GLAYDS L. BINDLEY, Aрpellant, v. METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY, a Corporation; LEWIS P. CLOTHIER and L. V. MURRAY, Respondents.
No. 40638
Division One
July 12, 1948
September 13, 1948
213 S. W. (2d) 387
[388] DALTON, C.---Plaintiff has appealed from a judgment of dismissal entered after defendants’ motion to dismiss plaintiff‘s amended petition had been sustained. On March 26, 1947, plaintiff instituted this suit for $10,000 actual and $115,000 punitive damages. The aсtion is based upon an alleged unlawful conspiracy entered into by the insurance company, its agent and its physician, for the alleged purpose of cheating and defrauding the plaintiff by depriving her of her property and rights, towit, a cause of action for the wrongful death of her husband and a right to recover penalty and attorney feеs on account of the insurance company‘s vexatious refusal to pay to plaintiff-beneficiary the amount due on a double indemnity (in case
Plaintiff further alleged that the action was theretofore filed on January 6, 1943; that on November 24, 1945, while same was pending in said court, the court ordered thе cause put on the ‘Hold Docket‘; that said cause was so placed and was never thereafter placed on the trial docket; and that while said cause was so pending on said ‘Hold Docket‘, the court, on April 1, 1946, ordered and adjudged that the same be dismissed for want of prosecution and that defendants have and recover of рlaintiff their costs. Plaintiff also alleged “that said order placing said cause on the Hold Docket was made because witnesses in the case were in the armed forces, and is still in force. That said court was without jurisdiction, for said reason, to make and enter the order made on April 1, 1946. That plaintiff was never notified of said order by the court or defendant, and that one of defendants’ counsel, on or about March 20, 1947, informed plaintiff‘s counsel that said order had been made.”
Defendants’ motion to dismiss the present action was based on two grounds: (1) that “the petition shows on its face that the alleged cause of action is barred by the Statutes of Limitations“; and (2) that “the petition shows on its face that the cause of action alleged therein has been adjudicated upon its merits pursuant to
In sustaining defendants’ motion to dismiss, the trial court relied upon
Appellant contends that
Respondents’ brief states that Rule 14 of the Rules of the Circuit Court of Jackson сounty, in force at the time this case was dismissed, provided: “Any case on the active trial list which is not ready for trial for any reason other than engaged counsel, as defined above, will be by the Presiding Judge taken off of the active trial list and placed on the Hold Docket unless continued for statutory grounds, in which event it shall be returned to the general dоcket. . . . Any case on the Hold Docket undisposed of for a period of 120 days shall on the next day be dismissed by the Court.”
Respondents say that the original cause “was dismissed by the court of its own motion for want of prosecution on April 1, 1946, pursuant to Circuit Court Rule No. 14.” Respondents further say that the “plaintiff . . . left the case on the Hold Docket for more than 120 dаys thereby making it mandatory on the court to dismiss
No such rule was referred to in the amended petition and it does not appear in the record, but by letter, dated May 18, 1948, appellant advises “that, if the court has power to do so, it may consider that that rule was in force, at the time mentioned in respondents’ brief, in the Circuit Court of Jackson county.”
This court cannot take judicial notice of the rules of the Circuit Court of Jackson county (State ex rel. Clinton Const. Co. v. Johnson (Mo. Sup.), 272 S. W. 928, 929) and it appears that the appellant, in her amended petition in this cause, did not plead that her prior action was dismissed by the court by reason of Rule No. 14 of the Circuit Court of Jackson Cоunty, nor did she plead such rule, however, she did plead certain facts concerning the dismissal and that she did not learn of the April 1, 1946 dismissal until March 20, 1947. In printing Rule No. 14 in their brief and in stating that appellant‘s original action was dismissed by the circuit court pursuant to said rule, the respondents intended that this court should act upon said statement. Appellant also consеnts. Accordingly, we will act upon the admission of counsel and consider the admitted fact that the original cause was dismissed pursuant to Circuit Court Rule No. 14. Emerson v. Mound City (Mo. Sup.), 26 S. W. (2d) 766.
Respondents construe the amended petition to state that the original cause was “dismissed by the court of its own motion for want of prosecution.” Respondents [390] say that the dismissal was proper аnd that, since the judgment has not been appealed from, or set aside, it is a final judgment, conclusive and binding on the parties and res adjudicata of the merits of the cause. Respondents further point out that the present action is not a direct proceeding to attack the prior judgment for fraud, accident, inadvertence or mistake in the inception of the judgment (Sutter v. Easterly, 354 Mo. 282, 189 S. W. (2d) 284; Cherry v. Wertheim (Mo. App.), 25 S. W. (2d) 118); and that, while relying on the judgment to toll the statute of limitations, appellant attempts to attack the judgment collaterally and annul its force and effect.
The petition shows on its face that the original cause was pending in the Circuit Court when the order and judgment of dismissal was entered. No lack of jurisdiction over the pаrties or the subject matter of the cause of action appears from the allegations of the amended petition. Accordingly, in this proceeding, the allegation that the “court was without jurisdiction” to enter the judgment must be disregarded as the judgment of dismissal is not subject to collateral attack. Beil v. Gaertner, 355 Mo. 617, 197 S. W. (2d) 611, 613; Bushman v. Bushman, 311 Mo. 551, 279 S. W. 122, 129; Davis v. Morgan Foundry Co., 224 Mo. App. 162, 23 S. W. (2d) 231, 233. The judgment rendered was regular on its face аnd the presumption
In Wetmore v. Crouch, supra, 188 Mo. 647, 654, 87 S. W. 954 (referring to what is now
In Jones v. Williams, 357 Mo. 531, 209 S. W. (2d) 907, 911, it was held that an order dismissing a petition on motion because no cause of action was stated was a dismissal with prejudice and res adjudicata on the merits. In effect it was held the reference in the order of dismissal to the ground mentioned and other grounds did not “otherwise specify“; and that such a specification would not permit the filing of an amended petition. The dismissal under the facts there shown was held to be conclusive on the merits. That case, however, is based upon the fact that
In the case of Hannibal v. St. Louis Public Service Co., supra, appellаnt‘s original suit was filed May 15, 1944 and was set for trial February 25, 1945. On that date it was called for trial, but plaintiff failed to appear to prosecute the cause and it was dismissed at plaintiff‘s cost for failure to prosecute. Ten months later plaintiff filed the second suit on the same cause between the same parties and it was dismissed on the ground that the dismissal оf the first case was with prejudice and operated as an adjudication of the merits of the cause in view of
Appellant‘s amended petition in this cause sufficiently pleaded the facts to show that the dismissal of the original cause for want of prosecution was not a dismissal on motion, [391] after notice and the
In this case it must be conceded that in truth and in fact there was no adjudication upon the merits of the original cause; no motion to dismiss for cause was heard or ruled; the cause was not set for hearing before the court for any purpose; the plaintiff in the cause was not in default for failure to appear on the day the order was entered; and, so far as appears from the record, none of the parties were present in court at the time of dismissal. The order was general and stated: “It is ordered and adjudged . . . that the following numbered and entitled causes be and the same are hereby dismissed for want of prosecution.” The order was followed by the names of the cases to which it applied. It is admitted that the court acted on its own motion and entered the judgment of dismissal for want of prosecution pursuant to Circuit Court Rule 14, after the lapse of 120 days referrеd to in the rule.
We do not question the inherent power of the court to dismiss a cause, on its own motion, for want of prosecution, but such a dismissal is not expressly provided for in the Code of Civil Procedure and the question is: Does the Code of Civil Procedure, and particularly
Reading and considering the
We are not here concerned with the matter of a valid dismissal for want of prosecution pursuant to Circuit Court Rule No. 14, but we are concerned solely with whether the dismissal for want of prosecution, under the pleaded and admitted facts, operated as an adjudication of the merits of the cause. We must hold thаt it did not. The “involuntary dismissal” referred to in
In the case of Hannibal v. St. Louis Public Service Co., it appears from the opinion that the original case had been set for trial. Whether by agreement or on notice does not appear, but we must assume that plaintiff was bound by the setting for trial. Plaintiff failed to appear to prosecute the cause. Whether the court acted on its own motion or upon a motion presented by defendant in dismissing the cause does not [392] appear. In any event the cause was set for trial and disposition on the day upon which the order was entered. Plaintiff (appellant) knew or should have known that some disposition would be made of the cause on that date. The St. Louis Court of Appeals ruled that the judgment, which did not “otherwise specify,” was with prejudice and operated as an adjudication on the merits of the cause. The admitted facts are very differеnt here.
Respondents further urge that “plaintiff‘s cause is barred by ‘Limitations,’
Respondents say: “It was incumbent on plaintiff to affirmatively plead in her petition that the alleged fraud did not become known to her within five years previous to the date of the filing of her said petition, this she did not do, аnd, therefore, the action is barred by
The judgment should be reversed and the cause remanded. It is so ordered. Bradley and Van Osdol, CC., concur.
PER CURIAM:—The foregoing opinion by DALTON, C., is adopted as the opinion of the court. All the judges concur.
