Lami Wood Products Corp. v. Woodlands Group At Key Harbor L.L.C.
Lami Wood Products Corp. v. Woodlands Group At Key Harbor L.L.C.
Opinion of the Court
This is an appeal from a judgment for The Woodlands Group at Key Harbor L.L.C., Parkview Bay Development, Inc., and R.E.D. Investments, L.L.C., (collectively referred to as defendants) in an action brought by Lami Wood Products Corp. (plaintiff) that sought damages for certain goods and merchandise sold by plaintiff to The Woodlands at Key Harbor L.L.C. This court dismisses and remands.
The disposition of this appeal relates to procedural error that renders the judgment that has been appealed void, as asserted by Point I of plaintiffs appellant’s brief. This case was tried by an associate circuit judge.
This case proceeded to trial on September 27, 2002. During trial when plaintiffs attorney advised the trial court that he had requested attorney fees and recited the amount of fees “prior to this trial,” the following colloquy occurred:
THE COURT: Do you have it itemized?
[PLAINTIFF’S ATTORNEY]: I can provide the Court with an affidavit.
THE COURT: I would prefer that.
Plaintiffs attorney asked if he could submit the affidavit “on Monday.” Plaintiffs attorney said he would “get it out of [his] office on Monday.”
Section 517.111.2 provides, with respect to cases tried pursuant to chapter 517 procedures, “When a case is tried before a judge without a jury, judgment shall be entered by the judge within thirty days
Here, however, unlike in Air Evac, the date when the additional material was provided to the trial court is evident. The last of the items provided was submitted to the trial court November 4, 2002. Thus, the case was submitted to the trial court November 4, 2002. The purported judgment was entered December 30, 2002, more than 30 days following submission of the case. Those being the circumstances before this court, the purported judgment is void.
Appropriate disposition of cases where the foregoing has occurred is to dismiss the appeal and remand the case to the associate circuit judge division of the court from which it came to permit the associate circuit judge who heard the case to enter a new judgment. As explained in Francis, however, in the event the trial judge who entered the void judgment is no longer judge of the associate circuit judge division of that circuit court, the successor of the former associate circuit judge must set aside all entries made concerning the purported judgment and grant the parties a new trial. 951 S.W.2d at 366.
The record on appeal reflects that this case was tried by the Honorable Christine Hutson, Associate Circuit Judge of Lac-lede County, Missouri. This court judicially notices that the 2003-2004 Official Manual of the State of Missouri reflects Judge Hutson is not now serving in that office. The appeal is, therefore, dismissed. The case is remanded with directions that the successor associate circuit judge to Judge Hutson set aside all entries in the case from and after September 27, 2002, and grant a new trial.
.The briefs of plaintiff (as appellant) and defendants (as respondents) erroneously characterize this appeal as an "appeal from the Associate Circuit Court” of Laclede County. As pointed out "as emphatically as we know how,” in Robinson v. Lohman, 949 S.W.2d 907, 910 (Mo.App. 1997), "[T]here is no 'associate circuit court’ in the Missouri court system!” This is exhaustively explained in Robinson, supra, at 910-12. This appeal is from the Circuit Court of Laclede County. It is an appeal of a case tried before an associate circuit judge.
. The petition sought damages, exclusive of interest, of $14,798.25 together with an unspecified amount of attorney fees. (Plaintiff's trial counsel stated that his fees, based on a billing of $135 per hour, amounted to $2,852 “prior to this trial.”) The petition is in two counts. Each count pleads an alternative remedy.
. References to statutes are to RSMo 2000.
. This court judicially notices that the trial date, September 27, 2002, was a Friday; that the following Monday would have been September 30, 2002.
. See B.C. National Banks v. Potts, 30 S.W.3d 220 (Mo.App. 2000), for a comprehensive discussion of the history of chapter 517. Although the previous limitation on the amount in dispute in cases heard by associate circuit judges, absent special assignments, has been repealed, remaining procedural limitations remain. B.C. National suggests what remains of chapter 517 is an expedited procedure for certain categories of claims. Id. at 222.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- LAMI WOOD PRODUCTS CORP. v. The WOODLANDS GROUP AT KEY HARBOR L.L.C., Defendants-Respondents
- Cited By
- 1 case
- Status
- Published