I-70 mobile City, Inc. v. Deidre Cartwright ( 2020 )


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  •                                          In the
    Missouri Court of Appeals
    Western District
    I-70 MOBILE CITY, INC.,                       )
    )
    Respondent,                    )   WD82790
    )
    v.                                            )   OPINION FILED: March 3, 2020
    )
    DEIDRE CARTWRIGHT,                            )
    )
    Appellant.                    )
    Appeal from the Circuit Court of Lafayette County, Missouri
    The Honorable Kelly Halford Rose, Judge
    Before Division Two: Cynthia L. Martin, Presiding Judge, Thomas H. Newton, Judge
    and Gary D. Witt, Judge
    Deidre Cartwright ("Cartwright") appeals the judgment of the Circuit Court of
    Lafayette County dismissing her affirmative defense and counterclaim alleging that I-70
    Mobile City ("I-70") breached the warranty of habitability in an unlawful detainer action
    brought by I-70. Cartwright requests that the Court reverse the circuit court’s judgment
    and remand for a new trial. We affirm.
    1
    Procedural and Factual Background1
    On or about January 1, 2017, Cartwright and Mark O'Brien ("O'Brien") entered into
    a lease agreement with I-70 for the rental of real property to which I-70 has record title.
    On October 29, 2018, I-70 filed a petition for rent and possession against Cartwright and
    O'Brien. On December 6, 2018, an interlocutory default judgment was entered against
    O'Brien for possession of the property and damages.2 On December 12, 2018, Cartwright
    filed an answer and counterclaim, and on December 13, 2018, based on an oral motion in
    open court, the court granted I-70 leave to file an amended petition. On December 20,
    2018, I-70 filed its amended petition amending the claim to solely request relief in unlawful
    detainer. In the amended petition, I-70 alleged that they had provided Cartwright with a
    written sixty-day notice of its intent to terminate the lease agreement on the same day that
    the amended petition was filed. I-70 further alleged that since the termination of the
    tenancy, despite numerous requests, Cartwright refused to relinquish possession of the
    property. Cartwright filed an answer to the amended petition that admitted all but one of
    the allegations in the petition. She only denied the allegation in the petition that despite
    numerous requests she had refused to relinquish possession of the property. 3 She also
    raised an affirmative defense alleging that I-70 breached the implied warranty of
    habitability by shutting off water services on October 25, 2018 and refusing to provide
    1
    No transcript of the trial was filed with this court, and we limit our review to the factual allegations in the
    pleadings.
    2
    O'Brien is not a party to this appeal.
    3
    It is unclear from the record before us how Cartwright was unlawfully detaining the property on
    December 20, 2018, when it was alleged in the petition that on that same date the notice was provided to Cartwright
    terminating the tenancy 60 days in the future. Because this issue is not raised on appeal, we do not address it
    further.
    2
    running water to the property since that date. Cartwright also asserted a counterclaim for
    breach of the implied warranty of habitability alleging the same facts regarding the lack of
    running water, as well as a counterclaim for forcible entry and detainer on the ground that
    I-70 willfully diminished water services to her, its tenant, in violation of section 441.233.4
    On April 1, 2019, I-70 filed a motion to strike Cartwright's affirmative defense and
    counterclaims, arguing that Missouri law does not permit affirmative defenses or
    counterclaims in unlawful detainer actions. On April 17, 2019, the circuit court dismissed
    Cartwright's affirmative defense and counterclaims and entered judgment in favor of I-70
    for possession of the property and court costs.
    This appeal followed.
    Standard of Review
    "[T]he judgment of the trial court will be affirmed unless it is not supported by
    substantial evidence, it is against the weight of the evidence, or it erroneously declares or
    applies the law." McNabb v. Barrett, 
    257 S.W.3d 166
    , 169 (Mo. App. W.D. 2008) "We
    review de novo questions of law decided in court-tried cases." Rhea v. Sapp, 
    463 S.W.3d 370
    , 375 (Mo. App. W.D. 2015).
    Analysis
    Cartwright argues in her sole point on appeal that her affirmative defense and
    counterclaim for breach of the implied warranty of habitability were improperly struck
    because the claims were not equitable challenges to the title to the property or attacks upon
    4
    All statutory citations are to RSMo. 2016 as updated through February 19, 2020, unless otherwise noted.
    3
    title as prohibited by sections 534.200 and 534.210.5 She argues that as a result, she is
    entitled to assert these claims in this unlawful detainer action as permitted by Missouri
    Supreme Court Rules 41.01(d), 55.01, and 55.32(b) and sections 517.031 and 534.060.
    I-70 contends that sections 534.200 and 534.210 preclude Cartwright from raising
    these affirmative defenses and counterclaims because they do not concern the right of
    possession, which is the only issue to be decided in unlawful detainer proceedings.
    Unlawful detainer proceedings are governed by section 534.030. In pertinent part,
    section 534.030.1 states:
    When any person willfully and without force holds over any lands, tenements
    or other possessions, after the termination of the time for which they were
    demised or let to the person . . . and after demand made, in writing, for the
    delivery of such possession of the premises by the person having the legal
    right to such possession, or the person's agent or attorney, shall refuse or
    neglect to vacate such possession, such person is guilty of an “unlawful
    detainer.".
    Unlawful detainer has historically been employed as a swift and efficient remedy to restore
    an owner to possession of real property. See Wells Fargo, N.A. v. Smith, 
    392 S.W.3d 446
    ,
    453 (Mo. banc 2013). Accordingly, "such actions were confined to the question of
    possession and did not purport to address questions of ownership or validity of title." 
    Id. Indeed, In
    an unlawful detainer action, under section 534.200, RSMo 2000[6], the
    complainant shall not be compelled to make further proof of the forcible
    entry or detainer than that he was lawfully possessed of the premises, and
    that the defendant unlawfully entered into and detained or unlawfully
    detained the same. The principal issue in an unlawful detainer action is the
    5
    On appeal, Cartwright does not challenge the dismissal of her counterclaim for forcible entry and detainer
    brought under Section 534.020, and we do not address it further.
    6
    Section 534.200, RSMo 2000 has not been amended and is identical to Section 534.200, RSMo 2016 as
    currently updated.
    4
    immediate right of possession. Issues relating to title or matters of equity . .
    . cannot be interposed as a defense in unlawful detainer actions. In addition,
    counterclaims are also prohibited in unlawful detainer proceedings,
    regardless of the subject matter, unless permitted by statute. Missouri
    statutes do not so permit.
    Walker v. Anderson, 
    182 S.W.3d 266
    , 268-69 (Mo. App. W.D. 2006) (internal quotation
    marks and citations omitted) (emphasis added).
    In a 2013 decision, upon which Cartwright principally relies, the Missouri Supreme
    Court addressed the seemingly categorical bar to counterclaims that had all but cemented
    itself in Missouri case law. Wells 
    Fargo, 392 S.W.3d at 455
    . In that case, the Court
    explained that "though cases came to refer to a prohibition on counterclaims or affirmative
    defenses, such references simply were a shorthand statement on the effect of the
    substantive limitations imposed by sections 534.200 and 534.210." 
    Id. In other
    words,
    counterclaims and affirmative defenses are not procedurally barred per se but rather barred
    only if they exceed the limitations of 534.200 and 534.210. 
    Id. These statutes
    thereby
    create a substantive "prohibition against a defendant raising equitable defenses and/or
    challenges to the validity of the plaintiff's title in an unlawful detainer action." 
    Id. at 455
    n.7.
    a.     Cartwright's claims are not barred by section 534.210
    Section 534.210 specifically prohibits any inquiry into the "merits of the title" in an
    unlawful detainer action. As such, "Missouri law recognized that claims for unlawful
    detainer do not—and cannot—determine ownership of, or validity of title to, real
    property[,]" instead requiring that claims resting on any issue of title be brought in a
    separate action. Wells 
    Fargo, 392 S.W.3d at 454
    .
    5
    While section 534.210 makes clear that title may not be questioned in unlawful
    detainer proceedings, Missouri courts have often interpreted chapter 534 as providing a
    categorical bar to affirmative defenses and counterclaims, regardless of their subject
    matter.   
    Id. ("Missouri courts
    repeatedly have stated that equitable defenses and
    counterclaims are not permitted in response to [unlawful detainer] claims."). As such, even
    counterclaims unrelated to title are substantively barred in an unlawful detainer action.
    "The sole issue is the immediate right of possession. Issues relating to title or matters of
    equity, such as mistake, estoppel and waiver, cannot be interposed as a defense." Broken
    Heart Venture, L.P. v. A & F Rest. Corp., 
    859 S.W.2d 282
    , 286 (Mo. App. E.D. 1993)
    (citations omitted).
    Neither Cartwright’s affirmative defense nor her counterclaims—directly or
    indirectly—require an inquiry into title. Cartwright states, and I-70 does not dispute, that
    her claims "solely raised the issue of whether [I-70] had, during the course of the tenancy,
    breached the implied warranty of habitability. . . . No allegation in the affirmative defense
    and counterclaim even indirectly or by implication pose [sic] any challenge to [I-70's] title
    to the subject premises."
    As such, the case is distinguishable from many unlawful detainer cases in which
    courts dismissed counterclaims and affirmative defenses wherein the responsive pleadings
    directly or indirectly questioned title. See Wells 
    Fargo, 392 S.W.3d at 461
    ("Because the
    Smiths' 'standing' and 'real party in interest' claims merely are restatements of their attacks
    on the validity of Wells Fargo's title, the Smiths must raise these claims in a separate suit
    and not in response to an unlawful detainer action."); Walker v. Anderson, 
    182 S.W.3d 266
    ,
    6
    269 (Mo. App. W.D. 2006) ("The true nature of Ms. Anderson's claim is that Ms. Walker
    does not have a right to possess the property at issue in this case because she procured the
    warranty deed by fraud and, therefore, Ms. Walker is not the owner of the property. Such
    a claim is, in essence, a challenge to Ms. Walker's title to the property and, therefore, is not
    cognizable in an unlawful detainer action."); State ex rel. Deutsche Bank Nat. Tr. Co. v.
    Chamberlain, 
    372 S.W.3d 24
    , 30 (Mo. App. W.D. 2012) ("The Lisenbees' creatively
    framed 'standing' argument is indistinguishable from an equitable claim requiring inquiry
    into the merits of Deutsch Bank's title," which is expressly prohibited by section 534.210.);
    Cent. Bank of Kansas City v. Mika, 
    36 S.W.3d 772
    (Mo. App. W.D. 2001) (affirming the
    trial court's decision deeming impermissible, in an unlawful detainer case, the defense that
    plaintiff did not have "legal title" to the property); Cmty. Bank of Raymore v. Patterson Oil
    Co., Inc., 
    463 S.W.3d 381
    , 387 (Mo. App. W.D. 2015) (discussing that the defendant’s
    allegations of superior title "proceeds from a flawed premise that the outcome of an
    unlawful detainer action turns on which party is able to 'demonstrate superior title'" and
    that "an unlawful detainer action is not the proper action in which to challenge the merits
    of title") (quoting Wells 
    Fargo, 392 S.W.3d at 457
    ) (emphasis in original).
    In contrast, Cartwright's claims are not repackaged attacks on the validity of [I-70's]
    title; therefore, the substantive limitation in section 534.210's prohibiting inquiries into the
    merits of title is not applicable to bar Cartwright's affirmative defense and counterclaim for
    a breach of the warranty of habitability.
    7
    b.     Cartwright's claims are barred by section 534.200
    Because Cartwright's affirmative defense and counterclaim are not barred by section
    534.210, the remaining inquiry is whether claims of a breach of the warranty of habitability
    are barred by section 534.200 in unlawful detainer actions.
    Section 534.200 provides that "[t]he complainant shall not be compelled to make
    further proof of the forcible entry or detainer than that he was lawfully possessed of the
    premises, and that the defendant unlawfully entered into and detained or unlawfully
    detained the same." Missouri Courts have consistently held that section 534.200 limits
    defenses and prohibits counterclaims regardless of their subject matter. Moser v. Cline,
    
    214 S.W.3d 390
    , 394 (Mo. App. W.D. 2007) (holding that defendants' claim for breach of
    the warranty of habitability, i.e., "a claim of set-off against rent," could not be asserted as
    a defense to the unlawful detainer action even though it could, and did in fact, serve as a
    defense to plaintiffs' rent and possession claim) (emphasis added); see also Phelps v.
    Phelps, 
    299 S.W.3d 707
    (Mo. App. S.D. 2009); Bach v. McGrath, 
    982 S.W.2d 734
    (Mo.
    App. E.D. 1998); Leve v. Delph, 
    710 S.W.2d 389
    (Mo. App. E.D. 1986); McNeill v.
    McNeill, 
    456 S.W.2d 800
    , 807 (Mo. App. 1970).
    The Missouri Supreme Court at least questioned the validity of the courts' reasoning
    in these prior cases. Wells 
    Fargo, 392 S.W.3d at 455
    . The Court in Wells Fargo did not,
    as I-70 notes, attempt to overrule or eliminate the "no counterclaim rule" nor did it consider
    outright the question of whether a claim unrelated to title could be brought as a defense to
    an unlawful detainer action. 
    Id. However, the
    Court stated in reference to that general
    rule:
    8
    [S]o often has this been said that it led some to conclude there was a
    specialized procedural limitation applicable to such actions, i.e., the "no
    counterclaim rule." This is incorrect. To be sure, chapter 534 contains
    procedures applicable only to unlawful detainer actions. This remains true,
    even though section 534.060 now provides that these procedures are to be
    augmented, in certain cases, by the procedures in chapter 517.
    
    Id. (internal quotations
    omitted) (emphasis added).
    The Wells Fargo Court proposes that, to the extent courts have applied the general
    rule without reference to the substantive limits of 534.200 and 534.210 and rather in
    reference—expressly or impliedly—to a fictitious procedural bar to counterclaims and
    affirmative defenses, their reasoning (though not necessarily their result) was flawed. 7
    Indeed, the Court in Wells Fargo takes the position that chapter 517 procedures apply to
    unlawful detainer notwithstanding the multitude of prior decisions holding that chapter 534
    is an "exclusive and special code." 
    Id. at 454;
    see 
    McNeill, 456 S.W.2d at 807
    (holding
    that defendant’s contention that he was entitled to recover for repairs and improvements
    on the premises was wholly without merit because proceedings in unlawful detainer
    "constitute a special, exclusive and preclusive code, which is full and complete in itself and
    leaves us without authority to draw upon other general statutory provisions") (internal
    citations omitted).
    Section 534.060, in relevant part, states that, "[t]o the extent practice and procedure
    are not provided in this chapter the practice and procedure provided in chapter 517 shall
    7
    To this point, I-70 incorrectly avers that the Court in Wells Fargo, "reiterated the long-standing 'no
    counter-claim rule.'" In fact, the Court criticized the "rule" for its misleading nature as it implied a procedural bar,
    where no such bar exists. Wells 
    Fargo, 392 S.W.3d at 455
    , ("[T]hese limitations are substantive, not procedural,
    and they apply regardless of the defendants attempts to raise such issues, i.e., whether by affirmative defense,
    counterclaim, or otherwise.").
    9
    apply[,]" thereby augmenting the procedural rules of chapter 534. See Wells 
    Fargo, 392 S.W.3d at 455
    . As such, chapter 517 applies to cases under chapter 534, including the
    provision permitting and regulating the filing of counterclaims and affirmative defenses.8
    Section 517.031; see section 517.011. However, these responsive pleadings, as the Wells
    Fargo court notes, are permitted only to the extent that they comply with all other chapter
    534 provisions, including section 534.200, which makes the sole issue in unlawful detainer
    actions "the immediate right of possession." Lake in the Woods Apartment v. Carson, 
    651 S.W.2d 556
    , 558 (Mo. App. E.D. 1983). Thus, critically, while the Wells Fargo Court
    clarifies that section 534.200 presents a substantive limitation, as opposed to a procedural
    limitation, its decision does not explicitly overrule prior courts’ interpretation of the
    statute—that all other claims must be dismissed and raised in a separate action unless such
    claims depend solely on the right to possession. Wells 
    Fargo, 392 S.W.3d at 456
    . (“These
    actions resolve only the immediate right to possession, and, then, only between the parties
    to the case.”) (citing Prendergast v. Graverman, 
    147 S.W. 1094
    , 1096 (Mo. App. 1912)).
    The Court in Wells Fargo, specifically limited unlawful detainer proceedings solely to the
    question of possession of the property.9
    Here, Cartwright’s affirmative defense and her first counterclaim are for breach of
    the warranty of habitability.             Her warranty of habitability claim does not concern
    8
    Counterclaims and affirmative defenses are similarly permitted by Missouri Supreme Court Rules
    44.01(d) and 55, upon which Cartwright also relies.
    9
    We note that Section 534.300 provides that the provisions of chapter 534 are inapplicable to certain
    persons who have been in quiet possession of property for three years. This provision is not raised before us, and we
    offer no opinion as to whether its provisions may be raised as an affirmative defense or otherwise. We further note
    that sections 534.310 and 534.330 allow for the recovery of certain damages but are not applicable to this matter
    because no damages were awarded, and that portion of the judgment is not challenged.
    10
    possession of the property but rather the property’s suitability for human habitation prior
    to the termination of her tenancy. See 
    Moser, 214 S.W.3d at 394
    ("To constitute a breach
    of the warranty of habitability, the tenant must allege and prove conditions of such a nature
    as to render the premises unsafe or unsanitary.").
    Cartwright's counterclaim and affirmative defense for breach of the warranty of
    habitability do not challenge or otherwise address who is entitled to current possession of
    the property. Therefore, this counterclaim and affirmative defense exceed the limitations
    of an unlawful detainer action brought under Chapter 534, and they are substantively
    barred. However, nothing herein should be read to indicate that Cartwright is without a
    remedy for her claim of breach of the warranty of habitability. The Supreme Court made
    clear in Wells Fargo that claims beyond those relevant to the unlawful detainer action may
    be brought in a separate 
    action. 392 S.W.3d at 463
    .
    Conclusion
    Because the trial court did not err in its application of the law, its judgment
    dismissing Cartwright's counterclaims and awarding I-70 possession of the property is
    affirmed.
    __________________________________
    Gary D. Witt, Judge
    All concur
    11