THOMAS H. NEWTON, Judge.
This case involves a disagreement between a mother and father over the apportionment of monies under section 537.0951 from the successful prosecution of a wrongful death action that arose from the shooting death of them 13-year-old son by Kansas City police officers in November 1998.
There were three separate apportionment hearings in the case. The first occurred in July 2000, two months before trial, and resulted in the interlocutory approval and apportionment of a $100,000 settlement between the parents and one of the defendants in the underlying action. The second occurred in May and June 2003 after the compensatory damages awarded by a jury had been affirmed by this court in Collins v. Hertenstein, 90 S.W.3d 87 (Mo.App. W.D.2002). The result of the second hearing was an interlocutory apportionment of the $510,000 compensatory damages award.2 The third hearing occurred in November and December 2003 and addressed a settlement that was reached regarding the aggravating circumstances damages (punitive damages), which this court had remanded for a new trial. Id. at 110. The result of the third hearing was a final judgment as to this $700,000 settlement that also incorporated by reference the two earlier distributions.
Mr. Timothy L. Wilson, Sr., decedent’s father, appealing from the circuit court’s judgment denying his Motion for New Trial on Apportionment, challenges the procedure by which the settlements and recovery were apportioned, the proportionality of the shares awarded, the awards of attorney’s fees and expenses, and the circuit court’s failure to award interest on the punitive damages. Ms. Valerie Collins, decedent’s mother, challenges the circuit court’s decision that allowed Mr. Wilson to re-litigate the issue of his alleged loss as a result of their son’s death during the third apportionment hearing. Because we find that there was error (i) in the apportionment procedure, and (ii) regarding interest as to the punitive damages, we reverse in part and remand.
Factual and Procedural Background
The facts involved in the wrongful death litigation have been fully set forth and will not be repeated here. Collins, 90 S.W.3d at 92-94. To better understand the attorney’s fee issue, we will note that Mr. Wilson and Ms. Collins, who have never married, together hired a lawyer under a contingency fee agreement immediately after the tragic event that took their son’s life.3 This attorney (father’s lawyer) contracted with another law firm within the next month to assist in the case. Before the first apportionment hearing occurred a year-and-a-half later, there had already been a falling out among the parties and counsel regarding trial strategy and disposition of the $100,000 settlement. Ms. Collins terminated her contract with father’s lawyer one month before the first apportionment hearing and signed an agreement with the [208]*208firm (law firm) brought in to assist.4 As part of the agreement between Ms. Collins and Mr. Wilson over the $100,000 settlement, it was understood that Mr. Wilson would withdraw from the underlying litigation before trial.5 While the underlying case was pending on appeal before this court in 2002, and well over a year before the second and third apportionment hearings occurred, father’s lawyer was suspended from the practice of law. Mr. Wilson was represented by different attorneys during the second and third hearings.
Fees and/or expenses were distributed to the attorneys as a result of each of the three apportionment hearings. The sum of $80,000 was set aside for already incurred and future litigation expenses out of the first $100,000 settlement. From what remained, Ms. Collins received $12,000, and Mr. Wilson received $8,000 in accordance with a 60/40 agreement they had entered.6 Ms. Collins’s law firm waived its fees with respect to the distribution of this settlement, so that there would be sufficient funds to bring the case to trial. Mr. Wilson paid his lawyer $2,000, but this was not part of the settlement agreement or the court’s apportionment. During the first hearing, Ms. Collins was present to testify as to the nature of her relationship with the decedent as well as the nature of Mr. Wilson’s relationship with the decedent.7 Mr. Wilson, who was incarcerated at the time, did not appear, [209]*209but his lawyer participated and made no objection to the distribution approved by the court. Nevertheless, Mr. Wilson argues that neither he nor his lawyer waived attorney’s fees from this interlocutory approval of the $100,000 settlement.
Mr. Wilson, represented by new counsel, was present for and testified during the second apportionment hearing to distribute the compensatory damages recovery. Mr. Wilson’s original lawyer also testified and was represented by counsel. There was vague, conflicting and confusing testimony about when or for how long Mr. Wilson was incarcerated over the course of his son’s brief life. But the circuit court recognized that he had spent minimal time with his son and had provided him with minimal necessities and money. The court stated that it did not believe the testimony and evidence showed any kind of emotional bond between father and son. The circuit court did not first apportion the award to Mr. Wilson and Ms. Collins, but divided what was left after setting aside an amount for attorney’s fees and expenses. The court awarded nearly $253,000 to Ms. Collins and $1,000 to Mr. Wilson. Attorney’s fees of $5,900 were awarded to Mr. Wilson’s lawyer who was then under suspension, about $246,000 in attorney’s fees was awarded to Ms. Collins’s law firm, and about $5,000 was awarded to the law firm for outstanding expenses.8 The court’s intention was to provide father’s lawyer with a total of $10,000 in fees, in light of testimony regarding his relatively limited participation in trial preparation and the fact that he had not participated in the trial due to Mr. Wilson no longer being a named plaintiff when it began. There had been testimony that father’s lawyer had received $2,100 in fees in addition to the $2,000 Mr. Wilson paid him after the first apportionment hearing. The $2,100 was apparently part of a $5,000 payment for expenses that Ms. Collins’s law firm advanced before entering the contract to assist with the litigation.9 Mr. Wilson did attempt to appeal from the circuit court’s interlocutory order making this apportionment award, but his appeal was dismissed for lack of a final, appealable judgment.
On November 21, 2003, the circuit court approved the punitive damages settlement with the defendants in the underlying action, which settlement was paid into a court registry on or about December 15 while the third apportionment hearing was underway. During that hearing, Mr. Wilson was represented by his third attorney. He was allowed, over Ms. Collins’s objection, to again present his and others’ testimony about the nature of his relationship with the decedent. Mr. Wilson’s original lawyer also testified and was represented by counsel. Of the $700,000 available for apportionment, the circuit court awarded Ms. Collins eighty-five percent and Mr. Wilson fifteen percent. Making a rough calculation from the bench, the circuit court estimated that the ultimate percentage awarded to Mr. Wilson from the ag[210]*210gregate of the settlements and recovery-available for apportionment was ten percent. From Ms. Collins’s share, fifty percent, or about $297,000 was awarded to her law firm in attorney’s fees, and she was required to pay eighty-five percent of the outstanding expenses, leaving her with about $292,700. Mr. Wilson’s share was reduced by fifty percent for attorney’s fees, which was split equally between his original lawyer and Ms. Collins’s law firm, with each receiving $26,250. Mr. Wilson’s share was further reduced by $840.61, which constituted fifteen percent of the outstanding expenses, leaving him with about $51,600. The awards were formalized in a written judgment dated December 17. The circuit court entered an order on the original defendants’ Motion for Order Nunc Pro Tunc on February 26, 2004, to correct omissions in the court’s November 2008 order approving the settlement.
In summary, of the $1,310,000 available for distribution, Ms. Collins received $555,822.09 net;10 Mr. Wilson received $60,059.39 net;11 the law firm received $569,835.57; father’s lawyer received $36,250; and litigation expenses of $90,632.95 were paid.
In his first point, Mr. Wilson challenges his overall 8.7 percent share of the $1.3 million in settlements and recovery as grossly disproportionate, claiming that the circuit court violated section 537.095 by failing to (i) apportion the proceeds between the members of the primary class of statutory beneficiaries before awarding attorney’s fees and expenses, (ii) enter a single final judgment that awarded the totality of legal fees and expenses, and (iii) consider the evidence presented during the third apportionment hearing in relation to the interlocutory decisions made after the first two hearings. Mr. Wilson also claims in his first point that section 537.095 requires one assessment of total damages and one apportionment followed by one award of attorney’s fees and expenses, and that the court erred in making three attorney’s fee awards based on three separate sets of evidence that, he claims, the court refused to consider cumulatively.12
In his second point, Mr. Wilson focuses on the attorney’s fees and expenses, repeating some of the facts that supported his first point,13 and concludes that he was required to pay a disproportionate share of the fees and expenses. He also challenges the circuit court’s failure to differentiate between fees awarded to father’s lawyer pursuant to Mr. Wilson’s contract with him and Ms. Collins’s contract with him,14 and pursuant to a quantum meruit theory for services to Ms. Collins after she terminated their attorney-client relationship. He further claims that he should not have paid any fees to Ms. Collins’s law firm under section 537.095, because he was always represented by counsel. Regarding ex[211]*211penses, Mr. Wilson complains that the circuit court’s failure to correctly apportion the first settlement resulted in his paying 36.23 percent of the total litigation expenses.
In his third point, Mr. Wilson claims circuit court error in failing to award interest on the $700,000 punitive damages settlement, because there was a delay in payment of the funds into the court’s registry after defendants were ordered to do so. Mr. Wilson raises cumulative error in his fourth point, claiming that even if his individual points of error do not warrant a new trial, all identified errors, in the aggregate, do justify the grant of a new trial.15
Ms. Collins replies only to Mr. Wilson’s first point on appeal and challenges the circuit court’s decision allowing Mr. Wilson to re-litigate the issue of his alleged loss during the third apportionment hearing and apportioning a different percentage to him than previously awarded.16 The defendants in the underlying litigation, Mr. William Hertenstein, Mr. Brian Keeney, and Mr. Troy Thomas, have filed a response to Mr. Wilson’s claim that interest is due on the $700,000 settlement.
Standard of Review
We review the denial of a motion for a new trial under an abuse of discretion standard. City of Pleasant Valley v. Baker, 991 S.W.2d 725, 727 (Mo.App. W.D.1999). In a wrongful death action, it is within the circuit court’s discretion to apportion the losses, and we reverse the judgment only where it is not supported by substantial evidence, it is against the weight of the evidence, or it erroneously declares or applies the law. Parr v. Parr, 16 S.W.3d 332, 336 (Mo. banc 2000). We will not interfere unless the judgment is grossly excessive or inadequate. Kavanaugh v. Mid-Century Ins. Co., 937 S.W.2d 243, 246 (Mo.App. W.D.1996). Nor do we approve or disapprove the apportionment; rather, we rule on whether the circuit court acted within the discretion granted by section 537.095. Wright v. Cameron Mut. Ins. Co., 908 S.W.2d 867, 868-69 (Mo.App. S.D.1995).
Legal Analysis
Apportionment Procedure
Section 537.095 provides in relevant part:
3. In any action for damages under section 537.080, the trier of facts shall state the total damages found, or upon the approval of any settlement for which a petition or application for such approval has been filed, the court shall state the total settlement approved. The court shall then enter a judgment as to such [212]*212damages, apportioning them among those persons entitled thereto in proportion to the losses suffered by each as determined by the court.
4. The court shall order the claimant:
(1) To collect and receipt for the payment of the judgment;
(2) To deduct and pay the expenses of recovery and collection of the judgment and the attorney’s fees as contracted, or if there is no contract, or if the party sharing in the proceeds has no attorney representing him before the rendition of any judgment or settlement, then the court may award the attorney who represents the original plaintiff such fee for his services, from such persons sharing in the proceeds, as the court deems fair and equitable under the circumstances;
[[Image here]]
(4) To distribute the net proceeds as ordered by the court; ...
In Parr the Missouri Supreme Court established the procedure that the courts must follow in apportioning wrongful death damages under this statute, noting that the apportionment, based on the parties’ respective losses, must occur before the expenses and fees, as contracted, are deducted. 16 S.W.3d at 338-39. Under the Parr method of apportionment, the court first establishes the total recovery amount and then divides it among those entitled to share in proportion to their losses. In that case, the parents and children of the decedent were each apportioned $10,000, and the decedent’s wife was apportioned $925,000. Then the decedent’s wife, as the claimant, was ordered to (i) “collect and receive said settlement amount ... receipt therefore, and ... stipulate for dismissal of this cause”; (ii) “[f]rom the settlement proceeds ... deduct and pay the expenses of recovery and collection of the judgment” to her law firm; (iii) from the “settlement proceeds apportioned” to her, deduct and pay to her law firm attorney’s fees as contracted; (iv) from the “settlement proceeds apportioned” to decedent’s mother, to deduct and pay attorney’s fees to decedent’s mother’s law firm as contracted; (v) acknowledge satisfaction for judgment and costs; and (vi) “distribute the net proceeds” in the amounts of $10,000 each to decedent’s father and children, and $7,500 to decedent’s mother. Id. at 339.
Of the written orders entered after each apportionment hearing in this case, only the final one came close to complying with this procedure, and it did not, on its face, appear to include the totals from the first two apportionment hearings in the calculations.17 In this respect, we agree with Mr. Wilson that the circuit court violated section 537.095. The circuit court in Parr also made a procedural error, but the supreme court, finding no error with the apportionment to the parties, affirmed its judgment, as modified to conform with the statute. Id. While we do not believe that the circuit court abused its discretion apportioning the proceeds to the parties, because we have additional issues involving the attorney’s fees and expenses and interest on the punitive damages settlement, however, we are unable to simply affirm and modify the judgment.
Apportionment Ratio
Before we address the attorney’s fees and other issues, we will address Mr. Wilson’s claim that the 91.3/8.7 apportionment was grossly disproportionate because [213]*213the circuit court followed an incorrect legal standard in making its determination.18 After carefully reviewing 2,000 pages of apportionment-hearing transcripts, we do not believe that the circuit court applied the wrong standard or abused its discretion in deciding to approximate a 90/10 split between the parents. See Haynes v. Bohon, 878 S.W.2d 902, 904-05 (Mo.App. E.D.1994) (court affirms 90/10 split between parents of deceased 14r-year-old because child only saw father occasionally, and father’s sporadic gifts of money and clothing did not amount to regular support); Glasco v. Fire & Cas. Ins. Co., 709 S.W.2d 550, 555 (Mo.App. W.D.1986) (90/10 split between parents of deceased 12-year-old child upheld “since the evidence showed the father failed to support and maintained only minimum contacts with the child from 1972 until her death in 1984.”).
The circuit court, which is in the best position to make credibility determinations,19 considered the time each parent had spent with the decedent, and used that as an approximate measure of the loss each suffered due to the death of their young son under section 587.095. While Mr. Wilson argues that it is the quality of the time spent with the decedent that matters in making a wrongful death apportionment, the testimony reveals that the decedent filled his father’s shoes in his mother’s single parent household during most of his 13 years, and only spent a limited amount of time with his father during the transitory interludes when Mr. Wilson was not incarcerated. Ms. Collins provided all necessary support to the child, while Mr. Wilson only occasionally gave the child money or paid for some of his clothes or food or activities. Those chores the child did while spending time with Mr. Wilson inured more to the benefit of those relatives with whom Mr. Wilson stayed while out of prison than to Mr. Wilson in his own right.20 Because the apportionment was not grossly excessive or inadequate, Kavanaugh, 937 S.W.2d at 246, we conclude that the circuit court did not abuse its discretion and must affirm its apportionment decision. Wright, 908 S.W.2d at 868-69.
In this case, the total judgment was $1.31 million. In total, Mr. Wilson was awarded $114,000 before paying attorney’s fees and expenses. This amount is short of a ten percent award;21 if the circuit court, after reviewing the evidence in the case, confirms that Mr. Wilson should actually have received ten percent of the total, the award should be adjusted.
Attorney’s Fees
Mr. Wilson claims that the circuit court erred in making three separate apportion-ments of attorney’s fees and expenses and in not considering the cumulative effect of [214]*214the evidence to reach a single apportionment and award of attorney’s fees and expenses, and that following this procedure affected the share he should have been awarded. Acknowledging that the lawyers involved are owed fees both under contract and in quantum meruit, he further claims that it is impossible to determine on what basis attorney’s fees were awarded. He also claims that any errors that affect the fees his lawyer should have received should benefit him rather than Ms. Collins or her law firm.
Ms. Collins fired father’s lawyer just before the $100,000 settlement agreement was approved by the court. In Risjord v. Lewis, 987 S.W.2d 408, 405 (Mo.App. W.D.1999), this court stated, “Once termination of the lawyer-client relationship has occurred before completion of a contingent fee contract, the lawyers’ only recovery could be in quantum meruit for the benefits conferred.” (citation and internal quotations omitted). This principle protects the client who has lost faith in her attorney and would be unable to pay both the discharged attorney at full contract price and someone hired to continue the attorney’s work. Id. at 406. According to testimony that supports the circuit court’s decision to award father’s lawyer $5,900 from Ms. Collins’s share, this lawyer did some preliminary investigation, served in a mostly consulting capacity, and engaged in considerable client counseling before Ms. Collins terminated his services. The law firm was providing the laboring oar drafting and filing the petition, conducting discovery, taking numerous depositions, handling media communications, and otherwise preparing the case for trial. While the circuit court did not label the $5,900 award a quantum meruit recovery on Ms. Collins’s terminated contract with father’s lawyer, under Risjord, this was a quantum meruit recovery and is all that Ms. Collins owed.22 Any objection to this determination was for father’s lawyer to pursue, and he has not appealed the circuit court’s decision.
As for Mr. Wilson’s obligation to his original lawyer, that contract, too, was terminated before completion. The Missouri Supreme Court has ruled that a lawyer’s suspension from the practice of law is “equivalent to a voluntary abandonment of his contract of employment,” and thus, he cannot recover, even in quantum meruit, for his services. Kimmie v. Terminal R.R. Ass’n of St. Louis, 344 Mo. 412, 126 S.W.2d 1197, 1201 (1939). The appeals court in Pollock v. Wetterau Food Distr. Group, 11 S.W.3d 754, 772-73 (Mo.App. E.D.1999), however, suggested that, at least where the suspended attorney is seeking to recover attorney’s fees from an adverse party and the misconduct is not associated with the case, the attorney should not be precluded from recovering for the reasonable value of his or her services under a quantum meruit theory. The Pollock court, although dealing with a distinguishable fact situation, thoughtfully reasoned, on the basis of persuasive case law from other jurisdictions, that a rule to the contrary would “have the unintended effect of retroactive monetary punishment.” Id. at 773. Such effect, said the court, would run counter to the purpose of disciplinary action, which is to protect the public and not to punish the attorney. Id.
[215]*215Adopting the Pollock approach to attorney’s fees for disbarred or suspended attorneys even if recovery is not being sought from an adverse party, we believe that Mr. Wilson’s lawyer, suspended for misconduct not associated with the case, is owed at least the value of the services he rendered to Mr. Wilson from the date of engagement in November 1998 until the date he was suspended from the practice of law in January 2002. Mr. Wilson paid him $28,250. The circuit court, on remand, will have to decide, on the basis of testimony already presented, whether that sum represents the reasonable value of services rendered. Those services included initial investigation and trial-preparation consultation before trial, and client consultation throughout. Father’s lawyer did not represent a named plaintiff during trial, and there is no testimony that he participated in any meaningful way in the appeal that ultimately affirmed the compensatory damages or in the negotiations as to the remanded punitive damages that led to a $700,000 settlement.23
As for the attorney’s fee that the circuit court ordered Mr. Wilson to pay to Ms. Collins’s law firm, this was not error. Mr. Wilson claims that section 537.095.4 only allows the court to order a non-represented person to pay attorney’s fees to the lawyer representing the named plaintiff in a •wrongful death action. Because he was represented throughout the proceeding, albeit by different lawyers, Mr. Wilson believes he should not have to pay anything to Ms. Collins’s law firm. Mr. Wilson forgets, however, that his lawyer had a contract with that law firm, and he was represented by it for about a year-and-a-half, before the contractual relationship between father’s lawyer and the law firm terminated several months before trial. Thus, the circuit court did not err in ordering Mr. Wilson to pay fees to the law firm from his share. There has been no contention that the amount ordered was unreasonable in quantum meruit; accordingly, this will not be at issue on remand.
Expenses
Mr. Wilson claims that he should not have been required to pay 36.28 percent of the litigation expenses, particularly as he was only awarded 8.7 percent of the total available for distribution. We have been unable to locate any case that requires litigation expenses to be split between the persons who can share the proceeds of a wrongful death action in proportion to the awards made for their loss. In fact, the statute requires that “the claimant” deduct and pay the expenses of recovery and the attorney’s fees before distributing the net proceeds to those persons entitled to share in the proportion ordered by the court. § 537.095.4(2) & (4).24 In this case, the [216]*216claimant is Ms. Collins, and while the various contracts between the parties and their lawyers contemplated the satisfaction of expenses before attorney’s fees were to be deducted from the parties’ shares,- there is no agreement regarding how the parties would divide the expenses.
The expenses that were awarded during the first apportionment hearing came off the top of the settlement, and the remainder was apportioned between Ms. Collins and Mr. Wilson. Mr. Wilson claims that the settlement should have been apportioned first, and then the expenses deducted. While Mr. Wilson is technically correct, this was an interlocutory order that could be accounted for and adjusted in the final judgment. Nor did Mr. Wilson object in any way during the first apportionment hearing to the court’s approval of this settlement to which he was a signatory. At the time, the proceeds were needed to pay the considerable expenses that were accruing to prepare the case for trial. Mr. Wilson and Ms. Collins had an agreement stating that Ms. Collins would not object to Mr. Wilson receiving as much as.a forty percent share, but as stated above, such agreements cannot bind the court under the express provisions of section 537.095.3. Furthermore, had the circuit court complied with section 537.095.3, Mr. Wilson would not have received any of the settlement proceeds from the first apportionment hearing, because the evidence at that time did not support a finding that he had suffered any loss from the death of his son.
During the second apportionment hearing, the expenses, although set aside before the proceeds were apportioned between Mr. Wilson and Ms. Collins, effectively came out of Ms. Collins’s share because the court had determined that Mr. Wilson was only going to receive $1,000, and approximately $5,000 in expenses remained to be paid then. The only source to pay the expenses was Ms. Collins’s share. During the third apportionment hearing, the circuit court split the expenses between the parties in proportion to the share each was awarded from the punitive damages settlement. Under section 537.095.4(2), this was incorrect. Mr. Wilson should not have been ordered to pay $840.61 in expenses. These expenses are to be deducted by Ms. Collins from the total recovery without thereby affecting Mr. Wilson’s award, and the circuit court is so directed on remand.
Re-litigating Father’s Loss
Before we consider Mr. Wilson’s claim that a fourth apportionment hearing should be conducted, we will address Ms. Collins’s claim that the circuit court erred in allowing Mr. Wilson to re-litigate the issue of his loss during the third apportionment hearing. Ms. Collins relies on the res judicata /collateral estop-pel doctrines to support her claim. Res judicata bars the reassertion of a cause of action previously adjudicated in a proceeding between the same parties or those in privity with them. Jordan v. Kansas City, 929 S.W.2d 882, 885 (Mo.App. W.D.1996). Before the doctrine can apply, “a final judgment on the merits must have been rendered in the underlying action.” Id. Similarly, collateral estoppel, or issue preclusion, bars a party from re-litigating any factual or legal issues that were decided by and necessary to a prior judgment. Galaxy Steel & Tube, Inc. v. Douglass Coal & Wrecking, Inc., 928 S.W.2d 420, 422 (Mo.App. S.D.1996). Thus, a final decision on the merits is a prerequisite to the application of this doctrine as well.
[217]*217The circuit court did not render a final decision when the proceeds of the $100,000 settlement and the $510,000 compensatory damages award were apportioned. Each decision was interlocutory and, as to Mr. Wilson and Ms. Collins and their attorneys, subject to a final accounting and apportionment under section 537.095. Thus, it was within the circuit court’s discretion whether to admit additional evidence as to Mr. Wilson’s purported loss. Clark v. Mo. & N. Ark R.R. Co., 157 S.W.3d 665, 673 (Mo.App. W.D.2004). Because that issue is not before us, we will deny Ms. Collins’s cross appeal.
Regarding Mr. Wilson’s request for a fourth apportionment hearing on remand, we have already alluded to the rather lengthy apportionment hearing transcripts in this appeal. As a simple matter of judicial economy, we see absolutely no need for any further evidentiary hearings. In addition, we have already determined on the basis of the hearings conducted to date that the circuit court did not abuse its discretion in apportioning most of the proceeds to Ms. Collins. Because the court’s error pertains to the application of law, rather than to any evidentiary issues, it is only the apportionment that must be corrected on remand, and the circuit court can re-calculate that apportionment without considering any additional evidence. § 512.160.3 (in disposing of appeal, “no new trial shall be ordered as to issues in which no error appears.”); see also Gardner v. Mo. State Highway Patrol Superintendent, 901 S.W.2d 107, 117 (Mo.App. W.D.1995) (purpose of remand is to rectify error that occurred in lower tribunal).
Punitive Damages Settlement Interest
Mr. Wilson claims in his third point relied on that section 408.040 requires the payment of interest by the defendants on the $700,000 punitive damages settlement from the day the court signed an order approving the settlement until it was actually paid into the court’s registry. Mr. Wilson argues not only that $4,142.40 in interest is owing (representing 9% interest on $700,000 from November 21 to December 15, 2003), but that interest on the unpaid interest has been accruing while that matter has been on appeal and continues to accrue. His argument as to interest on the interest was not raised in his point relied on, however, so we will not consider it further. Mo. R. Civ. P. 84.13(a). Defendants in the underlying litigation contend that the order approving the settlement, because it did not constitute a final judgment, is not subject to the post judgment interest rule. They further argue that interest is not due because the court did not set a date certain for payment of the settlement proceeds into the court’s registry.
There do not appear to be any cases on point, but the statute itself applies to “all money due upon any judgment or order of any court.” § 408.040.1 (emphasis added). While the proceeds could not be paid to the parties until after the apportionment hearing, there was a court order requiring that the money be paid into the court’s registry. Under the plain meaning of the statute, interest is owed by the defendants from the date the court signed the order approving the settlement and requiring payment of the funds until the check was actually deposited. Mr. Wilson’s third point is granted. On remand, the interest will have to be added to the total available for apportionment.
Conclusion
The circuit court incorrectly applied section 537.095 in two respects: failing to make a final overall apportionment in the manner prescribed by the Parr court and requiring Mr. Wilson to pay expenses; thus, it abused its discretion in denying [218]*218Mr. Wilson’s motion for new trial. City of Pleasant Valley, 991 S.W.2d at 727. The court did not, however, abuse its discretion in making an approximate overall 90/10 apportionment that reflected the testimony and evidence from three hearings as to Ms. Collins’s greater loss. Wright, 908 S.W.2d at 868-69.25 No new evidence is needed, and remand is limited for the court to enter orders consistent with this opinion. In summary, on remand, the circuit court must follow the requirements of section 537.095.4 as interpreted and applied by the supreme court in Parr and further (i) should adjust the amounts apportioned to Ms. Collins and Mr. Wilson, if it was the court’s intent to make an actual 90/10 split of the total recovery; (ii) determine, on the basis of testimony already adduced whether the amount Mr. Wilson paid to his lawyer was sufficient under quantum meruit; (iii) require Ms. Collins to deduct the $840.61 that Mr. Wilson paid in expenses from the total recovery without thereby reducing Mr. Wilson’s award; and (iv) order the payment of interest on the $700,000 punitive damages settlement. Affirmed in part, reversed in part and remanded.
VICTOR C. HOWARD, P.J., and JAMES M. SMART, J. concur.