Jenkins v. Andrews

526 S.W.2d 369
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedAugust 4, 1975
DocketKCD 27197
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 526 S.W.2d 369 (Jenkins v. Andrews) 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
Jenkins v. Andrews, 526 S.W.2d 369 (Mo. Ct. App. 1975).

Opinion

ROBERT R. WELBORN, Special Judge.

Action for damages arising out of claimed abuse of process. In each of three counts, plaintiffs sought punitive damages of $5,000,000 and actual-damages of $1,100 on Count I, $100,000 on Count II and $5,000 on Count III. This appeal is from order of trial court dismissing the petition with prejudice.

The plaintiffs in this case are Maurice E. Jenkins, his wife, Hazel, and their son, Phillip. The defendants are the members of the board of directors of Chariton County Grain Company, Incorporated, at the time of its liquidation in September, 1964.

On December 18,1965, the Carroll County Circuit Court entered judgment against Maurice E. Jenkins for $6,840.07, in favor of Chariton County Grain Company, Incorporated.

Execution issued on the judgment and on August 5, 1966, an effort was made to levy on personal property on the farm owned and operated by Maurice Jenkins and his wife in Chariton County. Actions of the defendants in connection with this effort form the basis for Count I of the petition in *371 this ease. The attempted levy on the personal property was unsuccessful.

On October 5,1966, the defendants served upon Jenkins notice to the effect that they would enforce their judgment by levying upon real estate owned by Jenkins and situated in Linn County. Execution sale was held on November 7, 1966, and defendant Robert Madget purchased the interest of Maurice Jenkins for $500. Madget thereafter brought suit against defendants here to quiet his title therein and was successful, with the court setting aside two deeds as having been made with intent to defraud creditors. The judgment of the trial court was affirmed by the Supreme Court in Madget v. Jenkins, 461 S.W.2d 768 (Mo.1970). The acts of the defendants relating to this procedure are involved in Count II of defendants’ petition.

In July, 1965, plaintiffs Maurice and Hazel Jenkins borrowed $65,000 from Phoenix Mutual Life Insurance Company. They executed a single note for the indebtedness, secured by a deed of trust on their Linn and Chariton County farms. In March, 1970, the defendants, other than Madget, purchased the note. On April 15, 1970, the purchasers of the note notified plaintiffs that their failure to pay taxes on the Linn County property for 1967, 1968 and 1969 constituted a default under the deed of trust and demanded payment of the amount due on the note. Both the Chariton and Linn County farms were advertised for sale under the deed of trust securing the note. Plaintiffs filed suit in the Linn County Circuit Court for a declaratory judgment and injunction against the sale. After the decision in Madget v. Jenkins, supra, in the Supreme Court, judgment was entered denying plaintiffs relief. The action of the defendants relating to the enforcement of the deed of trust forms the basis for Count III of the petition.

The present action was begun in the Linn County Circuit Court July 29, 1971. Defendant Madget filed a separate motion to dismiss. The other defendants filed a joint motion. These motions were overruled February 22, 1972. Defendant Madget filed a separate answer. The remaining defendants filed a joint answer.

On October 10, 1972, one of the defendants filed an affidavit for disqualification of Judge Green of the Linn County Circuit Court. The application was sustained and Judge J. Morgan Donelson was assigned to hear this case.

On December 14, 1973, the defendants filed an amended motion for summary judgment or in the alternative to dismiss plaintiffs’ petition. On December 21, 1973, a hearing on the motion was held before Judge Donelson. At the conclusion of the presentation of the motion and argument of counsel, the trial court indicated its intention to overrule the motion for summary judgment, but to sustain the motion to dismiss unless an amended petition was filed. Counsel for plaintiffs asked leave to amend and the trial court, granted 30 days for such purpose.

On January 18, 1974, plaintiffs filed application for a change of judge. Defendants objected to the application and the cause was again taken up by Judge Donel-son on January 28, 1974. Following argument, he entered an order overruling the motion for summary judgment, but sustaining the motion to dismiss and dismissed the petition, with prejudice. Then, he sustained plaintiffs’ application for change of judge. This appeal followed.

In this court the first assignment of error is based upon the trial judge’s failure to disqualify himself prior to ruling on the defendants’ motion to dismiss. Appellants contend that the application for disqualification met the requirements of Rule 51.05, V.A.M.R., and that the application was timely, so that nothing remained for the judge to do but to take the steps necessary to substitute another judge. Respondents contend that the application was not timely insofar as their motion to dismiss was concerned because it was filed after the matter had been heard and while the court had it under advisement.

*372 Appellants rely upon paragraph (b) of Rule 51.05, as follows:

“(b) The application must be filed at least thirty days before the trial date or within five days after a trial setting date has been made, whichever date is later, unless the trial judge has not been designated within that time, in which event the application may be filed within ten days after the trial judge has been designated or at any time prior to trial, whichever date is earlier.”

Appellants apparently assume that their motion was within the literal limits of the rule, inasmuch as they have filed no reply to respondents’ argument on that issue.

It has long been settled in this state that the right to disqualify a judge is not to be employed “to produce inconvenience and absurdity.” In Ex Parte Cox, 10 Mo. 742 (1847), issues in a divorce action had been tried by a jury and after their verdict, the defendant applied for a change of venue on grounds of prejudice of the judge. In ordering the trial court, by mandamus, to proceed with the cause, the Supreme Court stated (10 Mo. 743):

“Our statute which authorizes a change of venue in civil cases does not in terms declare at what period of the cause such orders may be made. There can be no doubt, however, that it never was contemplated that the progress of a suit could be interrupted at any period by such applications. The law must be construed with reference to the practice of other courts and our courts, so as not to produce inconvenience and absurdity. We need not, in this case, undertake to fix any particular period, beyond which such applications should be disregarded but we do not hesitate to say that, after the issues have been made up and tried, it is too late for complainant to come in and swear that the judge is prejudiced. No special facts are stated to account for this untimely application. If any prejudice existed on the part of the judge, it must have existed before the suit was tried.

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Bluebook (online)
526 S.W.2d 369, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jenkins-v-andrews-moctapp-1975.