Thummel v. Thummel

609 S.W.2d 175, 1980 Mo. App. LEXIS 2841
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 3, 1980
DocketWD 31217
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 609 S.W.2d 175 (Thummel v. Thummel) 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
Thummel v. Thummel, 609 S.W.2d 175, 1980 Mo. App. LEXIS 2841 (Mo. Ct. App. 1980).

Opinion

*177 DIXON, Judge.

These appeals, consolidated in this court, are the culmination of a long standing matrimonial dispute.

One appeal is by the husband from an order of the trial court denying the husband’s motion to quash a garnishment on a bank account. 1 The second is from a trial court order finding the husband guilty of civil contempt for failure to comply with an order of child support and maintenance. 2

A narration of the history of the disputes of the parties is necessary for an understanding of the issues.

The marriage of Elmer and Lilli Thum-mel was dissolved on July 5,1974. The trial court awarded custody of the two children of the marriage to the wife and ordered the husband to pay $250 a month per child for support, and $275 a month to the wife for maintenance.

Except for the year 1975, the husband made the child support payments from 1974 until the date of trial. The husband made no maintenance payments after November of 1974. This put the husband $4,250 in arrears on the child support and $15,125 in arrears on his maintenance at the time of trial.

Because of the husband’s failure to file the exhibits which he had offered in evidence at trial, some uncertainty exists as to what occurred between the parties prior to the instant dispute. Drawing upon the briefs of the parties, it would appear that the husband filed a motion to modify in December of 1975. At that time, the wife was represented by different counsel. The parties talked about working out a settlement of the maintenance and child support orders. The husband’s attorney drew a settlement agreement, but due to a disagreement as to the amount owed, the wife refused to sign it.

The husband asserts that the negligence of the wife’s ex-attorney in failing to approve the agreement was the cause of the lack of signatures on it. There was a letter from the ex-attorney to the court explaining the failure. Although an exhibit at trial, it has not been filed here.

The husband’s modification motion was then dismissed. The husband tendered to the wife several different sums under the unsigned and unapproved settlement agreement; but due to a dispute by the wife as to the amount owed, she refused to accept them.

The wife, on the advice of counsel, then filed two motions to set aside the earlier purported modification of the awards, and both were overruled. The wife then changed attorneys, and the present action ensued. This recital from the briefs is necessary to understanding of the evidence subsequently set forth.

In January of 1979, the wife garnished an account at Boatmen’s Raytown Bank held by the husband in the name of Thummel Construction Company. The garnishee answered and paid into court $15,798.00. The husband filed a motion to quash the execution. At the hearing on the motion to quash, testimony was offered. A summary recital of that evidence in the light of the *178 statements in the briefs will lend understanding to the issues posed.

The recital will in some respects appear out of order because of the anomaly of the wife first presenting evidence instead of the movant husband and also because the wife anticipated the defenses the husband would offer to defeat the garnishment.

Before any evidence was taken, the parties offered their respective documentary evidence as exhibits. The wife’s exhibits have been filed, but the husband’s have not.

The wife then testified as to the award of child support and maintenance, and the status of the payments by the husband. The amounts due on child support ($4,250) and maintenance ($15,125) were admitted by exhibit without objection, showing a total due on the judgment of $19,375.00.

The wife then testified in anticipation of the husband’s claim of an agreement to abate. She recalled attending a hearing in 1975, although it was one of several trips to court for her in the last four years. She inferred that the hearing took place between the attorneys and the judge; she expressly stated that there was no agreement reached at that time to “stop” or “abate” any maintenance payments, nor was there a “waiver of back support payments that were due.”

On cross-examination, the wife admitted that she filed two “motions for modification,” to set aside the purported earlier modification, one in 1977 and one in 1978. These motions were received into evidence, but they-like the other exhibits of the husband-have not been submitted here. The wife stated that she read these “motions,” but she was unsure of some of the words.

The wife stated that the attorney who drafted the motions told her that filing them “would be the only way to get the money that was owed to her.” The wife denied that her attorney approached her with several settlement offers made by the husband, but she did remember a check being tendered for $6,000 which she refused.

The bank records disclosed that the husband closed an account at the Noland Road Bank in the name of Thummel Construction Company just before the marriage breakup. It was the wife’s belief that the husband transferred this account to the Boatmen’s Raytown Bank, and this was the account she had garnished.

During the marriage, the wife kept the books of the company and made out the checks. She denied being a part owner of the business and was not sure whether or not she released an interest in the business in the dissolution settlement. The wife stated that both she and the husband wrote checks on the Thummel Construction account during the marriage, mostly for business, but some checks were for household expenses.

The wife then offered the deposition testimony of the husband. The husband classified the business as a “sole proprietorship.” The husband eventually placed his current wife’s name on the Thummel Construction account at the Boatmen’s Bank. At the time the current wife’s name was placed on the account, she was working for him as a secretary, and was not his wife.

Deposition testimony of bank officers from the two banks was offered by the wife. Mrs. Brown, a Vice-President from the Noland Road Bank, stated that Thum-mel Construction had a business account with her bank listing both the husband and the wife as signators. This account was closed in 1973, and a new account opened in the same name showing only the husband as signator. It was stipulated that the funds in the new account came from the old. The new account was closed in 1974.

Brown also testified that the husband and wife also had a personal account in their joint names listing both as signators. This account, when opened, was marked “joint and survivor account,” and Brown stated the bank would pay the survivor if one of the account holders died. This account was closed in 1973.

Brown further testified that the husband and his new wife had a joint account at the bank for over two years, listed in his name *179 and her maiden name, and then changed at an unspecified time to both their married names. This account had been closed in 1977.

Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
609 S.W.2d 175, 1980 Mo. App. LEXIS 2841, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thummel-v-thummel-moctapp-1980.