State Ex Rel. Ford v. Hogan

27 S.W.2d 21, 324 Mo. 1130, 1930 Mo. LEXIS 441
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 7, 1930
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 27 S.W.2d 21 (State Ex Rel. Ford v. Hogan) 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
State Ex Rel. Ford v. Hogan, 27 S.W.2d 21, 324 Mo. 1130, 1930 Mo. LEXIS 441 (Mo. 1930).

Opinions

This is an original proceeding in prohibition to prohibit the respondent, Judge of the Circuit Court of the City of St. Louis, assigned at that time to Division 15, from entertaining, hearing and deciding a motion, filed by Louis E. Ford, to set aside an execution sale as to certain shares of stock, owned by said Ford, in certain corporations. To respondent's return filed, relators filed a reply.

The following facts appear from the pleadings. Respondent was then presiding judge of Division 15 of the Circuit Court of the City of St. Louis. On January 5, 1926, Bertha E. Ford, relator, filed in the Circuit Court of the City of St. Louis her petition for divorce against Louis E. Ford, who entered his appearance. The cause was assigned to Division 15 of said circuit court, then presided over by Honorable Moses Hartmann, Judge. On January 21, 1926, the said court granted Bertha E. Ford a divorce, and awarded her alimony of $225 a month. No appeal was taken. On January 3, 1929, Louis E. Ford filed a motion to modify the decree as to alimony, stating that the alimony was burdensome and beyond his ability to pay, due *Page 1137 to financial reverses and a diminished income, and that $175 a month was sufficient to provide for and maintain plaintiff. On a hearing, respondent, as judge of said court, sustained the motion to modify the decree and decreased the monthly award of alimony to $175. On her motion for a new trial being overruled, Bertha E. Ford appealed to the St. Louis Court of Appeals.

It seems that Louis E. Ford, against the protest of Bertha E. Ford, of his own accord and without a modification of the decree, in 1927 and 1928 withheld from payments to her the sum of $50 a month, so that to December 12, 1928, the alimony arrearages aggregated $600. On said day Bertha filed her affidavit for execution. The Sheriff of the City of St. Louis, in obedience to the commands of the execution, levied upon, as the property of Louis E. Ford, all the shares of capital stock owned by him in the Metropolitan Securities Corporation and the St. Louis Used Car Exchange, and, upon notice given, alleged to be adequate, the sheriff sold, on March 14, 1929, said shares of stock for $600 and $25, respectively, and credited it and applied it to costs. Thereupon the sheriff made his return of said execution to the court. On February 23, 1929, prior to the sale, the sheriff notified Louis E. Ford that he had levied on said stock. Bertha E. Ford, and Randolph Laughlin and Laurence D. Honig, her attorneys, purchased all of said stock sold by the sheriff under execution. Laughlin, later for value received, sold fifty shares of the St. Louis Car Exchange stock to H.H. Laumeier. The name of said corporation was changed to the Banner Loan Company. On April 15, 1929, Louis E. Ford paid into court as a tender the sum of $654.35, and requested the surrender of the stock sold. On April 16th said Ford filed a motion to set aside the execution sale, which was not verified, and on May 25th a verified motion was filed by said Ford. On the same day, to-wit, May 25, 1929, relator Laurence D. Honig filed a verified application for a change of venue, averring the bias and prejudice of respondent discovered only that morning, which respondent has not ruled upon, but it is alleged that he has indicated he would overrule it.

The motion to set aside the execution sale avers, first, that the sums for which the shares of stock sold were grossly and fraudulently inadequate and that said sale is a fraud on defendant; second, that Louis E. Ford and Bertha E. Ford were negotiating for settlement and compromise of defendant's liability to plaintiff, and that by the actions of plaintiff's counsel in refusing to accept or reject proposals defendant was lulled into a sense of security and imposed on relative to a sale, and that defendant was unaware of the contemplated sale, excepting as notice might be imputed to him by the posting of notices of sale, which notices were vague, indefinite and defective in that they did not comply with the law in certain respects, *Page 1138 unnecessary to detail herein. That defendant tendered to plaintiff's attorney for her the sum of $701.20 in payment of the execution and judgment, which was refused, and that he then tendered and paid same to the sheriff, and later to the clerk.

Other facts submitted by the pleadings will be adverted to in our discussion of the points considered.

I. We take judicial notice of our statutes. Therefore we take judicial notice that the Eighth Judicial Circuit consists of the city of St. Louis (Sec. 2468, R.S. 1919). Also that theReturn terms of said circuit court annually are five andTerm. commence on the first Monday of each of the months of February, April, June, October and December. [Sec. 2617, R.S. 1919.] Relators' petition for prohibition states that the affidavit for execution was filed on December 12, 1928, and that it was returnable on the first Monday of April next, which was the first day of the April term, 1929. The execution was returnable at the second term after its issuance, and it may be inferred that it was at plaintiff's instance. The postponement of the return of the execution until the second term after its issuance was authorized. [Sec. 1606, R.S. 1919.] The April term, 1929, is thus designated the return term of the execution. The record shows that Division 15 of the Circuit Court of the City of St. Louis was in session on May 25, 1929, which was evidently a day of the April term, 1929. Consequently, the filing of the motions to set aside the execution sale, filed on April 16 and April 25, 1929, respectively, were filed during the April term, 1929, and thus at the return term of the execution.

II. A motion to set aside an execution sale, filed in the court and in the proceedings from which the execution emanated, is a proper and plenary proceeding to that end; for, as isMotion to said in City of Aurora ex rel. v. Lindsay, 146 Mo.Set Aside 509, l.c. 516, 48 S.W. 642, "that court alone hadSale. jurisdiction over its processes and was charged with the duty to see that no injustice was done under color of its writs." However, it is said that, as the sale occurred during the February term of said court, and as the motion to set aside the execution sale was not filed until the April term of said court, the court's jurisdiction over the matters complained of in said motion lapsed with the lapse of the February term of court. We have held that a motion to set aside an execution sale, filed at the return term, was filed at the proper term, and that the court had jurisdiction to entertain a motion filed during the term to which the return was returnable. [Norman v. Eastburn,230 Mo. 168, l.c. 188, 130 S.W. 276; State *Page 1139 ex rel. v. Wessell, 237 Mo. 593, l.c. 602, 141 S.W. 883.] We adhere to our rulings in those regards.

III. Relators complain that the return of respondent to his petition for prohibition is not verified by respondent, but only by the attorney upon his belief, and, consequently,Prohibition: the verified averments of the petition should beVerification taken as true. Our statute (Sec. 2061) does notof Return. require the return to be verified. Moreover, it was verified by respondent's attorney, and if relators desired to take advantage of it as an insufficient verification, they should have directly attacked it by a motion to strike it from the files or by other appropriate action. The non-action of relators renders it subject to our consideration.

IV. Louis E.

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Bluebook (online)
27 S.W.2d 21, 324 Mo. 1130, 1930 Mo. LEXIS 441, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-ford-v-hogan-mo-1930.