MICHAEL YOUNKER, BRAD NECKERMANN, ADAM CHADEK, and AMANDA CHADEK v. INVESTMENT REALTY, INC., MICHAEL WOESSNER, LINDA WOESSNER, CURTIS D. BAXTER, SARAH BAXTER, and WILLIAMSBURG APARTMENTS, INC., Defendants-Respondents.

CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 20, 2015
DocketSD33179
StatusPublished

This text of MICHAEL YOUNKER, BRAD NECKERMANN, ADAM CHADEK, and AMANDA CHADEK v. INVESTMENT REALTY, INC., MICHAEL WOESSNER, LINDA WOESSNER, CURTIS D. BAXTER, SARAH BAXTER, and WILLIAMSBURG APARTMENTS, INC., Defendants-Respondents. (MICHAEL YOUNKER, BRAD NECKERMANN, ADAM CHADEK, and AMANDA CHADEK v. INVESTMENT REALTY, INC., MICHAEL WOESSNER, LINDA WOESSNER, CURTIS D. BAXTER, SARAH BAXTER, and WILLIAMSBURG APARTMENTS, INC., Defendants-Respondents.) 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.

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MICHAEL YOUNKER, BRAD NECKERMANN, ADAM CHADEK, and AMANDA CHADEK v. INVESTMENT REALTY, INC., MICHAEL WOESSNER, LINDA WOESSNER, CURTIS D. BAXTER, SARAH BAXTER, and WILLIAMSBURG APARTMENTS, INC., Defendants-Respondents., (Mo. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

Missouri Court of Appeals Southern District Division Two

MICHAEL YOUNKER, BRAD ) NECKERMANN, ADAM CHADEK, and ) AMANDA CHADEK, ) ) Plaintiffs-Appellants, ) ) vs. ) No. SD33179 ) INVESTMENT REALTY, INC., ) Filed February 20, 2015 MICHAEL WOESSNER, LINDA ) WOESSNER, CURTIS D. BAXTER, ) SARAH BAXTER, and ) WILLIAMSBURG APARTMENTS, INC., ) ) Defendants-Respondents. )

APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF PHELPS COUNTY

Honorable John B. Berkemeyer, Associate Circuit Judge

REVERSED AND REMANDED

Michael Younker, Brad Neckermann, Adam Chadek, and Amanda Chadek (collectively

referred to as “Tenants”) appeal from the trial court’s judgment denying class certification and

granting summary judgment on all claims in their petition in favor of Investment Realty, Inc.,

Michael Woessner, Linda Woessner, Curtis Baxter, Sarah Baxter, and Williamsburg Apartments,

Inc. (collectively referred to as “Property Owners”). 1 Tenants alleged in their petition that

1 Tenants assert in their first point that a landlord-tenant relationship exists between them and all respondents as related to their respective individual lease agreements. Although Property Owners’ Motion for Summary Judgment

1 Property Owners improperly retained a portion of their lease deposits in violation of section

535.300. 2 Property Owners moved for summary judgment asserting that the terms of Tenants’

lease agreements, which varied from the security deposit requirements of section 535.300, were

controlling and that all lease deposits were handled according to the contractual terms in the

lease agreements. The trial court, relying upon the uncontroverted fact of Property Owners’

compliance with such contractual terms, granted summary judgment in favor of Property

Owners. Because compliance with the security deposit requirements imposed by section

535.300 is mandatory and cannot be contractually varied or altered and genuine issues of

material fact exist as to whether Property Owners complied with such statutory requirements, the

trial court’s judgment is reversed.

Factual and Procedural Background

The facts, set forth in the light most favorable to Tenants, see Binkley v. Am. Equity

Mortgage, Inc., 447 S.W.3d 194, 196 (Mo. banc 2014), are as follows:

Tenants each signed a “Lease and Agreement” to lease separate residences in Rolla,

Missouri, from Investment Realty. 3 These agreements vary slightly in their exact language and

the specific amounts of funds involved, but these differences are irrelevant to the issues involved

in this appeal. Relevant to this appeal, Tenants agreed to “keep the premises in as good order,

condition, and repair as when . . . first occupied.” The agreements also required Tenants to make

asserted the lack of a landlord-tenant relationship as a reason supporting partial summary judgment as to some of the respondents, the trial court never decided that issue, but rather granted summary judgment “in Full” in favor of all respondents for other reasons as discussed in this opinion infra. 2 References to section 535.300 are to RSMo 2000. 3 These agreements each contained a purported waiver of Tenants’ rights to be present at an inspection of the respective premises at the conclusion of the lease. The parties discuss the right to be present for such an inspection in their briefs; however, we have not found where the validity of these waivers was raised and challenged in the pleadings and put at issue in this case.

2 an initial deposit ranging from $275 to $400 (the “lease deposit”). 4 The agreements provided

that a portion of the lease deposit ranging from $75 to $95 would be a nonrefundable “common

area maintenance fee.” The agreements also authorized Investment Realty to expend the

remaining lease deposit to repair damage done by Tenants or to fulfill any remaining rent

obligations.

Tenants also signed an accompanying “Security Deposit Agreement” that further detailed

how their lease deposits would be utilized. The Security Deposit Agreement stated that there

was a $75 painting charge for each bedroom unit and a $75 initial carpet cleaning charge, with an

additional charge of $25 per room and $10 per heavily stained area. Tenants separately initialed

all of these provisions. The Security Deposit Agreement also specified that there should be no

damage to the property beyond normal wear and tear, but “DIRT IN CARPETING OR

ELSEWHERE, IS NOT NORMAL WEAR AND TEAR.” After their tenancies ended, Property

Owners deducted no more than the full common-area maintenance fee, painting fee, and carpet-

cleaning fee from Tenants’ lease deposits. Tenants were not charged any other fees, and the

remaining funds from their lease deposits were refunded to them.

Tenants filed a petition against Property Owners alleging that the common-area

maintenance fee, painting fee, and carpet-cleaning fee were amounts that would be “withheld in

every instance” and were retained to remedy “ordinary wear and tear,” which is not allowed by

section 535.300. As such, Tenants alleged that Property Owners were in violation of that statute.

Tenants’ petition was brought as a class action on their own behalf and on behalf of all others

similarly situated. By separate motion, Tenants sought court certification of that class.

4 The lease agreement refers to this amount as a security deposit. In order to avoid confusion with the section 535.300 statutory definition of a security deposit, we refer to this amount as the “lease deposit.”

3 Property Owners filed a motion seeking “Summary Judgment in Whole,” asserting three

legal reasons why summary judgment should be granted on all claims in the petition. The first

two reasons are essentially the same and assert that Property Owners are entitled to summary

judgment even if they did not comply with the terms of section 535.300 because they complied

with the terms of the lease agreements and the contractual terms control regardless of any

statutory requirements. The third and final reason asserted that Property Owners are entitled to

summary judgment because they complied with the requirements of section 535.300 by

expending in some manner or refunding all deposited funds.

In the alternative, Property Owners moved for partial summary judgment in two respects:

(1) in favor of the individual property owners because they were not landlords as that term is

used in section 535.300, and Investment Realty, Inc. was an independent contractor, and (2) on

all claims outside the statute of limitations.

In its judgment, the trial court denied Tenants’ “Motion for Class Certification,” granted

Property Owners’ “Motion for Summary Judgment In Full,” never reaching the issues related to

the requested partial summary judgments, and made a determination that the applicable statute of

limitations, if summary judgment were reversed, would be section 516.130.

Discussion

Tenants raise three points on appeal. First, Tenants argue that the trial court erred in

granting summary judgment because “there is no genuine dispute regarding the material fact that

[Property Owners] withheld sums from [Tenants’] security deposits for reasons not allowed by

[section] 535.300” . . . “and/or there are genuine issues of material fact as to whether the sums

withheld were allowed by [section] 535.300.” Second, Tenants argue that the trial court erred in

denying class certification because all requirements of Rule 52.08 were met. Third, Tenants

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MICHAEL YOUNKER, BRAD NECKERMANN, ADAM CHADEK, and AMANDA CHADEK v. INVESTMENT REALTY, INC., MICHAEL WOESSNER, LINDA WOESSNER, CURTIS D. BAXTER, SARAH BAXTER, and WILLIAMSBURG APARTMENTS, INC., Defendants-Respondents., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/michael-younker-brad-neckermann-adam-chadek-and-amanda-chadek-v-moctapp-2015.