Wilson v. Lodwick

96 S.W.3d 879, 2002 Mo. App. LEXIS 2470, 2002 WL 31863535
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 24, 2002
DocketWD 60970
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 96 S.W.3d 879 (Wilson v. Lodwick) 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
Wilson v. Lodwick, 96 S.W.3d 879, 2002 Mo. App. LEXIS 2470, 2002 WL 31863535 (Mo. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

PAUL M. SPINDEN, Presiding Judge.

This is a malpractice lawsuit against David Lodwick in which Ralph and Carolyn Wilson accuse him of breach of contract and negligence for not filing a financing statement to perfect the Wilsons’ security interest. The circuit court granted summary judgment for Lodwick on the ground that the Wilsons’ claim was haired by the statute of limitations. Because the circuit court erred in granting summary judgment to Lodwick on the basis of a motion that did not state a prima facie case for his affirmative defense of limitations, we reverse the summary judgment and remand for further proceedings.

In seeking summary judgment, Lod-wick’s motion pleaded:

1. [Ralph and Carolyn Wilson] are the owners of a Missouri corporation known as R <& C Auto Parts, Inc., which in 1990, owned and operated three auto parts stores[.]
2. R & C Auto Parts owned the furnishings, fixtures, shop equipment and inventory in the parts stores....
3. In 1990, the inventory and other assets of R & C Auto Parts were sold to McClain Auto Parts, Inc....
4. The sale was to be financed in part by a promissory note from McClain *881 Auto Parts secured by a first lien in inventory and other assets[.]
5. The terms of the sale of assets included a $100,000 down payment at closing with R & C financing for the balance.... R & C Auto Parts required a first lien on the collateral for the loan[.]
6. At the same time, McClain Auto Parts borrowed the down payment from Auto Parts Finance Company (“AFCO”) and arranged for ongoing inventory financing with APS, Inc. Both arrangements were secured by interests in McClain Auto Parts inventory and other assets[.]
7. APS, the inventory supplier, and its finance arm, AFCO, required a lien on the same collateral, including the auto parts inventory which also was used as collateral for the lien to R & C Auto Parts[.]
8. Mr. Wilson, on behalf of R & C Auto Parts, was adamant that the Seller would have a first lien:
A. There was no way that I was going to take a second. I had to be first or the sale would not go through. [Excerpt from Ralph Wilson’s deposition.]
Q. Throughout this sales process, from the time of Ralph’s first contact to you, and I think you said in June, until the final closing of this, did Ralph’s position as far as his desire to be in the No. 1 position ever change?
A. No. Ralph was adamant about being first secured, or he wasn’t going to sell them to Gene McClain. He had to be first secured.
[Excerpt from William Licklider’s deposition.]
9. [Ralph and Carolyn Wilson], McClains, APS and AFCO, agreed that to accomplish the result of R & C Auto
Parts having a first priority lien, APS and AFCO would delay filing their UCC-1 financing statements until UCC-1 financing statements were filed for R & C Auto Parts. ...
10. The security interests of APS and AFCO were to be subordinate to the security interest of R & C Auto Parts[.]
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11. Defendant David Lodwick drafted documents with regard to the asset sale, including Promissory Note, Purchase Agreement, Security Agreement, Bill of Sale, and UCC-1 Financing Statement[.] ...
12. The documents were executed, at closing of the sale in Mr. Lodwick’s office on July 30,1990[.]
13. Defendant Lodwick did not file the UCC-1 financing statements in 1990[.]
14. AFCO loaned McClain Auto Parts $100,000 in August 1990[.]
15. In September, 1990, APS and AFCO filed their financing statements^]
16. The financing statement filed on behalf of APS in September 1990 related to the $100,000 loan by APS to McClain Auto Parts[.]
17. [Ralph and Carolyn Wilson] learned in 1991 that financing statements for R & C Auto Parts had not been filed in 1990[.]
18. UCC-1 Financing Statements were ultimately prepared and recorded in 1991 by [Ralph and Carolyn Wilson’s] personal attorney, Larry Schulz, to perfect R & C Auto Parts’ security interest in the collateral....
19. The Wilsons’ personal attorney Larry Schulz prepared and filed the UCC financing statements on behalf of R & C Auto Parts in 1991 after conducting a search of public fifing records. *882 The search showed hen filings by the auto parts companies....
20. In 1991, [Ralph and Carolyn Wilson] understood that if the R & C Auto Parts’ financing statements had not been filed in 1990 before APS and AFCO financing statements, the R & C Auto Parts lien may not be first in priority.
Q. What was your understanding of the significance of the fact that these UCC-l’s hadn’t been filed in 1991 on behalf of R & C?
A. Well, I found out later that if they weren’t filed first, then you weren’t first secured.
Q. And what was your understanding then of the significance you were now in a third place or presumed — could have been a third place as opposed to a first place?
A. I don’t — I’m not sure I knew I was third then because it was my understanding that he didn’t find the filing on APS, but maybe he did. I don’t know. That’s been so long ago, I really can’t remember. But I do know that third was not a very good position for me to be in.
Q. Not what you had bargained for, in any event?
A. And not what I bargained for, right.
[Excerpt from Ralph Wilson’s deposition.] ...
21. The Wilsons’ attorney submitted bills for the UCC search and preparing the financing statements that were filed in 1991....
22. The attorney fee bills for the 1991 UCC search and preparation by attorney Larry Schulz were paid[.] ...
23. Neither Mr. and Mrs. Wilson nor their attorney, Larry Schulz, contacted Attorney Lodwick or William Licklider in 1991 after the Wilsons learned that the financing statements had not been filed....

As a defending party, Lodwick is entitled to summary judgment if he is able to establish “that there is no genuine dispute as to the existence of each of the facts necessary to support [his] properly-pleaded affirmative defense.” ITT Commercial Finance Corporation v. Mid-America Marine Supply Corporation,

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Bluebook (online)
96 S.W.3d 879, 2002 Mo. App. LEXIS 2470, 2002 WL 31863535, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilson-v-lodwick-moctapp-2002.