State ex rel. Watkins v. Trans-America Insurance Co.

453 S.W.2d 667, 1970 Mo. App. LEXIS 637
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 6, 1970
DocketNo. 24748
StatusPublished

This text of 453 S.W.2d 667 (State ex rel. Watkins v. Trans-America Insurance Co.) 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
State ex rel. Watkins v. Trans-America Insurance Co., 453 S.W.2d 667, 1970 Mo. App. LEXIS 637 (Mo. Ct. App. 1970).

Opinion

MAUGHMER, Commissioner.

This case came to the writer recently on a reassignment. It is a suit against the surety on the official bond of a notary public. The court sustained defendant’s motion to dismiss the petition for failure to state a cause of action and plaintiff has appealed. On the appeal from that ruling we assume as true all properly pleaded factual allegations of the petition.

Irma M. Roberts on April S, 1965, was commissioned as a notary public within and for the County of Jackson, in the State of Missouri, for a term of four years. Mrs. Roberts as principal, and the defendant Trans-America Insurance Company, a California corporation doing business in Missouri, as surety, entered into a performance bond payable to the State of Missouri in the principal sum of $5,000.00, conditioned upon the “faithful performance” by her of the duties of the office of notary public. She took the required oath and entered upon the duties of the office. Irma M. Roberts was at all times herein mentioned, the wife of one Billy D. Roberts, who was the defendant in a lawsuit pending in the Circuit Court of Jackson County, Missouri, being case No. 646890. On or about the_day of September, 1966, judgment had been entered against him in that cause and immediately thereafter he had filed a motion for new trial.

On September 21, 1966, while Mr. Roberts’ motion for new trial was pending, Mrs. Roberts wrote up what purported to be the written statement of one “Donna Sidener, formerly Donna Beemer,” notarized it, and filed the document in the Jackson County Circuit Court in support of her husband’s motion for new trial. This statement was designated as Exhibit A, and was filed as [668]*668a part of plaintiff’s petition. We set it forth in full:

“AFFIDAVIT
STATE OF MO.
COUNTY OF JACKSON Sept. 21, 1966
I, Donna Sidener, formally (sic) Donna Beemer, want to retract my statement made under oath Sept. 12, 1966, at the county court house. I am making this statement now before a witness and of my own free will and accord.
In the fall of 1962, I was employed as a baby sitter in the home of Ronald Jenkins. Mr. Jenkins had a race car in his garage. He told me some one was going to pick it up. He also told me he owed Mr. Roberts some money. I wondered why he was telling me this. I was supposed to call him when the car was picked up. About a week later, a man, I did not know came to the door and said he was taking the race car. I saw a truck in the drive. It was light blue, or green, I’m not sure. There were two other men in the truck. I did not recognize them. When they left, Alvin Jenkins called his father and told him the truck was gone.
Later, Mr. Jenkins told me it was a blue truck with Little Roberts on the side and Bill Roberts picked the car up. He told me later, Bill Roberts said he picked up the car, so I believed all this to be true. I thought everything was settled until this month.
Mr. Jenkins’s • lawyer, John Watkins, came to me and told me he was going to court over the race car and I had to testify. I told him I couldn’t remember anything and didn’t want to go. He said I had to testify. He told me again it was a tow truck with Little Roberts name on the side and Bill Roberts in it. He told my husband he was going to try and get $300.00 from Mr. Roberts in court. I only did what I thought was right after Mr. Jenkins and his lawyer talked to me.
The first time I saw picture of tow truck was the day in court. I told lawyer I was not sure.
I am hard of hearing and could not hear the lawyers very much. I did not mean to make any false statements.
(Two pages.)
Subscribed and sworn /s/ Donna Sidener
714 N. Main, Indep.
to before me Sept. 21,1966.
Notary-Irma M. Robert (i)
Wittness (sic)-Mary Jane Simpson-629 S. Ash
Indep. Mo.
(FILED: October 12, 1966)”

Plaintiff’s petition by paragraphs 8 and 9, which we now incorporate in toto, sets forth his theory of liability in this suit:

“8. Plaintiff states that Irma M. Roberts intended by the language of the aforesaid purported affidavit to cast aspersions on the professional reputation and ethics of the relator, John A. Watkins, by inferring that Donna Sidener was induced by relator, John A. Watkins, to testify falsely in the aforesaid Circuit Court Case No. 646,890.

“9. Plaintiff states that as a direct result of the breach by Irma M. Roberts of her duty and oath as Notary Public, relator, John A. Watkins, was forced to defend and protect his professional reputation in a court of law and has had his professional reputation among the members of the Bench [669]*669and Bar of the State of Missouri impaired to his damage in the sum of FIVE THOUSAND AND NO/IOO DOLLARS ($5,-000.00).”

We are told by plaintiff’s brief that in the case of Ronald A. Jenkins v. Billy D. Roberts, No. 646890 in the Circuit Court, and No. 24740 in the Kansas City Court of Appeals, there was a verdict and judgment against Mr. Roberts for conversion by him of a racing car owned by Mr. Jenkins, and that Mr. John A. Watkins, the plaintiff-appellant here, was the attorney for Mr. Jenkins in that lawsuit against Mr. Roberts. We assume such are the facts and that the Sidener affidavit was filed in support of defendant Roberts’ motion for new trial.

Plaintiff alleges that (1) Donna Sidener had not sworn to the affidavit, (2) that the facts set forth therein were false, and (3) Irma M. Roberts intended by the language of the affidavit and by the filing of it in court to “cast aspersions on the professional reputation and ethics of the relator, John A. Watkins, by inferring that Donna Si-dener was induced by relator, John A. Watkins, to testify falsely in the aforesaid * * case.”

It is apparently plaintiff’s theory that Mrs. Roberts induced Donna Sidener to sign the affidavit, that its contents were false, it was published by filing in the Jenkins suit and was libelous as to the plaintiff. The affidavit made the following and only the following statements concerning Mr. Watkins, the plaintiff in our case:

1. “Mr. Jenkins’s lawyer, John Watkins, came to me and told me he was going to court over the race car and I had to testify.” Be it true or false, we find nothing libelous in this statement.

2. “I told him I couldn’t remember anything and didn’t want to go.” There is no libel here.

3. “He said I had to testify.” Of course she had to testify, if subpoenaed.

4. “He told me it was a tow truck with Little Roberts name on the side and Bill Roberts in it. He told my husband he was going to try and get $300.00 from Mr. Roberts in court.” There is no libel in these two sentences.

5. “I only did what I thought was right after Mr. Jenkins and his lawyer talked to me. * * * I did not mean to make any false statements.” Again we find no libel.

It is not disputed but that Donna Sidener signed the statement or affidavit which we have referred to as Exhibit A. It indicates on its face that the signature was witnessed by one Mary Jane Simpson who is not otherwise referred to herein.

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Bluebook (online)
453 S.W.2d 667, 1970 Mo. App. LEXIS 637, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-watkins-v-trans-america-insurance-co-moctapp-1970.