Matthews v. Moore

911 S.W.2d 664, 1995 Mo. App. LEXIS 1969, 1995 WL 704987
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 1, 1995
Docket19975
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 911 S.W.2d 664 (Matthews v. Moore) 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
Matthews v. Moore, 911 S.W.2d 664, 1995 Mo. App. LEXIS 1969, 1995 WL 704987 (Mo. Ct. App. 1995).

Opinion

CROW, Judge.

The lessees of an apple orchard abandoned it and were sued by the lessors for rent that allegedly became due thereafter. The trial court heard the ease without a jury and entered judgment for the lessees, unem-bellished with findings of fact or conclusions of law. The lessors appeal.

We preface our analysis of the claims of error with an account of the facts. In narrating them, we accept as true the evidence and inferences from it favorable to the trial court’s judgment and disregard contrary evidence. T.B.G. v. C.A.G., 772 S.W.2d 653, 654[2] (Mo. banc 1989).

There are three lessors: Charles D. Matthews, V; Christopher D. Matthews; Melissa Ellen Matthews. 1 They are siblings. We henceforth refer to them collectively as “Plaintiffs.”

There are two lessees: J. Handy Moore and Dorothy M. Moore, husband and wife (“Defendants”). Dorothy Moore (“Dottie”) 2 is a sister of the Plaintiffs’ father, who died in 1974.

The orchard comprises approximately 90 acres situated within a tract of approximately 1,000 acres known as “the Hodge Farm.” In 1978, Plaintiffs and Dottie owned the Hodge Farm and numerous other tracts of real estate “jointly.” The testimony of Plaintiff Charles D. Matthews, V (“Matt”) revealed the background:

“Q. Can you explain ... how you acquired ownership in this property ...?
A. It was all inherited property. Some came from my father’s interest, some came from my great-grandmother’s interest, and some came from my great-aunt’s estate.”

Asked whether Dottie “had the same interest” in the properties as Plaintiffs, Matt replied, “Generally, yes.”

In “1978 or ’79,” Plaintiffs and Defendants began negotiating to divide the properties, “trying to balance out acres and values and in an effort to basically separate [their] affairs.” The negotiations culminated in a comprehensive and complex “Memorandum of Agreement” signed June 16, 1981.

The agreement divided the Hodge Farm, with Plaintiffs receiving part and Dottie receiving the other part. The orchard lay in the part received by Plaintiffs. The agreement provided, among other things, that Plaintiffs would lease the orchard to Defendants “for a term of 15 years at an annual rental per acre equal to the amount of average crop rental computed in an annual cash rent figure, which the Hodge Farm would have paid for the year next preceding.”

The orchard had existed since 1970 or 1971, when Defendant J. Handy Moore (“Handy”) plantéd it. He testified he did so pursuant to a lease with “the Virginia Lemons estate.” He explained:

“[T]hat was to keep the value of the property out of the Lemons estate. It was to remove it in case of or in the *666 event of the owner dying, that the property — the value, the added increment would be taxed to me and not to Virginia Lemons_ And then when she died, it became the people that subsequently were the owner. And, of course, as long as I paid the rent, I kept my interest in that improvement. And my understanding was when we negotiated that if I didn’t pay the rent, I lost my interest in it. That was the understanding.
Q. And the lease was then—
A. It was null.
Q. So you had an option to protect your investment?
A. I had to pay the rent.
Q. You had to pay the rent. But if you wanted to lose your investment and let the owners of the land have the investment— A. All I had to do was not pay the rent. Q. Not pay the rent. Then they would get the improvements, the orchard.
A. And I had lost it. That was the understanding.”
Handy avowed he invested “over $100,000 in the orchard.”
Simultaneously with signing the “Memorandum of Agreement” on June 16, 1981, Plaintiffs and Defendants signed a document captioned “Orchard Lease Agreement.” 3 The latter document (“the lease”) designated Plaintiffs as “Landlord” and Defendants as “Tenant.” The lease was “for a term commencing January 1, 1981, and expiring December 31, 1996.” It provided, among other things:
“3. The Tenant further covenants and agrees:
(a) To use the premises for orchard purposes only.
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(c) To retain possession of the premises during the term hereof and not to assign or sublet without the Landlord’s written consent.
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7. The non-payment of any rental when due or the abandonment of the leased premises shall act as a forfeiture of the balance of the term of this lease, and Landlord may enter the premises and take possession of same immediately.”

Defendants subsequently assigned their interest in the lease to Morning Sun Orchards, Incorporated, a corporation in which Handy was a shareholder. Morning Sun, managed by Tom Adkins, operated the orchard and paid rent to Plaintiffs through 1986. Handy recounted that Adkins departed near the end of 1986, whereupon Handy told Plaintiffs that Defendants were no longer going to operate the orchard.

Defendants paid Plaintiffs no rent after 1986. In the summer of 1987, Plaintiffs received a letter from Defendants’ lawyer stating Defendants “had chosen to abandon the lease.” Despite Defendants’ abandonment, the orchard produced apples in 1987. Handy testified:

“We told the Matthews boys that there was a crop of apples out there. There were apples on the trees, and we said it would be a shame for those apples to just fall on the ground.... I think I talked to Matt and said, We will try to salvage that crop and turn over whatever proceeds it makes to you.’ Nobody was doing anything with them.... [I]t looked like maybe there was some money that could be salvaged. I had tried to help Matt to find management for the orchard.... And I thought if there was some possibility of making some money off of [the apples], that would be fine. We would do that and turn the money over to them. That’s — So there were some apples out there, and they were picked_ There was no money.... The apples didn’t sell for enough to pay for the harvest, for the cost of getting them out. There was no money, and they were informed of that.”

After the 1987 harvest, Defendants engaged in no further activity on the orchard. In the winter of 1987-88, Plaintiffs “attempted to hire a successor operator,” but were unsuccessful. In the fall of 1988, Plaintiffs decided they “would enter and again operate the orchard” themselves.

Over Defendants’ objection that the testimony was immaterial, the trial court permit *667

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Bluebook (online)
911 S.W.2d 664, 1995 Mo. App. LEXIS 1969, 1995 WL 704987, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matthews-v-moore-moctapp-1995.