Sample v. Bank of Popular Bluff

207 S.W.2d 55, 239 Mo. App. 1152, 1947 Mo. App. LEXIS 367
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 30, 1947
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 207 S.W.2d 55 (Sample v. Bank of Popular Bluff) 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
Sample v. Bank of Popular Bluff, 207 S.W.2d 55, 239 Mo. App. 1152, 1947 Mo. App. LEXIS 367 (Mo. Ct. App. 1947).

Opinion

*1157 BLAIR, J.

The issues in this case are well defined by the pleadings. On August 10, 1945, plaintiff '(appellant here) filed her petition and alleged that she had paid $500.00 to defendant (respondent here) on March 2, 1944, and $500.00 on April 6, 1944, and that defendant “agreed to return to the plaintiff said sums six weeks after date.” .

The answer, filed August 25, 1945, admitted that defendant had received said sums at such times; but alleged that the original sum of $500.00 was paid to defendant by plaintiff for an option for thirty days on certain real estate (a hotel) in Poplar Bluff, Missouri, to purchase said hotel for the sum an price of $40,000.00, and that the second $500.00 was paid to defendant by plaintiff for an extension of time on such option for thirty days more; and that, if plaintiff paid said sum of $40,000.00, then said sum of $1000.00 was to apply on the purchase price of such hotel; and that if plaintiff failed to purchase said hotel for $40,000.00, defendant could retain said $1000.00.

Defendants further alleged that plaintiff afterwards informed defendants that she would not purchase said hotel and, thereupon, defendant became entitled to retain said $1000.00.

There are allegations concerning another and subsequent deal on the same hotel, which will be mentioned later in this opinion, but we do not think such later negotiations had a bearing on the $1000.00, except as they tended to show that plaintiff did not then expect said $1000.00 to be returned to her.

The reply of plaintiff denied specifically' that she paid defendant the $1000.00 under the conditions alleged in defendant’s answer, and claimed that it was agreed that she would but said hotel only on condition that she sold a farm for $30,000.00.

The cause was sent to Ripley County, Missouri, on change of venue, but was returned to Butler County on stipulation afterwards and it was continued.

The ease came on for trial before the Judge of the Butler County Circuit Court, sitting as a jury. It was then agreed that plaintiff might put on her evidence first, with certain testimony to be heard at a later date. The testimony of defendant was offered on May 14, 1946.

At the close of all the testimony, plaintiff was given ten days to plead further, if she desired. The petition seems not to have been amended in any respect, and plaintiff evidently did not take advantage of such leave.

On August 13, 1946, the trial court made its finding of facts and entered judgment for defendant and dismissed plaintiff’s petition. *1158 After an unsuccessful motion for new trial, plaintiff duly appealed to this Court.

We have painstakingly gone over the 218 pages of record Or transcript on appeal in this case, in order to see if the trial judge, sitting as a jury, made any error in the trial of the case.

His rulings on veidence, if anything, were favorable to plaintiff. At least, plaintiff ean have no complaint on that' score,' and makes none in her brief.

Plaintiff says that there was no option contract between herself and defendant on March 2, 1944, when the first $500.00 was paid, for the reason that there was no meeting of the minds of plaintiff and defendant’s president and cashier, and because the money put up then and later “was for the purpose of .showing the appellant’s good faith and intention to buy the Hotel when and if her farm was sold for $30,000.00.” And she cites, on this pointf, 13 C. J. 263 and 264; 66 C. J. 490 and 493; Levine v. Humphreys, 297 Mo. 555; Real Estate Co. v. Spellbrink, 211 Mo. 671; Huggins v. Safford, 67 M. A. 469, and Dezell v. Fidelity & Casualty Co. 176 Mo. 253, l. c. 265.

We have examined each of the authorities and cases cited. They hold that, in order to constitute a contract, there must be a mutual understanding of the facts entering into such contract and nothing can be left to conjecture. There is no dispute about such being the law, and those eases need not be noticed further.

But this was a case before the court, as the trier of the facts, and, in such case, the facts, as found by the trial court, where there is any evidence to support such findings, or reasonable deductions from the facts'in evidence, are accepted by the appellate court as the facts in .the case. Broderick v. Lucas’ Ex’r, 182 S. W. 154; Idalia Realty & Development Co. v. Norman’s Southeastern Ry. Co. 219 S. W. 923; Leavitt v. Taylor, 163 Mo. 158, 63 S. W. 385; Craig v. State of Missouri, 29 U. S. 410; 7 L. R. D. 903.

There was ample evidence to support such findings as to both sums of $500.00 paid to defendant. Plaintiff and her son Truman insisted that the $500.00 was put up as earnest money and not 'for an option, and that the second $500.00 was put up for the same purpose; but the trial judge did not so find.

On the other hand, defendant’s testimony tended to show that the original $500.00 was put up by plaintiff for, a thirty-day option on- the Gibbons Hotel in Poplar Bluff, and that the second $500.00 was put up by plaintiff for an extension of time of thirty days more, for plaintiff to purchase said hotel for $40,000.00, and that defendant bank then took said hotel off of the market for the full time and did not try to sell it to anyone else during that period of time. Defendant concededly was in a position to give plaintiff a good and sufficient warranty deed, at any time.

*1159 The findings of the court are quite interesting and are here' set out in full:

“The Court finds that plaintiff deposited with defendant the sum of five hundred dollars ($500.00) oiltwo (2) occasions for the purpose of holding the Gibbons Hotel, owned by the defendant, off of the open market for two (2) periods of thirty (30) days each; that the further agreement was that the defendant would convey said hotel to the plaintiff by good warranty deed for the sum of forty thoxisand dollars ($40,000.00) with the sums deposited to be applied on the purchase when the deal was consummated.

“The Court further finds that one R. H. Purvis, mentioned in evidence, acted as an agent for the plaintiff in the sale of her farm mentioned in evidence and also acted in his individual capacity as a real estate dealer to sell the Gibbons Hotel; that said R. H. Purvis did not at any time act as the general agent of the defendant but to the contrary entered into the transaction between plaintiff, and defendant for his own personal gain and profit as a real estate agent.

“The Court further finds that the defendant held the hotel property in question open for the plaintiff for a period of more than sixty (60)- days and subsequently tried to consummate the agreement for the sale of said property to the plaintiff but that plai?xtiff failed or refused to close the purchase agreement or pay the balance due therefor ; that by reason of the actions of the'plaintiff, plaintiff has forfeited the five hundred dollars ($500.00) paid on one occasion and the five hundred dollars ($500.00) paid on a'latter occasion.”

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207 S.W.2d 55, 239 Mo. App. 1152, 1947 Mo. App. LEXIS 367, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sample-v-bank-of-popular-bluff-moctapp-1947.