Reis v. La Presto

324 S.W.2d 648, 1959 Mo. LEXIS 821
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMay 11, 1959
Docket46648
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 324 S.W.2d 648 (Reis v. La Presto) 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
Reis v. La Presto, 324 S.W.2d 648, 1959 Mo. LEXIS 821 (Mo. 1959).

Opinion

STOCKARD, Commissioner.

Louis LaPresto appealed from the judgment of the Circuit Court of the City of St. Louis dismissing his petition in equity to set aside a default judgment in favor of Margherita LaPresto in the amount of $15,000, and also to set aside the sale of two tracts of land sold pursuant to an execution based on the said judgment. Jurisdiction of this appeal is in this court because of 'the amount in dispute and also because title to real estate is involved.

Subsequent to the submission of this appeal the suggestion has been filed in this court of the death of Louis LaPresto, plaintiff-appellant, and the appointment of Robert C. Reis as administrator ad litem of the estate of Louis LaPresto. We shall subsequently use the term “plaintiff” as referring both to Louis LaPresto and to the administrator ad litem.

A short statement of the history of this litigation will be helpful. In 1953 Mar-gherita LaPresto obtained a default judgment in the amount of $15,000 against her husband Louis LaPresto for separate maintenance. He was personally served with summons, but he filed no answer and no attorney appeared in his behalf. After the entry of the default judgment he filed no motion for new trial and he took no appeal. Execution was issued and certain real estate was levied upon by the sheriff and advertised for sale. A motion to quash the execution was overruled and upon appeal to this court that action was affirmed. LaPresto v. LaPresto, Mo.Sup., 285 S.W. 2d 568.

Plaintiff brought the present suit in equity against his wife Margherita and his two sons Frank and Charles. The petition is lengthy, but in substance it challenges the default judgment on two grounds. The first, which we shall designate as Part I, is that the judgment is void because of matters affirmatively shown of record, and the second, which we shall designate as Part II, is that the judgment should be set aside because of fraud in its procurement.

*651 After alleging the circumstances of the entry of the default judgment as above set out, including the fact that he was personally served but filed no pleadings and did not employ counsel, plaintiff alleged that his wife was “wholly incapable of comprehending the nature and complexities of any commercial or legal matters,” and that after Frank was admitted to practice law she has “at all times blindly done whatever was requested of her” by him, and that Frank became the “dominant factor in plaintiff’s home;” that Frank quarreled with plaintiff over “insignificant things and minor matters” with the intent to create dissension in plaintiff’s home, and he succeeded in taking plaintiff’s wife out of his home and “thereby brought about the separation of plaintiff and his wife.” Plaintiff then alleged what we shall designate as Part I of his petition, or that the default judgment “is unjust, unconscionable, inequitable, illegal and void and of no legal effect” because (a) equity and good conscience demanded that plaintiff be notified of the hearing in the suit for separate maintenance and the court had no right to hear the cause in his absence and without notice to him of the setting of the hearing when the record disclosed and the court knew that he was not represented by counsel and when an undisposed of motion was pending and nine months had elapsed since he had been served with the summons; (b) the default judgment was entered when the cause was not at issue because a motion of his wife for temporary alimony, suit money and attorney fees was pending; (c) the court had no jurisdiction to award a lump sum for separate maintenance against a defendant in default in the absence of an agreement of the parties or in the absence of some particularly unusual or extenuating circumstances, neither of which existed; (d) the lump sum of $15,000 was greater and other than that demanded in the petition; and (e) even if the judgment was “substantively permissible” the evidence introduced as to plaintiff’s financial worth, if true, “wholly failed to support a judgment for such a large sum.”

It is to be noted that as to the above allegations, which we have designated as Part I, there are no allegations that the defendants in this suit were guilty of any fraud, and there are no allegations from which fraud on their part can be inferred. In other words, with the exception subsequently noted, Part I of the petition is based on the contention that the judgment is void because of matters appearing of record which if meritorious would make it subject to a collateral attack as well as a direct attack. The exception is the last contention that the amount of the judgment was not supported by the evidence.

Plaintiff then alleged what we shall designate as Part II of his petition, or that the default judgment and the sale of his property under execution were obtained by collusion, concealment, artifice, fraud and deceit on the part of his wife and son Frank, and in support thereof he alleged that (a) (1) Frank caused plaintiff’s wife to abandon and leave plaintiff without just cause or reason and he prevented a reconciliation; (2) Frank knew plaintiff owned real estate but had taken title in the names of “nominees or straw parties” and he “did secretly procure deeds to such property with the intent of depriving plaintiff thereof;” (3) when plaintiff was hospitalized Frank caused plaintiff’s wife “to visit him and request him to sign over, by will or otherwise plaintiff’s property” (there is no allegation that any property was transferred by reason of this request); (4) Frank caused plaintiff’s wife to make unreasonable financial demands upon plaintiff and to institute the suit for separate maintenance, and he procured legal counsel for her; (5) while plaintiff was negotiating for a settlement and reconciliation Frank “did cause a default against this plaintiff and thereafter did instigate and cause a default judgment to be entered against this plaintiff in said separate maintenance action” for the gross sum of $15,-000; (6) Frank thereafter caused plain *652

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Bluebook (online)
324 S.W.2d 648, 1959 Mo. LEXIS 821, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reis-v-la-presto-mo-1959.