DON E. BURRELL, Judge.
Leslie A. Noles ("Mother") is attempting to appeal from an "Amended Judgment and Decree of Dissolution of Marriage" entered by the trial court after it lost jurisdiction over the case. Because none of the provisions about which Mother now complains were contained in the trial court's only valid judgment—its initial "Judgment and Decree of Dissolution of Marriage" ("judgment" or "original judgment")—we order the trial court to vacate its invalid amended judgment, reinstate its original judgment, and we dismiss Mother's appeal for lack of a justiciable controversy.
Mother filed her verified petition for dissolution of marriage on November 6, 2008. The cause was tried on January 15, 2010.
Father filed his revised Form 14 on January 21, 2010. Both his original and revised Form 14 calculations used a monthly gross income figure for Father of $7,688. Before the trial ended, Mother was also granted leave to submit a revised Form 14 based upon the evidence adduced at trial.
On January 29th, before entering any judgment in the case, the trial court prepared a six-page document entitled "Docket Memorandum" and forwarded it to the parties' attorneys. This memorandum summarized the evidence adduced at trial, discussed the parties' Form 14 calculations, explained why the trial court had rejected them and how it had calculated its own Form 14, explained its anticipated decision, and directed Mother's counsel to prepare a proposed written judgment for the trial court's review.
On February 9th, after the trial court had mailed out its docket memorandum and Form 14 but before it had entered any judgment in the case, Father filed a "Motion for Reconsideration and/or for New Trial" ("Father's motion"). Father's motion referenced Rule 78.01 and attached yet another Form 14 prepared by Father ("the modified Form 14").
On February 17th, Mother filed her proposed judgment. At the trial court's request, Father also provided the trial court with a proposed judgment.
On February 19th, the trial court entered its judgment. The judgment ordered Father to pay $778 per month in child support and ordered the parties to contribute toward the children's extraordinary expenses according to their income percentages as calculated on the trial court's Form 14—38% payable by Mother and 62% by Father.
On May 5th, the trial court held a hearing on Father's motion. No evidence was presented at the hearing. Father simply asked the trial court to recalculate its child support award using Father's lower "2010 income" of $4,615 per month as set forth in the modified Form 14 he had attached to his motion. Mother noted that she had not been provided with any 2010 income figures for Father and that no evidence of his 2010 income had been adduced at trial.
The following day, May 6th, the trial court made the following docket entry and sent it out with a letter to the parties' counsel:
The letter stated:
On May 10th, Father's attorney filed a proposed amended judgment that incorporated the changes mentioned in the trial court's letter. This was quickly followed by a letter from Mother's attorney objecting to the proposed amended judgment on the ground that, among other things, no new trial had been held and no new evidence had been submitted. Mother attached her own proposed amended judgment and parenting plan that retained the trial court's original child support amount of $778 from Father and its original division of extraordinary expenses.
On May 21, 2010—ninety-one days after the trial court entered its judgment—the trial court entered the amended judgment Mother now challenges on appeal. The amended judgment lowered Father's child support from $788 to $422 per month. It also changed the parties' responsibility for extraordinary expenses from a percentage split of 62% from Father and 38% from Mother to an order that the parties "be equally responsible for payment of private school and gymnastics for [the children]." When the trial court sent the parties a copy of its amended judgment, it included a letter that began as follows:
Mother's points on appeal assert the trial court erred as a matter of law by: 1) "amending the original child support award because a new trial was not held and additional testimony was not taken at the motion hearing"; and 2) amending the division of extraordinary expenses because Father failed to seek any such relief in his motion, it "was specifically denied by [Father]'s counsel at the motion hearing, a new trial was not held, and no `additional testimony' was adduced following trial on this issue."
Rule 75.01 provides that a trial court retains control over its judgment during the thirty-day period after it is entered "and may, after giving the parties an opportunity to be heard and for good cause, vacate, reopen, correct, amend, or modify its judgment within that time." See also Carter v. Carter, 901 S.W.2d 906, 911 (Mo. App. E.D.1995).
Beyond the thirty-day opportunity permitted under Rule 75.01, a trial court's authority to amend its judgment is more limited and depends upon action taken by one or more of the parties.
State ex. rel Missouri Parks Ass'n v. Missouri Dept. of [Nat.] Res., 316 S.W.3d 375, 382 (Mo.App. W.D.2010) (citing Massman Constr. Co. v. Highway & Transp. Comm'n, 914 S.W.2d 801, 802 (Mo. banc 1996)).
Rule 81.05(a)(2) uses the term "ruled" in setting out that a judgment becomes final for purposes of appeal upon the earlier of the following two occurrences:
See also In re Smythe, 254 S.W.3d 895, 898 (Mo.App. S.D.2008); Basham v. Williams, 239 S.W.3d 717, 722 (Mo.App. S.D.2007).
Applying these rules presents no difficulty when the after-trial motion is either explicitly denied by the trial court or is denied by operation of law when the trial court makes no ruling within ninety days of its filing. The application is less clear when the question is whether an explicit announcement by the trial court that it is granting the motion is sufficient—without the actual entry of an amended judgment—to prevent the motion from being denied by operation of law under Rule 78.06 at the expiration of the ninetieth day following the filing of the motion.
Herrman stands for the proposition that the trial court's authority does not extend past the ninety days afforded by Rules 78.06 and 81.05, but it did not directly address the question before us today because the trial court there gave no indication of its intention to grant wife's motion to amend the judgment until it "sustained her motion to amend the judgment" and entered that amended judgment on the ninety-ninth day after the motion was filed—nine days too late. 321 S.W.3d at 451-52. Here, the original judgment was entered on February 19, 2010. Father's motion, prematurely filed on February 9, 2010, is treated as having been filed on the same date as the original judgment—February 19, 2010.
At first glance, and interpreting the term "rule on" in the sense of "announcing a decision," it would seem reasonable to hold that the trial court "rule[d] on" Father's motion for purposes of Rule 78.06 on May 6, 2010, when it created a docket entry that "Granted/Sustained" Father's motion. Further, the trial court's letter of the same date began with the statement: "[Father]'s Motion for Reconsideration/New Trial is granted and this court's judgment and parenting plan of February 19, 2010 is amended to reduce [Father]'s monthly child support to $422.00 effective June 1, 2009." (Emphasis added).
In Carson v. Brands, 7 S.W.3d 576 (Mo. App. S.D.1999), a docket entry stating, "The [trial] [c]ourt, being fully advised,
In Basham, 239 S.W.3d at 721, a motion for new trial was timely filed 20 days after the original judgment was entered. Eighty-nine days after the motion was filed, the trial court made the following docket entry: "Cause taken under advisement for amended judgment. Judge [ ] took case file with him. Judgment to be entered." Id. The referenced amended judgment was then entered one hundred ten days after the motion was filed. Id. On review, we found that "[t]he docket entry [] did not extend the time for the court to rule on the after-trial motion, nor was it a denial of the after-trial motion." Id. at 722. As a result, the amended judgment entered after that ninetieth day was a nullity. Id.
While the language in the trial court's docket entry and accompanying letter in the instant case goes further than the docket entries in Carson and Basham by specifically stating that the trial court had reached a final decision and announcing provisions it intended to include in its amended judgment, we first note that they did not constitute a judgment. Although the letter used the present tense by stating that the original judgment "is amended" and indicated a new child support amount and division of extraordinary expenses, it also specifically instructed Father's counsel to "prepare a formal written amended judgment and parenting plan in accordance with these findings."
If these May 6th writings did "rule on" Father's motion for purposes of Rule 78.06, that ruling was nothing more than an interlocutory order.
State ex rel. & to Use of Fletcher v. New Amsterdam Cas. Co., 430 S.W.2d 642, 645 (Mo.App.St.L.D.1968). In addition, unlike an order that grants a new trial (and thereby vacates the original judgment), an order that grants a motion to amend the judgment is not listed as an event from which an appeal is granted by statute. See section 512.020(1)-(5), RSMo Cum. Supp.2006.
We continue to believe that the entry of an interlocutory order is insufficient to "rule on" a motion to amend the judgment for purposes of Rule 78.06 and that the only way to properly reconcile the meaning of "rule on" as set forth in rules 78.06 and 81.05(a)(2)(B) is to hold, consistent with the reasoning expressed in our prior cases, that a motion to amend the judgment is "rule[d] on" when, within ninety days of its filing: (1) the motion is explicitly denied; (2) the trial court takes no action on it; or (3) an amended judgment is actually executed and filed. Here, the first two alternatives are not applicable and the trial court did not enter its amended judgment until the ninety-first day following the filing of Father's motion. Father's motion was therefore deemed overruled on May 20th (the ninetieth day) by operation of law under Rule 78.06. "If an after-trial motion is overruled by operation of law, then the original judgment is final, valid, and enforceable." Carson, 7 S.W.3d at 579.
The trial court's amended judgment, entered May 21, 2010—one day too late—was a nullity and must be vacated. See Herrman, 321 S.W.3d at 452; Missouri Parks Ass'n, 316 S.W.3d at 390. As none of the provisions about which Mother now complains on appeal were contained in the trial court's original February 19th judgment—the only valid judgment in the case—there is no justiciable controversy before us, and we dismiss Mother's appeal for that reason. We do, however, remand the cause to the trial court which is directed to vacate its amended judgment and reinstate its original judgment. See Evans v. Director of Revenue, State of Mo., 119 S.W.3d 671, 674 (Mo.App. S.D.2003) (case remanded for reinstatement of an original judgment after the trial court improperly amended the judgment by a nunc pro tunc order).
BARNEY, P.J., and LYNCH, J., Concur.
State ex rel. McDaniel v. Pinnell, 741 S.W.2d 852, 855 (Mo.App. S.D.1987) (emphasis added). Here, both the trial court's docket entry and letter explicitly indicated that they were not the final word because they each stated that a new judgment was to follow.