to plaintiffs as to the quality of construction of the buildings on the property and that the property was yielding a net income of $2100 per month, $1500 from the restaurant alone, when 10 employees were used therein. It is averred that in truth and in fact each of the foregoing representations was false and fraudulent, made intentionally to induce plaintiffs to execute and perform said contract, namely that the streets of the trailer court will have to be paved by asphaltic or concrete material by July, 1963, in order to comply with municipal ordinances; and by that date the north line must be set back 10 feet; that certain repairs will have to be made to the buildings; that the property never paid the profits as represented by defendants.

The petition states that plaintiffs believed and relied upon such statements and representations by defendants, and that if plaintiffs had known the truth as above stated, they would not have entered into the contract; that plaintiffs did not know the truth of such facts and defendants knew that plaintiffs would not have entered into the contract if such facts were known to them.

It is further alleged that $5,000 will have to be expended for pavement of the streets of the trailer court, new water lines installed, extensive plumbing repairs made, two-of the trailer spaces will be rendered useless, at least three trailer spaces will be lost by the setback; that the expected net profits will never be reached; that plaintiffs have been damaged in the premises in the sum of $20,000. The contract attached to the petition was substantially as described in the petition.

*187 Defendants’ answer admitted the contract of sale, the payment to them of $20,000 by the plaintiffs on the purchase price, admitted that possession had been given plaintiffs, and alleged that plaintiffs had failed to pay the balance of the agreed purchase price. All allegations of fraud or deceit were denied. Defendants also filed a counterclaim, as stated, asking that plaintiffs be requested to pay defendants the balance of the agreed purchase price, with interest, that the payment due be declared a lien on the real estate in favor of defendants until paid, and that all costs be assessed against plaintiffs.

Answering the counterclaim plaintiffs admitted their failure to close the transaction at the times and places named in notices from the defendants and prayed for an order requiring plaintiffs’ petition first to be heard and determined, and that the court, upon consideration of the counterclaim, allow as a setoff from the balance of the purchase price due under the contract of sale, the amount of damages, if any, allowed the plaintiffs on their petition, the costs to he charged to the defendants.

According to the evidence adduced by the plaintiffs, they first became interested in defendants’ property through an advertisement of it by a real estate agent in a St. Louis newspaper. Plaintiffs talked with the agent Kelly, who supplied them with a brochure, describing the property. Plaintiff, William Gamel, testified that he had lived in Columbia during the past four years, during part of which time he was employed by General Motors in the equipment division, and part of the period in the State Highway Department. Prior to that, he had been in the business of making and marketing cookies for sale in Missouri and Kansas. Near Columbia, he had divided a tract of land into three parcels.

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Bluebook (online)
373 S.W.2d 184, 1963 Mo. App. LEXIS 428, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gamel-v-lewis-moctapp-1963.