D.W. v. J.O.

476 S.W.3d 298, 2015 Mo. App. LEXIS 946, 2015 WL 5573495
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 22, 2015
DocketNo. ED 101982
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 476 S.W.3d 298 (D.W. v. J.O.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
D.W. v. J.O., 476 S.W.3d 298, 2015 Mo. App. LEXIS 946, 2015 WL 5573495 (Mo. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

ROBERT G. DOWD, JR., Presiding Judge

This appeal arises from the judgment of the circuit court ordering D.W. (“Father”) to pay some of the attorney fees incurred by J.O. (“Mother”) while litigating custody of the parties’ minor child and awarding Father the child income tax exemption. On appeal, Mother claims error on both of those issues and also challenges the process by which the circuit court. entered that judgment on the findings of the family court commissioner. We affirm.

Father filed a petition for custody of the child, and the case was assigned to a family court commissioner. The parties reached an agreement on custody and visitation and submitted only the issues of attorney fees and the tax exemption to the commissioner. The commissioner held a hearing on those issues. The commissioner entered her recommendation — that Father be ordered to pay Mother $5,000 in attorney fees and that Father be awarded the child income tax exemption — on a pre-printed child custody and support form judgment, which also included all of the issues the parties had agreed upon. The circuit court judge approved and adopted this document as the judgment of the court on the same day the commissioner had signed it. It is undisputed that the parties did not receive notice of the commissioner’s decision before the circuit court judge adopted it as the judgment of the court. Rather, the parties received a copy of the judgment — one and the same as the commissioner’s decision — a few days after the judge signed it.

Thereafter, Mother filed a motion to amend the judgment to more accurately reflect the parties’ agreement regarding custody and visitation. This motion did not address the issues of attorney fees and tax exemption that had been submitted to the commissioner. The motion was heard and granted in an order signed by both the commissioner and the circuit court judge on the same day as the motion was filed. Mother then filed a motion a few days later, seeking a rehearing before a circuit court judge on the tax exemption and the attorney fees award. A different circuit court judge denied that motion the same day it was filed. This appeal follows.

In her first point on appeal, Mother challenges both of the judges’ same-day rulings: the entry of judgment on the same day as the entry of the commissioner’s decision and the denial of her motion for rehearing the same day it was filed. Mother argues that she should have been given an opportunity to challenge the commissioner’s decision before entry of judgment. She also contends that she was entitled to be heard on her motion for rehearing and was precluded from seeking a change of judge as a result of the same-day ruling thereon. She asserts generally that the immediate rulings by the trial judges indicate a lack of careful review of her claims. We disagree. Mother has been given all the process to which she is entitled and has therefore suffered no prejudice.

We begin with a review of the statutes and rules governing these types of family court cases heard by commissioners. [301]*301Commissioners are authorized to hear family matters under Chapter 487 of the Missouri Revised Statutes. Section 487.030, enacted in 1993, provides that “notice of the findings and recommendations of the commissioner, together with a statement relative to the right to file a motion for rehearing, shall be given to the parties whose case has been heard by the commissioner, and to any other person that the court may direct.” Section 487.030.1. This section also provides that the parties “are entitled to file with the court a motion for a hearing by a judge of the family court either within fifteen days after receiving notice of the findings of the commissioner at the hearing or within fifteen days after the mailing, or within fifteen days after other service directed by the court.” Section 487.030.2. The statute does not contemplate requesting a rehearing after the judgment is entered. Thus, the statute was construed to require the court to observe a fifteen-day waiting period before adopting a commissioner’s findings in order to give the parties their one opportunity to file a motion for rehearing. See Colvin v. Ashley, 995 S.W.2d 35, 37-38 (Mo. App. W.D. 1999). “Failure by the circuit court to observe the fifteen-day waiting period before determining whether to adopt the commissioner’s findings nullifies this provision by depriving the parties of a meaningful opportunity to move the court for rehearing.” Id. at 38.

But after that case was handed down, Rule 130 was adopted and became effective in 2010. It also governs the practices and procedures before commissioners hearing family law matters and “supersedes all statutes and existing court rules inconsistent therewith.” Rule 130.01 and Rule 130.02. Under Rule 130.07, notice of the commissioner’s findings and recommendations is required just as it is under the statute. But under the rules it is not notice of the commissioner’s findings that triggers the fifteen-day period for seeking a rehearing before a judge, it is notice of the entry of judgment:

Unless waived by the- parties in writing, a party to a case or proceeding heard by a commissioner, within 15 days after the mailing of notice of the filing of the judgment of the court, may file a motion for rehearing by a judge of the court.

Rule 130.13(a). The rule does not contemplate that a party may'request a rehearing before a circuit court judge prior to judgment being entered. Rather, the motion for rehearing before a circuit court judge is not due under the rule until after the adoption of' the commissioner’s findings and recommendations and entry of judgment by the circuit court.1

Because of the inconsistency between the statute and the rule on this issue, the rulé prevails as to the time for filing a motion for rehearing before a circuit court judge. See also Dunkle v. Dunkle, 158 S.W.3d 823, 831 (Mo. App. E.D. 2005) (in family court cases heard by commissioner, fifteen-day deadline in Rule 130.13 supersedes thirty-day deadline for motion for new trial in other rules). Thus, while notice of the commissioner’s findings should have been given to the parties under the rule, the failure'to do so did not deprive Mother of the opportunity tó request a rehearing before a circuit court judge because the rule does not contemplate that type of request being filed until after entry of the judgment.2 Thus, even [302]*302if Mother had received notice of the commissioner’s .findings prior to the entry of judgment, her motion for rehearing was not to be filed until after judgment was entered anyway.

Mother contends that by ruling on this motion for rehearing the same day it was filed, the circuit court deprived her of notice and an opportunity to be heard on the motion. First, the idea that Mother was not on notice of her own motion is absurd. The cases Mother cites on this issue are not applicable because they-involved situations in which the court granted one party’s motion for new trial without notice to the opposing party. See Albert J. Hoppe, Inc. v. St. Louis Public Service Co., 235 S.W.2d 347 (Mo. banc 1950) and Estate of Kibbe, 704 S.W.2d 716, 717-18 (Mo. App. W.D. 1986).

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476 S.W.3d 298, 2015 Mo. App. LEXIS 946, 2015 WL 5573495, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dw-v-jo-moctapp-2015.