Miller v. Gayman

482 S.W.2d 414, 1972 Mo. LEXIS 878
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 17, 1972
Docket56144
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 482 S.W.2d 414 (Miller v. Gayman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Miller v. Gayman, 482 S.W.2d 414, 1972 Mo. LEXIS 878 (Mo. 1972).

Opinion

EAGER, Special Commissioner.

Plaintiff sued defendants in two counts. The first count was on a note of defendants for $35,000 payable to plaintiff’s testatrix and her husband, who predeceased testatrix; the note was secured by a mortgage on land in Illinois. Plaintiff alleged ownership in Isabel R. Kirchner, her testatrix, by survivorship. It was further alleged : that the note could not be produced by plaintiff because it was lost or inadvertently destroyed, but that it was not in the hands of anyone having legal or equitable title thereto; that the mortgage was unsatisfied of record; that principal of $30,000 was due and unpaid with interest at 5% since March 1, 1965, and also a reasonable attorney’s fee. The second count sought recovery of $15,066.40, with interest, for other sums allegedly borrowed from the testatrix. The Court entered judgment for defendants on the second count and plaintiff has not appealed. We shall therefore confine our consideration to the action on the note. By their answer defendants admitted the execution of the note and mortgage; they denied the allegation that the note had been lost or destroyed and that it was not in the hands of anyone having title thereto. As an affirmative defense they alleged that the note “was renounced by decedent, Isabel R. Kirchner, prior to her death” and that defendants had been discharged of all obligations thereon; and they further asserted “the affirmative defenses of payment and renunciation * * Sundry other allegations of the petition were denied generally. Since defendants lived in Illinois, a writ of attachment was issued; it was later dissolved by stipulation upon entry of appearance. Defendants moved for a summary judgment; affidavits were filed pro and con. We find no definite ruling on that motion, but since the case went to trial on the merits, with a jury waived, the motion is of no further consequence. Motions for the production of documents on behalf of each party were sustained. The Court entered judgment for plaintiff on the note for $30,000 as principal, $7,772.48 as interest, and an attorney’s fee of $3,777.25 (10%); as indicated, it entered judgment for defendants on Count 2.

At trial plaintiff produced the original recorded mortgage and a photostatic copy of the note which had been furnished by defendants on order of the Court. Plaintiff identified the signatures on both. Objection was made to the mortgage as irrelevant and to the copy of the note because it was secondary evidence. Both objections were overruled. Plaintiff identified various notations of payments on the *416 back of the note which she said were made by her father. That witness, her husband, her sister Twila Groene, and the latter’s husband, all testified to the conversations had at a meeting held on June 16, 1969, at which both defendants and Mr. Zenge, counsel for plaintiff, were present. The essence of that testimony of the discussion was (over a continuing objection of privilege) : that defendant Darlene owed money to her mother; that a statement had been prepared by the mother under oath, which was produced and examined; this purported to show the status of the account of defendants with the mother and probably that of the other sisters; that all read it, and that Darlene said “they didn’t owe that much”; that she admitted that the “note part” was correct and that the principal balance due was $30,000; that Darlene asked for a copy of the affidavit and said that she had figures; she was told that she could have a copy when she presented her figures, but that she never did; that Darlene later got a copy of the paper by court order. Plaintiff offered the paper as Exhibit 3, then and later, but it was excluded as self-serving and hearsay. The references to the paper were kept in evidence as an indication of what the parties were talking about. Some of this testimony was that defendants admitted that the note “was not paid,” — rather than a statement of what was due. Plaintiff offered in evidence admissions from the pleadings and from an affidavit of Darlene of the execution of the note and mortgage, that the mortgage was unsatisfied of record, and of the payments made on the note. At the conclusion of plaintiff’s case defendants filed a “Motion for Directed Verdict,” which the Court overruled.

All substantive testimony of the defendants themselves was excluded under the “Dead Man’s Statute,” but Darlene produced the original note, identified the signatures and her father’s notations on the back, and she also identified the original mortgage. The note was then introduced as defendants’ Exhibit A. Both Darlene and Walter Gayman testified that what they said concerning the note at the family meeting was that the note had not been “paid.’’ At this point counsel for plaintiff admitted that $5,000 had been paid on the principal. Darlene further testified that she asked at the meeting about the savings and loan accounts and “other money” and that plaintiff said that this would “come out” in her final report. Defendants offered in evidence Schedules E and G of the federal estate tax return of decedent. Schedule E was offered to show the holding of substantial sums of money and securities in the joint names of decedent and her daughters, including defendant Darlene. Schedule G was offered to show transfers during decedent’s lifetime of real estate, securities, cash and savings and loan accounts in substantial amounts to the daughters of decedent and their husbands (and children), and presumably to show the inequality of such distributions, with less to defendants. The theory of defendants’ counsel on this (and certain depositions to be mentioned later) was to show a motive for the supposed renunciation of defendants’ note. This evidence was excluded upon objection that it had no probative value on the issues raised by the pleadings. There was evidence that Isabel Kirchner frequently visited her daughter Darlene in Illinois, stayed for more or less extended periods, and that their relations were yery cordial. The will of the testatrix, filed in connection with the motion for a summary judgment, left the residue of her estate to her three daughters, “share and share alike.”

The testimony on which the claim of renunciation is based came from one Esther Ruckman of Ottumwa, Iowa. She testified: that she had known decedent for 20 years, that both were interested in raising dogs, and that they visited in each other’s homes; that she also knew and visited with the defendants and had been in their home at times when decedent was visiting there; that she was present in defendants’ home on a day during March 1965 when *417 decedent was there; that “they had their tax papers all spread out” on card tables, with decedent “helping-,” and that the discussion was of “taxes and money”; that Mrs. Kirchner “went and got her purse and she said to Darlene, ‘Here’s a paper I want you to have. It’s the note,’ ” and that she “gave it to her in my presence.” The witness identified Exhibit A as the note referred to; she testified that at one time in 1968 (the year in which she died) decedent said that she wanted her children to have everything divided equally. On cross-examination the witness added that decedent said that “it was the note on her farm.” The note itself, Exhibit A, showed nothing upon its face or back to indicate a discharge.

Defendants offered the depositions of officials of four savings and loan associations located in Illinois.

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Bluebook (online)
482 S.W.2d 414, 1972 Mo. LEXIS 878, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-gayman-mo-1972.