MacY v. Day

346 S.W.2d 555, 1961 Mo. App. LEXIS 620
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 10, 1961
Docket7886
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 346 S.W.2d 555 (MacY v. Day) 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
MacY v. Day, 346 S.W.2d 555, 1961 Mo. App. LEXIS 620 (Mo. Ct. App. 1961).

Opinion

STONE, Presiding Judge.

In this action at law, plaintiff sought to recover $500, the amount of a down payment to defendant on the purchase price of a restaurant known as Vo’s Cafe, the fixtures, equipment and (perhaps) supplies therein, and the building in which the restaurant operated in Neosho, Missouri. In her counterclaim, defendant sought $500 for plaintiff’s breach of the alleged sale contract. Upon trial to the court sitting as a jury, plaintiff had judgment on his petition for $500 with interest and defendant was denied recovery on her counterclaim. On this appeal, defendant’s only contention is that the judgment “was clearly against the law and the weight of evidence.”

At the conclusion of negotiations (in which defendant’s attorney participated) in the restaurant on the evening of July 16, 1959, the parties apparently believed that they had reached an understanding for what admittedly was to have been “a package deal” for the real estate and the restaurant. So believing, plaintiff delivered to defendant his check for $500 bearing this notation, “payment on Vo’s bldg & equipment & stock as of Aug 1 59,” and defendant delivered to plaintiff a receipt (written on the face of a blank check) reading as follows: “Reed 500.00 as down payment on Vo’s restaurant, equipment & stock as of Aug 1 1959. Balance for building restaurant & est to be $12,500. Payment & delivery to (be) completed Aug 1 59. In event title is not good no sale. Mrs. Bonnie A. Day.” Plaintiff said that he “was supposed to have a (written) contract the next morning”; and we emphasize that, from the transcript before us, it is abundantly clear that neither party intended that all of the constituent terms of their agreement were to be included in plaintiff’s check and defendant’s receipt therefor or that those writings should be the only evidence of their understanding. Contrast Ray v. Wooster, Mo., 270 S.W.2d 743, 752-753. However, it was several days after July 16 before a written contract was prepared by defendant’s attorney; and, when that contract was presented to plaintiff, he objected to some provisions and refused to sign. The trial judge found that there was no binding agreement because there was (1) no description of the real estate and (2) no meeting of the minds with reference to the restaurant fixtures, equipment and stock involved in the transaction. We treat of these findings in inverse order.

Although the parties seemingly contemplated the sale of “equipment & stock,” their testimony upon trial indicated certain *557 areas of misunderstanding. As for the equipment, plaintiff said that he thought (on the evening of July 16, 1959) that he was buying “all the equipment in the restaurant” — -“everything in there belonged to me”; and defendant’s testimony plainly shows that plaintiff was justified in that conclusion. But, while plaintiff was talking with defendant in the restaurant two or three days later, “the coffee man come in and said, ‘Macy, these three (coffee) stoves here belong to my company.’ ” In her testimony, defendant referred at one point to “two little coffee stoves” and, at another point, to “a coffee stove,” so we do not know how many “coffee stoves” were in the restaurant nor (in the absence of any proffered evidence on these subjects) their make, model, size or reasonable market value. However, regardless of these details, defendant readily conceded upon trial that the “coffee stoves” were owned and furnished by her coffee supplier at Webb City and that she simply “had forgotten to tell him (plaintiff)” about that on the evening of July 16.

The written contract presented to plaintiff several days after July 16 also excepted from the personalty to be transferred “the television which is the personal property of first party (defendant).” Plaintiff immediately obj ected and, for this (and other) reasons, refused to execute the contract. When, in the course of plaintiff’s cross-examination during trial, defendant’s attorney suggested that he had “marked that out” of the contract in response to plaintiff’s •objection, plaintiff insisted “I didn’t see it taken out”; and, in the form of contract received in evidence as the one tendered to plaintiff, the clause excepting the television had not been deleted. The testimony of defendant concerning this television set is not satisfying. When asked why it was reserved to her in the written contract, she said “that was Charlie’s (her deceased husband’s) personal television”; and, when pressed for further answer, she stated that “I didn’t know the television was taken out” in the written contract and thought that her attorney “didn’t even know the television was included * * * because the television is there (in the restaurant) sometimes and sometimes it isn’t.” On one page of the transcript we find defendant’s testimony that “the television was there when (plaintiff) was there, so that is the reason I included it” and “gave him the television,” while on the next page of the transcript we find defendant’s contradictory statement that “at the time when (plaintiff) was in there, I don’t think the television set was in there,” followed by this meaningless linguistic jumble, “if the television was in there and I told him he could have the television, he could have it, but I didn’t know that the television wasn’t included on it, it says on the contract that the t.v. wasn’t to go.”

Turning to the “stock” or supplies, plaintiff thought that “the inventory wasn’t to be increased or wasn’t to be depleted, it was supposed to be just as it was, or fairly close to what it was this night” of July 16. According to plaintiff, defendant told him two or three days later that “I (defendant) am not going to give you any of the inventory * * * I’d be crazy to give you an inventory” and refused plaintiff’s counter-proposal that he “would give her $500 less and buy her inventory.” In the written contract subsequently presented to and rejected by plaintiff, it was provided “that all store supplies, provisions on hand by said first party (defendant) at the close of operation on said 31st day of July 1959 shall be turned over to second party (plaintiff) and that payment therefor shall be included in the purchase price (of $13,000) above mentioned” and (as interlined by hand) “that no supplies will be removed except as used in daily business.” At the trial, defendant’s labored explanation was that “he (plaintiff) was to have the inventory as I had it then (on July 16) and as I was going to keep it up like we always keep it up, everything from the next day that I had to buy was on hand, everything I had to *558 buy from.any time until he took over, what I had to have I still had on hand, just like I do right now.” Obviously, whatever “understanding” the parties may have approached as to “stock” must have been indeed vague, nebulous and fuzzy.

It is elementary and fundamental that, to make a valid contract, “(t)he parties must have a distinct intention, common to both, and without doubt or difference”- [Dobbins v. City Bond & Mortgage Co., 343 Mo. 1001, 1012, 124- S.W.2d 1111, 1116(8); Bennett v. Tower Grove Bank and Trust Co., Mo.App., 325 S.W.2d 42, 47; 17 C.J.S. Contracts § 31, p. 359], and that the minds of the contracting parties must meet upon and assent to the same thing in the same sense and at the same time. Bearup v. Equitable Life Assur. Soc. of U. S., 351 Mo.

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Bluebook (online)
346 S.W.2d 555, 1961 Mo. App. LEXIS 620, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/macy-v-day-moctapp-1961.