White v. Smith

440 S.W.2d 497, 1969 Mo. App. LEXIS 654
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 16, 1969
Docket8833
StatusPublished
Cited by68 cases

This text of 440 S.W.2d 497 (White v. Smith) 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
White v. Smith, 440 S.W.2d 497, 1969 Mo. App. LEXIS 654 (Mo. Ct. App. 1969).

Opinion

STONE, Judge.

This is a garnishment imbroglio. On June 2, 1964, plaintiffs Ellis White and Della White, an elderly married couple who since 1920 had owned and resided on a 60-acre tract just south of Highlandville, Missouri, instituted suit in the Circuit Court of Christian County against defendant Jack Smith d/b/a Highlandville Packing Company, who owned and operated an abattoir or slaughterhouse on the tract just north of plaintiffs’ acreage, there carried on a “general custom slaughtering and processing” business, and in connection therewith maintained a nearby lagoon or pond into which blood, offal and waste material from the slaughterhouse were drained. Plaintiffs’ suit was “for nuisance,” with a prayer for an injunctive decree abating the nuisance and for monetary damages. Following trial on October 15, 1965, the court entered a judgment and decree granting the requested injunctive relief and awarding plaintiffs the sum of $6,000 as damages. There was no appeal therefrom.

At all times herein material, defendant Smith was the named insured in a “General Liability Insurance Policy” issued by Countryside Casualty Company which obligated it “to pay on behalf of the insured all sums [within the policy limits of $25M/$50M'/ $10M] which the insured shall become legally obligated to pay as damages because of bodily injury, sickness or disease . . . and as damages because of injury to or destruction of property, including the loss of use thereof, caused by accident and arising out of the hazards hereinafter defined and designated in the declarations.” (All emphasis herein is ours.) “Operations and Premises,” the hazard designated in the declarations, was defined as “[t]he ownership, maintenance or use of premises, and all operations.”

This garnishment proceeding under Rule 90 [Chapter 525] 1 against Countryside, as garnishee, was transferred upon stipulation to the Circuit Court of Greene County, where the cause was tried to the court and taken itnder advisement, written briefs were submitted by opposing counsel, and in due time the learned trial judge filed a scholarly six-page “Memorandum and Order” and entered judgment in favor of plaintiffs White and against garnishee Countryside for $6,000 with interest thereon in the additional sum of $918. From that judgment, garnishee appeals.

*500 The respective parties here urge disposition of the appeal on considerations short of the meritorious issues, and to those preliminary matters we first attend. Plaintiffs-respondents vigorously press their “motion to dismiss appeal and affirm judgment” because (a) “appellant [Countryside] did not deliver copies of appellant’s brief forty-five days before this cause was set for hearing [Rule 83.06(a)] nor within any other time agreed upon by counsel”, and (b) “the argument portion of appellant’s brief does not have specific page references to the transcript on appeal.” Passing the patent inconsistency of moving conjunc-tively for dismissal of the appeal and af-firmance of the judgment, plaintiffs’ motion is not without merit. However, even though a typewritten copy of garnishee’s-appellant’s brief was not delivered until the twenty-ninth day before the date of hearing, plaintiffs-respondents sought no extension of time for preparation of their brief but served and filed it posthaste on the thirteenth day before the date of hearing. Cf. Fulkerson v. Laird, Mo.App., 421 S.W. 2d 523, 527(8). In response to plaintiffs’ complaint that the argument section of garnishee’s brief had no specific page references to the transcript on appeal [Rule 83.05, subsecs, (a) (4) and (d)], garnishee-appellant undertook to supply the deficiency by including in its reply brief a list of eighteen “page and line numbers in appellant’s [original] brief” at which certain “omitted transcript page numbers” should be interlined. Cf. Wilt v. Waterfield, Mo., 273 S.W.2d 290, 292(1). It would seem that garnishee’s counsel more appropriately might have sought leave of court to carry out the tedious task of locating the “page and line numbers” and making the desired interlineations in the ten copies of the original brief theretofore filed. However, since it is the settled judicial policy to construe and apply the rules of civil procedure liberally “to promote justice, to minimize the number of cases disposed of on procedural questions and to facilitate and increase the disposition of cases on their merits” [Rule 83.24], and since our primary concern is with the cause of the litigants [Fielder v. Production Credit Ass’n., Mo.App., 429 S. W.2d 307, 310(1)], we conclude that, in the interests of justice, plaintiffs’-respondents’ motion to dismiss appeal should be overruled. Rule 83.09.

Garnishee’s preliminary assault upon the judgment nisi is that the trial court erred in overruling garnishee’s motion for judgment at the close of plaintiffs’ evidence “for the reason that plaintiffs failed to allege [in their denial of garnishee’s answers to interrogatories] facts sufficient to state a cause of action against garnishee.” Rule 90.18 provides that such denial “shall contain, specially, the grounds upon which a recovery is sought against the garnishee.” Instant plaintiffs’ denial (incorrectly titled “Plaintiffs’ Reply to Garnishee’s Answers”) specially averred “that garnishee, by a policy of casualty insurance issued to the said Jack Smith [defendant], agreed to indemnify the said Jack Smith against any judgments for damages obtained against him, growing out of the operation of the packing plant, which was the subject of plaintiffs’ action” and “that garnishee is indebted to the said Jack Smith in an amount in excess of that for which plaintiffs obtained judgment against said defendant.” Upon the issues joined by plaintiffs’ denial and garnishee’s reply thereto in the nature of a general denial, the parties proceeded to trial. At the outset of the hearing, garnishee’s policy was received in evidence by stipulation of opposing counsel and plaintiffs’ original petition in the nuisance action was admitted without objection. After defendant and both plaintiffs had been examined and cross-examined at length and plaintiffs had rested their case, garnishee filed its “Motion for Judgment” in which it challenged for the first time the legal sufficiency of plaintiffs’ denial of garnishee’s answers to interrogatories. Garnishee’s argument here is that by its policy it did not agree, as was averred in plaintiffs’ denial, “to indemnify [defendant] against any judgments for damages” but only contracted tto indemnify him for all sums which he might become legally *501 obligated to pay “as damages because of injury . . . caused by accident.”

When garnishee made no attack upon plaintiffs’ denial but replied to the merits and proceeded to trial, it “waived all defects except those so fundamental in character that a [judgment] could not cure them.” Kiernan v. Robertson, 116 Mo.App. 56, 60, 92 S.W. 138, 139(1). We do not regard the failure of plaintiffs’ denial to track the precise language of garnishee’s policy as a defect “so fundamental in. character” that the subsequent judgment did not cure it. See Hall v. Weston, Mo., 323 S.W. 2d 673, 680; Taylor v. Dollins, 205 Mo.App. 246, 248, 222 S.W. 1040, 1041. Furthermore, if plaintiffs’ denial was insufficient, all parties proceeded to trial as though the ultimate issue, i.

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Bluebook (online)
440 S.W.2d 497, 1969 Mo. App. LEXIS 654, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/white-v-smith-moctapp-1969.