This Cоurt granted transfer following dismissal of an appeal by order of the Missouri Court of Appeals, Eastern District. The cause is retransferred.
On December 10, 1993, the trial court entered a decree in a dissolution action between L.J.B. and L.W.B. The trial court found
The court of appeals dismissed L.J.B.’s appeal. Relying on Rose v. Rose,
Rule 81.04(a) provides that a notice of appeal must be filed within ten dаys after the judgment or order appealed from becomes final. A copy of the judgment appealed from must be attached to the notice of appeal. Rule 81.08, Civil Procedure Forms 8-A and 8-B. Rule 81.05(a) provides that a judgment is final thirty days after entry of judgment. Rule 81.05(b) рrovides: “In any case in which a notice of appeal has been filed prematurely, such notice shall be considered аs filed immediately after the time the judgment becomes final for the purposes of appeal.” Reading the above provisions together, it is obvious that no notice of appeal would be effective until some order giving the appearance of a judgment under Rule 74.01 is filed by the trial court in a case. The December 10 order qualified as a judgment under Rule 74.01. Where, as here, the judgment is not vаcated or set aside and a new trial granted on all issues but rather is merely reopened for taking additional evidence on оne limited issue, it is not accurate to say the judgment has been vacated or that the amendment to that judgment, as provided in Rule 73.01(a)(5), is an entirely new judgment.
A similar issue arose in State ex rel. State Highway Commission v. Tate,
Neither the language nor purpose of Rule 81.05(b) admit of such limited interpretation. The rule by its terms specifies only one point in time as critical: the point at which a premature notice of appeal shall be considered as filed, namely, the moment “the judgment becomes final for the purpose of аppeal.” The appellate court interpreted the rule by engrafting an additional reference point not mentionеd in the rule. It would require that any premature notice of appeal to qualify under the rule must be filed after the moment a judgment entry appears.... We believе this contrary to the language of Rule 81.05(b) which unambiguously provides that the rule applies “in any case” in which the notice of appeal precedes the time an ap-pealable judgment appears. Further, such interpretation frustrates the purpоse of the Rule_ Rule 81.05(b) seeks to preserve appeals for litigants whose counsel in an abundance of caution or by mistakе file premature notices of appeal in such situations.
It is true that the December 10, 1993 decree that was attached to thе prematurely filed notice of appeal is not identical to the March 21, 1994 decree, the “final” judgment.
The vital step for рerfecting an appeal is the timely filing of a notice of appeal and, once such notice is timely filed, the appeal becomes effective. Weller v. Hayes Truck Lines,
Where the trial court has entered a judgment appearing to dispose of all issues in the case, giving the appearance of a judgment under Rule 74.01, followed by a limited reopening оf evidence under Rule 78.01, the amendment of the judgment as authorized by Rule 73.01(a)(5) is not the entry of an entirely new judgment. Under Rule 81.05(b), the notice of appeal filed after the original judgment but before the amended judgment is deemed filed immediately after the amended judgment is enterеd. See Rule 73.01(a)(5). If the judgment were vacated in its entirety and a new trial ordered on all issues, the result might be different. But that did not occur here. To the extеnt Rose is inconsistent with this decision, it is overruled.
The cause is retransferred to the Missouri Court of Appeals, Eastern District, for a disposition of the appeal on the merits.
