Wagoner v. Wagoner

267 S.W. 654, 306 Mo. 241, 1924 Mo. LEXIS 553
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 30, 1924
DocketNos. 23518, 23519, 23520, 23818, 23819.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 267 S.W. 654 (Wagoner v. Wagoner) 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
Wagoner v. Wagoner, 267 S.W. 654, 306 Mo. 241, 1924 Mo. LEXIS 553 (Mo. 1924).

Opinion

*246 GRAVES, C. J.

Upon a re-assignment, after the rejection of one opinion, these eases have fallen to me. A casual glance at the record will convince one that a statement of the cases, and their several facts, is not to be made without some careful analysis of the record.

In the Circuit Court of the City of St. Louis there were pending three separate cases for disposition, numbered ' respectively, on the dockets of that court, No. 95956; No. 11540, and No. 47800. They were in different divisions of the court, but were finally gotten together in a single division, and there tried together, so far as the taking of evidence was concerned. They were intimately related and properly so tried. Case No. 95956 is an action for maintenance, and is called the Maintenance case, and is No. 23518 on our docket. Case No. 11540 is called the Sequestration case (in equity) and upon our docket is numbered 23519. Case No. 47800 is an injunction proceeding, and is called in the record the Injunction case, and is numbered upon our docket 23520. Lulu L. Wagoner is the plaintiff and appellant in these three numbered cases. In them all George 0. R. Wagoner is defendant, but in the latter two there were other defendants. Defendant George C. R. Wagoner appealed in the Sequestration suit (there being cross-appeals) and his appeal here is numbered 23818. He and other defendants likewise appealed in the Maintenance suit, and that is numbered 23819, in this court. This appeal was not from the judgment on the merits, but from a ruling upon motions to redeem. So that we have five numbers for the record in the three cases before us. As was said, Wagoner’s appeal in the Maintenance case only goes to certain proceedings therein, and not to the actual judgment for Maintenance, which was one entered *247 upon his motion. These matters will appear more in detail later.

Maintenance Suit-Appeal of the Plaintiff.

Defendant Wagoner (in the Maintenance case) had sued his wife Lulu L. Wagoner for divorce, but dismissed the action. Later the wife brought suit for maintenance, and on February 11, 1916, obtained a judgment by default, by which she was allowed maintenance at the rate of $400 per month. November 21, 1916, Wagoner obtained a divorce from his wife in the State of Nevada, and paid such allowance to said date, and upon such payment filed a motion asking that said judgment for maintenance be declared satisfied and vacated, and that his wife be enjoined from collecting maintenance after November 21, 1916. The trial court sustained Wagoner’s motion, and the wife appealed to this court, where the judgment was reversed. [Wagoner v. Wagoner, 287 Mo. 567.] Of this case we may have something further to say. Our opinion left the maintenance judgment of $400 per month intact. In the proceeding in this court (287 Mo. 567) the husband sought to vacate the maintenance judgment from the date of his alleged decree of divorce in the State of Nevada.

On September 12, 1921, the defendant filed a motion in this maintenance case to modify the judgment,.setting up changed conditions of the parties, and asking that the court make the maintenance allowance a gross sum, so that the case might finally be disposed of as between the parties. According to oiie brief there had been nineteen lawsuits between these parties from 1914 up to the present proceeding. The court sustained the motion to modify, and fixed the gross sum for maintenance at $15,000, in addition to what defendant had paid up to the date upon which he filed the motion to modify.

Defendant tendered in court the said sum of $15,000, and from this judgment lodges no complaint. His appeal in the maintenance suit is grounded upon a motion filed therein, relative to the sale, under execution, of some *248 corporate stocks. The plaintiff appealed from this modified judgment for maintenance in the gross sum of $15,-000. Such is an outline of case No. 23518, on our docket, so far as plaintiff is concerned.

The Sequestration Suit — Plaintiff’s Appeal.

In August, 1917, Lulu L. Wagoner, filed a bill in equity, the general purport of which was to have the court “appoint a receiver, sequestrator or trustee, for the property of George C. R. Wagoner, and divest the title of all said property of the defendants herein, and vest the same well and truly in said receiver, sequestrator, or trustee.” The defendants in this case were, in addition to George C. R. Wagoner, S. Z. Wagoner, his mother; ITenry E. Wagoner, a brother; Wagoner Undertaking Company, a corporation; H. H. Wagoner Realty Company, a corporation; German-American Rank, a corporation; William L. King and Mrs. N. B. McEwen. The. charge is that all the defendants had conspired together to so hold the alleged property of George Wagoner, in the two corporations, in such manner as to defeat the plaintiff in the collection of her maintenance money. Defendant filed amended answer, counterclaim and cross-bill, and plaintiff a reply. Both are lengthy, and will be noted later if necessary. Upon the trial the court dismissed both the petition of plaintiff, and the cross-bill of defendants. Both plaintiff and the defendant George Wagoner appealed from this judgment. Plaintiff’s appeal is our No. 23519, and defendant’s appeal is our No. 23818. Details will be left to the opinion.

The Injunction Case — Plaintiff’s Appeal.

In this case, filed September 5, 1921, it is averred that the Sheriff of the City of St. Louis was finally forced to levy upon all the right, title and interest of George Wagoner in and to the stock of both the Wagoner Undertaking Company and the IT. H. .Wagoner Realty Company, and had given notice to sell the same on September 6, 1921, at twelve o’elock noon, of that day; that *249 Sheriff Mohrstadt, and the other defendants, had conspired together to defeat the collection of plaintiff’s judgment through this execution sale, and some of them (other than the sheriff) would bring a replevin suit against the sheriff, and the sheriff would turn over the property on a fraudulent bond, in such suit, which suit would be based upon a false affidavit; or, that there would be a fraudulent third-party claim made for such property, so levied upon by the sheriff and that such claim would be false and fraudulent, but the sheriff would turn over the property on insufficient bond, and plaintiff would lose the fruits of her execution. The petition is long on alleged frauds and conspiracies, and on imaginary suits and third-party claims based thereon, but singular to say it sufficed for a restraining order without .notice. The defendants in this action were, George Wagoner; his mother, S. Z. Wagoner; Patrick Cullen, the counsel of the two parties first named; the sheriff, Charles E. Mohrstadt; Mrs. N. B. McEwen and the United States Bank. The restraining order was as broad as the petition. September 6th, P. IT. Cullen and Mrs. S. Z. Wagoner filed a motion to vacate such temporary restraining order. This motion was heard, and a temporary injunction granted against all of said defendants, although only Mohrstadt, the sheriff, -and Cullen, the lawyer, and Mrs. Wagoner appeared. The sale proceeded without let or hindrance at noon on September 6th, under the protecting wings of this temporary injunction.

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Bluebook (online)
267 S.W. 654, 306 Mo. 241, 1924 Mo. LEXIS 553, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wagoner-v-wagoner-mo-1924.