Parker v. Parker

971 S.W.2d 878, 1998 WL 344801
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 30, 1998
DocketNos. 72171, 72237
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 971 S.W.2d 878 (Parker v. Parker) 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
Parker v. Parker, 971 S.W.2d 878, 1998 WL 344801 (Mo. Ct. App. 1998).

Opinion

GRIMM, Presiding Judge.

The four living children of their deceased father filed this action seeking among other things to quiet title to a condominium unit. They allege that their step-mother improperly used a durable power of attorney to obtain part of their interest in that property. The trial court quieted title and gave step-mother a life estate in the condominium. Further, it decreed that at her death, basically one-half went to her heirs and the other one-half went to father’s children,1 all as tenants in corn-mon.

Step-mother appeals and children cross-appeal. Step-mother raises three points; one relates to an alleged failure to make detailed findings of facts, the other two concern the failure to quiet title in her. In their points, children claim that title to the condominium should be quieted in them and stepmother as tenants in common. Pursuant to the directions in Rule 84.14 to finally dispose of the ease, we modify the trial court’s judgment by quieting title and decreeing that step-mother and each of father’s children each receive a one-sixth interest. As modified, the trial court’s judgment is affirmed.

I. Background

Father and a former wife had five children; the children grew up in a house on Mert Street. In 1963, through a straw party, father conveyed the Mert property to his five children. The conveyance to the children, however, was subject to a life estate in father. In addition, father was given the power to sell or “dispose of the fee simple title to the said premises and to convert the proceeds received therefor to his sole use.” (emphasis added).

Father and step-mother married in 1976. Shortly before the marriage, father gave each child a copy of the 1963 deed. He told them that step-mother “had sold her house and put the money in the bank for her children and so his money from his house would go to his children.” Step-mother acknowledged that she sold the house she had been living in and put part of the proceeds from the sale into a trust for children she had from a prior marriage. She moved into the Mert property and understood that father had a life estate in the house. Further, she understood that upon his death, the house would go to his children. Father had also previously told the children that he wanted the Mert property to go to them upon his death.

[880]*880In the early 1990’s father told the children that he wanted step-mother to receive a child’s share of the Mert property. To carry out this plan, in September 1993, father and step-mother conveyed the Mert property to the children2 and step-mother as tenants in common. This deed continued the life estate in father only and continued to give him the power to sell the property and convert the proceeds “to his sole use.”

Father’s health had deteriorated. In the summer of 1993, he visited Washington University’s Memory and Aging Project. He returned there a year later because of his inability to speak. In July 1994, father executed a durable power of attorney, naming step-mother his attorney-in-fact.

Father’s health continued to decline. Step-mother handled father’s financial affairs and assets. In May 1995, father and stepmother decided to sell the Mert property because it was too large and it was too much to care for. On May 19, step-mother executed a general warranty deed to the Mert property conveying it to a third party. The deed is signed: “Ralph W. Parker, Sr. by Ruth E. Parker his Attomey-in-fact.”

On that same day, the proceeds from the sale of the house were used to purchase a unit in a condominium. The condominium is located at 559 Greenway Chase Drive in Florissant. Although father never told stepmother that he had changed his mind on where the Mert property should go at his death, she had the deed for the condominium unit titled to “Ruth E. Parker and Ralph W. Parker, Sr., his wife (sic).” Also during May, father moved into a nursing home.

Sometime later that year, father’s youngest son filed a petition to be appointed father’s guardian. Also, the children filed this action, seeking an accounting by step-mother as attomey-in-fact. In addition, they claimed breach of fiduciary duty, sought a constructive trust, and asked that title to the condominium be quieted. Father died on December 31, 1995. Following a hearing, the trial court quieted title to the condominium.

II. Motion to Strike Exhibits

Before considering the points on appeal, we must first determine what exhibits are properly before us. With their appeal, children filed six “exhibits”: (1) the 1963 deed conveying the Mert property to children, (2) the 1993 deed conveying the Mert property to children and step-mother, (3) a Durable Power of Attorney, (4) a 1995 deed conveying the Mert property, (5), a 1995 deed conveying a condominium, and (6) a Washington University Presumptive Diagnosis.

Step-mother filed a motion to strike exhibits 3 through 6 from the record on appeal because they “were not introduced into evidence at trial.” The motion was ordered taken with the ease. We have reviewed the transcript and find that neither party offered exhibits 3 through 6 and they were not received in evidence by the trial court. Exhibits not offered at trial and thus not received as evidence are not properly part of the record on appeal; as far as our review is concerned, such documents do not exist. Sydnor v. Director of Revenue, 876 S.W.2d 627, 629 (Mo.App. W.D.1994); Eaton v. Eaton, 637 S.W.2d 799, 800 (Mo.App. E.D.1982). Step-mother’s motion is granted. We will not consider the contents of those four exhibits except as reflected by testimony of witnesses.

III. Findings of Facts and Conclusions of Law

In her first point, step-mother alleges the trial court erred by failing to provide requested “detailed findings of fact and conclusions of law.” She contends that we should reverse and remand “with a directive to make specific Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law.”

Rule 73.01(a)(3) applies to bench trials and provides in part:

If a party so requests, the court shall dictate to the court reporter or prepare and file a brief opinion containing a statement of the grounds for its decision and the method of deciding any damages awarded. The court may, or if requested [881]*881by a party shall, include in the opinion findings on the controverted fact issues specified by the party, (emphasis added). We first note that step-mother’s point al-

leges error in failing to make detailed findings of fact and conclusions of law. However, as shown above, nothing in Rule 73.01(a)(3) requires a trial court to provide conclusions of law. Rather, that rule pertains only to controverted fact issues as specified by the party making the request.

Here, step-mother filed a request for findings. In the argument portion of her brief, she complains that the trial court did not comply with this specific request:

Whether [step-mother’s] use of the Durable Power of Attorney to sell the Mert property to subsequently purchase the [condominium unit] wrongfully deprived [children] of their survivorship in the Mert property.

Step-mother’s request is not for a finding of fact.

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Bluebook (online)
971 S.W.2d 878, 1998 WL 344801, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parker-v-parker-moctapp-1998.