Matthew J. Weiss, Respondent, vs. Mary D. Weiss, Appellant.

CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 15, 2025
DocketED112738
StatusPublished

This text of Matthew J. Weiss, Respondent, vs. Mary D. Weiss, Appellant. (Matthew J. Weiss, Respondent, vs. Mary D. Weiss, Appellant.) 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
Matthew J. Weiss, Respondent, vs. Mary D. Weiss, Appellant., (Mo. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

In the Missouri Court of Appeals Eastern District DIVISION TWO

MATTHEW J. WEISS, ) No. ED112738 ) Respondent, ) Appeal from the Circuit Court of ) St. Louis County vs. ) 22SL-DR02534 ) MARY D. WEISS, ) Honorable Megan H. Julian ) Appellant. ) Filed: July 15, 2025

Before Lisa P. Page, P.J., Rebeca Navarro-McKelvey, J., and Daniel G. Pelikan, Sp. J.

Mary D. Weiss (Wife) appeals from the trial court’s judgment denying her motion to set

aside a February 1, 2024 consent judgment of dissolution of marriage to Matthew J. Weiss

(Husband). We affirm.

BACKGROUND

Husband and Wife were married on October 7, 1995. Three children were born of the

marriage, one of whom was unemancipated at the time Husband filed a petition for dissolution of

marriage in May 2022. Wife filed an answer and counter petition, alleging she lacked sufficient

property to provide for her reasonable needs and requested support from Husband. In July 2023,

Husband filed a motion for special master and a retired judge (Special Master) was appointed.

The matter was tried on nonconsecutive days: December 5, 2023; January 17, 2024; and

January 24, 2024. However, on January 24, 2024, the parties and their attorneys reached a settlement and testified on the record as to their agreement. Wife’s attorney prepared the

settlement documents and on January 26, 2024, the parties, their attorneys, and the Special

Master met at Wife’s attorney’s office to execute the marital settlement and separation

agreement (MSA), to include separate affidavits for judgment signed by Husband and Wife. The

trial court approved and signed the judgment of dissolution on February 1, 2024 (Judgment).

On February 26, 2024, Wife filed a motion entitled “Respondent’s Verified Section

452.325.2 Motion to Set Aside the February 2 [sic], 2024 Judgment of Dissolution of Marriage

and the Marital Settlement and Separation Agreement Incorporated Therein and for This Court’s

Consideration, at an Evidentiary Hearing of the Parties’ Economic Circumstances and Other

Relevant Evidence in Determining the Conscionability or Unconscionability of the Terms of the

Judgment and Marital Settlement and Separation Agreement.” Wife argued the trial court should

conduct an evidentiary hearing because her due process rights were violated when the trial court

adopted the judgment of dissolution, MSA, and parenting plan. Wife asserted the trial court

should consider the conscionability of the MSA’s terms pursuant to Section 452.325 RSMo

(2016). 1

Wife filed her second post-judgment motion on March 4, 2024, titled “Verified Motion

for New Trial and Recission, Set Aside and/or Cancellation of this Court’s February 1, 2024

Judgment of Dissolution of Marriage Incorporating the Parties’ Parenting Plan and [MSA].”

Wife argued, pursuant to Rule 78 2 and Matter of N.S.M. v. McShannon, 523 S.W.3d 584 (Mo.

App. W.D. 2017), that the court should rescind, set aside, and/or cancel the February 1, 2024

Judgment because of the court’s implicit finding the terms were made by each party “freely,

knowingly, and intelligently.” She alleged the Judgment, parenting plan and MSA were not

1 All further statutory references are to RSMo (2016). 2 All references to Rules are to Missouri Supreme Court Rules (2023).

2 voluntary because her capacity to contract was compromised due to a 2010 head injury. She

claimed she did not have a reasonable understanding of the nature and consequences of the

agreement. She further alleged economic and financial duress because she lacked her own free

will based on her financial condition, oppression, and because she felt coerced and threatened by

Husband’s statements to her.

Husband filed a response on March 14, 2024, and requested attorneys’ fees on April 3,

2024. Wife filed her third post-judgment motion on May 8, 2024, titled “Verified Motion to Set

Aside Judgment of February 1, 2024 and to Re-Open This Matter.” She claimed the Judgment

did not identify, value, or characterize property and debt disclosed by the receipt of a tardy

business records subpoena that included her pension benefit.

The trial court heard testimony and received evidence on Wife’s post-trial motions and

Husband’s motion for attorneys’ fees on March 14 and 15, 2024. On May 31, 2024, the court

denied Wife’s motions and ordered Wife to pay $15,000 for a portion of Husband’s attorneys’

fees. Wife filed her notice of appeal on June 10, 2024.

DISCUSSION

Wife raises six points on appeal. In her first point, she alleges the trial court erred in

failing to set aside the Judgment of Dissolution of Marriage and grant Wife a new trial because

the court abused its discretion in that Wife did not freely and voluntarily consent to the entry of

judgment, as Wife was experiencing extreme duress during the negotiation and finalization of the

court’s Judgment.

In her second and third points, Wife alleges the trial court erred in appointing a Special

Master, because the court misapplied Rule 68.01 in improperly delegating its judicial authority to

the Special Master without an order of reference and without sufficient evidence of “some

3 exceptional condition” required by the rule. In Wife’s fourth point, she also alleges the trial

court misapplied Rule 68.01 in entering its Judgment of Dissolution of Marriage before the

expiration of thirty days of receiving the Special Master’s report. In each of these points, two,

three, and four, Wife alleges she was deprived of her right to due process.

In her fifth point, Wife alleges the circuit court erred in ordering Wife to pay Husband’s

attorneys’ fees because it abused its discretion in holding that Wife’s post-judgment motions

were without merit, in that Wife had good cause and valid grounds to support the motions.

In her sixth and final point, Wife alleges the trial court erred in denying Wife’s May 8,

2024 motion to re-open the evidence regarding the existence of undivided marital property

because consideration of said evidence may have materially affected the merits of the case, and

thus, the court abused its discretion in that Wife submitted her verified motion while the court

still had control of its Judgment and therefore the court could have re-opened the case for good

cause to properly account for and divide the marital property pursuant to Section 452.330.

Authority for Appellate Review

A. Timely filed motions

This court must make an initial determination of our authority to review this matter on

appeal. McShannon, 523 S.W.3d at 588. Trial courts generally retain control over judgments for

a thirty-day period after entry of judgment under Rule 75.01. Rule 78.04 provides, in relevant

part, “[A]ny motion for new trial and any motion to amend the judgment or opinion shall be filed

not later than thirty days after the entry of judgment.” Once the thirty-day period provided by

Rule 75.01 expires, the trial court’s authority to grant relief is limited to the grounds raised in a

timely filed, authorized after-trial motion. State ex rel. AJKJ, Inc. v. Hellmann, 574 S.W.3d 239,

242 n.3 (Mo. banc 2019) (citing Massman Const. Co. v. Mo. Highway & Transp. Comm'n, 914

4 S.W.2d 801, 802-03 (Mo. banc 1996).

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