Martin v. Hieken

340 S.W.2d 161, 1960 Mo. App. LEXIS 462
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 15, 1960
Docket30492
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 340 S.W.2d 161 (Martin v. Hieken) 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
Martin v. Hieken, 340 S.W.2d 161, 1960 Mo. App. LEXIS 462 (Mo. Ct. App. 1960).

Opinion

DOERNER, Commissioner.

Plaintiffs seek to recover damages because of defendant’s alleged breach of his duty as plaintiffs’ real estate agent. The action was initiated in the Magistrate Court of the City of St. Louis, where judgment was rendered in favor of defendant. Upon trial de novo in the circuit court, without a jury, plaintiffs obtained a judgment for $566.82, and defendant appealed.

The essential facts are these: Defendant, a real estate broker, in the spring of 1955, was employed by Mr. and Mrs. L. R. Mc-Cord to sell their resort property, called the Hi Ho Hideout, situated on the Lake of the Ozarks. The listed price was $39,-000. Plaintiff Guy S. Martin, at all times acting for himself and his wife, answered defendant’s advertisement, and conferred with defendant in Martin’s office on June 17, 1955. Martin decided to propose an exchange of properties, with some cash to boot, and at Martin’s direction defendant filled out, in triplicate, a printed form headed “Exchange Contract.” By its terms Martin offered to exchange a frame bungalow he owned, located on Crown Drive in Riverview, St. Louis County, for the Mc-Cord’s property, and to pay $4,893.25 in cash in addition. Each party was to take the other’s property subject to certain deeds of trust, the contract reciting that there were two on the Hi Ho property. At the same conference Martin likewise employed defendant as his broker, and the written proposal stipulated that each party was to pay defendant a commission of 5% on each parcel. As filled out, the proposal provided that the sale was to be closed on July 15, 1955, and in the body of the printed form it was stipulated that the closing was to be made “ * * * under the usual closing practices of the St. Louis Real Estate Board set forth on the reverse side hereof, and made part of this contract.” The closing practices of that Board, as printed on the reverse side of the form, included, among others, the provision that “Rents, taxes, interest, insurance, water rates, gas and electric bills, coal supply and apartment expenses and salaries, if any, are to be adjusted to date of closing on the basis of 30 days to the month, seller to have the last day; * *

*163 Martin signed all copies of the proposed contract and paid earnest money of $250 to defendant. Defendant took all three copies of the offer with him. On the next day, defendant presented the offer to the McCords. According to defendant, the Mc-Cords rejected Martin’s offer in its entirety, hut were willing to make a counteroffer. Their counter-proposal was that they would agree to the exchange of the properties, but that Martin was in addition to pay $7,093.25 in cash; that Martin was to assume the two deeds of trust which were encumbrances on the Hi Ho property; and that there was to be no adjustment of the interest, taxes or insurance accrued to the date of closing. Instead of filling out a new exchange form, defendant crossed out the figures “$4,893.25” on the face of the one offered to the McCords, and wrote above it the figures “$7,093.25.” He also deleted with a pen the words “taxes, interest,” “water rates,” “coal supply and apartment expenses and salaries,” from the quoted part of the closing practices printed on the reverse side of the form, so that as altered the items to be adjusted to the date of closing were “Rents, insurance, gas and electric bills.” This change on the back was not initialled by the McCords, but they signed the contract on its face, and initialled the change in the cash figure.

Defendant then conferred with Martin on June 20. The evidence of the parties is in direct conflict as to what was discussed 'on that occasion. According to Martin, defendant told him only that the McCords wanted cash of $7,093.25 to make the exchange, and said nothing about the alteration of the adjustment clause. According to defendant, he informed Martin of both of those elements of the McCord’s counteroffer, and that with respect to payment of the accrued interest Martin said, “ * * * he would be happy to pay the interest on the loans, since he already thought that was understood when he agreed to assume the existing financing.” However, when defendant was asked on direct examination whether he had called Martin’s attention to the alteration of the adjustment clause, his answer was, “I don’t recall whether I called that to his attention specifically, since he had already read the contract; he had looked it all over completely, and I don’t know if I specifically called it to his attention.” Whether defendant meant by this answer that Martin had read the contract when he signed it on June 17 (at which time, of course, no alteration had been made), or at the conference held on June 20, was not developed by any further evidence.

Both parties are in accord that Martin refused to pay any greater sum than the $4,893.25 he had originally offered. Defendant testified that he also conferred with the McCords later in the day on June 20, and advised them that Martin had rejected their counter-offer and would pay no greater sum in cash than Martin’s original offer of $4,893.25. The McCords then accepted that figure, and in their presence defendant drew a line through the figure “$7,-093.25,” inserted in ink that of “$4,893.25,” and had the McCords initial it.

From a chronological standpoint the evidence becomes sketchy and confusing at this point. Defendant had further conferences with Martin, with the McCords, and at one point, according to the defendant, the whole deal was about to be called off at a conference between Martin, the McCords, and defendant, at defendant’s office. Since it would serve no useful purpose to try to relate, step by step, the further proposals, counter-proposals, and additions which occurred on and after June 20, 1955, nor to try to decipher the amendments, alterations, changes and supplements made in and to the original exchange contract, it is sufficient for the purposes of this opinion to state that an apparent meeting of the minds between Martin and the McCords was reached early in July, perhaps on July 1. As best we can make out from the testimony and the written exchange contract, which was rendered almost illegible by the numerous changes and interlineations made in ink, the agreement then provided for the exchange of properties, for the plaintiffs *164 to pay the McCords $2,000 in cash, and to execute to defendant a note for $2,763.45 secured by a third deed of trust on the Hi Ho resort, out of which latter amount the McCords were to receive the sum of $446.-79 when the note was paid.

We use the phrase “apparent meeting- of the minds,” because of the issue of fact as to whether defendant had informed plaintiff, on June 20, of the alteration of the adjustment clause. Martin testified that the defendant never gave him a copy of the supposed agreement until July 5, at which time Martin put it in his safe without reading it. As the abstract was not ready by July 15, the date specified for the closing, Martin obtained permission from the defendant and the McCords to take possession of the Hi Ho property. Both parties agree that the abstract was not delivered to Martin until July 28. Upon examining it, Martin discovered that the principal and interest payments on the two deeds of trust on the Hi Ho property were due in October, 1955, (which he had not known before) and Martin telephoned defendant on that day to point out that the interest should be adjusted to July 15.

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Bluebook (online)
340 S.W.2d 161, 1960 Mo. App. LEXIS 462, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/martin-v-hieken-moctapp-1960.