Mistler v. Mistler

816 S.W.2d 241, 1991 Mo. App. LEXIS 1337, 1991 WL 167061
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedAugust 29, 1991
Docket17050
StatusPublished
Cited by83 cases

This text of 816 S.W.2d 241 (Mistler v. Mistler) 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
Mistler v. Mistler, 816 S.W.2d 241, 1991 Mo. App. LEXIS 1337, 1991 WL 167061 (Mo. Ct. App. 1991).

Opinion

SHRUM, Judge.

In this domestic relations case, the wife Ruth Ann Mistier appeals from those portions of a dissolution decree that divided property, ordered the husband Jerry D. Mistier to pay $500 a month child support, and declined to order the husband to pay the wife’s attorney fees.

The principal property division issue is the characterization, as marital or nonmari-tal, of post-dissolution monthly annuity payments due each party. The payments are part of a court-approved settlement of the parties’ claims that arose following an injury the husband sustained during the marriage. By its judgment, the trial court determined each party’s post-dissolution annuity payments to be nonmarital property. We find no error in that determination. Finding no merit in the wife’s remaining assignments of error, we affirm the judgment.

FACTS

The husband and wife were married January 9, 1971, and their marriage was dissolved June 28, 1990, following a separation that began in June 1986. One child, *244 Jared Scott Mistier, was born of the marriage on March 28, 1972.

There was conflicting evidence about the work history, work habits, and earning ability of the husband during the marriage, but the record is clear that during their marriage the parties were of modest financial means until January 12, 1982, when they settled their respective claims that arose from the husband’s personal injuries.

The husband had sustained serious head injuries on August 4, 1978, while working at the Union Electric power plant near Fulton, Missouri. He was struck on the head with a three-ton steel beam, and the resultant injuries left him with both physical and mental impairments to the extent that he was totally disabled. The husband filed a claim for workers’ compensation benefits, and both parties sued Union Electric in the City of St. Louis for the husband’s personal injury and the wife’s loss of consortium claims. On January 12, 1982, the Union Electric suit was settled.

Because the husband was incompetent at the time, the proposed settlement was presented to the Circuit Court in St. Louis for approval. A transcript of the settlement conference reveals that the wife had been appointed guardian for the husband and that she was at the conference in her individual capacity and as guardian. The husband was not present. The settlement court did not appoint a guardian ad litem, although the conference transcript reveals that the court earlier had considered appointing one if it had perceived “an inappropriate allocation of the funds of the proposed settlement” between the husband and the wife.

Under the terms of the proposed settlement, the defendant would pay the following:

1. To the husband: $48,000 per year with annual increases at 6 percent, to be paid for 10 years or for his life, whichever was greater;
2. To the wife: $150,000 initial payment plus $2,250 per month with annual increases at 6 percent, payable for 40 years;
3. To their son Jared Scott Mistier: $13,000 in 1990; $14,000 in 1991; $15,000 in 1992; $16,000 in 1993; and $50,000 in 1995.
4. Plaintiffs’ trial preparation costs: up to $250,000.
5. Plaintiffs’ attorney fee: $1,325,000, payable as follows: $650,000 at time of settlement; $225,000 in three years; $225,000 in four years; $225,000 in five years.

There were additional settlement terms. The workers’ compensation carrier would pay medical expenses to the date of the settlement and waive all subrogation rights to any of the settlement proceeds, the husband’s compensation claim would be dismissed with prejudice, and the husband would waive his claim to any medical expenses that were incurred after the date of the settlement. Future payments were to be made through the purchase of annuities. The present value of the settlement was calculated to be $2,381,118.

The settlement court rejected the initial proposal stating it would not approve “that kind of attorney fee in a minor or incompetent’s case.” The court approved a settlement that lowered the attorney fees and added an immediate lump-sum payment of $306,251.67 to the husband. Considering that lump-sum payment, the settlement court stated:

The court will propose to order that sum paid to Ruth Ann Mistier as guardian of the estate of Jerry Dennis Mistier for his use and benefit. Without such a payment, the court will have some difficulty approving the totality of the payment that was proposed to be made up front, as it were, to Ruth Ann Mistier in the amount of $150,000 without some portion of that being allocated to the estate. However, with this payment being made to the estate, the court can understand and appreciate that there is a need to pay money directly to Mrs. Mistier without its passing through the estate because the court has been informed that over the course of time since this accident, Mrs. Mistier has devoted herself to the care of her husband and that she has totally been responsible for maintaining *245 the family and the expenses at great personal cost to her, and I have been informed she probably even had to borrow money in order to meet the expenses of the family. That money should be repaid back by her, if that is the case, and she should have funds readily available to do it.

The husband’s $306,251.67 lump sum was paid to the wife in her capacity as his guardian. By the time of the dissolution trial, the husband’s annuity payments had increased to $6,375 per month and the wife’s annuity payments had grown to $3,586 per month. A transcript of the settlement conference was admitted into evidence at the dissolution trial. By its decree, the dissolution court made the following division of property it classified as marital:

MARITAL PROPERTY TO HUSBAND

Property Value

Shelby County farm (Jerry’s farm) $100,500

Furniture/personal effects 3,000

1983 gooseneck trailer 2,000

1989 Chevrolet pickup 12,500

1978 AAYR trailer 5,000

1985 Ranger boat, Motorguide motor, Evinrude motor, and Woom boat trailer 6,500

1984 Alumacraft, BMMF boat trailer, Suzuki and Mercury motors 3,500

Boatmen’s trust account 175,940

Bank accounts in Jerry’s name 3,000

TOTAL $311,940

MARITAL PROPERTY TO WIFE

Shelby County farm (Ruth Ann’s farm) $156,550

Callaway County residence 158,000

Furniture/personal effects 63,180

1986 Chevrolet Blazer 8,500

1982 Oldsmobile 1,000

1976 Dona grain trailer 1,000

1982 Chevrolet truck 4,000

Ultralight one-man plane 1,000

Lawn and Leisure lawnmower 100

1985Minnk motor 50

E.D. Jones account 42,000

Kabota lawn tractor 5,000

LESS: debt on farm (105,000)

furniture debt ( 20,000)

TOTAL $315,380

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Bluebook (online)
816 S.W.2d 241, 1991 Mo. App. LEXIS 1337, 1991 WL 167061, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mistler-v-mistler-moctapp-1991.