M.H. Siegfried Real Estate Co., defendant below, appeals from a jury verdict assessing actual and punitive damages against it for conversion of a pickup truck. Respondent Knight cross appeals, claiming that his charge of conversion of a sum of money should have been submitted to the jury.
Billy Jo Knight rented some farm land from M.H. Siegfried Real Estate Co. The lease was not to expire until the last day of March, 1977, but Knight moved off the land in late February or early March of that year leaving behind various pieces of farm equipment, including a 1969 Ford pickup truck. Over the next several months, Mr. Siegfried wrote Knight several letters requesting that “debris and old cars” be removed from the premises. On June 29, 1977, M.H. Siegfried paid to have the pickup towed from the farm lot to the parking lot of the defendant, where it remained for one-half day. The truck was then parked in the back yard of Cedric Siegfried’s house. Siegfried was president and chief managing officer of the defendant corporation. Thereafter, M.H. Siegfried filed suit in the magistrate court for costs in removing debris from the leased premises. The early litigation is pivotal to an understanding of the issues in the present case and the proceedings in that litigation will, therefore, be detailed to the extent necessary. The date of filing in the magistrate court does not appear, but the trial was August 8, 1977. M.H. Siegfried recovered a judgment for $945.00. No supersedeas bond was filed but an appeal was perfected by Knight. In October of 1977, the sheriff, acting under authority of an execution issued upon the magistrate court judgment, seized the pickup at “23rd & Sterling.” Knight bought the truck at the execution sale in October. In November, the Circuit Court of Jackson County heard the de novo appeal of Knight from the magistrate court judgment. The magistrate court judgment was reduced a net amount of $590.00. M.H. Siegfried received $945.00 from the execution sale of the pickup truck. Although demand was made, no part of the money was ever paid Knight. Two and one-half years later, the instant suit was filed in two counts. One count was for conversion of the truck and one count was for conversion of the funds arising from the execution sale of the truck. Both counts contained allegations and a prayer for punitive damages. After trial before a jury, the court directed a verdict for Knight in the amount of $590.00 on a theory of money had and received, that amount being the excess above the final award obtained by M.H. Siegfried, but never returned to Knight. The jury returned a verdict in Knight’s favor on his claim for conversion of the pickup truck, awarding actual and punitive damages.
M.H. Siegfried first asserts that Knight’s cause of action for conversion of his pickup truck is barred because it was not asserted as a mandatory counterclaim in the 1977 judicial proceedings. A determination that the conversion claim was a mandatory counterclaim under Rule 55.-32(a) would be dispositive of this issue on appeal, because failure to assert a mandatory counterclaim forever bars the claimant from having that claim heard.
State ex rel. Davis v. Moss,
Conversion of the pickup truck did arise out of the same “facts and circumstances constituting the foundation” of the earlier lawsuit,
Harris
v.
Nola, supra
at 639, so the claim would fall within the broad meaning given “transaction or occurrence” for purposes of the compulsory counterclaim rule. There is no contention that Knight’s claim falls within any other express exclusions. An implicit requisite to the compulsory counterclaim rule, however, is that the claim to be asserted as a counterclaim be “matured” at the time of serving the pleading.
Magna Pictures Corp.
v.
Paramount Pictures Corp.,
There is no authority directly ruling on the word “mature” as it is used in the Rule.
Cf. Niedringhaus v. Zucker,
Turning to the facts of the instant case, it must be determined when conversion of the pickup truck was accomplished. M.H. Siegfried had the right to remove the truck from the premises as it did, some three months after the expiration of Knight’s lease.
See
Annot.,
Knight must hang his theory of conversion on the third method outlined above, because there was no evidence of use by M.H. Siegfried or Cedric Siegfried of the truck, nor as mentioned, was the taking tortious. Thus, Knight’s cause of action for conversion of the truck would not accrue for purposes of determining whether it was a mandatory counterclaim in the 1977 lawsuit until Knight made a demand for the truck and was denied its return by appellant.
It appears from the trial transcript that Knight, upon finding his truck missing from the farm lot in late June, contacted the M.H. Siegfried office several times to inquire as to the truck’s whereabouts. He apparently was not allowed to speak directly to Siegfried, and the secretary to whom he spoke denied any knowledge of the matter. Knight testified that he left an address and phone number with the Siegfried office, but was never provided the information necessary to retrieve his truck. The 1977 lawsuit was filed in July and judgment entered on August 8 against Knight in magistrate court. From these facts, it can be inferred that M.H. Siegfried knew that Knight was seeking the return of his truck but refused to provide him the information *815 that would have formed the basis of a mature counterclaim. Siegfried’s answers to interrogatories on behalf of M.H. Siegfried and his trial testimony show that evasion of the disclosure of the truck’s location was central to the plan to realize on the magistrate court judgment by execution. Also in evidence was the memorandum of the conversation by defendant’s lawyer with the police in which disclosure of the location of the truck was evaded. That memorandum also discloses that long after the magistrate court judgment Knight did not know where his truck was and had reported it as stolen. The harshness of the compulsory counterclaim rule should not deprive respondent of a remedy under these circumstances— where discovery of the damage is prevented by fraud or deception. Chemical Workers Basic Union, supra at 164.
The jury’s verdict in favor of Knight on his claim for conversion of the pickup truck can be accorded only limited review on appeal. It is true, as Siegfried contends, that abandonment is a complete defense to an action for conversion of personalty.
Wirth
v.
Heavey,
The evidence in the record is substantial that Knight never intended to abandon his pickup. Knight testified that, although he left the truck on the land leased from Siegfried Realty after his lease had expired, he checked on the truck every week, filed a police report on finding the truck missing in June, and contacted Siegfried’s office several times inquiring as to the truck’s whereabouts. Knight retained possession of the keys to the truck.
Compare Graff v. Triple B. Development Corp.,
The evidence of malice, arising from the same evidence recited above with respect to the maturity of the counterclaim, was sufficient to support submission of MAI 10.01.
M.H. Siegfried next complains that the trial court committed error in allowing its attorney in the 1977 litigation to testify. Section 491.060(3) RSMo 1978 declares that an attorney is an incompetent witness as far as testimony concerning communications between the attorney and client is concerned. The client, however, holds the attorney client privilege and can waive it by taking the stand and testifying himself about privileged communications.
Johnson v. State,
Siegfried was called as a witness by the plaintiff and although the plaintiff did not state that he was calling him as an adverse party, the direct examination was
*816
conducted largely in the form of cross examination. Siegfried was a cautious witness, careful and precise in his answers. He paried most of the questions concerning discrepancies in his interrogatory answers with skill and precision demonstrating his understanding of the proceedings and his experience as an attorney. During his examination on points that were detrimental to his position, he was careful to respond only to the direct question and to avoid volunteering any information outside the scope of the question when that suited his purposes. When the examination turned to questions concerning the activities with respect to the sale of the truck, Mr. Siegfried did not respond as directly and concisely as he had in his earlier testimony. On the critical issues with respect to the movement of the truck from Siegfried’s back yard to the place where the sheriff levied execution and with respect to the activities at the bidding, Siegfried volunteered statements concerning conversations with the attorney. It is in these two areas that the trial court permitted the examination of the former attorney. The defendant argues that
Hemminghaus
v.
Ferguson,
Unless there are some circumstances which show that the client was surprised or misled, it seems that the usual rule that the client’s failure to claim the privilege when to his knowledge testimony infringing it is offered, would apply here, and that the decisions treating such testimony on cross-examination as being involuntary and not constituting a waiver are hardly supportable.
McCormick’s Handbook of the Law of Evidence 195 (E. Cleary ed. 2d ed. 1972) (footnotes omitted). The rationale for the rule espoused in Hemminghaus and Vardeman, which is that testimony given by a patient on cross-examination is necessarily extorted and cannot constitute a voluntary waiver of the physician-patient privilege, is not applicable to this case. The client’s agent who here voluntarily testified, albeit on direct examination by the adverse party, concerning communications between himself and his former attorney, was himself an attorney with forty years’ experience. Knight’s questions, which elicited the responses constituting a waiver, were general and did not compel an answer that would disclose privileged communications. Both of the areas in which the trial court permitted inquiry of the former attorney were areas in which Siegfried had already related by nonrespon-sive answers the substance of the attorney’s conversations. The trial judge, when confronted with the claim of privilege by Siegfried after Siegfried learned the attorney was to be called as a witness, specifically relied upon these nonresponsive statements as a waiver of the attorney-client privilege. On the record in this case, the action of the trial court was certainly appropriate.
On his cross-appeal, Knight complains that his claim for $590, that being the difference in amount between Siegfried’s judgments against him, should have been submitted on a theory of conversion. Instead, the trial court directed a verdict for Knight on a theory of money had and received. Judgment was entered for Knight in the amount of $590, plus interest from the date the circuit court judgment became final.
The court, in directing the verdict for Knight, found that there was no dispute that M.H. Siegfried owed Knight the money. M.H. Siegfried has not appealed the entry of judgment against it on this count and does not deny that the money was owed to Knight in its reply brief. The only issue, then, is Knight’s contention that he should have been allowed to recover under his own theory and thus receive a submission on punitive damages under that count.
Coleman v. Pioneer Studebaker, Inc.,
The judgment is affirmed and costs assessed against M.H. Siegfried.
All concur.
