Hauk v. First National Bank of St. Charles

680 S.W.2d 771, 1984 Mo. App. LEXIS 4312
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 7, 1984
DocketNo. 48204
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 680 S.W.2d 771 (Hauk v. First National Bank of St. Charles) 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
Hauk v. First National Bank of St. Charles, 680 S.W.2d 771, 1984 Mo. App. LEXIS 4312 (Mo. Ct. App. 1984).

Opinion

SMITH, Presiding Judge.

Plaintiffs, George and Theresa Hauk, appeal from a judgment against them in a court-tried case on their claim for breach of contract and from a judgment in favor of defendant, First National Bank of St. Charles, on its counterclaim. We reverse both judgments.

Plaintiffs were the holders of a note and first deed of trust on property owned by Russell Williams. The bank was the holder of second and third deeds of trust on the same property. On September 24, 1982, the bank foreclosed its deeds of trust and purchased the property at foreclosure sale. Payments on plaintiffs’ note were in arrears at the time of foreclosure. Various discussions occurred between the bank and plaintiffs to effectuate a pay-off of the note held by plaintiffs and release of their first deed of trust. Plaintiffs were reluctant to accept prepayment for tax reasons. They offered to accept prepayment on the basis of receiving from $11,000 to $15,000 more than the $58,000 plus due for principal and earned interest. The bank demurred to this arrangement and offered, through plaintiffs’ attorney, the amount of principal and interest due as of September 28,1982. That this offer was actually communicated to plaintiffs is not established by the record, nor does the record show this offer was communicated as a specified amount of money rather than generally as principal and interest due.

The note contained the following pertinent provisions:

“... payable in monthly installments of $872.92 (each of said payments to be first applied to the interest, and the remainder applied to the principal) on the 6th day of each month thereafter ...”1
[773]*773“The makers hereof reserve the right to mature and prepay any number of like installments on any installment due date, it being understood, however, that installments so prepaid shall be considered as prepaid in the reverse order of their maturity, that is to say, the last maturing installment shall be paid first.” (This prepayment provision applied to both the original and amended notes).

On October 13, 1982, counsel for the bank wrote directly to plaintiffs (at their home in Dallas, Texas) with copies to the bank president and plaintiffs’ counsel. The letter contained the following:

“The First National Bank recently was compelled to foreclose on a deed of trust that it had on certain property of Russell Williams, upon which you also had a deed of trust. The First National Bank did therefore tender to you $68,341.98 which was the amount due on your note according to your attorney Mr. Mel Benitz. For some reason, you declined to accept this tender.
“I wish to inform you that this money is available to you at any time at the First National Bank that you should elect to take it. You have only to contact Mr. Tom Boschert, President of the Bank, to receive this payment, and of course, surrender your note and deed of trust and execute a deed of release. All of these await you at the First National Bank.
“Meanwhile, I would inform you that your note does, indeed, carry a prepayment privilege and I, frankly, do not believe that you have any choice but to accept payment ....”

Plaintiffs sent the following mailgram to the bank president, which was received at 12 noon on October 18:

“Accept tender on Russell Williams deal of $68,341.98 per letter from your attorney Claude Knight dated October 13, 1982.
“Will send note, deed of trust, and executed deed of release to Mel Benitz.”

The following letter was sent on October 18 to Plaintiffs:

“Upon review of the foreclosure file on Russell Williams and my letter to you dated October 13, 1982,1 discovered that an error had been made and the amount of tender incorrectly stated.
“In order to set the record straight the amount should read $58,341.98 which was the correct figure given to me- by your attorney_”

On October 22 plaintiffs and their attorney appeared at the bank and presented the note, deed of trust, and executed deed of release and demanded $68,341.98. The bank refused and this suit followed. Plaintiffs sought to recover the figure contained in the letter of October 13 on the basis that a contract existed between the parties based on that letter and plaintiffs’ mail-gram of October 18. The bank counterclaimed seeking a declaratory judgment that it was entitled to prepay the note, that it made full tender on September 28, and sought an order that plaintiffs deliver the note, deed of trust, and deed of release in return for $58,341.98. It also sought a statutory penalty of 10% for improper refusal to release. The trial court found for defendant on plaintiffs claim, and awarded defendant what it prayed in the counterclaim except for the statutory penalty.

The trial court’s decision on plaintiffs’ claim was based upon its legal conclusion that the offer in the letter of October 13 required acceptance by presentation at the bank of the listed documents and that the offer was withdrawn prior to such acceptance. We disagree.

The operative law is stated in Daggett v. Kansas City Structural Steel Co., 334 Mo. 207, 65 S.W.2d 1036 (1933) [1-4]:

“Of course, if an offer calls for the performance of an act, and further provides, either expressly or by necessary implication, that acceptance shall be made by performance of the act, then the acceptance must be in the manner indicated in the offer. But where an offer calls for the performance of an act, and does not provide the manner of acceptance, we know of no reason why the other party could not accept the offer [774]*774and thus complete the contract by either performing the act called for in the offer, or by agreeing to perform it. The distinction between an offer which calls for a promise, and one which calls for the performance of an act, is that in the former, notice of acceptance is always essential, while in the latter such notice is not required if the act called for in the offer is performed, because performance of the act is an acceptance _ (Citations omitted) However, a holding that notice of acceptance is not essential where the act called for in the offer is performed, is not a holding that the offer could not be accepted by agreeing to perform the act called for in the offer.”

The act called for in the letter of October 13 was the surrender of the note, deed of trust, and an executed deed of release. The letter does not provide that acceptance of the offer could be made only by such act. In fact it provides for acceptance by contacting “Mr. Tom Boschert, President of the Bank.” Plaintiffs contacted Mr. Boschert by their mailgram and promised to perform the required act. Under the teaching of Daggett, supra, the promise to perform the required act was an acceptance of the offer made in the October 13 letter.2 The trial court therefore erred in its conclusion of law that the subsequent letter of October 18 served to modify the offer of October 13 prior to acceptance by plaintiffs.

We turn now to defendant’s contention that it is entitled to relief from the contract because of its unilateral mistake. In Sheinbein v. First Boston Corporation,

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Bluebook (online)
680 S.W.2d 771, 1984 Mo. App. LEXIS 4312, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hauk-v-first-national-bank-of-st-charles-moctapp-1984.