Thomas v. Lloyd

17 S.W.3d 177, 2000 Mo. App. LEXIS 730, 2000 WL 628808
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 16, 2000
Docket22733
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 17 S.W.3d 177 (Thomas v. Lloyd) 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
Thomas v. Lloyd, 17 S.W.3d 177, 2000 Mo. App. LEXIS 730, 2000 WL 628808 (Mo. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

KENNETH W. SHRUM, Judge.

The disintegration of the romantic and business relationship between Mary Dean Thomas (Plaintiff) and Eubert Gayle Lloyd, Jr., (Defendant) led to this suit. In her petition, Plaintiff asked the court to annul the parties’ purported marriage, impose a constructive trust on real estate, quiet title to real estate, partition real estate, award damages for fraud, order an accounting, enter an order of replevin, and award damages for assault and battery. Via counterclaim, Defendant sought dissolution of a partnership and an accounting, damages based on a fraud theory, damages for malicious prosecution, and damages for assault and battery.

The trial court found that the subject real estate could not be partitioned in kind, ordered the same sold at public auction, and ordered the net sale proceeds to be distributed in the following ratios: Ninety-eight percent to Plaintiff and two percent to Defendant. After it adjudged the parties’ cattle business was a partnership, the court dissolved the partnership, directed that certain partnership assets be sold at public auction, ordered the net sale proceeds to be dispersed in the ratio of sixty-six percent to Plaintiff and thirty-four percent to Defendant, and ordered in-kind division of other partnership personal property. The court denied all other relief sought by the parties , and entered judgment “against them respectively on their prayers.” Defendant appeals. Richard and Carolyn Hoffman were defendants because they held a deed of trust on the real estate that was the subject of the partition count. They have not appealed.

We affirm.

FACTS

Plaintiffs husband of thirty years died in February 1988. In February 1989, Plaintiff met Defendant in Mobile, Alabama, while traveling. Their chance meeting quickly blossomed into a romantic relationship. When Plaintiff returned to her home in Maryland in late February 1989, Defendant accompanied her and they began living together.

Initially, Defendant told Plaintiff he worked for a major oil company, had been outside the country for the past three *182 years, was independently wealthy, and was not married. As Plaintiff later learned, none of these statements was true. In truth, Defendant had recently been released from prison. He had multiple criminal convictions, including convictions for counterfeiting and stealing. Further, Defendant’s assets at the time were no more than $2,000, and he was legally married to Patricia Lloyd.

Evidence as to when Plaintiff learned of Defendant’s deceptions was contradictory. The trial court found that Plaintiff first learned of Defendant’s criminal history and lack of wealth soon after she returned to Maryland in February 1989. It found that Plaintiff discovered Defendant was not single “soon after her void marriage to Defendant.” The parties’ “void marriage” occurred July 10,1989, in Canada.

Except for occasional vacations, Plaintiff and Defendant resided in Plaintiffs home in Maryland from late . February 1989 through October 1990. During that period, Defendant made repairs and renovations to Plaintiffs house. In October 1990, Plaintiff sold her Maryland home in an “owner-finance” arrangement.

The parties then moved to Missouri. After looking at several farm properties, they bought a 600-acre farm in Crawford County, Missouri, for $150,000. The deed was dated March 8, 1991. The grantees named in the deed and the type of tenancy created were as follows: Plaintiff, a single person, and Defendant, a single person, as joint tenants with right of survivorship. The $150,000 purchase price was paid as follows: $100,000 cash downpayment and a $50,000 purchase money note that called for 120 monthly installments of $633.38.

After buying the farm, Plaintiff and Defendant bought cattle and farm machinery, then began operating a cattle business on the property. The parties also made improvements to the farm, including remodeling an old farm house in which they lived. In June 1992, they began construction on a 4,200 square-foot house. Later, the house was expanded to 6,500 square feet. By the time of trial, Plaintiffs expenditures for labor and materials on the home exceeded $201,000.

A progressive deterioration in the parties’ relationship led to the filing of this multiple-count lawsuit in October 1995. After entry of the judgment outlined above, Defendant appealed.

STANDARD OF REVIEW

Our standard of review in this court-tried case is explained in Murphy v. Carron, 536 S.W.2d 30 (Mo.banc 1976). The decision of the trial court will be affirmed on appeal unless no substantial evidence supports it, it is against the weight of the evidence, it erroneously declares the law, or it erroneously applies the law. Id. at 32[1], The power to set aside a trial court’s judgment on the ground that it is against the weight of the evidence will be exercised with caution and only when the reviewing court has a firm belief that the decree or judgment is wrong. Searcy v. Seedorff, 8 S.W.3d 113, 116[2] (Mo.banc 1999). “In reviewing a contention that the evidence is insufficient, the evidence is viewed in the fight most favorable to the verdict, and deference is accorded to the trial court’s assessment of credibility.” Id. at 116[3].

DISCUSSION AND DECISION

Point VII: Failure to Include Real Estate as Partnership Asset

We first consider Defendant’s seventh point relied on, in which Defendant charges the trial court with reversible error for not classifying the farm real estate as a partnership asset. Defendant claims he was prejudiced by such error because if the farm was properly classified as partnership property, any proceeds (after proper offsets) from a sale thereof would be divided in accordance with the partners’ interests. He insists that exclusion of the real estate from the partnership assets is *183 “clearly not supported by the evidence.” We disagree.

“The true method of determining whether, as between partners themselves, land standing in the names of individuals is to be treated as partnership property is to ascertain from the conduct of the parties and their course of dealing, the understanding and intention of the partners themselves, which, when ascertained, unquestionably should control.” State Auto. and Cas. v. Johnson, 766 S.W.2d 113, 122[5] (Mo.App.1989); Hudson v. French, 211 Mo.App. 175, 241 S.W. 443, 446[5] (1922). Whether real estate titled in the names of individual partners is partnership property is a question of fact and the burden of proof is on the one alleging that the ownership does not accord with the legal title. 68 C.J.S. Partnership § 75, at 277 (1998).

In attempting to demonstrate that the parties intended for the real estate to be a partnership asset, Defendant points to the joint ownership of the farm and the fact that the parties operated the partnership cattle business on the farm as evidence that the two understood and intended for the farm to be a partnership asset.

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Bluebook (online)
17 S.W.3d 177, 2000 Mo. App. LEXIS 730, 2000 WL 628808, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thomas-v-lloyd-moctapp-2000.