O'Day v. Van Leeuwen

190 S.W.2d 263, 354 Mo. 604, 1945 Mo. LEXIS 548
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedNovember 5, 1945
DocketNo. 39522.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 190 S.W.2d 263 (O'Day v. Van Leeuwen) 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
O'Day v. Van Leeuwen, 190 S.W.2d 263, 354 Mo. 604, 1945 Mo. LEXIS 548 (Mo. 1945).

Opinions

Suit in equity for the specific performance of an oral contract for the exchange of real properties. Decree for plaintiffs and defendant Botta appealed.

Plaintiffs alleged that on or about July 1, 1941, they entered into an oral agreement with the defendant Van Leeuwens to exchange their property located at 512 Kensington Street, Kansas City, Missouri, for certain described lots owned by the Van Leeuwens in Northmoor, a subdivision in Platte County, Missouri; that in accordance with the agreement they conveyed to the Van Leeuwens by warranty deed the Kensington Street property, subject to a deed of trust for $1880.93, and delivered possession; that the Van Leeuwens delivered possssion of the Northmoor property to plaintiffs, but in violation of the agreement, *Page 607 failed and refused to execute a deed to said property to plaintiffs subject to a $400 deed of trust; that the Van Leeuwens, in February, 1942, ousted plaintiffs' tenant from the Northmoor property and took possession thereof.

Plaintiffs further alleged that notice of their interest and equities in the Northmoor property was placed of record in the office of the recorder of Platte County on January 21, 1942; that thereafter, and with [264] notice of plaintiffs' interest in the Northmoor property, Michael Botta (appellant) obtained from the Van Leeuwens a deed to said property "and placed a new incumbrance (deed of trust) thereon in the sum of $600 in place of the former incumbrance" assumed by plaintiffs; that the new deed of trust was owned by defendant Emerson "who took with notice of plaintiffs' interest."

Plaintiffs further alleged that the contract of exchange of property was fully performed by them; that the Van Leeuwens not only failed to make a deed to plaintiffs to the Northmoor property and sold that property to Botta, but that they also sold the Kensington Street property which plaintiffs conveyed to them pursuant to the exchange agreement.

Plaintiffs asked for "a decree canceling the incumbrance on said property (Northmoor) held by defendant Emerson upon such terms as will render plaintiffs liable to assume no more than the original incumbrance of $400.00; that the deed from defendants Van Leeuwen to defendant Botta be canceled; that defendants Van Leeuwen be directed to convey said premises to plaintiffs by good and proper deeds, subject only to an incumbrance of $400.00; that plaintiffs be awarded a reasonable sum for the rental value of said property from February, 1942, to date; that title be quieted in plaintiffs as against the defendants."

The Van Leeuwens did not answer. Botta and Emerson filed separate answers. Botta answered by a general denial, and alleged that he purchased the Northmoor property in June, 1943, from the Van Leeuwens "for a good and valuable consideration"; that at the time of his purchase the Van Leeuwens "were in sole possession; that prior to his purchase the Van Leeuwens had placed on the property the $600 deed of trust owned by defendant Emerson. In his answer Emerson denied generally, and admitted he owned the $600 deed of trust.

The trial court found "that all of the allegations of the petition are true and that plaintiffs are entitled to the relief prayed for"; that defendants Botta and Emerson "took the property (Northmoor) with notice of the interest of plaintiffs therein and stand in the same position thereto as" the Van Leeuwens. The decree provided for recovery for rent, fixed defendant Emerson's deed of trust lien at $400; cancelled Botta's deed; determined title to be in plaintiffs, and contained some other provisions not necessary to mention here. *Page 608

Botta (appellant) makes the points that the petition wholly fails to state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, and that the evidence is not sufficient to support the decree rendered.

In the brief appellant says: "Now, outside of the fact that the plaintiffs, in their amended petition herein, alleged that the contract of exchange, to which reference is made therein, was an oral one, they, in reality, make no further intelligible references thereto; as, for example, they do not allege when that oral agreement was to be consummated; whether or not there were certain terms and conditions thereof; whether or not abstracts of title to the realty in question were to be furnished by the owners thereof, whether certain specific incumbrances were to be assumed, and the amount thereof; whether or not the parties thereto were to have time and opportunity to correct any defects which might be found in the respective titles; when the possession of the properties was to be surrendered to each other; or, whether or not there were certain provisions of that oral agreement, which, if not performed by the one or the other, within the time and in the manner specified, would render the same inoperative or unenforceable."

[1] The original petition was filed October 9, 1943, and the first amended, upon which cause was tried, was filed February 11, 1944. Appellant filed answer September 1, 1944. The sufficiency of the petition was not challenged except by an ore tenus demurrer interposed by appellant after plaintiffs had put in a substantial part of their case. An ore tenus demurrer on the ground that the petition does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action does not reach uncertainty or indefiniteness of averment or the defect of pleading legal conclusions, and such demurrer is unavailing, if by reasonable intendment or by fair implication from the facts alleged, or if by a most liberal construction the essential allegations may be inferred. Kern v. United Ry. Co., 214 Mo. App. 232, 259 S.W. 821, l.c. 823; Philibert v. Benjamin Ansehl Co., 342 Mo. 1239,119 S.W.2d 797. l.c. 798, and cases there cited.

[2] On the point based on the alleged insufficiency of the petition appellant cites Story et al. v. American Central Ins. Co., [265] 61 Mo. App. 534; Lackawanna Coal Iron Co. v. Long,231 Mo. 605, 133 S.W. 35; Terry et ux. v. Michalak et ux.,319 Mo. 290, 3 S.W.2d 701. So far as the Story case might be pertinent it was overruled in Rodgers v. Western Home Town Mut. Fire Ins. Co., 186 Mo. 248, 85 S.W. 369. In the Lackawanna case and the Terry case timely demurrers to the petitions were filed and sustained, and we might say that the present petition is by no means as vulnerable as the petitions there involved. The ore tenus demurrer to the petition was properly overruled.

[3] Appellant contends that he had no notice of plaintiffs' claims on the Northmoor property, and that his deed thereto is valid regardless *Page 609 of any breach of agreement by the Van Leeuwens to convey the property to plaintiffs. The Van Leeuwens conveyed the Northmoor property to Botta June 7, 1943. Plaintiffs, at the time, knew nothing about this. It so happened that about 30 days after this conveyance plaintiff Joseph B.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
190 S.W.2d 263, 354 Mo. 604, 1945 Mo. LEXIS 548, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oday-v-van-leeuwen-mo-1945.