14 S.W.3d 145 | Mo. Ct. App. | 2000
Arnold and Estell Parnés appeal the circuit court’s judgment dismissing their petition for damages against Centertainment, Inc., for failure to state a claim upon which relief could be granted. In response to the Parneses’ appeal, Centertainment filed a motion to dismiss the appeal on the ground that the Parneses did not obey rules of appellate procedure. Because we find numerous violations, we sustain the motion and dismiss the appeal.
The Parneses did not file a certified copy of the petition for damages with this court in their record on appeal.
We struck the Parneses’ first brief because the argument portion did not include “a concise statement of the applicable standard of review for each claim of error, in violation of Rule 84.04(e).” The first brief did contain a jurisdictional statement and a statement of facts. When we struck the first brief, however, we informed the Parneses:
[T]he Court will no longer permit appellants to amend their briefs by reprinting only the defective portions. The Court has [struck] the entire brief and will require that the entire brief be reprinted or reduplicated. If you want to use portions of the original brief, you may pick them up in the Clerk’s office or ... make arrangements to have them mailed to you.
The Parneses were obligated to file the supplemental pages for their amended brief with this court, and it was not this court’s obligation to supplement the Parneses’ brief with pages from a brief which had been struck.
Even if we were to allow the first briefs statement of facts to supplement the amended brief, the statement of facts was deficient. “A statement of facts that consists of nothing more than an abbreviated procedural history fails to provide an understanding of the case and is deficient.” Angle v. Grant, 997 S.W.2d 133, 134 (Mo.App.1999). The Parneses’ original statement of facts said:
Plaintiff-Appellant filed his Petition for Damages, against both Defendants. (LF — 42-63). The full text of the Petition for Damages was inadvertently not filed with the Legal File. To correct that unintentional oversight, the Plaintiff-Appellant are enclosing the original and eleven copies of the Petition for Damages, which should be designated in the Legal File.3 Plaintiffs filed his Petition for Damages with Summons attached (LF-39-63). Defendants filed a Motion to Dismiss along with Suggestions in support of their Motion to Dismiss (LF-30-38).
Plaintiffs filed their Suggestions Opposing Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss (LF-19-27).
Defendant’s filed Reply Plaintiffs Suggestions in Support of their Motion to Dismiss (LF-11-17).
Plaintiff filed Reply Suggestions to Defendant’s Reply Suggestions (LF-6-10).
The Trial Judge sustained Defen- ' dant’s Motion to Dismiss. (LF-18).
The Parneses’ statement of facts in their amended brief merely stated:
Plaintiffs filed their Suggestions Opposing Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss (LF-19-27).
Defendant’s filed Reply Plaintiffs Suggestions in Support of their Motion to Dismiss (LF-11-17).
Plaintiff filed Reply Suggestions to Defendant’s Reply Suggestions (LF-6-10).
The Trial Judge sustained Defendant’s Motion to Dismiss. (LF-18).
The Parneses’ failure to include in their statement of facts the facts upon which their claim of error is based does not preserve anything for our review. Id.
“Violations of the rules of appellate procedure are grounds for dismissal of an appeal.” Jones v. Jones, 819 S.W.2d 773,
Centertainment also filed a motion for damages for frivolous appeal. We deny the motion.
. In the legal file filed with this court, the Parneses included only the first page of the petition for damages.
. Rule 81.15(c) allows a legal file to be filed without certification if the parties agree in writing that the legal file is true and accurate.
. The Parneses did not do this.