The plaintiffs, Kurt J. Diekmann and his wife Norma Diekmann, appeal from an order vacating a default judgment they had *697 gotten against defendant-respondent Bernard H. Lindenbusch, a car dealer. The parties brief two issues: Is the order ap-pealable ? If so, was it proper for the trial court, after the judgment had become final, to set it aside on the ground it had been rendered on an amended petition not served on defendant Lindenbusch?
The plaintiffs had sued three defendants for damages suffered from buying, financing and insuring an automobile. Each was served with summons. The financer and the insurer pleaded but defendant Linden-busch defaulted. Later, plaintiffs filed an amended petition but did not have it served on defendant Lindenbusch. Still later, plaintiffs dismissed their amended petition against the defendant financer and insurer and proved up a $1,496 default judgment against Lindenbusch. After the judgment had become final, the plaintiffs got out an execution and garnishment against defendant Lindenbusch. He then moved the court to set aside the judgment on the ground of irregularities on the face of the record. The court granted the defendant’s motion, quashed the garnishment, set aside the default judgment, and put the case back on the docket. Plaintiffs promptly appealed from that order. (Appeal No. 32,122.) With an abundance of caution, plaintiffs simultaneously filed a motion for new trial. When that was denied by the passage of ninety days without court action, plaintiffs again appealed. (Appeal No. 32,199.)
At the threshold we meet defendant’s motion to dismiss plaintiffs’ appeals. He contends the appeals are premature because the plaintiffs have not yet suffered an adverse judgment; that they must submit to a retrial and only then can appeal — if they lose. Lindenbusch points to a wide range of cases holding that a plaintiff cannot appeal from an order setting aside a default judgment.
Before discussing these cases we must separate them according to the
time
each default judgment was set aside. This, because there is a material difference between default judgments that are not final and those that have become final. Here, the Diekmanns’ default judgment was rendered June 19, 1964; it had become a
final judgment
when the trial court set it aside November 2, 1964. So, this case differs from those where the trial court sets aside the default judgment within thirty days after the judgment (or in pre-code days did so during the term the default judgment was rendered). By common law (Wooten v. Friedberg,
Defendant Lindenbusch spotlights the oft-cited case of Bussiere’s Administrator v. Sayman,
The defendant clings to this concept that there is no appeal from an order vacating a final default judgment, citing our two opinions in Farrell v. DeClue, Mo.App.,
But in Casper v. Lee,
“On December 7, 1949, more than thirty days after the entry thereof, respondent filed a motion to vacate and set aside the default judgment. After hearing, the motion was sustained; the judgment was set aside; and the case was ordered reinstated on the docket. After an unavailing motion for a new trial, appellant has taken this appeal from the order or judgment setting aside the judgment in favor of appellant. An appeal lies from such an order or judgment. * * * ” (Our emphasis.)
The court then took up the merits of the motion to vacate. Judges Dalton and Hyde *699 dissented, not on the issue of appealability but on the merits of the order.
In thus holding that an appeal does lie from an order setting aside a final default judgment, the Supreme Court turned away from its ruling in
Bussiere.
This case of Casper v. Lee is the last word of the Supreme Court on the point now before us. So, we must and do rule that the plaintiffs Diekmann may appeal from the trial court’s order setting aside their final default judgment. The Kansas City Court of Appeals recently followed the Casper case, twice holding that if the trial court vacates the plaintiff’s final default judgment, the plaintiff may appeal to challenge the propriety of the order that took away his judgment. Fisher v. Mahler, Mo.App.,
Defendant-respondent Lindenbusch argues, logically, that we must have statutory authority to consider the appeal. Section 512.020, V.A.M.S., authorizes appeals : from any order granting a new trial, from certain designated orders and interlocutory judgments that determine the rights of the parties, from any final judgment, and
from any special order after final judgment in the cause.
In
Bussiere
the court pointed out that the order appealed from had wiped out the judgment and reasoned that the italicized clause authorized an appeal only when a final judgment still existed
after
the trial court’s order. But the clause “from any special order after final judgment” is open to another construction: an appeal lies from any order
made
after a judgment has become final. The law favors appeals, and statutes granting appeals should be liberally construed. (Fenton v. Thompson,
Here is the time table of relevant events leading to the vacation of plaintiffs’ judgment:
November 12, 1960. Plaintiffs filed their amended petition in five counts against all three defendants; counsel’s typed notation shows that copies were mailed to each defendant.
July 16, 1963. Plaintiffs and the two corporate defendants filed a stipulation for dismissal with prejudice, at plaintiffs’ costs.
May 27, 1964. Counsel for plaintiffs filed “Notice of Hearing” to present evidence on June 2, 1964; counsel’s notation shows that a copy was mailed to defendant Lindenbusch by certified mail and a return receipt was attached, signed “Ben Lindenbusch.”
June 2, 1964. Plaintiffs appeared and dismissed Counts One, Three, Four and Five. Defendant Lindenbusch remained in default. Evidence heard and cause submitted. Judgment for plaintiffs against defendant Lindenbusch for $1,145 actual damages, $1 punitive damages, $350 attorney fee, and costs.
October 13, 1964. Defendant Linden-busch filed his motion to quash summons in garnishment and set aside judgment for plaintiffs’ failure to serve Linden-busch with copy of amended petition.
November 13, 1964. Motion granted, judgment set aside, and cause reinstated on docket.
*700 Our examination of this record and the law convinces us (a) that by rule some amended petitions must be personally served on defaulting defendants, (b) that this amended petition is within that rule, and (c) that plaintiffs’ failure to comply with the rule was an irregularity which empowered the trial court to vacate the final default judgment. Civil Rule 43.01(a), V.A. M.R., says:
“Service — When Required. Every pleading subsequent to the original petition * * * shall be served upon each of the parties affected thereby, but no service need be made on parties in default for failure to appear except that pleadings asserting new or additional claims for relief against them shall be served upon them in the manner provided for service of summons in this code.” (Our emphasis.)
Defendant Lindenbusch was in default and the amended petition was not served upon him in the manner provided for service of summons. So, we must ask: Did plaintiffs’ amended petition assert new or additional claims against him?
Count One of the amended petition changes the original allegations about the sale, tender and demand for the automobile and the amounts of carrying charges, and adds charges of duress and threat of repossession. Count Two of the original petition charged that defendants conspired to defraud plaintiffs; Count Two of the amended petition, on which the default judgment was rendered, adds that the acts of “plaintiffs” were malicious, willful and deliberate, but says nothing of fraud. The amount of damages prayed in Count Three of the amended petition exceeds the amount sought in original Count Three. Counts Four and Five of the amended petition seek penalties and damages not sought by the corresponding counts of the original petition. Beyond question, this amended petition asserts “new or additional claims for relief.” It follows that plaintiffs violated Civil Rule 43.01(a), V.A.M.R., by failing to serve a copy of it on defendant Linden-busch.
Having reached this conclusion we next ask whether this violation of the rule empowered the trial court to set aside the final judgment. Our procedural arsenal holds six weapons designed to bring down a final default judgment: a separate suit in equity, a statutory petition for review, a nunc pro tunc order, a motion in the nature of a writ of error coram nobis, a motion showing fraud practiced on the court, and a motion showing irregularity on the face of the record. (See Vol. 28, MLR, p. 281, 1963.) The last is the one facing us. Civil Rule 74.32, V.A.M.R. (§ 511.250, V.A.M.S.), states:
“Motion to Set Aside, When Filed. Judgments in any court of record shall not be set aside for irregularity, on motion, unless such motion be made within three years after the rendition thereof.,”
These words acknowledge the common law existence of the remedy and merely put a time limit on its use. Cross v. Gould,
The irregularity must be one that “is patent on the record, and not one depending upon proof
dehors
the record.” Casper v. Lee,
Turning from illustrations to a case more directly in point, we note Rubbelke v. Aebli, Mo.,
The orders vacating the plaintiffs’ default judgment and denying their motion for a new trial are affirmed.
PER CURIAM:
The foregoing opinion of CLEMENS, C., is adopted as the opinion of this court. Accordingly, the orders vacating the plaintiffs’ default judgment and denying their motion for a new trial are affirmed.
Notes
. Harper v. Harper, Mo.App.,
. Holder v. Chidister, Mo.,
. Whether the final default judgment had “ceased to exist” would seem to depend on whether the order setting it aside was a lawful order. By dismissing the appeal on the ground that the final default judgment had “ceased to exist,” the appellate court assumed — but refused to determine — the lawfulness of the very order on which it based its decision.
