Case Information
*1 SUPREME COURT OF MISSOURI
en banc
BRITTANY HUNTER, )
)
Respondent, )
) v. ) No. SC95083
)
CHARLES MOORE, SR., )
)
Appellant. ) APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE CITY OF ST. LOUIS The Honorable David L. Dowd, Judge Opinion issued April 19, 2016
Brittаny Hunter (Plaintiff) brought negligence claims arising out of her stay at a motel against the motel’s manager, Charles Moore Sr. (Defendant) and his employer. The parties entered a settlement agreement under section 537.065. Because the parties disputed some of the terms of the agreement, Plaintiff filed a separate action, which is the subject of this appeal, against Defendant seeking specific performance and reformation of their executed agreement. Specifically, Plaintiff asked the court to add to their written instrument two terms that she claims the parties agreed to but mistakenly failed to reduce to writing: (1) that Defendant’s insurer, American Family Mutual Insurance Company *2 (Insurer) is to be precluded from controlling the defense of Plaintiff’s negligence claims against Defendant, and (2) that Defendant is to cooperate with Plaintiff in the underlying action by agreeing to an uncontested hearing on liability and dаmages. This opinion will at times refer to these terms collectively as “the disputed terms.”
Based on evidence adduced at a bench trial, the trial court entered judgment reforming the written agreement to require Defendant to preclude Insurer from controlling the defense of the underlying action and to cooperate with Plaintiff in the underlying action, “ either by agreeing to a consent judgment or having an uncontested hearing on liability and damages.” (emphasis added). On appeal, Defendant argues thаt there was no substantial evidence to support reformation.
Although there was substantial evidence to support the trial court’s judgment reforming the written instrument to include the disputed terms, both parties agree that it was never their intention for Defendant to enter a consent judgment. This Court may enter the judgment as the trial court ought to have entered. Rule 84.14. Accordingly, the portion of the judgment requiring Defendant to cooperate in the underlying action “either by agreeing to a consent judgment or having an uncontested hearing on liability and damages” is modified to require only that Defendant cooperate by “having an uncontested hearing on liability and damages.” The judgment as modified is affirmed.
I. Facts
This case arises out of an underlying negligence action filed by Plaintiff, by and through her next friend and mother, against Defendant and his employer, Delta Motel (Delta), to recover for injuries Plaintiff sustained while staying at the motel. Delta *3 maintained a liаbility insurance policy through Insurer, under which both Defendant and Delta were insureds. Defendant and Delta demanded that Insurer defend and indemnify them against Plaintiff’s claims. Insurer notified Defendant that it would defend him in the underlying action under a reservation of rights and filed a declaratory judgment action against both Defendant and Delta seeking a judgment that it had no duty to defend or indemnify its insureds under the policy.
Defendant hired a separate attorney (“Defendant’s attorney”) to reprеsent him in the declaratory judgment action. Through this attorney, Defendant rejected Insurer’s defense under a reservation of rights. Defendant warned that if Insurer did not withdraw its reservations of rights and dismiss him from the declaratory judgment action, he would consider entering into a settlement agreement with Plaintiff pursuant to section 537.065. *4 In response, Insurer offered Defendant a full defense and indemnification and promised to dismiss Defendant from the declaratory judgment action. Despite these assurances, Insurer did not dismiss Defendant and moved for summary judgment against both Defendant and Delta in the declaratory judgment action.
After learning that Insurer had not dismissed Defendant from the declaratory judgment action and had, instead, moved for summary judgment against him, attorneys for Plaintiff and Defendant explored the possibility of their clients entering a settlement agreement pursuant to section 537.065. After negotiations via email and telephone, Plaintiff and Defendant reаched a settlement agreement and signed a written instrument purporting to contain the terms of their agreement. The written instrument requires Plaintiff to limit her recovery against Defendant in the negligence action to proceeds from the insurance policy and to an agreed-upon portion of any judgment against the Insurer arising out of its failure to defend and indemnify Defendant. Defendant agreed to assign to Plaintiff a portion of any proceeds Defendant might rеcover in an action against Insurer and to cooperate with Plaintiff and her attorney in the pursuit of such claims. The written instrument was silent as to whether or how Defendant was to cooperate with Plaintiff in her underlying negligence action.
On the same day Defendant signed the written instrument, Defendant’s attorney sent Insurer a letter on Defendant’s behalf declaring that Insurer had breached the judgment lien as the result of any judgment rendered against the tort-feasor, arising out of thе transaction for which the contract is entered into. The agreement would also permit Plaintiff to satisfy her judgment against any lottery
winnings of Defendant or to garnish his wages in the event he should earn more than $50,000 in a year.
contract of insurance by moving for summary judgment against Defendant in the declaratory judgment action after promising to fully defend and indemnify him. Defendant’s attorney stated that, as a result of Insurer’s breach, his client had entered into a “537 agreement with plaintiff in thе underlying action” and instructed the attorney hired by Insurer to represent Defendant in the underlying negligence action to withdraw as counsel in that case.
Shortly after receiving the letter notifying it of the parties’ settlement agreement, Insurer dismissed Defendant from the declaratory judgment action without prejudice. Insurer’s attorney did not withdraw as counsel for Defendant in the underlying negligence action. When Plaintiff’s attorney asked Defendant’s attorney what was taking plaсe, the latter indicated that he no longer represented Defendant and that he was surprised that Insurer’s attorney had not withdrawn his representation in the negligence action. Plaintiff’s attorney then contacted Insurer’s attorney to see why he had not withdrawn as Defendant’s counsel. Insurer’s attorney responded that he intended to continue his representation of Defendant in the underlying negligence action.
Plaintiff filed the subject action against Defendant sеeking specific enforcement of the settlement agreement and reformation of the written instrument to reflect the true intentions of the parties. The trial court heard evidence regarding whether the agreement was enforceable and whether it required Defendant to cooperate with Plaintiff in the underlying negligence action. Plaintiff’s attorney testified that the parties intended that Defendant would cooperate with Plaintiff in the underlying action by hаving an uncontested hearing on liability and damages at a bench trial and by precluding Insurer *6 from controlling the defense in that proceeding. Defendant’s attorney testified that he and Plaintiff’s attorney negotiated the terms of the agreement via telephone and email, but that he could not recall the specifics of the parties’ intentions and that he did not believe that he intended the disputed terms to be part of the agreement. Plaintiff’s attorney acknоwledged that these terms were not set forth explicitly in the written instrument, but he testified that he had intended to reduce them to writing and that he perhaps “didn’t connect the dots” as well as he should have.
As additional evidence of the parties’ intent that Plaintiff would have an
uncontested hearing on liability and damages in her negligence action against Defendant
and that Insurer would not be allowed to control the defense, Plaintiff introduced the
letter from Defendant’s attоrney to Insurer as well as emails between the parties’
attorneys expressing their mutual surprise that Insurer’s attorney did not withdraw his
representation of Defendant after being notified that Defendant had entered into the
settlement agreement with Plaintiff. Additionally, Plaintiff’s attorney pointed to a section
of the instrument stating that the parties “specifically considered” the decisions in
Butters
v. City of Independence
,
The trial court entered judgment in favor of Plaintiff, finding that Plaintiff had proven by clear, cogent, and convincing evidence that the parties mutually agreed that Defendant would not allow Insurer “to have control over the defense” of the underlying *7 negligence action and that he would cooperate with Plaintiff in that action “either by agreeing to a consent judgment or having an uncontested hearing on liability and damages.” The trial court relied on the letter to Insurer asking its attorney to withdraw his representation of Defendant, email communications between the parties’ attorneys, the testimony of Plaintiff’s attorney, and the written instrument’s reference to the Rimco and Butters cases in reaching its conclusion that, through mutual mistake, these terms were not set forth in the writing and that reformation was a proper remеdy. To the extent that Defendant’s attorney testified that the parties did not intend to incorporate the disputed terms in the settlement agreement, the trial court explicitly found his testimony not credible.
Defendant appeals. This Court has jurisdiction pursuant to article V, section 10 of the Missouri Constitution.
II. Standard of Review
This Court will affirm a trial court’s judgment in a court-tried case unless there is
no substantial evidence to support it, it is against the weight of the evidence, or it
erroneously declares or applies the law.
Ivie v. Smith
,
Evidence is substantial if it has any tendency to prove or disprove any fact necessary to sustain the trial court’s judgment. Id. In deciding whether the trial court’s *8 judgment is supported by substantial evidence, appellate courts must view the evidence in the light most favorable to the judgment, defer to the trial court’s credibility determinations, and accept as true thе evidence and inferences favorable to the judgment, disregarding all contrary evidence. Id. at 200. In reaching its judgment, the trial court is free to believe any, all, or none of the evidence presented at trial. The trial court here made detailed findings of fact and conclusions of law. Additionally, any issues of fact upon which no specific findings are made are considered as having been found in accordance with the court’s judgment. Rule 73.01(c).
III. Analysis
Defendаnt argues that the trial court erred in reforming the written instrument because there was no substantial evidence of a mutual mistake that prevented the instrument from accurately reflecting the parties’ actual agreement.
“Equity will reform an instrument which, through mutual mistake of the parties,
does not accurately set forth the terms of the agreement actually made or which does not
incorporate the true prior intentions of the parties.”
King v. Riley
,
The party seeking reformation must show by clear, cogent, and convincing
evidence: (1) the existence of an actual, preexisting agrеement and (2) a mutual mistake
made by the parties to the agreement.
Cardinal Partners, LLC v. Desco Inv. Co.
, 301
S.W.3d 104, 110 (Mo. App. 2010). Whether there has been a mutual mistake is normally
a question of fact.
Brown v. Mickelson
,
Under the facts here, there was sufficient evidence in the record to support the trial
court’s finding that, due to mutual mistake, the parties failed to include the disputed terms
in the written instrumеnt when the parties had previously agreed to those terms.
Plaintiff’s attorney testified regarding the parties’ intentions in entering the settlement
agreement. He stated that it was their mutual intent that Insurer would no longer control
the defense in the underlying action and that Defendant would “cooperate in pursuit of all
the underlying claims” by having an uncontested hearing on liability and damages. He
testified that he meant to reduce these terms to writing when he drafted the written
instrument and acknowledged that he perhaps “didn’t connect the dots” as well as he
should have. Plaintiff’s attorney further testified that he discussed these specific terms
with Defendant’s attorney “several times” and that these intentions were “clear” to
Defendant’s attorney before the parties signed the written instrument.
[6]
*11
Reformation may properly be granted when “a mutual mistake of law” prevents a
written instrument from expressing the parties’ actual intentions, which occurs when
“partiеs erroneously suppose that the words used in an instrument are legally effective to
secure a certain result.”
Schwabe
,
Furthermore, evidence does not have to be undisputed for a party seeking
reformation to prevail.
Leimkuehler v. Shoemaker
,
420, 423 (Mo. App. 1995). Appellate courts defer to those determinations as long as they are supported by competent and substantial evidence.
Other evidence supported the trial court’s conclusion that both parties intended for the disputed terms to be part of the settlement agreement. Defendant’s attorney sent a letter to Insurer the same day Defendant signed the written instrument. In the letter, Defendant’s attorney claimed that Insurer had materially breached the contract of insurance and added:
Because of American Family’s material breach of the contract of insurance, my client has decided to now enter into the 537 agreement with the plaintiff in the underlying action in order to protect his personal assets. Additionally, he does not trust American Family or anyone hired by American Family to represent him in the underlying action. Therefore, he is instructing [American Family’s attorney] to file a Motion to Withdraw and notice same up for hearing in the [underlying action] as soon as possible.
Attorneys for both Plaintiff and Defendant expressed their disbelief in emails to each other that Insurer’s attorney failed to withdraw as counsel from the underlying action after receiving the letter from Defendant’s attorney. These letters and emails, which were specifically discussed by the trial court in its judgment, indicate that Defendant’s attorney, as well as Plaintiff’s, intended for the settlemеnt agreement to include the disputed terms.
*13
The trial court also took note of the provision in the written instrument stating that
the parties “specifically considered”
Butters v. City of Independence
,
In this case, there was substantial evidence to support the trial court’s determination that Plaintiff and Defendant agreed to the disputed terms prior to signing the written instrument and that, due to a mutual mistake, they failed to reduce those terms to writing.
IV. Conclusion
This case should be a cautionary tale for contract drafters. Although the extraordinary equitable remedy of reformation may be available to the party who can clearly and convincingly show that a mutual mistake prevented a written instrument from effectuating the true intentions of the parties, attorneys should make every effort to reduce all agreed-upon terms to writing so that an agreement, once made, may be immediately and efficiently enforced according to its plain, written terms.
The judgment as modified is affirmed.
______________________________ Mary R. Russell, Judge All concur.
Notes
[1] All statutory references are to RSMo 2000 unless otherwise indicated.
[2] Section 537.065 reads in whole: Any person having an unliquidated claim for damages against a tort-feasor, on account of bodily injuries or death, may enter into a contract with such tort-feasor or any insurer in his behalf or both, whereby, in consideration of the payment of a specified amount, the person asserting the claim agrees that in the event of a judgment against the tort-feasor, neither he nor any person, firm or corporatiоn claiming by or through him will levy execution, by garnishment or as otherwise provided by law, except against the specific assets listed in the contract and except against any insurer which insures the legal liability of the tort-feasor for such damage and which insurer is not excepted from execution, garnishment or other legal procedure by such contract. Execution or garnishment proceedings in aid thereof shall lie only as to assets of the tort-feasor specifically mentioned in the contract or the insurer or insurers not excluded in such contract. Such contract, when properly acknowledged by the parties thereto, may be recorded in the office of the recorder of deeds in any county where a judgment may be rendered, or in the county of the residence of the tort-feasor, or in both such counties, and if the same is so recorded then such tort-feasor's property, except as to the assets specifically listed in the contract, shall not be subject to any
[4] As noted above, both parties on appeal agree that they never intended for Defendant to agree to a “consent judgment.”
[5] In his briefs to the court of appeals, Defendant also argued that the trial court’s
judgment is against the weight of the evidence. A claim that the judgment is against the
weight of the evidence presupposes that there is sufficient evidence tо support the
judgment.
J.A.R. v. D.G.R.
,
[6] Plaintiff’s attorney mentioned numerous times during his testimony that, although the
attorneys discussed and agreed to the disputed terms specifically during negotiations,
they also mutually understood that these terms would be included because their
agreement was made pursuant to section 537.065. As Defendant correctly points out, the
disputed terms are not implied in all section 537.065 agreements. Nothing in the text of
section 537.065 requires parties to agree that an insurer may not control the defense of a
party to the agreement. Nor does the statute contain any provisions requiring parties to
agree to either a consent judgment or an uncontested hearing on liability and damages. It
may be true that, as a practical matter, parties frequently include such terms in
agreements made pursuant tо the statute when, as here, an insurer has denied coverage to
its insured.
See, e.g.
,
Intermed Ins. Co. v. Hill
,
[7] Defendant’s briefs to this Court do not reference the letter from Defendant’s attorney to
Insurer or the emails exchanged by the parties’ attorneys showing their surprise that
Insurer’s attorney did not withdraw from the underlying negligence action even though
the trial court made specific findings of fаct regarding this evidence. The standard of
review on appeal requires that evidence be viewed in the light most favorable to the
judgment.
Ivie
,
[8] Butters and Rimco discuss the options of insurers and insureds when coverage of a claim against an insured is in dispute and accurately state that, once an insurer refuses to defend its insured without reservation, the insured is free to enter settlement negotiations with a claimant and to take control of its own defense. Neither case holds, however, that the terms disputed by the parties here are somehow inherent in every agreement made pursuant to section 537.065.
