Pflanz v. Pflanz

177 S.W.2d 631, 237 Mo. App. 873, 1944 Mo. App. LEXIS 176
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 8, 1944
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 177 S.W.2d 631 (Pflanz v. Pflanz) 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
Pflanz v. Pflanz, 177 S.W.2d 631, 237 Mo. App. 873, 1944 Mo. App. LEXIS 176 (Mo. Ct. App. 1944).

Opinion

*876 McCULLEN, J.

This is an appeal from an order of the Circuit" Court of the City of St. Lords overruling a motion of defendant to "quash and stay an execution theretofore issued at plaintiff’s request.

It appears from the record that on April 18, 1935, in said court, plaintiff was granted a divorce from defendant and was also awarded custody of their minor child, a girl, then twelve years of age. In the .divorce decree it was ordered that plaintiff recover of defendant as and for her alimony, and for the support and maintenance of the minor child, the sum of ten dollars per week until further order of .the court, four dollars thereof as alimony for the support of plaintiff and six dollars thereof as an allowance for the support of the minor child, “payable on Thursday of each week, the first payment to be made and to bec'ome due and payable’forthwith, and that the defendant pay the costs of this proceeding, and in default of the payment of said costs, or any of the installments awarded as aforesaid as alimony and for the support of said child, as and when same become due and payable, execution issue therefor.”

On August 12, ■ 1942, plaintiff filed in the court a statement entitled “Affidavit of Nonpayment of Allowance,” which alleged the facts as to the granting of the divorce on April 18, 1935, and the orders of the court with respect to alimony and the allowance for the support of the minor child, and stated the amounts thereof respectively, as well as the time for payment of the same, all as above stated. The affidavit further alleged:

“Plaintiff further states that part of said allowance has been paid, but there is still due to plaintiff the sum of nine hundred and fifty dollars for her support and the support past due of their minor child. ” The above affidavit was signed and sworn to by plaintiff. Upon the same, date, namely, August 12, 1942, upon plaintiff’s request, based upon the above affidavit, the execution involved herein was *877 issued by tbe clerk of tbe circuit court and directed to the sheriff of the City of St. Louis, commanding said sheriff:
“These are, therefore, to command you that of the goods and chattels and real estate of said Harry Pflanz, you cause to be made $950.00, debt, interest, cost and charges.”

The execution was returnable to the December Term, 1942, of said court. The St. Louis Independent Packing Company was served and summoned as garnishee thereunder.

The record shows that up to the return day of the writ of execution said garnishee owed wages to defendant amounting to $536.10, but returned, under said garnishment, ten per cent thereof, amounting to $53.61.

On October 2, 1942, defendant filed in the, circuit court a motion to quash and stay the execution in which, after referring to the affidavit of plaintiff upon which the execution was based, he alleged:

“Said affidavit is not in conformity with the law and the rules of this Court in that it is merely stating a general conclusion and does not state facts sufficient for this defendant or the Court to ascertain and determine the weekly payments claimed by plaintiff nor the truth and accuracy as to said amount.
“This defendant has been paying said weekly installments and denies that he owes plaintiff or is indebted to plaintiff in any such sum as $950.00 or anywhere near said amount and, therefore, is entitled to know specifically the facts and basis of said claim.
“The plaintiff, based upon such improper affidavit, has brought a garnishment agaiiist defendant’s employer and has tied up all of defendant’s wages and earnings so that he is unable to purchase the necessities for himself, his wife and minor child to live on and, in order to have said garnishment released, plaintiff is demanding of and trying to coerce defendant into a settlement on the basis of said false and unjust sum of $950.00.
“The said minor child referred to' in the decree and for whose support the Court provided $6.00 per week, and which weekly allowance is included in said affidavit of plaintiff, has been and now is married and is in no way dependent upon plaintiff for such support. Said minor child since her marriage does not reside in the State of Missouri. ’ ’

Defendant’s above motion was verified by his affidavit.

The trial and hearing on defendant’s motion to quash and stay the execution was held oh December 18, 1942, during which, in open court, counsel for plaintiff excluded the demand for any amount for the support and maintenance of the minor child, but did not change the amount of $950 stated in the affidavit, .upon which the execution was based. In this connection, plaintiff’s counsel told the court :

I believe I stated in my affidavit the question of the child. Under our affidavit, for the first five years from the age of thirteen, which she was at the time of granting of the decree in 1935, .and she did *878 go to work at approximately, I might say eighteen. We have ceased that court order of asking for the additional $6.00 in our affidavit, so up to the present day from 1940 up to the time of the filing of the execution, approximately two years, we are not asking for anything in this judgment for the child.”

At the beginning of the hearing on the motion, to quash the-execution defendant objected to proceeding in the matter on the ground that the affidavit filed in the cause did not make out a prima-facie case as to any amount due plaintiff from defendant; that the amount set forth in the affidavit was of a general character, namely $950; that it did not state the dates of defendant’s failure to pay the alimony, but stated one general ‘sum covering a period of seven years. The court overruled the objection and defendant saved his exceptions. Defendant then testified that he was in the employ of the St. Louis Independent Packing Company and had been working there the past four years; that he had married again and his present family consists of his wife, a sixteen months old child as well as an eight year old son of his present wife; that he has supported and is supporting his family; that he had paid plaintiff all of the amounts specified in the decree up to May 15, 1942; that his daughter, the minor child involved, had been married since September, 1942, and resides in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

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Bluebook (online)
177 S.W.2d 631, 237 Mo. App. 873, 1944 Mo. App. LEXIS 176, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pflanz-v-pflanz-moctapp-1944.