Glick Finley LLC v. Glick

310 S.W.3d 713, 2010 Mo. App. LEXIS 413, 2010 WL 1327839
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 6, 2010
DocketED 93002
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 310 S.W.3d 713 (Glick Finley LLC v. Glick) 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
Glick Finley LLC v. Glick, 310 S.W.3d 713, 2010 Mo. App. LEXIS 413, 2010 WL 1327839 (Mo. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

LAWRENCE E. MOONEY, Judge.

The plaintiffs, Glick Finley LLC (the firm) and Karen Finley, appeal the November 2008 judgment entered by the Circuit Court of the City of St. Louis. In this judgment, the court accepted the receiver’s final report and ordered compensation for the receiver, distribution of cash and property, preparation and filing of articles of dissolution for the firm and corresponding publication of notices, preparation and filing of final tax returns, and payment of the receiver’s $1 bond. The court’s judgment further provided that upon the receiver’s filing of a certificate of completion of the enumerated actions, the receiver shall be discharged. The receiver filed a certificate of completion, which was unverified. When the plaintiffs sought the trial court’s review of the actions of the receiver, the trial court disclaimed any jurisdiction to review the receiver’s compliance with its various orders.

We conclude that the trial court’s judgment is not a final, appealable judgment because it is conditioned on the future completion of numerous actions. We dismiss the appeal for lack of a final judgment.

The plaintiff Karen Finley and the defendant Thomas Glick are attorneys who joined their solo practices to create Glick Finley LLC. After a few years with the firm, Glick notified Finley of his intended departure for a larger St. Louis-area law firm. The parties’ relationship quickly and seriously deteriorated. The firm and Finley sued for injunctive relief against Glick, which the trial court granted. Glick counterclaimed for dissolution of the firm and *715 appointment of a receiver. Finding that the parties could not peaceably coexist in a working environment, the trial court judicially dissolved the firm and appointed a receiver. The receiver filed an interim report in September 2007, which the trial court ultimately accepted as an inventory, and the receiver filed his final report in August 2008. The parties filed numerous objections and exceptions to the final report, and the firm and Finley filed a request for findings of fact and an accounting. Without an evidentiary hearing, the trial court denied all objections and exceptions and the request for findings of fact and an accounting when it issued the November 2008 judgment.

The firm and Finley moved for a new trial and again sought findings of fact and conclusions of law. In early January 2009, the receiver “found some additional funds” that he distributed to the parties and their clients, never obtaining judicial approval or ratification. The receiver filed his report of compliance on January 26, 2009, and sought the court’s order discharging him. The court neither accepted the receiver’s report of compliance nor discharged the receiver. The firm and Finley filed objections and exceptions to the receiver’s report of compliance, again sought an inventory and an accounting, and objected that the latest tax returns were prepared incorrectly. Apparently believing he was still engaged, the receiver moved in March 2009 to quash a subpoena to the firm’s bank issued by the plaintiffs. In April 2009, the trial court denied all pending motions 1 “for lack of jurisdiction because more than 90 days has transpired since the filing of plaintiffs motion for new trial.” The firm and Finley appeal.

In four points on appeal, the firm and Finley claim the trial court erred in denying their after-trial motions for lack of jurisdiction, in approving the receiver’s final report without evidence that it was correct and complete, in approving the receiver’s final report because the receiver failed to properly perform his duties, and in denying their requests for findings of fact.

The right to appeal is purely statutory. Oasis Car Wash, Inc. v. First North County Bank, 558 S.W.2d 683, 685 (Mo.App.St.L.1977). An aggrieved party may appeal the final judgment in the case or from any special order after final judgment. Section 512.020 RSMo. (Supp.2009). Exceptions exist for enumerated orders and interlocutory judgments. 2

In every appeal, this Court must determine whether we have authority to decide it on its merits. Comm. for Educ. Equal. v. State, 878 S.W.2d 446, 450 (Mo. banc 1994); Bannister v. Pulaski Fin. Corp., 255 S.W.3d 538, 541 (Mo.App. E.D. 2008). This judgment does not fall within any of the exceptions enumerated in section 512.020, including an appeal from an order refusing to revoke, modify, or change an interlocutory order appointing a receiver. Therefore, an appeal pursuant to section 512.020 depends upon a final, appealable judgment. A final, appealable judgment disposes of all issues and all parties in the case, leaving nothing for *716 future determination. Id.; Steinmann v. Davenport, 97 S.W.3d 18, 20 (Mo.App. E.D.2002). Where the trial court fails to either resolve all the issues as to all parties or to expressly designate no just reason for delay under Missouri Supreme Court Rule 74.01(b), we must dismiss the appeal. Id.

In Oasis Car Wash, this Court determined that an order approving a receiver’s purported final accounting was not a final, appealable judgment because the successor receiver was still carrying out his duties in the continuing receivership. 558 S.W.2d at 687. And in Steinmann, we held that the judgment was not final and appealable where the trial court left something for future determination, namely an accounting, various winding-up activities, and a final report and accounting. 97 S.W.3d at 19.

Here, the November 2008 judgment does not resolve all issues. Instead, the judgment is conditioned on several actions that the receiver must complete in the future, including paying debt, distributing cash to Finley and Glick, filing articles of dissolution with the secretary of state, publishing notices of dissolution, preparing and filing federal, state, and city tax returns, depositing into the court registry the bond that the court had ordered paid eighteen months earlier, and filing a certificate of completion of the enumerated actions. The court’s judgment states that the receiver would be discharged upon the future filing of a certificate of completion.

Thus, the court’s November 2008 judgment directed the receiver to complete numerous remaining duties. The receiver’s failure to deposit the court-ordered bond until after entry of the judgment, the requirement to prepare and file tax returns in the future, the post-judgment discovery of additional assets distributed without court approval or later ratification, the absence of any review and acceptance of the receiver’s report of compliance, and the failure to discharge the receiver all lead us to conclude that the November 2008 judgment is not a final, appealable judgment.

Furthermore, due process requires that we remand the cause.

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Bluebook (online)
310 S.W.3d 713, 2010 Mo. App. LEXIS 413, 2010 WL 1327839, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/glick-finley-llc-v-glick-moctapp-2010.