Richard Darwin Berry (“Husband”) and Maureen Smith Berry (‘Wife”) were married on May 29, 2000, in Warren County, New York. There were no children born to the marriage. On February 3, 2003, Husband petitioned for dissolution.of marriage in Stoddard County, Missouri. Wife was personally served with process on February 14, 2003, in West Point, New York. Wife contested the Missouri court’s jurisdiction.
At the time of trial, Husband was stationed at West Point, New York, and Wife lived in the Albany, New York area. Following a hearing at which both parties were present and represented, the trial court entered its judgment and decree of dissolution on January 26, 2004, finding that it had both personal and subject matter jurisdiction. The circuit court ordered that the marriage be dissolved, awarded wife attorney’s fees plus reimbursement for travel expenses, divided marital property, allocated marital debts, and denied Wife’s request for maintenance. Wife appeals.
Wife filed a pro se “Answer and Response,” in which she objected to jurisdiction. Therein, Wife stated that she did not consent to service and rejected “any previously and illegally served papers.” She requested “to have the complaint dismissed.”
On April 16, 2003, Husband filed a “First Amended Petition for Dissolution of Marriage,” in which he amended his original petition by adding a request for division of marital property and debts.
Wife obtained counsel and filed her “Answer to First Amended Petition for Dissolution of Marriage” and “Counter Petition for Dissolution of Marriage” on May 28, 2003.
Preliminary to a hearing held June 23, 2003, Wife’s counsel requested that the trial court dismiss the action for “lack of jurisdiction by the Court[,]” contending that neither party was a resident of Missouri. The trial court denied Wife’s motion and proceeded to hear the cause.
A “Judgment and Decree of Dissolution of Marriage” was filed January 26, 2004, in which the trial court found that it had “personal jurisdiction over the parties and subject matter jurisdiction in this ease[.]” The trial court apportioned the marital debt, divided the marital property, awarded Wife $500.00 for attorney fees, and ordered Husband to pay Wife’s medical insurance premiums and travel expenses. Wife’s request for maintenance was denied upon the trial court’s finding that Wife “has sufficient property and income to provide for her reasonable needs.” The trial court made the order denying maintenance “not modifiable.”
In her appeal, Wife presents two points relied on. Point I challenges the trial court’s judgment denying maintenance to Wife on the 'basis that the trial court did not have either personal jurisdiction or subject matter jurisdiction. In her second point, Wife contends that the trial court’s denial of maintenance was error in that “the evidence demonstrated that [Wife] was disabled from employment and lacked sufficient income and assets to provide for her reasonable needs[.]” We find Point I to be dispositive and need not address Wife’s second point.
In Missouri, to obtain personal jurisdiction over a non-resident defendant, “the plaintiff must make a prima facie showing that 1) the cause of action arose out of an activity covered by Missouri’s long-arm statute, ... and 2) the defendant had sufficient minimum contacts with Missouri to satisfy the requirements of due process.” Wray v. Wray,
“An action for dissolution of marriage involves an amalgam of contractual right and status.” Ferrari v. Ferrari,
“[L]ack of personal jurisdiction forestalls consideration of orders pertaining to maintenance ... and attorney’s fees.” Thompson v. Thompson,
Husband contends that Wife’s failure to assert the defense of lack of jurisdiction “either by motion or in her answer ... constitutes a waiver of such defenses.” “ ‘Rule 55.27(g)(1)(B) provides that the defense of lack of personal jurisdiction, among other things, is waived ... if it is neither made by motion under this Rule [55.27] nor included in a responsive pleading.’ ” Crouch v. Crouch,
Wife raised the issue of jurisdiction in her original pro se “Answer and Response,” in which she stated “[t]hat I am unfamiliar with the residency requirements for this Court, however, object to jurisdiction.” Wife alleged that the parties were married in the State of New York, that both live in the State of New York, and that Wife never lived in Missouri. Wife also stated that she rejected service and asked the court to find that service was improper.
In her subsequent “Answer to First Amended Petition for Dissolution of Marriage,” Wife denied that Husband’s residence was Stoddard County, Missouri, “and further denie[d] that his legal residence is ... Bernie, Missouri, for at least 90 days immediately preceding the filing of his petition.” In her “Counter Petition for Dissolution of Marriage” which was filed as part of Wife’s Answer, Wife contends that both parties are residents of New York and that “[njeither party is a resident of the State of Missouri, and therefore, the State of Missouri is without jurisdiction to hear this cause.” Wife further contended that all marital property and marital debts were outside of the State of Missouri. Wife requested that the court dismiss for lack of jurisdiction, “or in the alternative, to dissolve the marriage; to make an equitable division of the marital property and assignment of the marital debts; to order [Husband] to pay [Wife] a reasonable sum for [Wife’s] maintenance; [and] to order [Husband] to pay [Wife’s] attorney fees and costs herein incurred[.]” Wife correctly contends that once raised, an objection to personal jurisdiction is preserved through the trial. Wray,
To support a general judgment in per-sonam against an absent spouse, Rule 54.06(b) requires, among other things, that the petitioner continue to live in this state. Husband has satisfied this prong, in that he testified that he never abandoned his Missouri domicile although he was actively serving in the military and stationed outside of Missouri at the time of his marriage to Wife. See Edwards v. Edwards,
However, Rule 54.06(b) also “mandates compliance with the minimum contacts test by requiring that one whom the state would subject to an in personam judgment for maintenance, support, attorney’s fees, suit money, or disposition of marital property must have ‘lived in lawful marriage within this state.’ ” Crouch,
A personal judgment entered against a party by a court lacking personal jurisdiction over that party is void. Maul v. Maul,
That portion of the decree dissolving the marriage is affirmed. In all other respects, the judgment is reversed and the cause remanded with instructions to the trial court to vacate all other provisions in the judgment.
