Poelker v. Jamison

Decision Date19 October 1999
Citation4 S.W.3d 611
Parties(Mo.App. E.D. 1999) . Joseph and Mabel Poelker, Plaintiffs/Respondents, v. Christopher Jamison, Defendant/Appellant. Case Number: 75313 Missouri Court of Appeals Eastern District Handdown Date:
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals

Appeal From: Circuit Court of St. Louis County, Hon. John D. Wiggins

Counsel for Appellant: Gail S. Zarosa

Counsel for Respondent: Party Acting Pro Se

Opinion Summary: The buyer appeals from the trial court judgment in favor of the sellers. The sellers claimed the buyer owed them additional money from the sale of their home.

REVERSED.

Division Five holds: The trial court erred in considering evidence of a prior oral agreement that varied the terms of the sale contract in violation of the parol evidence rule. Judgment is entered in favor of buyer, with costs assessed to the sellers.

Opinion Author: Mary Rhodes Russell, C.J.

Opinion Vote: REVERSED. Crahan, J., and Blackmar, Sr.J., concur.

Opinion:

Christopher Jamison ("buyer") appeals from the judgment entered by the trial court in favor of Joseph and Mabel Poelker ("sellers"). Sellers claimed buyer owed them additional money from the sale of their home pursuant to an alleged oral agreement entered into before signing the sale contract. We reverse in that the admission of such an alleged oral agreement violates the parol evidence rule.

Buyer and sellers executed a "Sale Contract" for the sale of sellers' house in Overland. The document consisted of a two-sided form contract with spaces to insert the pertinent information. The front side of the contract listed a sale price of $51,200, and contained a handwritten clause: "Seller to pay $2000 at closing." All parties signed the contract on the front side of the form in the pre-printed spaces provided for such signatures.

The back side of the form contained a clause that stated, "This is the entire contract and neither party shall be bound by representation as to value or otherwise unless set forth in contract [sic]." A section entitled "Special Agreements between Seller and Purchaser forming part of Contract" contained a handwritten clause: "Seller to pay $2000.00 in closing costs." All parties also signed immediately underneath this section, although the form contained no pre-printed lines for this purpose.

The closing on the property occurred approximately one month after the contract signing, and buyer moved into the house. Approximately three months later, sellers claimed buyer still owed them money. Buyer denied he owed any more money to sellers, and sellers thereafter sued buyer in small claims court. Their petition stated in pertinent part:

My wife sold house on 9006 Tudor to Chris. We agreed to take 1 point for him. ($1000.00). At time of closing he did not have enough closing money. He ask us to take 1 point and he would pay us back after 1st of year 1998. We agreed to this. He claim now he doesn't owe us. There more to this case. Etc.

The small claims court found for sellers and entered a judgment in their favor for $1000. Buyer applied for and received a trial de novo in the circuit court.

At the trial de novo, the trial court allowed sellers to testify to an apparent oral agreement they made with buyer. According to sellers, buyer did not think he would have enough money for closing costs. Therefore, they agreed to "take a point" for buyer, which was worth $1000, and he agreed to repay them after January 1, 1998.

Buyer testified he did indeed believe he would not be able to pay closing costs. Therefore, he and sellers agreed that sellers would pay the closing costs. In exchange, the price of the house was increased from $50,000 to $51,200.

At the conclusion of the trial de novo, the trial court entered judgment in favor of sellers in the amount of $1000. Buyer appealed.

Our standard of review is governed by Murphy v. Carron, 536 S.W.2d 30 (Mo. banc 1976). We will sustain the judgment of the trial court unless there is no substantial evidence to support it, unless it is against the weight of the evidence, or unless it erroneously declares of applies the law. Id. at 32.

In his first point on appeal, buyer argues "the trial court erred in allowing oral evidence to change the terms of a written and fully executed contract contrary to the parol evidence rule." In his second point, buyer argues "the trial court erred in allowing an alleged oral agreement in a confessed written [instrument] to be enforced in a real estate contract contrary to the statute of frauds . . .." We find buyer's first point to be dispositive. Therefore, we do not address the merits of buyer's second point.

In the absence of fraud, accident, mistake, or duress, the parol evidence rule...

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