Stewart v. Sturms

784 S.W.2d 257, 1989 Mo. App. LEXIS 1833, 1989 WL 153484
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 19, 1989
Docket54680
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 784 S.W.2d 257 (Stewart v. Sturms) 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
Stewart v. Sturms, 784 S.W.2d 257, 1989 Mo. App. LEXIS 1833, 1989 WL 153484 (Mo. Ct. App. 1989).

Opinions

SATZ, Judge.

This case is the consolidation of appeals by two defendants of a $150,000.00 judgment for plaintiff in her action for personal injuries arising from the collision of defendants’ vehicles. In Division, we affirmed the judgment. Defendants’ motions for rehearing were granted. After oral argument before the Court en banc, we affirm.

On October 27, 1984, plaintiff, Laurie Stewart, was riding as a passenger in defendant Thomas Paynter’s (Paynter) vehicle. Paynter’s vehicle collided with defendant Jay Sturms’ (Sturms) vehicle. On January 18, 1985, plaintiff filed a petition for personal injuries against both defendants, seeking $50,000.00 as damages. At that time, § 509.050 RSMo 1978 and parallel Rule 55.05 required a plaintiff seeking money damages for tortious injuries to plead the amount of money sought. In 1987, the statute was amended to eliminate the need to plead a specific dollar amount for tortious injuries but required the prayer to be “for such damages as are fair and reasonable.” § 509.050 RSMo 1987 (Supp). The effective date of the amended statute was July 1, 1987. § 509.050 RSMo 1987 (Supp). The bill enacting this change provided that § 509.050 “shall apply to all causes of action accruing after the effective date....” § 45, L.1987, H.B. 700.

Rule 55.05 was amended in May, 1987 and its amendment tracked the amendment of the statute. Rule 55.05. The effective date of the amended Rule was January 1, 1988, with the notation that it might be followed after July 1, 1987.

The trial of this case began on January 6, 1988. During the first half of plaintiff’s closing argument, she did not mention a dollar amount for damages, and, on defendants’ motion, she was prevented from doing so in the closing half of her argument. The jury returned a verdict for plaintiff against both defendants in the amount of $150,000.00. It assessed fault: 78% against defendant Sturms and 22% against defendant Paynter.

Both defendants objected to the verdict on the ground that it was in excess of the prayer. Plaintiff responded by moving to amend her prayer from $50,000.00 to a prayer for $150,000.00 or to a prayer for “such damages as are fair and reasonable.” The court, thus, was confronted with a conflict between Rule 55.05, which facially permitted plaintiff’s request, and § 509.050 RSMo 1987 (Supp), which facially operated prospectively only, and, thus, facially prohibited plaintiff’s request. The court heard plaintiff’s motions, accepted the $150,-000.00 verdict and entered judgment in that amount in favor of plaintiff, without indicating which of plaintiff’s motions it was granting. The trial court correctly noted that the characterization of and the procedural differences in plaintiff’s alternative motions were not determinative. Defendants raised the same objections to the verdict, along with other assertions of error, in their respective motions for a new trial. These motions were denied. The now consolidated appeals followed.

From the record it appears that both defendants were represented by counsel designated by their respective insurers. [259]*259Defendants Sturms’ policy limits, apparently, were $25,000.00.

Both defendants make several attacks on the entry of the $150,000.00 judgment against them. A number of those attacks are common to both defendants. We address those arguments first.

In their respective Motions for Rehearing in this Court, defendants characterize plaintiff’s pleading of $50,000.00 damages as an allegation of fact, rather than as a prayer for relief. This allegation of fact, defendants contend, bound and limited plaintiff to this amount of damages and, therefore, the verdict received and the judgment entered for $150,000.00 were “void”.

Paragraph 2 of plaintiff’s petition recites a litany of personal injuries, pleads “the sum of about $3,000.00 to date” in lost wages and “the sum of about $7,500.00 to date” for “medical attention”, and, then, in the last sentence, states:

[plaintiff] has suffered and will suffer pain, all to her injury and damage in the sum of Fifty Thousand Dollars ($50,-000.00), for which sum ... [plaintiff] prays judgment against defendant. (See Appendix)

In Division, we read this last sentence as plaintiff’s prayer for relief. This was not a startling or strained reading. It was the interpretation made and the characterization used, repeatedly and consistently, by the trial court and all counsel in their extensive discussion of the $150,000.00 verdict returned by the jury. Thus, a partial example of this colloquy shows:

[Sturms’ Counsel] Judge, at this time I would ask that the Court reduce the verdict to $50,000, which is the amount that the 'prayer in the—to conform to the petition, which is the amount of the prayer in the petition.
[Paynter’s Counsel] I would join in that request.
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[Sturms’ Counsel] Okay. Just so the record is—that is to reduce it in accordance with the amount of the prayer in the amended [petition], which is $50,000.
[[Image here]]
[The Court] [T]he Court was absent during the deliberations by the jury this morning_ [I]n the Court’s absence Judge Drumm accepted the verdict ... deferring ... an ultimate decision ... to this division to finally enter verdict and judgment, because of the problems arising with the result being three times what the prayer was.
[[Image here]]
[Plaintiff’s Counsel] Plaintiff previously requested leave from this Court to amend plaintiff’s prayer_ (Emphasis added)

True to their interpretation at trial, both defendants referred to the pleaded $50,000.00 as a “prayer” for relief in their respective motions for a new trial and never characterized this pleading as an allegation of fact. In these motions, defendants asserted the trial court error to be the entry of a $150,000.00 judgment which exceeded the $50,000.00 of plaintiff’s “prayer”. Thus, the issue of whether plaintiff is bound by an allegation of fact was not raised in defendants’ motions for a new trial, and, therefore, this issue was not preserved for appeal. E.g. State v. Northup, 367 S.W.2d 512, 514 (Mo.1963).

Moreover, neither defendant raised this issue as a Point in his appellate brief. Our review is limited to those issues presented in defendant’s Points. E.g. Smith v. Welch, 611 S.W.2d 398, 399 (Mo.App.1981). Admittedly, in his initial brief, Sturms did make the general argument that:

A pleader is bound by the allegations of his Petition.1 This argument, however, [260]*260was made in the last paragraph under Sturms’ Point III which reads:

[Plaintiff’s] Amendment of the Prayer Following Judgment is Void, Because Rule 55.33(a) and (b) Do Not Apply, And A Judgment May Not Exceed The Amount Prayed For in the Petition.

We are not obligated to search through Sturms’ arguments for issues other than those articulated in his Points. E.g. Abney v. Farmers Mutual Ins. Co. of Sikeston, 608 S.W.2d 576, 578 (Mo.App.1980).

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Stewart v. Sturms
784 S.W.2d 257 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1989)

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Bluebook (online)
784 S.W.2d 257, 1989 Mo. App. LEXIS 1833, 1989 WL 153484, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stewart-v-sturms-moctapp-1989.