Woods v. Standard Personal Loan Plan, Inc.

420 S.W.2d 380
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 17, 1967
Docket32607
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 420 S.W.2d 380 (Woods v. Standard Personal Loan Plan, Inc.) 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
Woods v. Standard Personal Loan Plan, Inc., 420 S.W.2d 380 (Mo. Ct. App. 1967).

Opinion

BRADY, Commissioner.

Plaintiff received judgment for $2,200.00 actual and $7,000.00 punitive damages in her action for malicious prosecution of a civil action. Defendant appeals contending the trial court erred in denying its motion for a directed verdict offered at the close of all the evidence and in refusing to give an instruction offered by it. Defendant also contends both the actual and punitive damages awarded are excessive.

In those parts pertinent to this appeal plaintiff’s petition alleged defendant harassed her and threatened her with legal action; that defendant willfully and maliciously filed a false and fraudulent suit against plaintiff when defendant “ * * * knew or in the exercise of ordinary care should have known that the suit was ill founded and that plaintiff was not indebted unto said defendant.” It was further alleged that as a result of defendant’s acts plaintiff suffered damage to her reputation, lost earnings in the amount of $150.00 and suffered “great humiliation and embarrassment” to her damage in the amount of $2,-500.00. By Count II of the petition, plaintiff prayed for punitive damages in the amount of $15,000.00. The answer was a general denial.

We are required by the jury’s verdict to state the facts in the light most favorable to plaintiff. Huffstutler v. Coates, Mo., 335 S.W.2d 70. Doing so it appears from the record that on August 9, 1958, defendant made a loan of $264.75 to be repaid by eighteen consecutive installments of $18.00 each. The note evidencing *382 this loan was signed by “Charles D. House” and plaintiff with House was designated on the note as “Borrower”. On December 9, 1958, this note, as defendant’s witnesses put it, was “renewed”. This renewal was in the form of a new note for the balance then due upon the old note plus an unspecified amount of additional money paid to House bringing the indebtedness to $350.65. It was defendant’s practice, and it was followed in this instance, to show only the principal sum due on the face of the note, the interest being computed at each payment and paid separately. Accordingly, Exhibit B, a note for $350.65, was made out. It was to be paid in twenty-four consecutive payments of $24.00 each and again bore the signature of “Charles D. House” as “Borrower”. Whether plaintiff signed this note is in dispute. Her name appears thereon opposite the signature “T. Nelson” who also witnessed House’s signature.

House, plaintiff’s nephew, became ill early in 1959 and plaintiff started making payments. However, she considered she was making payments upon the first note and so informed defendant. She did not notice that on some of the receipts she received the balance noted was larger than the amount due on the note of August 9, 1958. She continued making payments until May or June of 1960. Her testimony was that although she paid the note of August 8, 1958, in full she never received the cancelled note nor any other evidence it had been paid.

About three weeks or “maybe a month” after she made the last payment she began hearing from the defendant. She was then working at Kalmon Shoe Company where she had been employed for over thirty years at a wage of $14.00 per day for an eight hour day. She received five or six telephone calls from defendant’s employees and each time was required to leave her work and go to the office to converse with defendant’s employees about her payment of this note. This had never happened to her before in her life. Later, “They sent me a letter and I went to the (defendant’s) office and I told them that I thought the loan was paid off and they said, well, this amount yet, balance, and I said, well, it couldn’t be that much because I had already paid off that much and that was more than the loan was at the beginning. They told me, well, this was the second loan that he made.” She further testified that she informed defendant that she did not sign the note of December 9, 1958, and was not going to pay it. Upon several occasions when she was at defendant’s office to„ see_ them about this matter she asked to see the note and was told the person in charge of such matter was out and so she could not see it. She was told that if she did not make payments her wages would be garnisheed.

In May of 1960, plaintiff’s attorney wrote defendant stating the signature on the note of December 9, 1958, was not that of the plaintiff and offered to have plaintiff sign an affidavit to this effect. He further suggested the signature might have been placed on the note by House. In July of that year, plaintiff’s attorney received a letter from defendant stating: “Regarding our telephone conversation I am sending a photostatic copy of the note. You state that this is not the signature of Mrs. Woods. Please have an affidavit obtained. Gilbert Kay.” Five days later plaintiff executed the following affidavit: “I did not co-sign a note with Charles D. House for the Standard Personal Loan Plan, which note is signed Charles D. House and Gladys Woods, dated December 9, 1958, in the principal amount of $355.55. I further state I have examined a photo copy of this note which bears the signatures Charles D-House and the signature Gladys Woods and I hereby state under oath that the signature appearing on behalf of the above mentioned note is not my signature and that I did not sign same.” Later that same month, plaintiff’s attorney wrote a letter to defendant stating that he had in his possession this-affidavit but he was “ * * * somewhat reluctant to furnish you this Affidavit since there may be some criminal prosecution of this boy. However, if you care to have a. *383 representative of the bonding company call at my office, I will be glad to further discuss this matter with him.” Defendant made no effort to see the affidavit at plaintiff’s counsel’s office or to pursue the matter further with him.

In November of 1960 defendant filed suit in Magistrate Court against plaintiff seeking recovery of $257.04 plus interest which was alleged as the balance due on the note of December 9, 1958. Plaintiff was served while she was at work and had to come to the office of her employer for that purpose. Her fellow employees and her employer made some comments to her about the matter but what was said does not appear in the record. Trial of that cause resulted in judgment being rendered in favor of Mrs. Woods. Defendant did not appeal that decision.

Lester Caplan, defendant’s President, testified the “counter work” on the loan of December 9, 1958, was handled by Tod Nelson, a trainee then with the defendant and who was in Kenosha, Wisconsin at the date of the trial of this case. Caplan testified he approved the loan in the presence of House and the plaintiff but admitted he did not see the plaintiff sign this note nor did he see to whom the additional money was paid. When the loan was made a credit life insurance policy on House was taken out and plaintiff was named as the beneficiary. Defendant also introduced into evidence its Exhibit D, an “Application and Financial Statement”, bearing the signature “Gladys Woods” and witnessed by “T. Nelson”. This statement bears the date of December 9, 1958. Plaintiff denied signing such a statement.

The defendant’s witness Wachter was given defendant’s Exhibits A, B, and C for the purpose of giving an opinion whether the signature “Gladys Woods” appearing on each was written by the same person.

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Bluebook (online)
420 S.W.2d 380, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/woods-v-standard-personal-loan-plan-inc-moctapp-1967.