Moore Automotive Group, Inc. v. Goffstein

301 S.W.3d 49, 2009 Mo. LEXIS 553, 2009 WL 4927353
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 22, 2009
DocketSC 89795
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 301 S.W.3d 49 (Moore Automotive Group, Inc. v. Goffstein) 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
Moore Automotive Group, Inc. v. Goffstein, 301 S.W.3d 49, 2009 Mo. LEXIS 553, 2009 WL 4927353 (Mo. 2009).

Opinions

PATRICIA BRECKENRIDGE, Judge.

Moore Automotive Group, Inc., appeals from summary judgment in favor of Sandy Goffstein and Goffstein, Raskas, Pomer-antz, Kraus & Sherman, LLC, (“the firm”) on Moore Automotive’s suit for conversion, constructive trust, fraud, monies-had-and-received and civil conspiracy. The trial court granted summary judgment because it found that Moore Automotive was bound by answers to garnishment interrogatories filed by the firm in a previous garnishment proceeding. In those answers, the firm denied possession of any funds belonging to its client, a former employee of Moore Automotive who had embezzled from the company. Moore Automotive did not file exceptions to those answers.

The trial court found that, under Rule 90.07(c), Moore Automotive’s failure to file exceptions in the separate proceeding made the firm’s interrogatory answers binding on Moore Automotive in the present case. Moore Automotive appealed the trial court’s decision. After opinion by the court of appeals, this Court accepted transfer. Mo. Const, art. V. sec. 10. Because the provision of Rule 90.07(c), making a garnishee’s answers to interrogatories conclusively binding on the garnishor if the garnishor does not file timely exceptions, does not bind a party in a separate non-garnishment proceeding, the trial court’s judgment is reversed, and the cause is remanded.

Factual and Procedural History

Moore Automotive employed Julie Lewis as its chief financial officer for approximately eight years. During the last three years of her employment, Ms. Lewis embezzled more than $2 million from Moore Automotive. When she learned that another employee had discovered her theft, Ms. Lewis resigned her position and admitted that she had embezzled funds from the company. At the time she left the company, Ms. Lewis told Moore Automotive she would cash in some of her investments and use approximately $280,000 of those proceeds to begin repaying Moore Automotive for the theft. Almost immediately, Ms. Lewis retained Mr. Goffstein and the firm to represent her in any legal matters arising from her misappropriation of funds from Moore Automotive and transferred $286,790.17 to the firm.

Moore Automotive then filed a civil suit against Ms. Lewis and her husband. It sought and obtained a writ of attachment to attach the assets of Ms. Lewis and her husband prior to judgment, as permitted by section 521.010.1 Ms. Lewis contested the attachment by filing a motion to dissolve the attachment and quash execution. During an evidentiary hearing on this motion, Mr. Goffstein stated in open court that Ms. Lewis intended for the funds that she transferred to him and the firm to be used as an initial payment of restitution to Moore Automotive. Specifically, Mr. Goff-stein stated:

The fact of the matter is that the only transfer that was ever made was the money that was sent to my office, which everyone is aware of. That’s not concealment. It’s not an intent. It was money to be used as part of the initial doion payment.

(Emphasis added.) At the conclusion of the hearing, the court overruled Ms. Lewis’ motion to dissolve the attachment and quash execution.

[52]*52Thereafter, Moore Automotive requested that the firm be summoned as a garnishee. The firm was served with a writ of garnishment and interrogatories that inquired whether the firm had in its possession or under its control any property, money, or other effects owned by Ms. Lewis. The firm timely filed its answers to the interrogatories, stating that it had no property, money, or other effects in its possession, or under its control that belonged to Ms. Lewis or her husband. In its interrogatory answers, the firm further stated that all funds previously paid to the firm by Ms. Lewis were to be used by the firm for the purpose of representing Ms. Lewis and paying all of her attorneys’ fees and costs incurred as a result of litigation. Moore Automotive never filed any exceptions or denials to the firm’s interrogatory answers.

Moore Automotive filed a motion to compel compliance with execution, seeking a determination that it rightfully was entitled to the funds held by the firm and to compel payment. The court denied the requested relief, finding that the firm’s answers to the garnishment interrogatories were “sufficient” and that Moore Automotive failed to file exceptions to those answers. Moore Automotive, therefore, was unsuccessful in garnishing the funds possessed by the firm.

Meanwhile, Ms. Lewis made her initial appearance on a federal indictment in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Missouri. As part of the criminal case, Ms. Lewds pled guilty to wii*e fraud, and, as part of her sentence, the district court ordered her to pay more than $2.4 million in restitution to Moore Automotive. Ms. Lewis currently is incarcerated as a result of her plea in the criminal case.

Following Ms. Lewis’ guilty plea, Moore Automotive filed the current two-count action for conversion and civil conspiracy against Mr. Goffstein and the firm. Mr. Goffstein and the firm sought summary judgment, asserting that Moore Automotive’s failure to object to its interrogatory answers in the garnishment action barred Moore Automotive from challenging the nature of the $286,000 transfer and that there was no separate cause of action for conspiracy. Moore Automotive amended its petition to assert claims against Mr. Goffstein and the firm for conversion, constructive trust, fraud, monies-had-and-received, and civil conspiracy. Mr. Goffstein and the firm then filed a motion for summary judgment on the amended petition, again asserting that Moore Automotive was bound by the firm’s interrogatory answer that it had no money or property in its possession or control belonging to Ms. Lewis and that the funds previously paid to the firm by Ms. Lewis were for the purpose of representing her. On this basis, the trial court granted summary judgment to Mr. Goffstein and the firm, from which Moore Automotive appeals.

Standard of Review

Summary judgment is appropriate only wdiere the moving pai'ty has demonstrated that “there is no genuine dispute as to the facts” and that “the facts as admitted show a legal right to judgment for the movant.” ITT Commercial Fin. Corp. v. Mid-Am. Marine Supply Corp., 854 S.W.2d 371, 380 (Mo. banc 1993). The movant bears the burden of establishing both a legal right to judgment and the absence of any genuine issue of material fact required to support the claimed right to judgment. Id. at 378. The propriety of summary judgment is purely an issue of law, and this Court’s review is essentially de novo. Id. at 376. “As the trial court’s judgment is founded on the record submitted and the law, an appellate court need [53]*53not defer to the trial court’s order granting summary judgment.” Id.

Analysis

In the trial court, Mr. Goffstein and the firm contended they were entitled to summary judgment because no disputed facts existed concerning Moore Automotive’s present conversion, constructive trust, fraud, money-had-and-received, and civil conspiracy claims. The trial court found that no disputed facts existed as to these claims because, under Rule 90.07(c) and section 525.210, Moore Automotive’s failure to respond to the interrogatory answers in the previous garnishment action conclusively established the propriety of the transfer of funds between Ms.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
301 S.W.3d 49, 2009 Mo. LEXIS 553, 2009 WL 4927353, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moore-automotive-group-inc-v-goffstein-mo-2009.