STATEWIDE AGENCIES, INC. v. Diggs

62 P.3d 1105, 31 Kan. App. 2d 226, 2003 Kan. App. LEXIS 91
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kansas
DecidedFebruary 7, 2003
Docket87,987
StatusPublished

This text of 62 P.3d 1105 (STATEWIDE AGENCIES, INC. v. Diggs) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
STATEWIDE AGENCIES, INC. v. Diggs, 62 P.3d 1105, 31 Kan. App. 2d 226, 2003 Kan. App. LEXIS 91 (kanctapp 2003).

Opinion

Larson, S.J.:

This landlord/tenant appeal raises the question of whether a landlord who has lawfully obtained possession of a tenant’s personal property is guilty of conversion by refusing to deliver possession to the tenant without the tenant first paying landlord’s expenses and past-due rent.

Statewide Agencies, Inc. (Statewide or landlord) leased residential real estate to Debra Diggs (Diggs or tenant). Diggs failed to pay November 2000 rent when it was due. The required 3 days’ notice to pay rent or quit was given.

On December 5, 2000, landlord filed a petition against tenant seeking unpaid rent, expenses, and immediate possession of the premises. The hearing set for December 13 was not held because *227 tenant had not been served by that time. Landlord filed an amended petition on December 28, 2000, with a hearing date of January 4, 2001. Service was made by tacking on the door of the leased premises and mailing.

Diggs failed to appear at the January 4, 2001, hearing and the court entered an order of immediate possession and writ of restitution dated January 4, 2001, and filed January 8, 2001. The order and writ found landlord should be restored to immediate possession of the leased premises. It also provided that if tenant failed to remove her property from the premises the sheriff should execute the writ and the landlord could change die locks on the premises and store the remaining possessions of the tenant in the leased premises rather than incur the cost of moving and storing items in another facility.

The sheriff served the order and writ by tacking it on the door of the leased premises on January 9, 2001, and required the tenant to move by Januaiy 10, 2001, at 12 p.m. On January 11, 2001, the sheriff evicted the tenant, and the landlord changed the locks to the premises. Tenant requested removal of her personal property and took her purse, medications, and a few other personal items.

At trial Mark McKibben and Kadiy Carey, employees of landlord, testified that 15 days after tenant had been evicted, or January 26, 2001, a notice was placed in a newspaper stating tenant’s property would be sold after February 12, 2001, unless unpaid rent and expenses were paid to landlord. A copy of the notice was sent to Diggs’ last known address within 7 days of publication. McKibben returned several items of tenant’s personal property. The remainder of tenant’s property was taken to a storage facility.

Landlord sold some of tenant’s personal property at rummage sales for $757.19. Landlord’s employees purchased tenant’s appliances for $275. Unsold items were stored.

On March 20, 2001, landlord filed an amended petition seeking judgment of $1,773.54 for past due rent, damages, late charges, and costs. On April 26, 2001, Diggs filed a pro se answer and counterclaim which was never served on Statewide’s counsel. One counterclaim contended landlord had unlawfully converted her *228 personal property; she requested return of her property or the replacement value and punitive damages of $4,000.

A pretrial hearing was set and at this time an attorney entered his appearance for Diggs. The notice of the trial setting for June 13, 2001, stated: “The parties SHALL exchange a list of all witnesses and copies of all exhibits at least ten days prior to trial.” Landlord complied with this notice.

Counsel for both parties first discovered at the June 13, 2001, trial that the tenant had filed counterclaims. Landlord agreed tenant’s counterclaims could be heard, but only if her evidence was limited to her testimony because she had not complied with the trial notice. The trial court agreed, and the court trial resulted in the following testimony.

McKibben testified as to the lease, the default, the notice concerning Diggs’ property previously referred to, and the sale of part of the property. Landlord claimed past-due rent from November 2000 through January 2001, damage to the premises, and moving and storage expenses for tenant’s property. McKibben and Carey stated tenant never asked for the return of her belongings between the date of the eviction and “the date they had statutory authority to sell or dispose of the personal property.” They also stated tenant did not offer to pay any rent or damages or ask for the return of her property prior to the sale of her property.

McKibben and Carey were asked at trial if tenant had requested the return of her personal belongings, would they have returned them if the rent was not paid. Landlord claimed both responded that tenant never asked for her belongings, but they would not have returned the items if she had. Tenant contended, and the district court held, that McKibben, Carey, and tenant had testified tenant asked landlord for the return of her property prior to the published notice and was told she could have her properly when she paid the rent. Tenant also testified her daughter asked for tenant’s belongings, but tenant did not know when she did so. Tenant testified as to the value of her property. There was never any testimony that tenant offered to pay landlord’s expenses and past-due rent.

At the conclusion of the hearing, the trial court awarded landlord a judgment against tenant for $1,116.24 for past rent and damages. *229 As to tenant’s conversion claim, it found tenant requested removal of her personal property the day of the eviction and within days after the eviction but landlord refused unless she paid past-due rent. The trial court held the landlord had fully complied with K.S.A. 2001 Supp. 58-2565(d) as to all of the procedures for the sale of tenant’s property. Notwithstanding this finding, it held landlord wrongfully converted tenant’s property. Tenant’s other counterclaims and request for punitive damages were denied.

The trial court scheduled a later hearing for July 2001 concerning the value of tenant’s converted property. Landlord objected, contending tenant was bound by the notice of trial and no further evidence by the tenant should be considered. The trial court ruled that further proceedings would be held on tenant’s damage claim once she had complied with the notice requirements.

Eleven days before the July hearing, tenant provided a list of witnesses and exhibits that she intended to use at the hearing. Landlord again objected, but the trial court found its notice requirements had now been met and allowed tenant to introduce additional evidence beyond that presented at the June hearing.

Tenant, her ex-husband, and her daughter testified at the July hearing as to the value of her property. Tenant provided a list of her personal property at the leased premises showing a total value of $20,089.97. This included a claim for a diamond ring that had been worth $3,000 sewn into a dress hem. Tenant’s ex-husband testified he did not know that she had a diamond ring.

An auctioneer with 20 years’ experience testified for landlord as an expert witness as to the value of tenant’s properly. Based on tenant’s list and her unsold property, he valued each item with his valuation totaling $1,512.

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Bluebook (online)
62 P.3d 1105, 31 Kan. App. 2d 226, 2003 Kan. App. LEXIS 91, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/statewide-agencies-inc-v-diggs-kanctapp-2003.