Myers v. Clayco State Bank

687 S.W.2d 256, 1985 Mo. App. LEXIS 3104
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 5, 1985
DocketWD 34,749
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 687 S.W.2d 256 (Myers v. Clayco State Bank) 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
Myers v. Clayco State Bank, 687 S.W.2d 256, 1985 Mo. App. LEXIS 3104 (Mo. Ct. App. 1985).

Opinion

SHANGLER, Judge.

The plaintiffs Myers, Miller and Belden appeal the dismissal with prejudice of a multicount petition against defendant Clay-co State Bank. The motion to dismiss, to which the judgment responds, alleged as grounds: the bar of the compulsory counterclaim rule of procedure; that the pleadings stated no cause of action; and that plaintiffs were not the real parties in interest. It is evident also from the presentations of counsel and from the inquiry of the court antecedent to decision that the judgment adjudicates that the claims asserted in the petition were precluded under compulsory counterclaim Rule 55.32(a) by the summary judgment entered by the circuit court of Platte County against these several plaintiffs [there defendants] and in favor of this defendant Clayco [there plaintiff] in case No., CV180-1684-CC.

There was before the court at the time the motion to dismiss was presented and ruled: the petition of the plaintiff as augmented by exhibits; the documents, pleadings and judgments in the several other litigations relevant to the causes of action the plaintiffs here propose; the affidavits, exhibits and other proofs tendered by the defendant Clayco in support of some motions and in opposition to others; and, all these, intersticed by arguments of counsel asserted as fact and assumed as fact in response — on the motion to dismiss. On appeal, the plaintiffs Myers, Miller and Bel-den contend that compulsory counterclaim Rule 55.32(a) does not govern the causes of action the petition pleads, that since the allegations otherwise state claims for relief, the petition should be restored. We review these assertions of error in the perspective of the facts, proofs and intend-ments properly available to the trial court.

The petition the judgment dismisses consummates a train of events begun some years earlier. The plaintiffs were then en-terprisers in commercial real estate and conducted business through numerous separate corporations — among them, First Standard Investors, Inc. In December of 1977, the Clayco State Bank loaned the First Standard corporation $250,000 by promissory note and, as a condition of loan, Myers, Miller and Belden each executed a personal guaranty in favor of the Bank for a portion of the total promissory obligation. The payments were made as due until early 1980, when the rise in interest rates impaired profit from the several ventures and caused delinquency in the several obligations. On January 7, 1980, Clayco advised the First Standard corporation and the personal guarantors that the obligations on the note were in default and accelerated, and made demand for immediate payment. The enterprisers Myers, Miller and Belden prepared and submitted to their creditors for consent a plan for orderly liquidation and, thereafter, Clayco [so the petition al *259 leges] accepted payments from the enter-prisers and informed them “they would agree to the proposed liquidation.” 1 Then, on July 9,1980, during the grace period the proposed moratorium allows the debtor First Standard corporation, the Clayco Bank once again advised First Standard Investors and the personal guarantors that the promissory note was in default and the balance accelerated, and once again made demand on the guarantors for payment.

On July 21, 1980, the Clayco Bank filed suit against the several guarantors. The guarantors Myers and Miller were residents of Missouri, and the Clayco Bank commenced suit against them by attachment in Johnson County, Kansas. The guarantor Belden was a resident of Kansas, and the Clayco Bank commenced suit against him by attachment in Clay County, Missouri. The subject of each suit was the obligation of the promissory note and the claim to recover the amount of the guarantee in default. The guarantor defendants, in each case, entered a general appearance, made answer, and the attachments were dissolved. The attachments [so the petition on review alleges] resulted in the foreclosure and liquidation of numerous properties “in which the appellants [enterprisers Myers, Miller and Belden] had equity.” While these suits pended, the Clayco Bank accomplished suit and service against all three guarantors and First Standard Investors in Platte County. The defendants Myers, Miller and Belden admitted that they executed the guarantees of the promissory note obligation, and summary judgment was adjudicated in favor of the Clayco State Bank. The judgment in that suit — Clayco State Bank v. First Standard Investors, Inc., Myers, Miller, Belden and others, Case No. CV180-1684-CC was entered on May 1, 1981. The separate suits in Johnson County, Kansas and Clay County, Missouri against the several guarantors were thereafter dismissed. Count I — for fraudulent misrepresentation — rested on allegations that the Clayco Bank agreed to the moratorium of the promissory note debt but with the intention not to honor the terms of that proposed liquidation, and instead commenced two suits, in Johnson County, Kansas, and in Clay County, Missouri, to collect the promissory guaranty. Count II — for outrageous conduct — rested on allegations that the deceitful representations of the Clayco Bank lured the guarantors into a sense of false security and were given to enable the Clay-co Bank time to bring suits on the note— and that these acts were done solely to harm the guarantors. Count III — abuse of process — rested on allegations that the Clayco Bank initiated two simultaneous liti-gations to collect the same loan debt, and that the concurrent suits in different courts to collect the same debt was unlawful and perverted and done merely to harm the guarantors. Count IV in prima facie tort— rested on allegations that the Johnson County and Clay County suits were intentionally undertaken to do harm to the guarantors and not only to collect the debt, and that with full knowledge of their precarious financial condition the Clayco Bank attached numerous property interests in order to commence the suits, acts calculated to inflict catastrophic financial injury upon them.

The trial court determined that on the pleadings and other proofs presented, the several causes of action attempted by the petition were compulsory counterclaims in the suit brought by the Clayco Bank on the promissory note guarantees in Platte County, and so were precluded by the summary judgment entered in that litigation, since become final.

Compulsory counterclaims Rule 55.-32(a) provides:

*260 A pleading shall state as a counterclaim any claim which at the time of serving the pleader has against any opposing party, if it arises out of the transaction or occurrence that is the subject matter of the opposing party’s claim and does not require for its adjudication the presence of third parties of whom the court cannot acquire jurisdiction. But the pleader need not state the claim if (1) at the time the action was commenced the claim was the subject of another pending action.

The guarantors Myers, Miller and Belden argue that the four counts of the petition are not precluded by the compulsory counterclaims rule because (1) the causes of action do not arise out of the transaction or occurrence — the promissory note guarantees, (2) the causes of action were the subject of another pending action

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Bluebook (online)
687 S.W.2d 256, 1985 Mo. App. LEXIS 3104, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/myers-v-clayco-state-bank-moctapp-1985.