Nelson v. Martin

760 S.W.2d 182, 1988 Mo. App. LEXIS 1585, 1988 WL 121336
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 15, 1988
DocketNo. 53611
StatusPublished

This text of 760 S.W.2d 182 (Nelson v. Martin) 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
Nelson v. Martin, 760 S.W.2d 182, 1988 Mo. App. LEXIS 1585, 1988 WL 121336 (Mo. Ct. App. 1988).

Opinion

KAROHL, Judge.

Defendants, Daryl J. Martin and Carol Lynne Martin, his wife, appeal after a verdict and judgment for plaintiffs, Darold Nelson and Shirley Nelson, his wife, for actual and punitive damages. The nature of the cause of action is in doubt because plaintiffs’ verdict directing instruction did not submit either cause of action alleged in plaintiffs’ two count petition. Nor did it submit any recognized theory which would support a verdict for plaintiffs. This creates a major problem in reviewing the appeal.

Plaintiffs and defendants were each 50% shareholders in Moriah Development Corporation, a Missouri Corporation. Count I of the Nelson Petition alleged a cause of action on the basis of rights of shareholders acquired under § 351.525(1) RSMo 1986. This section describes a procedure for terminating the affairs of a corporation after forfeiture of charter. On January 1, 1980 the charter of Moriah Development Corporation was forfeited for failure to file and pay annual franchise taxes. Plaintiffs allege defendants, as officers and directors of Moriah, sold the principal asset of the corporation, Tenbrook Apartments, for their own benefit and failed “to distribute Plaintiff’s pro rata share of the assets of the disfranchised corporation.” (Our emphasis). Count I concludes that “As a result of such failure on the part of Defendants to distribute said assets of the corporation, Plaintiff was damaged.” (Our emphasis).

Count II of the petition reasserts the allegations in Count I and seems to allege: (1) defendants agreed to maintain the books and records of the corporation for the benefit of both plaintiff and defend[184]*184ants; (2) a change of position by plaintiff in reliance on the agreement; and, (3) a failure of the defendants to keep the agreement. Count II alludes to the agreement, reliance upon representations and a breach of the agreement because defendants, “without the knowledge or consent of the Plaintiff” sold the principal asset of the corporation, Tenbrook Apartments. Finally, Count II charges defendants’ actions “did defraud the Plaintiff out of the equity the Plaintiff was entitled to in the Moriah Development Corporation, and that the said fraud amounted to actual damages in the amount of Two Hundred Fifty Thousand Dollars ($250,000.00).” Both counts claimed defendants’ actions were “malicious, intentional, wilful and fraudulent” and supported punitive damages.

The jury found for plaintiffs and against defendants for $39,850 actual and $57,500 punitive damages on a verdict directing instruction which appears to have been intended to submit Count I. Count II, which appears to allege both breach of contract and fraud, was not submitted to the jury. It was therefore abandoned.

Defendants filed a motion for new trial. We reproduce all of the grounds alleged to justify a new trial, as follows:

1. That the Court erred in permitting counsel for Plaintiffs to submit verdict directing instructions to the jury, modified by the Court and given by the Court as modified, which were not Missouri Approved Instructions.
2. That the Court erred in overruling the motion of counsel for Defendants to exclude from the courtroom and view of the jurors, as prejudicial to the Defendants, extensive, bulky, and numerous boxes of documents, ledgers, bank statements, and invoices, offered by Plaintiffs as exhibits thirty-five (35) through forty-three (43), which exhibits the Court had previously refused to be admitted into evidence on behalf of the Plaintiffs, and further permitting counsel for Plaintiffs to repeatedly comment on said exhibits throughout the course of the trial and in Plaintiff’s summation to the jury.
3.That the verdict for damages against the Defendants rendered by the jury is excessive and not supported by the evidence.

After the motion for new trial was overruled defendants filed a timely appeal with the assistance of new counsel. Defendants briefed the following trial court errors in their quest for a new trial:

I. THE TRIAL COURT ERRED BY SUBMITTING AN INSTRUCTION TO THE JURY ON RESPONDENT’S REQUEST FOR AN AWARD OF PUNITIVE DAMAGES WITHOUT THE SUBMISSION OF A DEFINITIONAL INSTRUCTION OF THE TERM “MALICIOUS” WHICH IS MADE MANDATORY BY THE “NOTES ON USE” CONTAINED IN 10.01 OF THE MISSOURI APPROVED INSTRUCTIONS, THEREBY CONSTITUTING PLAIN ERROR.
II. THE TRIAL COURT ERRED BY SUBMITTING A VERDICT DIRECTING INSTRUCTION WHICH OMITTED THE CONJUNCTION “AND” BETWEEN THE PARAGRAPHS WHICH IS MANDATORY UNDER THE GENERAL PRINCIPALS OF THE MISSOURI APPROVED INSTRUCTIONS, THEREBY CONSTITUTING PLAIN ERROR.
III. THE JURY’S VERDICT IS IN ERR AS APPLIED AGAINST APPELLANT CAROL MARTIN, AS THERE WAS A COMPLETE ABSENCE OF PROBATIVE FACTS TO SUPPORT A FINDING THAT CAROL MARTIN HAD TAKEN ANY ACTION IN THE SALE OF THE PRIME ASSET OF THE CORPORATION OR THAT SUCH ACTION WAS WILFUL, WANTON AND MALICIOUS. THEREFORE THE JURY’S VERDICT AGAINST CAROL MARTIN CONSTITUTES PLAIN ERROR.

The first point offered to the trial court in the motion for new trial mentions plaintiffs’ verdict directing instruction and claims error, in a limited and specific way, because it is not an approved instruction. The second point briefed on appeal is directed toward the verdict directing instruc[185]*185tion and claims plain error because the court failed to include the conjunction “and” between each factual element as required by the general principals of the Missouri Approved Instructions. Apparently the request for plain error review is some recognition that trial counsel for defendants did not object to the instruction as offered by plaintiffs and submitted by the court. It also suffers from the fact that the ground asserted on appeal was not presented to the trial court.

By simple observation we conclude plaintiffs’ verdict directing instruction does not submit the cause of action asserted in either count of plaintiffs’ petition. In fact it does not submit any legal theory or recognized cause of action which would support recovery by plaintiffs. The verdict directing instruction as submitted reads:

INSTRUCTION NO. 6
Your verdict must be for plaintiffs if you believe:
First, on June 1, 1979, plaintiffs and defendants were 50% stockholders in Mo-riah Development Corporation,
Second, on that date defendants sold the prime asset of the corporation without the knowledge or consent of plaintiffs and received payment,
Third, that defendants failed to pay plaintiffs their proportionate share of the proceeds of the sale,
Fourth, plaintiffs were thereby damaged. (Our emphasis).

Count I of the petition alleges a cause of action against defendants as the last officers and directors of Moriah Development Corporation for failure to pay the plaintiffs their pro rata share of assets of the disfranchised corporation. The verdict directing instruction requires a finding that defendants failed to pay plaintiffs “their proportionate share of the proceeds of the sale [of the prime asset of the corporation].” (Our emphasis).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
760 S.W.2d 182, 1988 Mo. App. LEXIS 1585, 1988 WL 121336, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nelson-v-martin-moctapp-1988.