Laumeier v. Laumeier

271 S.W. 481, 308 Mo. 201, 1925 Mo. LEXIS 891
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 13, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 271 S.W. 481 (Laumeier v. Laumeier) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Laumeier v. Laumeier, 271 S.W. 481, 308 Mo. 201, 1925 Mo. LEXIS 891 (Mo. 1925).

Opinion

*208 WHITE, J.

This is a proceeding* by defendant to modify a decree of divorce between the parties so as to determine the rights and obligations of each respecting the rights of a child born to plaintiff after the decree of divorce.

They were married July, 1918. On June 12, 1919, a decree of divorce was granted plaintiff, the' court adjudging that she was the injured and innocent party, and her maiden name, Byrd Shoemaker, was restored. It is claimed by the defendant that he was tricked into the marriage, did not know it at the time, and that he never lived with plaintiff after such alleged marriage. The plaintiff claims that they did live together a.t various places in St. Louis, even after the suit for divorce was filed, but that defendant never acknowledged her as his wife in any public way.

*209 The defendant was wealthy and, at the time the decree of divorce was rendered, he gave the plaintiff the sum of $20,000 in full settlement of all claims. In the decree of divorce no mention is' made of alimony.

The, plaintiff’s petition for divorce sets out that the defendant refused to treat her as his wife or to introduce her as such to his friends, and neglected and refused to support her, and contains this:

‘‘ Plaintiff states there were no children born of this marriage. ’ ’

On December 9, 1919, a son was born to the' plaintiff in the city of St. Louis, and his name registered as Henry ■Shoemaker.

On October 27, 1922, the defendant filed his petition in the Circuit Court of the City of St. Louis, seeking to modify the decree, in which, among other things, he alleged that in September, 1922, the defendant, Byrd Shoemaker, under the name of Byrd Laumeier, brought suit in New York against the petitioner, charging that a son was born as a result of the marriage, and that an attempt was made to serve said petitioner with a writ of summons in said suit; that the defendant then began an investigation and learned that said child was born December 9, 1919, under the name of Henry Shoemaker.

The petition then pleads in the alternative that the child either is or is not the petitioner’s, but avers his belief that it is not his, and alleg.es that the plaintiff is not a proper person to care for said child; that she consorted with low associates, that she had squandered the $20,000' he had paid her on settlement at the time the divorce decree was rendered. The petition then prays that if it be determined that the child is not the child of petitioner, the said Byrd Shoemaker and Henry Shoemaker be enjoined from asserting any claim against him, his property or estate, based upon the claim or contention that the said child is his child, but that if it be determined that the child be his, that it be awarded to him, and that appropriate orders be made to enforce his rights.

*210 February 19, 1923, the plaintiff, Byrd Laumeier, filed a petition in tbe Supreme Court asking a writ of prohibition to prevent Judge Hall of the circuit court, in whose division the proceeding was pending, from entertaining it, on the ground that the Circuit Court of the City of St. Louis was without jurisdiction of the person of the plaintiff, or of the subject-matter of the action. This court • issued preliminary rule in prohibition, to which Judge Hall made return. The matter was argued and submitted to Court in Banc, the preliminary rule was discharged, and the circuit court directed to proceed with the case. A motion to modify the opinion in that case filed by the respondent was afterwards overruled in a per curiam opinion, which further explained the effect of the ruling.

The matter was called for trial February 23, 1924; the¡ plaintiff, Byrd Shoemaker, appeared by counsel and made oral application for continuance, which was overruled. The court then proceeded to take evidence, which consisted of the testimony of H. H. Laumeier, and numerous depositions taken by him in various places. He testified that he never saw the child and never heard of it until September, 1922, when he landed in New York on return from Europe, and was confronted by the plaintiff with a child which she claimed to be his; if she was pregnant at the time of the divorce she concealed the matter from him.

The files and the record of all the proceedings in the ¡prohibition case, together with the opinion of this court, were introduced in evidence by the respondent at the trial of this case. From those files and that record it appears that the appellant in this proceeding first filed a motion to dismiss for want of jurisdiction, limiting her appearance to the purpose of the motion only. She also filed a demurrer to the petition of Laumeier on the ground that the court was without jurisdiction. Both the demurrer and the motion were overruled. These pleadings and the rulings on them, however, appear only in the *211 record of the prohibition case, and do not appear in appellant’s abstract of the record in this case.

On the evidence; introduced the trial court rendered judgment for the petitioner, finding that the child of the plaintiff' was not the defendant’s child. The court further found that when the plaintiff filed petition for divorce, June 6, 1919, she knew she was pregnant and concealed the fact from the court and from the defendant; that she had received from the defendant and retained $20,000 in full satisfaction of her marital rights. The judgment then recites that the plaintiff had filed a petition for writ of prohibition in the St. Louis Court of Appeals, and that the St. Louis Court of Appeals denied the writ, and that the petition for writ of prohibition was filed iii the- Supreme Court after1 the disposition of the matter in the St. Louis Court of Appeals. The court then awarded the custody of the child, Henry Shoemaker, to the plaintiff, without any right on the part of the defendant to interfere, and without any duty on his part to contribute to its support, past, present or future; and further adjudged that there was no child born of the marriagp, and that the plaintiff, Byrd Shoemaker, be forever enjoined from asserting any claim against the defendant or his property or estate based on the claim that the child, Henry Shoemaker, is the child of the defendant, H. H. Laumeier, and enjoined from prosecuting against the defendant in any court the suit instituted by her in the State of New York.

I. When the case was called for trial February 23, 1924, the plaintiff, Byrd Laumeier, alias Shoemaker, by her attorney, Mr. Liberman, of Jourdan, Bassieur & Pierce, presented an oral application for continuance and offered two affidavits in support of the same. The court overruled the application and error is assigned to that ruling.

The first affidavit, sworn to February 21, 1924, by Garuthers Ewing, attorney for Byrd Laumeier, in New York, states that H. H. Laumeier was sued by his former wife in the Supreme Court of New York, in September, *212

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Bluebook (online)
271 S.W. 481, 308 Mo. 201, 1925 Mo. LEXIS 891, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/laumeier-v-laumeier-mo-1925.