Muse v. Woyner

698 S.W.2d 26, 1985 Mo. App. LEXIS 3614
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 17, 1985
DocketNo. 13929
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 698 S.W.2d 26 (Muse v. Woyner) 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
Muse v. Woyner, 698 S.W.2d 26, 1985 Mo. App. LEXIS 3614 (Mo. Ct. App. 1985).

Opinion

FLANIGAN, Judge.

Plaintiffs James Paul Muse and Marie Muse sued their daughter, defendant Ruth Brown Woyner, and her husband, defendant Charles Woyner. Count I of the petition, directed only against Ruth, alleged that plaintiffs paid Ruth $14,550 for the remodeling of a house located on land owned by Ruth in Texas County. The money was paid while plaintiffs were making their home with Ruth. The prayer of Count I was that the court declare a resulting trust in favor of plaintiffs and that the court impose an equitable lien on the land in their favor.

Ruth’s answer to Count I denied most of the material allegations of the petition and also pleaded the Statute of Frauds, § 432.-010,1 as an affirmative defense.

Count II of the petition, directed only against defendant Charles Woyner, sought $1,000 for the unpaid purchase price of a horse, with saddles and tack, which plaintiffs allegedly had sold Woyner.

The answer of defendant Charles Woy-ner denied all of the allegations of Count II of the petition and further alleged that “any sums, if any, owed to plaintiffs by defendant has previously been paid to plaintiffs.”

The trial court, sitting without a jury, found in favor of defendant Ruth on Count I and in favor of defendant Woyner on Count II. Neither side invoked Rule 73.-01(a)(2) by requesting a statement of the grounds for the court’s decision or its findings on specified controverted fact issues and the court made none. Plaintiffs appeal.

Plaintiffs’ first two points challenge the trial court’s finding in favor of Ruth on Count I and will be considered together. Plaintiffs’ first point is that the trial court erred in failing to find that a resulting trust arose in plaintiffs’ favor on Ruth’s land to the extent of the amount of money advanced by plaintiffs for the remodeling. Plaintiffs’ second point is that the trial court erred in not awarding plaintiffs an equitable lien on Ruth’s land to the same extent.

In 1978 plaintiffs moved to Missouri from Mississippi where they had previously resided. Later that year Ruth and her then husband and their two children moved to Missouri. In December 1978 Ruth and her then husband obtained title to the land in dispute. After their divorce in April 1980 Ruth became the sole owner of the land.

In August 1980 plaintiff James Paul Muse began to have heart trouble and, around October 1, 1980, he and his wife moved in with Ruth, a registered nurse.

Ruth testified that before her parents moved in she had decided to do some remodeling of the house. On October 17, 1980, Ruth borrowed some money from a savings and loan association to finance the remodeling she originally planned. That remodeling was completed around December 1, 1980.

Between December 1980, and April 1981, the parents gave Ruth checks for addition[28]*28al remodeling, the remodeling here in dispute. There were five checks totalling $14,550.

James Paul Muse testified that when he and his wife decided to move in with Ruth, they first offered to buy five acres from her. According to him, Ruth said that she was willing to sell him the land but said, “Why not take (sic) the money and just move in the house with me and the kids?” He testified that the improvements paid for by the $14,550 included a sitting room and a bedroom for the parents and a barn.

James Paul Muse also testified that before the five checks were given to Ruth, he and his wife had an agreement with Ruth. The agreement was “that we furnish the money for the improvements, that we would have a place to live as long as I lived, or as my wife lived, and if at any time we moved out or the property was sold, that we would be reimbursed in full, for the money that we spent on the improvements.”

Marie Muse testified that before the five cheeks were given to Ruth the parents and Ruth agreed orally that the parents “would get our money back” if the land was sold or if the parents no longer lived there.

Marie Muse further testified that in April 1981 Ruth “put the agreement in writing but it was never typed up, notarized or recorded_ There was a written agreement which Ruth wrote in my presence at the dining room table on a stenographer’s pad, a little promissory ... Ruth was going to take it and have it typed up and notarized but it was never carried out.... I am not sure that Ruth actually signed that little note but she read it over and we looked it over and worded it, etc., but I never saw it again after that day.” Ruth did not deny that occurrence.

James D. Muse, son of the plaintiffs and brother of Ruth, testified that in December 1980 he visited Ruth and his parents in Missouri while the improvements “were going on.” According to the witness, Ruth told him that she had made an agreement with her parents to repay the money they advanced for the improvements if the parents moved away or if the land had to be sold.

Later in the trial, plaintiffs’ counsel, in cross-examining Ruth, asked her if such a conversation had taken place between her and her brother and Ruth’s equivocal response was, “Not to my recollection, no.”

The witness further testified that some time later, after his parents had moved from Ruth’s land and Ruth also had moved from it, he telephoned Ruth “to reaffirm that she was going to repay my parents the money they had invested in the house.... Ruth told me that she thought $14,500 was a little bit too much but she would pay them $10,000 at the sale of the house.”

Testifying in her own behalf, Ruth testified that she had received $14,550 from the plaintiffs but only about $10,000 of that went into the improvements. The rest, she said, was used for routine daily living expenses. After the remodeling originally planned by Ruth had been completed, Ruth said that she had a talk with her parents who were then living with her. The parents wanted an additional room, a dining room, a carport and a barn for her father’s three horses. Ruth said she told her parents that she could not afford any further remodeling at that time.

Ruth testified, “Several days passed and I came home from work one night and they presented me with a check saying they wanted to help out, that if money was the reason I could not go ahead and do these things they wanted to give me the money. They used the word ‘give.’ There was rio discussion at all at this meeting or prior to this meeting that this was a loan nor was there any agreement to pay the money back. There was no agreement that the money would be repaid if the house was sold or if my parents should leave the property.”

Ruth testified that she and Woyner started dating in the fall of 1981, long after all remodeling had been completed. In November 1981 Ruth told the plaintiffs that she was going to marry Woyner but “I did not give them any definite time.” In Janu[29]*29ary 1982 the parents moved out of Ruth’s house and returned to Mississippi.

Ruth and Woyner were married on June 19, 1982. The record shows that the plaintiffs did not approve of Ruth’s relationship with Woyner. At the trial Ruth introduced several letters written to her by her mother. In one of those letters the mother said, “[Woyner] ran us off but we are not running any further.” In another letter the mother said, “We are in desperate need of the money we invested with you.... A stranger was allowed to come in and uproot our whole family.” In still another letter the mother referred to Ruth’s “adulterous and sinful living.”

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In Re DC
49 S.W.3d 694 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 2001)

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Bluebook (online)
698 S.W.2d 26, 1985 Mo. App. LEXIS 3614, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/muse-v-woyner-moctapp-1985.