Senn v. Manchester Bank of St. Louis

583 S.W.2d 119, 1979 Mo. LEXIS 289
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 19, 1979
Docket59652
StatusPublished
Cited by45 cases

This text of 583 S.W.2d 119 (Senn v. Manchester Bank of St. Louis) 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
Senn v. Manchester Bank of St. Louis, 583 S.W.2d 119, 1979 Mo. LEXIS 289 (Mo. 1979).

Opinions

PER CURIAM.

Manchester Bank (hereinafter bank or defendant) appeals from a judgment in favor of plaintiffs-respondents in the sum of $491,892 actual and $737,838 punitive damages. The suit was tried without a jury as a class action under Rule 52.08(b)(3). Jurisdiction is in this Court pursuant to the Missouri Constitution, art. V, § 3 (1970, amended effective January 2, 1979), because the cause involves a construction of art. I, §§ 2 and 10, and art. V, § 5 thereof. The case was briefed and argued, and an earlier opinion failing of adoption by a majority of the judges voting, the submission was set aside and the cause redocketed for the September 1978 term at which time it was again argued. The Missouri Bankers Association requested and was granted leave to appear as amicus curiae and its interests in this cause appear to be similar to those of the defendant-bank.

North American Developers, Inc., (hereinafter North American) was a Missouri corporation which owned approximately 1100 lots in Jefferson County, Missouri. Early in 1966 North American began selling these unimproved lots to the public as part of a project known as Monaco Lake. At this time only two plats — sections 1 and 3 — containing about 265 lots were platted and recorded. All lots involved in this case were in sections 1 or 3. The purchasers took unrecorded contracts for warranty deeds in return for a cash down payment and a negotiable installment note for the balance. The contracts and notes were identical in form and content except as to [123]*123the description of the property, amounts, dates, and names of purchasers.

North American’s existence as a developer was short-lived. Less than a year after it began selling Monaco Lake lots in quantity, it was in financial difficulty. In March of 1967 the first mechanic’s lien was filed against the development and by the end of September 1967 eleven liens had been filed aggregating $85,823.32. By the end of 1967 North American had ceased operations and the people who had bought lots at Monaco Lake were left with a functionally useless development and a tangle of lawsuits.

On April 27, 1966, Manchester Bank signed a note purchase agreement with North American. Defendant agreed to purchase the notes signed by the purchasers of lots in the Monaco Lake project. The notes were to be purchased for 87½% of the principal due on each note at the time of purchase by the defendant. Of the remaining 12V2%, 2x/2% was retained by defendant as a discount charge and 10% was a dealer reserve against bad debts. The note purchase agreement also required North American to deliver a deed of trust executed on April 27, 1966, which was to constitute a first lien on the Monaco Lake subdivision for the purpose of insuring North American’s obligations under the agreement. North American was also required to deliver along with each endorsed note an executed warranty deed in blank containing a legal description of the lot which was to be delivered to the lot purchaser on full payment of the note. In conjunction with the delivery of the deed, the defendant was to release the lot from its deed of trust covering Monaco Lake.

The defendant began purchasing the notes described above about April 29, 1966, and continued to purchase them until about November 16, 1966. After purchase of a note, the defendant would sent a letter to the maker of the note (the lot purchaser) informing the maker that it had purchased the contract (not just the note) and that payments were thereafter to be made to defendant.

Prior to September 15,1970, upon receipt of final payment, the defendant sent each lot purchaser a form letter transmitting their canceled note and a warranty deed. Simultaneously, a partial deed of release releasing the purchaser’s lot from the defendant’s deed of trust was executed and recorded by the bank. The transmittal letter recommended that the lot purchaser record the warranty deed in Jefferson County.

On approximately June 12,1967, an agent of defendant wrote to North American advising it of its breach of the note purchase agreement. The letter cited the failure of North American to maintain clear title to the property by subjecting it to other deeds of trust and by allowing mechanics’ liens to be filed against the property. The defendant then demanded that North American repurchase the notes held by the defendant in the full amount of the unpaid principal balance ($199,462.40) as per the note purchase agreement. North American was given until June 23, 1967, to comply before the defendant took appropriate steps to enforce its position.

The lienholders grew impatient and on October 13, 1967, Highland Gardens Nursery, Inc., filed an equitable mechanic’s lien proceeding in which it joined all the other lien claimants, North American, defendant-bank, and others. Highland Gardens did not join any of 24 owners who had deeds from North American to a number of lots in the subdivision which had been recorded before the suit was filed, nor did it join any of the lot purchasers with unrecorded contracts for deed. None of these persons moved to intervene in the Highland Gardens suit, nor were they joined by defendant-bank, North American, or any other party in the Highland Gardens suit. This resulted from the fact that defendant did not give notice to the lot purchasers of the filing of the Highland Gardens and other mechanic’s lien suits or of any other liens, such as the Kaiser deeds of trust (apparently Kaiser was the owner and holder of notes secured by deeds of trust recorded in 1967 on all or part of the Monaco Lake property, and these were later assigned to one Don Roth). There was evidence that several of [124]*124the lot owners knew of the existence of the mechanics’ liens.

The trial of the Highland Gardens suit commenced on August 26, 1968, and the cause was taken as submitted on August 29. On the 28th of August, defendant filed a “Supplemental Prayer of Defendants Manchester Bank of St. Louis and Elmer J. Nonnenkamp to Petitions and Cross-Claims of Various Mechanics Liens Claimants.” This “motion,’ sought to have excluded from the court’s judgment lots conveyed of record to third persons prior to the filing of the notice of liens. It also sought to have the mechanics’ liens satisfied first out of assets other than the lots where the purchasers held unrecorded contracts for deeds. Additionally, defendant and Elmer J. Non-nenkamp filed a motion at the close of the evidence to dismiss the lienholders’ claims for failure to join necessary parties as required by § 429.280(1), RSMo 1959, or in the alternative to continue the action and order joinder of all necessary parties. Mr. Non-nenkamp was an officer of defendant and the trustee named in the deed of trust executed by North American in favor of defendant. Section 429.280 requires joinder in equitable mechanic’s lien proceedings of all persons whose interest in the real estate is disclosed by the public record and § 429.-190 permits others interested in the controversy or property charged with the lien to be made parties.

In December of 1969 judgment was entered in the Highland Gardens suit. Five mechanics’ liens aggregating $54,956.13, plus interest, were allowed against sections 1 and 3 of Monaco Lake. Other liens were allowed against adjoining property. It was ordered that sections 1 and 3 be sold and that the proceeds, after expenses, be paid to the claimants in order of their priority. The lienholders were found to have first priority, the defendant second, and other deeds of trust third.

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Bluebook (online)
583 S.W.2d 119, 1979 Mo. LEXIS 289, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/senn-v-manchester-bank-of-st-louis-mo-1979.