Stamatiou v. Stamatiou

967 S.W.2d 229, 1998 WL 117869
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 17, 1998
DocketNo. WD 53900
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 967 S.W.2d 229 (Stamatiou v. Stamatiou) 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
Stamatiou v. Stamatiou, 967 S.W.2d 229, 1998 WL 117869 (Mo. Ct. App. 1998).

Opinion

LAURA DENVIR STITH, Presiding Judge.

Dimitri Stamatiou appeals the trial court’s order dismissing his Motion for Writ of Possession in the dissolution of his marriage to Lila Dian Stamatiou. He alleges that the original dissolution decree entitled him to possession of certain real property. The property was in fact awarded to Mrs. Stama-tiou in the decree. The bases he asserts why he has rights in the property are without merit. Accordingly, we affirm.

I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Lila Dian Stamatiou and Dimitri Stamati Stamatiou were married on December 26, 1967. Their marriage was dissolved by order of the Clay County Circuit Court on August 29, 1989. As part of the property distribution, the court awarded Mr. Stamatiou the couple’s marital interest of 100% ownership of El Greco Studios, Inc., d/b/a Greek Islands Restaurant. The court awarded Mrs. Stama-tiou the real property and premises upon which Greek Islands Restaurant was located.

Mr. Stamatiou appealed the trial court’s order of dissolution. While the appeal was pending, on February 28, 1990, Mrs. Stama-tiou served Mr. Stamatiou with notice to vacate the real property on which Greek Islands Restaurant was located. She alleged that no written lease existed between herself as owner of the premises and El Greco Studios, Inc. (“El Greco”), and that any month-to-month tenancy would be terminated on April 1,1990. On May 29,1990, Mrs. Stama-tiou filed an unlawful detainer action alleging that she had been paid no rent and that El Greco had no valid lease for the property. She requested that El Greco be made to vacate the property.

While the unlawful detainer action was still pending, this Court determined Mr. Stama-tiou’s appeal of the dissolution decree. We affirmed most aspects of the court below’s judgment and division of property, including the award of the real property to Mrs. Sta-matiou and the award of the corporation to Mr. Stamatiou, but we reversed and remanded as to certain unrelated portions of the original property distribution. In re Marriage of Stamatiou, 798 S.W.2d 737 (Mo.App.1990) (Stamatiou I). Mr. Stamatiou appealed the trial court’s amended division of property following remand. This Court slightly modified the trial court’s order in respects not relevant here, and remanded for distribution of the property in accordance with both opinions. Stamatiou v. Stamatiou, 827 S.W.2d 739 (Mo.App.1992) (Stamatiou II). As directed, on July 10, 1992, the trial court entered its order awarding Mr. Stamatiou sole ownership of the corporation El Greco Studios, Inc., d/b/a Greek Islands Restaurant, and awarding Mrs. Stamatiou the real property upon which the restaurant was located.

Also in July 1992, the court in the unlawful detainer action ruled on Mr. Stamatiou’s claims that El Greco had a valid written lease for operating Greek Islands Restaurant on the property awarded to Mrs. Stamatiou and ruled on Mrs. Stamatiou’s claims for rent and possession. It determined that no written lease existed between El Greco and Mrs. Stamatiou. It also restored the property to Mrs. Stamatiou and ordered El Greco to pay back rent of $48,666.40. Mr. Stamatiou appealed these rulings.

At about this same time, in September 1992, Mr. Stamatiou filed a motion to modify his child support obligation and a motion for contempt against his former spouse, alleging that she had failed to return to him marital and non-marital property which she was ordered to give him in the July 10, 1992, decree. The trial court ordered Mrs. Stama-tiou to pay certain sums, declined to modify the child support awarded, and specifically held that Mr. Stamatiou had failed to prove that his former spouse had refused to turn over to him his marital interest in El Greco, corporate records of El Greco, Greek personal property and real estate, and various items of personal property and household goods.

[231]*231Mr. Stamatiou appealed both the ruling against him on his contempt and child support modification motions and the ruling for Mrs. Stamatiou in the unlawful detainer action. We affirmed the court’s holding in the unlawful detainer action that El Greco had no valid ’written lease for use of the property in question and that it owed back rent and was required to vacate the premises in Stamatiou v. El Greco Studios, Inc., 898 S.W.2d 571 (Mo.App.1995) (Stamatiou III). We affirmed the dissolution court’s denial of Mr. Stamatiou’s motions for contempt and for modification of child support by memorandum order in Stamatiou v. Stamatiou, 914 S.W.2d 815 (Mo.App.1995) (Stamatiou IV).

El Greco later filed a motion to vacate and set aside the unlawful detainer judgment. Mr. Stamatiou purported to act on behalf of the corporation in that action. The motion to vacate was denied. On appeal, we noted that Mr. Stamatiou, who is not an attorney, had no authority to represent El Greco, and we remanded with directions to the trial court to dismiss the suit for lack of jurisdiction. Stamatiou v. El Greco Studios, Inc., 935 S.W.2d 701 (Mo.App.1996) (Stamatiou V).

Thus, by March, 1996, the courts had affirmed the award to Mrs. Stamatiou of the real estate on which Greek Islands Restaurant was located, had ruled that El Greco had no lease for the operation of the Greek Islands Restaurant on that property, had ordered El Greco to pay rental for its past operation of the restaurant on the property and ordered the property to be restored to Mrs. Stamatiou, and had ruled that Mr. Sta-matiou had received the items which he was ordered to receive in the dissolution from Mrs. Stamatiou.

Nonetheless, on March 12, 1996, Mr. Sta-matiou filed the instant Motion for Writ of Possession in the dissolution action. He alleged that the dissolution decree had ordered Mrs. Stamatiou to convey possession of the real property on which Greek Islands Restaurant was located to him and that she had failed to do so and that she had failed to honor El Greco’s valid lease of the premises. The trial court granted Mrs. Stamatiou’s motion to dismiss, noting that the dissolution action was not the venue for determination of business dealings between the El Greco corporation and Mrs. Stamatiou. This appeal followed.

II. MR. STAMATIOU’S CLAIMS ON APPEAL

Mr. Stamatiou’s claims in his Motion and on appeal are difficult to summarize, for many of them are based on his evident continuing misunderstanding of the dissolution decree. Apparently, Mr. Stamatiou believes that in the dissolution decree the court ordered Mrs. Stamatiou to convey the real property to him in exchange for Mr. Stama-tiou’s payment of $150,000. He also appears to believe that, in order to ensure Mr. Stama-tiou’s payment of this $150,000 sum, the dissolution court granted Mrs. Stamatiou a judicial lien on the land. He also referred at oral argument and in his brief to the fact that his liquor license required him to own the property on which the restaurant was located. Mr.

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967 S.W.2d 229, 1998 WL 117869, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stamatiou-v-stamatiou-moctapp-1998.