Hamilton v. Hamilton

340 S.W.3d 197, 2011 Mo. App. LEXIS 311, 2011 WL 864920
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 15, 2011
DocketWD 71786
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 340 S.W.3d 197 (Hamilton v. Hamilton) 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
Hamilton v. Hamilton, 340 S.W.3d 197, 2011 Mo. App. LEXIS 311, 2011 WL 864920 (Mo. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

PER CURIAM:

Lamont Hamilton appeals the circuit court’s May 11, 2009 judgment vacating the court’s April 16, 2008 order, which granted Lamont’s motion to quash Cherlyn Hamilton’s writ of garnishment. He contends the trial court erred in denying his motion to quash the garnishment. The respondent’s motion to dismiss is granted, because no justiciable issue is presented in this appeal.

Statement of Facts

On October 5, 2000, the Circuit Court of Jackson County entered a judgment dissolving the marriage of appellant Lamont Stanley Hamilton (“Lamont”) and respondent Cherlyn Jean Hamilton (“Cherlyn”). As part of the dissolution, Cherlyn was to pay $597.00 per month in child support and Lamont was to pay $597.00 per month for maintenance. The property settlement agreement provided that Lamont needed to pay maintenance for only four years, after which his maintenance obligations to Cherlyn would end. The parties informally agreed to offset the child support and maintenance payments, as the amounts owed were the same. Thus, neither party paid anything to the other.

In 2003, the Jackson County Child Support Division informed Cherlyn she had to pay child support regardless of what Lamont’s obligations were. In addition, Cherlyn was informed she was in arrears and had to pay all of the child support due since the time of the dissolution decree. Apparently, Cherlyn began to pay child support through the Child Support Division. Subsequently, Cherlyn asked Lamont to pay maintenance. He did not agree to pay.

On June 9, 2003, Cherlyn filed a request for writ of garnishment. Lamont moved to quash the writ of garnishment on September 22, 2003, which Cherlyn did not *199 oppose. In December 2003, the circuit court granted the motion to quash, apparently on the basis of a change in circumstance since Lamont had become homeless and was on public assistance.

In February 2008, Cherlyn filed another request for writ of garnishment, seeking all maintenance due from 2000 to the present. Lamont was employed at a Home Depot store at the time. Lamont objected to the garnishment and filed a motion to quash, asserting that Cherlyn was not entitled to all the money she was claiming in the garnishment because he was entitled to a four-year offset.

On April 16, 2008, the circuit court quashed the writ of garnishment because the amount stated in the garnishment as the judgment amount was excessive. Subsequently, the court denied Cherlyn’s Motion to Reconsider and Amend the April 16, 2008 Order. Cherlyn sought to appeal the order quashing the writ under section 512.020(5). 1 In Hamilton v. Hamilton, 278 S.W.3d 730, 732 (Mo.App.2009), this court dismissed the appeal as not perfected for appeal because the ruling was not designated a judgment.

After the dismissal of the appeal, the parties met back in the circuit court and agreed to vacate the April 2008 order quashing the garnishment. The parties may not be in agreement about why they agreed to vacate the April 2008 order, but they did agree to vacate the order. Lamont seems to think it had something to do with the fact that Cherlyn erred in “submitting the interrogatories to Home Depot U.S.A. to a local store and not the corporate home office in Atlanta.” He does not explain why that caused him to agree to vacate the order quashing the garnishment and to allow the garnishment to proceed. 2 The garnishment was then executed on funds in the hands of Home Depot, with Cherlyn collecting $267.41. Although that ended that chapter of the proceedings concerning that garnishment, Lamont seems to want to revisit the garnishment that is now history.

In the latest chapter of the litigation, Cherlyn requested another writ of garnishment; this garnishment was issued in July 2009. Lamont, not willing to concede, moved to quash this garnishment on August 14, 2009. Cherlyn responded to his motion to quash with a motion for summary judgment, contending that no dispute of material fact existed and that she was entitled to the garnishment as a matter of law. Lamont filed a response but did not comply with the format of Rule 74.04, 3 in that he failed to admit or deny factual assertions in Cherlyn’s statement of uncontroverted material facts. On October 22, 2009, the court noted the deficiencies of Lamont’s response and ordered Lamont to file an appropriate response within fourteen days. On November 24, 2009, one month after the court’s order and two weeks after the response time expired, the circuit court dismissed Lamont’s motion to quash. That same day, Lamont submitted a lengthy response to the motion for summary judgment. The court apparently did not see Lamont’s response before entering the dismissal, nor *200 was the court obligated to review his response at that point.

In his notice of appeal, Lamont purported to appeal the April 16, 2008 order quashing the garnishment. That ruling was actually in his favor. Moreover, the order in question was never perfected as a judgment, and Cherlyn’s appeal of the order was already dismissed by this court. We suspect that Lamont really wishes to appeal the denial of his motion to quash the later garnishment. The circuit court’s “Order and Judgment” denying that motion was entered November 24, 2009. Lamont filed his notice of appeal on December 2, 2009, which would have been timely if he had been appealing the November 24, 2009 ruling. However, he did not refer to the November 24 ruling in either his notice of appeal or his point relied on.

Discussion

Lamont sets forth one point relied on:

The trial court erred in judgment vacating court’s order dated April 16, 2008, and denying petitioner’s motion to quash garnishment because the trial court’s judgment was not supported by Rule 90.07(b)(c) interrogatories to garnishee answers to interrogatories exceptions response was submitted in error to Home Depot Inc., that respondent’s renewed exections [sic] to answers of garnishee Home Depot U.S.A., Inc., to respondent’s garnishment interrogatories and motion to order garnishee to answer interrogories [sic] properly, with suggestions in support therof [sic] failed to support the filing error caused by the respondent’s submitting the interrogatories to Home Depot U.S.A., Inc to a local store in Independence Missouri and not to the corporate home office in Atlanta which caused a delay in the response to the interrogaries [sic] which was the main basis of vacating and denying petitioner’s motion to quash garnishment.

In seeking to parse the language of his point relied on, and in giving broad intendment to the point, we note that Lamont seems to claim the court erred in its order of May 11, 2009, in vacating the April 16, 2008 order quashing the garnishment, thereby allowing the garnishment to proceed. While an appeal of the May 11, 2009 order could have been timely perfected under section 512.020 and Rule 81.04, no appeal was taken. The judgment became final on June 11, 2009, as no authorized post-trial motions were filed. See Rule 81.05(a)(1).

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Bluebook (online)
340 S.W.3d 197, 2011 Mo. App. LEXIS 311, 2011 WL 864920, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hamilton-v-hamilton-moctapp-2011.