DocketNumber: No. ED 106068
Citation Numbers: 558 S.W.3d 119
Judges: Dowd
Filed Date: 8/28/2018
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
Dale E. Stucker (Father) appeals the trial court's judgment that dissolved his marriage to Karen E. Stucker (Mother). Father claims that the trial court erred by (1) denying his request for equal, alternating week-long periods of custodial time in the summer and (2) ordering that he pay Mother child support in the amount of $98 per month. We are unable to reach the merits of this appeal because Father waived his right to appeal by stipulating to *121the entry of the judgment he now seeks to challenge. Appeal dismissed.
Discussion
In Missouri, the right to appeal is purely statutory. Henze v. Schallert,
We find that the stipulation Father agreed to with Mother, which specifically "pray[ed] that the Court enter its Second Amended Judgment," results in the waiver of his right to appeal. A review of the record supports our conclusion as to the intent of the stipulation. The court held a bench trial on the parties' cross-petitions for dissolution of marriage. Following the bench trial, the court entered a judgment and then, after Father filed a motion to amend, the court entered a first amended judgment that, inter alia , denied Father's request for equal, alternating summer custody and ordered that he pay child support in the amount of $98 per month. Mother filed a motion to reopen trial for additional evidence regarding certain tax consequences of the judgment, and at the hearing on that motion, Father filed a motion for new trial. The court denied Father's motion, granted Mother's, and scheduled a second bench trial exclusively to address the tax issues.
Before the second bench trial could be held, however, the parties entered into and filed the stipulation, which provided in toto , "Comes Now Petitioner, and Comes also Respondent, by their respective attorneys, and do stipulate and agree that all post-trial motions filed by either side are withdrawn and do pray that the Court enter its Second Amended Judgment, per the interlineations previously filed with the Court." The trial court cancelled the scheduled bench trial and entered the stipulated Second Amended Judgment, which like the previous judgment denied Father's requested custody and ordered that he pay $98 monthly in child support. Father's only subsequent filing was his notice of appeal, by which he now attempts to dispute the validity of the Second Amended Judgment's custody and child support determinations to which he stipulated.
In light of these facts, we find that Father waived his right to appeal the Second Amended Judgment. He specifically "pray[ed]" for the entry of that judgment and consented to the withdrawal of all post-trial motions and thus cannot be held under § 512.020 to have been "aggrieved by" the Second Amended Judgment. New Amsterdam Cas. Co.,
*122Nations,
We also reject Father's effort in violation of Rule 81.12
Conclusion
Because Missouri law clearly provides that Father may not appeal a judgment entered at his request, this appeal must be dismissed.
Gary M. Gaertner, Jr., J., and Lisa P. Page, J., concur.
All statutory citations are to RSMo 2016.
All rules references are to the Missouri Supreme Court Rules (2016).