Doctor Duncan R. Danforth, a 75-year-old man of substantial means, married 21-year-old Loretta Ollison (Loretta) on Wednesday, August 13, 1980. Immediately following the ceremony the newlyweds went to a lawyer’s office where Dr. Dan-forth executed a newly prepared will naming Loretta a principal beneficiary of his estate. On Sunday, August 17, 1980, Dr. Danforth was murdered by Michael Stith (Stith), Loretta’s lover, after two exconvicts employed by Stith and Loretta to kill Dr. Danforth reneged on their previous agreement to do so. Loretta was jury-convicted of conspiracy to commit capital murder, § 564.016,
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and sentenced to imprisonment for ten years which was affirmed upon appeal.
State v. Danforth,
Loretta proffered no evidence in this matter. At the trial hereof Dr. Dan-forth’s children, among other things, offered Exhibit C consisting of a copy of the transcript of the trial wherein Loretta was tried and convicted of conspiracy to commit capital murder. Loretta’s first point relied on, in substance, is that as the children introduced the criminal case transcript, wherein Loretta and her parents as part of her defense testified Loretta’s marriage to Dr. Danforth was not induced by fraud, the children are bound thereby and therefore the trial court erred in entering judgment denying Loretta’s election to take against the 1978 will. This ignores the fact the transcript and opinion of
Danforth,
In
Danforth v. Danforth,
As written, Loretta’s second point relied on is diffuse and difficult to comprehend. The best we can understand it is that Loretta is claiming the court nisi erred in denying her election to take against the 1978 will because the children’s claimed objection to such election “was required to have been filed as a compulsory counterclaim in the libel action but it was not [and the children’s present] claim is barred for failure to plead it as a counterclaim in the libel action.”
Even if it be assumed, and we make no such assumption,
see
Rule 55.-32(a), V.A.M.R., the children’s present contentions were required to be made in a compulsory counterclaim in the libel action, the trouble we find with Loretta’s second point is that the libel action was voluntarily dismissed with prejudice without a trial and up to the time of dismissal the trial court had the discretionary power to permit the children, by amendment, to file such a counterclaim. Rule 55.32(e), V.A.M.R. A dismissal, as here, with prejudice simply serves as a mechanism to terminate the litigation rather than to adjudicate the issues therein involved.
Denny v. Mathieu,
As written, Loretta’s third point relied on is complex and prolix. In substance, the understandable portion of the point and the argument thereunder, is the claim that fraud cannot be the basis for excluding her from benefiting from the estate as fraud is not grounds for posthumously annulling a marriage. She also suggests that as § 474.160 does not expressly divest the rights there given a surviving spouse because she has been convicted of conspiracy to commit capital murder, the trial court erred in holding her conviction served to forfeit such statutory rights.
It was held in
In re Estate of Laspy,
A reading of
State v. Danforth,
and the other opinions cited in the first paragraph hereof, quickly demonstrates that Loretta’s fraud in procuring the marriage and her conspiracy in the murder of Dr. Danforth cannot be disputed. Whether the marriage was void or voidable is not in question as the marriage itself is not under collateral attack. Instead, Loretta’s undertaking to enrich herself via her fraud and conspiracy to commit murder is under direct attack. If, as the record demonstrates, Loretta’s marriage to Dr. Danforth was not in good faith and without love but only with mercenary motives to acquire his property, she was guilty of fraud.
Andris v. Andris,
Loretta’s fourth and final point relied on reads: “The court erred in entering judgment against appellant because there is no competent evidence in the record to prove that Mike Stith murdered appellant’s husband, a condition precedent to holding appellant to be vicariously liable for murder and barred from inheritance by having murdered her husband, in that, respondent’s only evidence on the point [an appellate court opinion] is inadmissible hearsay, admitted over objection of appellant.”
Section 477.231, in part, declares: “The supreme court may declare the published volumes of the decisions of the supreme court as the same are published by any person, firm or corporation, to be official reports of the decisions of the supreme court, and the court of appeals may jointly make a similar declaration with respect to published volumes of the opinions of the court of appeals.” In accordance with such authorization, there appears in the front portion of each volume of the South Western Reporter — Missouri Cases declarations of the Missouri Supreme Court and the Missouri Courts of Appeal that published volumes of the decisions of each court appearing in the South Western Reporter be the official reports of the opinions of such courts.
Loretta’s final point ignores the provisions of § 477.231, the declaration just noted and the fact that the trial court took “judicial notice” of the three cases cited in the opening paragraph of this opinion as reported in the South Western Reporter. The trial court did not take “judicial notice” of the photocopies of such opinions, only the reported opinions, as the photocopies were employed as a matter of convenience only. Also, the trial court was asked to “judicially notice”
State v. Stith
for the limited and lone purpose of the fact of Stith’s conviction and not as evidence of the facts upon which his murder conviction was
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predicated. Moreover, no objection at trial was made to the photocopy exhibits of the published opinions for the reasons they were photocopies. Upon appeal the only objections to evidence that can be considered are those that are made in the trial court.
State ex rel. State Highway Comm. v. Northeast Building Company,
Loretta’s final point is denied and the judgment nisi is affirmed. 2
