Wenneker v. Frager
Decision Date | 16 December 1969 |
Docket Number | No. 33393,33393 |
Citation | 448 S.W.2d 932 |
Parties | Burt WENNEKER, d/b/a Burt Wenneker & Company, Respondent, v. Joseph FRAGER and Gertrude Frager, his wife, Appellants. |
Court | Missouri Court of Appeals |
Dempsey & Dempsey, David G. Dempsey, Clayton, for appellants.
Adolph K. Schwartz, St. Louis, for respondent.
CLEMENS, Commissioner.
The issue here is the trial court's authority to render judgment enforcing a settlement after the parties had executed a memorandum agreement and stipulated in open court that the cause be 'passed for settlement.' We affirm the judgment.
The background. Respondent Burt Wenneker, a builder, and appellants Joseph and Gertrude Frager, property owners, sued each other over a construction contract. Wenneker sought a money judgment and a mechanic's lien against the Fragers' property, joining other potential lienholders as defendants. Joseph Frager sued Wenneker for damages, alleging non-compliance with the construction contract. The cases were consolidated and went to trial without a jury. Mr. Adolph K. Schwartz represented Mr. Wenneker and Mr. John F. Nangle represented Mr. and Mrs. Frager. The second day of trial the court granted counsels' request for a recess to 'work on a settlement'. After several hours an agreement was reached, evidenced by a memorandum in Mr. Nangle's handwriting.
The essence of this agreement was that the Fragers were to pay Wenneker $10,000 and he was to satisfy all lien claims against the Fragers' property. The memorandum declared that the parties had settled all matters pending between them and the lawsuits would be dismissed with prejudice; Joseph Frager would release to Wenneker $2,315.78 in cash then held in escrow and Joseph and Gertrude Frager would give Wenneker their standard form five-year promissory note for $7,684.22 bearing seven percent interest annually; and Wenneker would pay the claims of three named potential lienholders. The memorandum was signed by both counsel, by Wenneker, and by Joseph Frager personally and for his wife, who was absent from the courtroom at the time.
The court's minute entry for September 7, 1967, the second day of trial, recited that the trial had progressed and 'both causes passed for settlement'. The court's memorandum signed by both counsel provided for taxing costs and recited: 'Both causes hereby passed for settlement'. Mr. Schwartz later testified Mr. Nangle then agreed to prepare the necessary closing papers but when that was not done he did so himself, sending them to Mr. Nangle for completion. By then other counsel had entered their appearance for the Fragers but the settlement papers were never executed.
After several months' delay, apparently prolonged by changes in the Fragers' counsel, Wenneker filed a 'Motion for Judgment' in accordance with the settlement memorandum, reciting the Fragers' refusal and his own continuing readiness to comply with the agreement. The motion was served on the Fragers' counsel of record. After numerous settings and delays caused by further changes in the Fragers' counsel the motion came on for hearing, Mr. David G. Dempsey then appearing as the Fragers' counsel. The Fragers had filed no responsive pleading to Wenneker's motion for judgment.
The court heard evidence concerning the settlement and rendered judgment:
The Fragers appeal, contending the motion for judgment was insufficient as a pleading for specific performance; the evidence showed neither Wenneker's performance nor the Fragers' repudiation of the settlement agreement, and that the settlement is not binding on Mrs. Frager since she did not personally sign the memorandum. We first consider the nature and legal effect of the settlement agreement and then the Fragers' contentions.
Effect of Settlement. Two Missouri cases concern the nature and effect of settling pending lawsuits where, as here, the parties announce in open court that they have settled and at their request the cause is ordered 'passed for settlement'.
In Fair Mercantile Co. v. Union-May-Stern Co., 359 Mo. 385, 221 S.W.2d 751, during trial the defendant agreed to pay and the plaintiff's president agreed to accept $2,500 in full settlement of plaintiff's claim and to dismiss the case. Thereupon the trial court, as here, noted that the cause was 'passed for settlement'. Thereafter the plaintiff refused defendant's tender of the agreed $2,500. The trial court ordered the defendant to pay the $2,500 into court and ordered the plaintiff to execute a release. In rejecting plaintiff's efforts to proceed with its original claim the Supreme Court said: 'Such a stipulation should be as binding as a written contract; indeed, it is a contract but made with more solemnity and with better protection to the rights of the parties than an ordinary contract made out of court.'
Similarly, in LANDAU V. ST. LOUIS PUBLIC SERVICE CO., MO.APP., 267 S.W.2D 364, 1 at the start of trial plaintiff's and defendant's counsel orally agreed to settle for $1,750 and dismiss the case upon payment and execution of a release. Counsel signed and filed a memorandum 'cause passed for settlement'. Thereafter plaintiff declined to accept defendant's money and execute a release. The trial court decreed that the settlement be specifically enforced by ordering plaintiff to execute a release. In rejecting plaintiff's efforts to proceed with her claim this court held that the agreed settlement
These two cases lead us to conclude that an open court agreement to settle a pending lawsuit, accompanied by a stipulation that the cause be passed for settlement, terminates the cause of action and creates a new obligation warranting a judgment in accordance with the terms of settlement. In Farmer v. Arnold, Mo., 371 S.W.2d 265(3) the court said 'a compromise and settlement 'operates as a merger of, and bars all right to recover on, the claim or right of action included therein", citing 11 Am.Jur., Compromise and Settlement, §§ 23--24, p. 271. The later edition of that work, 15 Am.Jur.2d, Compromise and Settlement, § 21, pp. 955--956, says The Supreme Court of North Carolina so held in Beauchamp v. Clark, 250 N.C. 132, 108 S.E.2d 535(2). And in Theis v. Theis, 271 Minn. 199, 135 N.W.2d 740, l.c. 742, the Supreme Court of Minnesota in its own syllabus said 'A valid compromise and settlement assented to by all the parties in interest is ordinarily final, conclusive, and as binding upon them as any contract and is as binding as if its terms were embodied in a judgment.' We believe this is the nature and effect of the Wenneker-Frager settlement. We pass to the Fragers' specific objections briefed here.
Sufficiency of brief they 'ignore the form of respondent's motion for judgment and treat(ing) it as a count in his petition asking for specific performance.' They then attack the motion's sufficiency as they would a formal petition, pointing to the absence of allegations of mutual obligation, consideration, actual performance and no adequate remedy at law. All this presupposes that Wenneker must proceed formally as in a new lawsuit and may not proceed by motion in the same action. In Landau and Fair Mercantile settlement was enforced by amended answers, without comment on the form of procedure. In Evans v. Evans, Mo.App., 28 S.W.2d 416(3), a settlement was enforced by motion to quash an execution.
Missouri courts have not laid down a precise method for enforcing settlement agreements....
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