Pemiscot County Port Authority v. Rail Switching Services, Inc.

523 S.W.3d 530, 2017 WL 1885292, 2017 Mo. App. LEXIS 401
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 9, 2017
DocketNo. SD 34570
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 523 S.W.3d 530 (Pemiscot County Port Authority v. Rail Switching Services, Inc.) 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
Pemiscot County Port Authority v. Rail Switching Services, Inc., 523 S.W.3d 530, 2017 WL 1885292, 2017 Mo. App. LEXIS 401 (Mo. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

DANIEL E. SCOTT, J.

Pemiscot County Port Authority’s executive director negotiated and signed an operating agreement with Appellant (“RSSI”) regarding Port Authority’s railroad spur. When Port Authority granted track-use rights to a third party, RSSI claimed exclusivity under its agreement. Proceedings for declaratory and other relief between Port Authority and RSSI resulted- in summary judgment declaring RSSI’s agreement void ab initio for violating RSMo § 432.070’s mandate that contracts of a municipal corporation “be subscribed by the parties thereto, or their agents authorized by law and duly appointed and authorized in writing.”1

RSSI appeals, asserting that (1) material factual disputes precluded summary judgment; (2) the trial court misinterpreted and misapplied § 432.070; and (3) that statute is unconstitutionally vague. We deny all points and affirm the judgment.

Point I

This point fails procedurally. The error is hardly unique to this otherwise well-lawyered case, but plagues large-record summary judgment appeals seen in this court, even with attorneys of the highest rank involved.

Per Rule 84.04(a) & (c), an appellant’s brief must include “a fair and concise statement of the facts relevant to the questions presented for determination” (our emphasis). RSSI’s “questions presented for determination” in this point are whether summary judgment was proper given three alleged factual disputes.2 So it is evident that we must scrutinize the facts established by Rule 74.04 summary judgment procedure, and equally evident that RSSI’s statement of facts should have set forth those facts. Chopin v. AAA, 969 S.W.2d 248, 251 (Mo.App. 1998).

Why? Because “[fjacts come into a summary judgment record only via Rule 74.04(c)’s numbered-paragraphs-and-responses framework.” Jones v. Union Pac. B.R., 508 S.W.3d 159, 161 (Mo.App. 2016). In turn, appellate courts review summary judgment based on the Rule 74.04(c) record, not the whole trial court record. Id.; [533]*533Lackey v. Iberia R-V Sch. Dist., 487 S.W.3d 57, 60 & n.3 (Mo.App. 2016).3

Yet RSSI “sets forth an account of the facts that does not correspond to the factual statements in the consecutively numbered paragraphs [required by Rule 74.04(c) ].” Chopin, 969 S.W.2d at 251. We cannot ascertain from RSSI’s statement of facts, as Rule 84.04(c) requires, those Rule 74.04(c) established facts that are material and “relevant to the questions presented for determination.” Id. In other words, RSSI’s brief fatally fails to indicate which material facts Port Authority’s Rule 74.04 filings established or which such facts, if any, RSSI properly denied, Jimmy Jones Excavation, Inc. v. JDC Structural Concrete, LLC, 404 S.W.3d 922, 924 (Mo.App. 2013).

Why does this matter? Because the right to summary judgment boils down to certain facts, established per Rule 74.04(c), that legally guarantee one party’s victory regardless of other facts or factual disputes. See ITT Commercial Fin. Corp. v. Mid-Am. Marine Supply Corp., 854 S.W.2d 371, 378 (Mo. banc 1993).

A year after ITT, our supreme court implemented Rule 74.04(c)’s now-familiar format of numbered paragraphs and responses “to assist the judge in ruling on summary judgment motions by requiring such motions to conform to a specific form that will reveal the areas of dispute.” 16 Missouri Practice, Civil Rides Practice § 74.04:2 (2016 ed.); see also Osage Water Co. v. City of Osage Beach, 58 S.W.3d 35, 44 (Mo.App. 2001) (attributing rule change to supreme court’s desire to cléarly advise opposing parties and courts of claimed basis for summary judgment).

Although refined by 2003 and 2008 amendments, it remains Rule 74.04(c)’s precept that material facts be asserted, then admitted or denied, via separately-numbered paragraphs, “in order to clarify the areas of dispute and eliminate the need for the trial, or appellate court to sift through the record to identify factual disputes.” Cross, 32 S.W.3d at 636. “For more than 20 years, Rule 74.04 has required these numbered paragraphs and responses for ‘specificity regarding the contentions raised in motions for summary judgment.’” Lackey, 487 S.W.3d at 61 (quoting Osage Water, 58 S.W.3d at 44).4

The upshot of all these cases?

[534]*5341. Facts .come into a summary judgment record one and only one way—as separately-numbered paragraphs and responses per Rule 74.04(c).5
2. So “to review the judgment, we must scrutinize those facts” because they are “the facts relevant to the questions presented for determination” by RSSI’s challenge to the factual propriety of summary judgment. Chopin, 969 S.W.2d at 251 (our emphasis).
3. RSSI’s failure to properly present those facts dooms this point as we “cannot sift through a voluminous record, separating fact from conclusion, admissions from disputes, the material from the immaterial, in an attempt to determine the basis for the motion without impermissibly acting as advocates,” Lackey, 487 S.W.3d at 62 (internal quotation omitted); see also Jimmy Jones Excavation, 404 S.W.3d at 924.

We cannot overcome this failing •even if we consider RSSI’s (1) general complaints of “numerous disputed material facts,” of factual disputes “too numerous and burdensome to detail fully,” and that summary judgment was improper “[gjiven the number of disputed material facts and the admissions to other material facts”; or (2) cites to Rule 74.04(c) paragraphs and responses that purportedly show more than 100 facts disputed in whole or part. To focus only on disputed facts presents an incomplete picture. We must determine whether uncontroverted facts established via Rule 74.04(c) paragraphs and responses demonstrate-Port Authority’s right to judgment regardless of other facts or factual disputes. See ITT, 854 S.W.2d at 378.6

For a time, we. ourselves tried to glean enough’ from the 1,300-page appellate record to salvage this point. Predictable difficulties and, eventually, neutrality considerations led us to abandon that effort. At any rate, appellate courts have no duty to search the record for facts that might substantiate a point on appeal. Jimmy Jones Excavation, 404 S.W.3d at 924. “That is the duty of the parties, not the function of an appellate court ... [which] cannot spend time searching the record to determine if factual assertions in the brief are supported by the record.” Id. (citations and internal quotation marks omitted),

To recap, RSSI had “the duty to define the scope of the controversy by stating the relevant facts fairly and concisely.” Chopin, 969 S.W.2d at 251. Its failure to identify the relevant facts established per Rule 74.04(c) violates Rule 84.04(c) and justifies dismissal or denial of this point. Id.; see also Executive Bd.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
523 S.W.3d 530, 2017 WL 1885292, 2017 Mo. App. LEXIS 401, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pemiscot-county-port-authority-v-rail-switching-services-inc-moctapp-2017.