Remmers v. Estate of Wolf

226 S.W. 290, 206 Mo. App. 159, 1920 Mo. App. LEXIS 234
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 7, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 226 S.W. 290 (Remmers v. Estate of Wolf) 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
Remmers v. Estate of Wolf, 226 S.W. 290, 206 Mo. App. 159, 1920 Mo. App. LEXIS 234 (Mo. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinion

REYNOLDS, P. J.

On April 30, 1894, plaintiff here, under her then married name of Eva E. Wolf, obtained a decree of divorce from her then husband, Charles A. Wolf, in the circuit court of the city of St. Louis. By the decree plaintiff was awarded the care, custody and control of the child born of the marriage, then apparently eighteen months or two years old. Plaintiff subsequently married one Remmers and her former husband (Wolf) also remarried. Filing a notice of her intention to present the demand against the estate of her deceased hus *164 band, Charles A. Wolf, in the Probate Court of St. Lonis County, the notice saying that on the first day of the May, 1915, term of the court, she would "present the. claim to the court, it was heard during the May, 1915, term thereof and disallowed. The account as filed with the probate court as stating the amount due under the divorce judgment is as follows:

For the 'term beginning- May 1, 1894, to and including February 5, 1905,............... $1725.25
For the period commencing February 5, 1905, and ending on the 5th day of February, 1915, $1562.00
Total,............ $3287.25.”

The usual affidavit was filed to this claim, setting out that no portion of the installments of alimony mentioned in the decree had ever been paid to plaintiff.

There was an answer filed in the probate court, by the administratrix of the estate of Charles A. Wolf, she being his widow. This answer, after a general denial, set up that Wolf was able at all times to pay the judgment but the claimant had made no effort to collect it; that the child mentioned in the decree was a minor at the time of the rendition of the decree of divorce but has since become of age and for a number of years has been self-supporting. It was also set out that plaintiff had since remarried and is not entitled to receive anything on account of the judgment. There was a reply to this, setting' up, among other things, that this judgment for divorce was rendered prior to the limitations of the statutes of 1895, was payable in monthly -installments of $10 each, and that plaintiff had been compelled to pay for the support of her son largely in excess of the $10 a month allowed by the decree, and that on the — day of October, 1905, decedent, Charles A. Wolf, had paid $15,. which plaintiff had applied on account of costs due under the terms of the judgment, by reason of which payment, it is averred in the reply, the Statute of Limitations is no defense to plaintiff’s claim. '

*165 At the trial in the circuit court that court found against the claimant and rendered judgment accordingly in favor of administratrix and ordered the judgment certified to the probate court. From that judgment plaintiff has duly appealed to our court.

Along with his decision in the case, the learned trial court filed an opinion in writing, which is brought up by appellant. After stating the facts as to the filing of the claim; that it was served April 23, 1915, returnable to the May, 1915, term of the probate court and filed in that court on May 10th; and setting up the substance of the answer to the attack made on the sufficiency of the claim or statement, the learned trial court found the statement was sufficient to give the probate court jurisdiction. The opinion then finds, as we do, that this is an action to which the ten-year statute (Laws 1895, p. 221, Eevised Statutes 1909, sec. 1912) does not apply, holding that this suit, being on a judgment' rendered pyior to 1895, under that statute would be barred in the year 1905; but he holds, as we do, that the ten-year statute does not apply, but that section 6796, Eevised Statutes 1889 (twenty-years limitation) does apply, the trial court saying:

“But it seems clear that the original section 6796, Eevised Statutes of 1889, is the statute which should govern in case of a judgment rendered prior to 1895. The act of 1895 repealed that section and enacted as a new section in lieu thereof the present section 1912. Section 6796 and the following section, 6797, were parts of chapter 103 of the Statutes of 1889. Section 6797 was:
The provisions of this chapter shall not apply to any actions commenced or to any cases where the right of action or of entry shall have occurred before the time when this chapter takes effect, but the same shall remain subject to the laws then in force.’
“ ‘ The Act of 1895 took the place of section 6796 and became a part of that chapter, and subject to the same conditions that the section it had taken the place of had been subject to The chapter, so far as its *166 amended feature was concerned, took effect when the amendatory act took effect, and, hence, by its very terms did not apply to a cause of action then in existence, bnt such cause of action was to remain subject to the laws in force when it accrued.’ McFaul v. Haley, 166 Mo. 56, 63; Cranor v. School District, 151 Mo. 119, 125.
'“Since this statute (section 6796, Revised Statutes 1889) is the statute applying to a judgment rendered in 1894, the presumption of payment and satisfaction may be repelled by proof of payment made within twenty years.
“It is claimed very persuasively that, since this judgment requires payment in monthly installments running through a period of nineteen and one-half years, and up to a time about fourteen months before this claim was exhibited, it is of a continuing character, and the limitation ought not. to run as to installments accruing within twenty years. It is said that as to such installments no cause of action would accrue which could be barred until they severally became due.
“ ‘Nevertheless, such a judgment must be subject to the incidents of other judgments, except in so far as the statutes otherwise provide by expression or implication. ’ (Dreyer v. Dickman, 131 Mo. App. 660, 665.) So it is held that, since there is no statute which takes a judgment for alimony from year to year out of the statute confining the issuance of executions on judgments to ten years from their date, and an ample remedy is provided for the wife to revive her judgment before ten years have elapsed and from one ten-year period to another, an execution could not issue on such a judgment more than ten years after its date. [Dreyer v. Dickman, supra; Biffle v. Pullam, 114 Mo. 50, 53, 55.]
“The above mentioned statute, in force up to 1895, refers to the judgments, orders and decrees and the dates of their rendition and declares that they ‘shall be presumed to be paid and satisfied after the expiration of twenty years from the day of the rendition of such judgment, order or decree.’ It makes no reference to the *167 time or times when the judgments or any parts of them are to be performed or paid. • The present,statute, section 1912, uses the same language except that the period is ten years and the date referred to is that of the original rendition of the judgment or of its revivor, upon personal service, or of the last payment entered of record.

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Bluebook (online)
226 S.W. 290, 206 Mo. App. 159, 1920 Mo. App. LEXIS 234, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/remmers-v-estate-of-wolf-moctapp-1920.