THAYER FARM CENTER/MEYER FEED, Plaintiff-Respondent v. DON BUSH, SR., JALONNE BUSH, DON BUSH, JR., and SALLY BUSH

CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 30, 2024
DocketSD37750
StatusPublished

This text of THAYER FARM CENTER/MEYER FEED, Plaintiff-Respondent v. DON BUSH, SR., JALONNE BUSH, DON BUSH, JR., and SALLY BUSH (THAYER FARM CENTER/MEYER FEED, Plaintiff-Respondent v. DON BUSH, SR., JALONNE BUSH, DON BUSH, JR., and SALLY BUSH) 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.

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THAYER FARM CENTER/MEYER FEED, Plaintiff-Respondent v. DON BUSH, SR., JALONNE BUSH, DON BUSH, JR., and SALLY BUSH, (Mo. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

Missouri Court of Appeals Southern District

In Division THAYER FARM CENTER/MEYER ) FEED, ) ) Plaintiff-Respondent, ) ) v. ) No. SD37750 ) Filed: October 30, 2024 DON BUSH, SR., JALONNE BUSH, ) DON BUSH, JR., and SALLY BUSH, ) ) Defendants-Appellants. )

APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF OREGON COUNTY

Honorable Steven F. Lynxwiler, Special Judge

REVERSED AND REMANDED WITH DIRECTIONS

Don Bush, Sr.; Jalonne Bush; and Don Bush, Jr. (hereinafter referred to collectively

as Defendants and individually as Don, Sr., Jalonne, and Don, Jr., respectively) appeal from

a judgment against them in the amount of $61,520.66, plus interest, in a suit brought by

Thayer Farm Center/Meyer Feed (hereinafter referred to as Thayer). 1 On appeal,

Defendants’ second point asserts that Thayer’s petition pleaded an “account stated” theory

1 Because all Defendants share the same surname, we refer to each one individually by given name for purposes of clarity. No familiarity or disrespect is intended. Don, Jr.’s wife, Sally Bush, also was named as a defendant, but she was found not liable to Thayer at trial. No one has appealed from that ruling. Therefore, we do not refer to her as one of the defendants on appeal. We refer to her by given name when appropriate for context. of recovery, but the trial court entered judgment on an unpleaded “action on account”

theory of recovery. Because this point has merit, we reverse the judgment. We remand

with directions to enter judgment for Defendants and to assess court costs in their favor as

the prevailing parties.

Factual and Procedural History

On January 9, 2018, Thayer filed its lawsuit against Defendants. The petition

contained two counts.

Count I of the petition was directed to defendants Don, Sr. and Jalonne. In relevant

part, Count I alleged:

That on or about the 6th day of February, 2015, Defendants Don and Jalonne Bush entered into an agreement with [Thayer] to pay for certain goods and services.

That the total balance now due for said goods and services so sold is Forty- Five Thousand, Nine Hundred Fifty and 35/100 Dollars ($45,950.35), and said amount is still due and unpaid.

Count II of the petition was directed to defendants Don, Jr. and Sally Bush. In

relevant part, Count II alleged:

That on or about the 6th day of February, 2015, Defendants Don Jr. and Sally Bush entered into an agreement with [Thayer] to pay for certain goods and services.

That the total balance now due for said goods and services so sold is Forty- Five Thousand, Nine Hundred Fifty and 35/100 Dollars ($45,950.35), and said amount is still due and unpaid.

Defendants filed an answer denying these and other allegations in the petition.

A bench trial commenced on August 18, 2020, and all parties waived opening

statements. Thayer’s only witness was Roger Meyer (Meyer). Meyer testified that he

2 operated Thayer and had sold goods and products to Defendants. 2 The following colloquy

then occurred:

[Thayer’s counsel]: And so during the time period of 2005 through 2012, did the defendants request certain products be sold to them on credit from your business?

A. Yes, sir.

[Defense counsel]: Objection. At this point, I’m going to object that that’s beyond the scope of the pleadings. The pleadings that [Thayer’s counsel] has filed seeks a – stating that on the 6 day of February, 2015, Defendants Don and Jalonne Bush entered into an agreement with [Thayer] to pay for certain goods and services. The period of time in which he is alleging that there was an agreement reached is 2015 forward to pay for certain goods and services. I would also further object that the period of time that he has asked to discuss about would be outside the statute of limitations of five years, Judge.

[Thayer’s counsel]: Judge, this is actually a suit on account. Statute of limitations is 10 years and statute of limitations as an affirmative defense must be pleaded. It is not pleaded in this action, so it cannot be raised now at trial as a defense.

[Defense counsel]: It’s not pleaded, Judge, because he’s alleged February 15, – or excuse me, 6 day of February, 2015. I have to rely upon his pleadings regarding any affirmative defense. Today is the first date, Judge, that we have had the discussion regarding any such documentation or invoices from a period of time from [2005] to 2012.

The trial court overruled the objection and granted defense counsel a continuing objection

to any testimony about charges prior to February 6, 2015.

2 Thayer was operated pursuant to a partnership between Meyer and his wife. Missouri adheres to the common-law aggregate theory of partnership, which means that a general partnership has no legal existence separate from its members. See Unifund CCR Partners v. Kinnamon, 384 S.W.3d 703, 705-06 (Mo. App. 2012). This remained true after Missouri adopted the Uniform Partnership Law in RSMo Chapter 358. Unifund CCR Partners, 384 S.W.3d at 705-06. Bringing suit in the name of Thayer, rather than in the individual names of Meyer and his wife, presented a capacity-to-sue issue, which was waived because it was not raised in a timely Rule 55.27(a) motion or in Defendants’ answer. Unifund CCR Partners, 384 S.W.3d at 710; Rule 55.27(g)(1) Missouri Court Rules (2018). 3 Meyer identified Exhibit 1, which was a collection of handwritten invoices showing

miscellaneous products purchased over the years. Meyer testified that the listed items were

purchased by Defendants, who were “[b]asically, family.” 3

Exhibits 2, 3, 4 and 5 were a collection of handwritten invoices for “Circle B” from

2005-2008. With respect to Exhibits 2-5, Meyer testified that all of the invoices referenced

Circle B at the top. According to Meyer, Circle B was the name of the farm operated by

Don, Sr., Jalonne, and Don, Jr. Despite the name on the invoices, Meyer testified that the

purchases were made by the individuals who came to get the feed at the time of the sales.

Exhibits 2-5 were admitted over objection. The court acknowledged that it was taking all

of defense counsel’s objections with the case.

Meyer was next shown Exhibits 6-9, which were invoices for “Bub Ranch” from

2005-2010. Meyer testified that all of the feed and supplies were purchased by Defendants,

who were family, even though the invoices said “Bub” or “Bub Ranch” on them. Exhibits

6-9 were admitted.

Meyer testified that the total charge on all of these tickets for feed purchases was

$106,060.66. Defendants had paid $44,540, which left a balance of $61,520.66. The last

payment occurred on February 1, 2015.

According to Meyer, he met with Defendants to discuss what was owed. Meyer

testified that the “[m]eeting was basically[,] they’d pay off the feed bill if we signed off on

the ranch.” This was the only meeting Meyer had with Defendants on February 6, 2015.

According to Meyer, “Don Senior told me he would pay the feed bill if, you know, [my

3 Because Meyer is married to Holly, the daughter of Don, Sr. and Jalonne, all Defendants are Meyer’s in-laws. 4 wife, Holly, and I would] sign off on that farm.” Meyer testified that he believed there was

$61,520 owed on the feed bill.

Meyer then identified Exhibit 10, which was a calculation of the balance due with

accrued interest: a sum of $92,237.86. Exhibit 10 was admitted. During cross-

examination, Meyer made the following admissions:

1. Don, Sr. never applied for credit with Thayer.

2. Don, Sr. never signed anything agreeing to pay for feed.

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THAYER FARM CENTER/MEYER FEED, Plaintiff-Respondent v. DON BUSH, SR., JALONNE BUSH, DON BUSH, JR., and SALLY BUSH, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thayer-farm-centermeyer-feed-plaintiff-respondent-v-don-bush-sr-moctapp-2024.