State of Missouri ex rel. Harry M. Stockman, Relator v. The Honorable Thomas J. Frawley, Judge of the Circuit Court of the City of St. Louis, 22nd Judicial Circuit, Division 22
In the Missouri Court of Appeals
Eastern District
WRIT DIVISION THREE
STATE OF MISSOURI ex rel. ) No. ED103251
HARRY M. STOCKMAN, )
)
Relator, ) Writ of Prohibition
vs. ) Circuit Court of the City of St. Louis
) Cause No. 1522-FC01127
The Honorable THOMAS J. FRAWLEY, )
Judge of the Circuit Court of the City of ) Hon. Thomas J. Frawley
St. Louis, 22nd Judicial Circuit, Division 22, )
) Filed:
Respondent. ) September 15, 2015
Harry M. Stockman (“Relator”) seeks a writ of prohibition or mandamus against the
Honorable Thomas J. Frawley (“Respondent”) for denying his application for change of judge
under Rule 51.05. We entered a preliminary order of prohibition, and Respondent filed a timely
answer and suggestions in opposition. We dispense with further briefing as permitted by Rule
84.24(j). We now make that preliminary order permanent, as modified below.
Relator and his wife filed cross-petitions for dissolution. Relator is a lawyer and
represents himself. Both parties filed motions pendente lite (“PDL”) to address certain
temporary arrangements pending a final judgment. Relator sought temporary maintenance, and
Wife sought exclusive possession of the marital home, a restraining order preventing Relator
from spending the proceeds of a large settlement and attorney fees. Respondent was designated
the trial judge, after recusal of the originally assigned judge, on June 10, 2015. On June 25th, the
court held what the docket sheet refers to as a “counsel status hearing.” There is no transcript of
this hearing, and the parties have slightly different versions of the hearing. Relator describes the
hearing as a “conference” at which he withdrew his PDL motion and agreed to the relief Wife
sought in hers. Respondent describes it as a “hearing” at which the parties argued the merits of
their PDL motions, the judge responded to those argument and then—waiving testimony—the
parties conferred and prepared the proposed “consent judgment” that was signed by the judge.
Thus, it appears they both agree that no evidence was presented and that the court’s order was a
product of the parties’ agreement on the issues. The order stated that Relator had withdrawn his
motion for maintenance PDL, it directed Relator to provide Wife with documentation of his
expenditures of the settlement proceeds and it ordered Relator to “make effort to obtain his own
residence” by a certain date or the court would hear Wife’s motion for exclusive possession.
Shortly thereafter, Relator filed an application for change of judge under Rule 51.05, but
did not include a notice of hearing. The court sua sponte set the application for hearing a few
days later. At the hearing, Respondent indicated that having appeared before him on the PDL
motions, Relator’s change of judge application was untimely. Respondent also indicated that
having failed to file notice of hearing, Relator’s application was properly denied. As discussed
more fully below, neither of these articulated reasons justifies Respondent’s denial of the change
of judge request in this case.
The right to disqualify a judge is a keystone of our judicial system, and Missouri courts
follow a liberal rule construing it. State ex rel. Walters v. Schaeperkoetter, 22 S.W.3d 740, 742
(Mo. App. E.D. 2000). A civil litigant has a “virtually unfettered right to disqualify a judge
without cause on one occasion.” Id. Thus, the presentation of a timely application for change of
judge under Rule 51.05 requires a prompt change of judge. Id.
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First, the application in this case was timely. Rule 51.05(b) provides that the application
“must be filed within 60 days from service of process or 30 days from the designation of the trial
judge, whichever time is longer.” It goes on to say that “[i]f the designation of the trial judge
occurs less than thirty days before trial, the application must be filed prior to any appearance
before the trial judge.” Rule 51.05(b). Thus, because Respondent was designated just fifteen
days before the hearing at which the parties addressed their PDL motion, if that hearing
constituted a “trial” under this rule, then having appeared at it precluded Relator from seeking a
change of judge thereafter.
A “trial” within the meaning of Rule 51.05(b) means a full trial on the merits. State ex
rel. Cohen v. Riley, 994 S.W.2d 546, 548 (Mo. banc 1999)1 (citing State ex rel. City of Berkeley
v. Clifford, 976 S.W.2d 569, 571 (Mo. App. E.D. 1998) and Reproductive Health Services, Inc.
v. Lee, 660 S.W.2d 330, 342 (Mo. App. E.D. 1983)). Thus, even where evidence is taken at a
hearing, there has not necessarily been a “trial on the merits” unless substantive—not merely
preliminary—issues are ruled upon. See Riley, 994 S.W.2d at 548-49 (preliminary injunction
hearing where evidence taken was not a “trial on the merits” for purpose of rule); see also State
ex rel. Kramer v. Walker, 926 S.W.2d 72, 74 (Mo. App. W.D. 1996) (hearing on PDL motion
where evidence taken on issue of temporary custody did not make subsequent change of judge
motion on underlying modification proceeding untimely; judge had no discretion but to grant
timely request for change of judge filed after ruling on pre-trial PDL motion). Likewise, where
the matter before the court is not contested and the court settles no issue in dispute, “its order
cannot be considered a substantive trial on the merits.” State ex rel. Welch v. Scott, 58 S.W.3d
690, 692 (Mo. App. W.D. 2001) (relying on Riley, supra). Similarly, when judgment on an issue
1
Contrary to Respondent’s stated belief at the change of judge hearing, none of the amendments to Rule 51.05 since
Riley call its holding on this point into question.
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is reserved, on the belief that further litigation would be necessary to resolve that issue, there has
been no “trial” for purposes of Rule 51.05(b). Id.
Here, as in Riley and Scott, the conference and resulting order in this case does not
resemble a “trial” within the meaning of Rule 51.05(b). There was no evidence taken at this
hearing on the parties’ PDL motions, and all of the issues were all settled by consent of the
parties, not resolved by Respondent. That is, regardless of what Respondent’s response to the
parties’ arguments prior to their agreement might have been, they entered a consent order rather
than submitting testimony and asking Respondent to make a ruling. Moreover, contrary to
Respondent’s claim, the court did not actually dispose of any of the substantive issues of
maintenance and the distribution of marital property raised in the PDL motions. Wife sought a
restraining order preventing Relator from spending the settlement proceeds, but the order merely
directed Relator to account for his expenditures of those proceeds; it did not grant the restraining
order or distribute that property. As to Wife’s motion for exclusive possession of the marital
home, the order merely directed Relator to try moving out by a certain date. The court reserved
ruling on Wife’s motion—and set a hearing thereon—in the event Relator had not moved by the
appointed date. And, of course, Relator withdrew his PDL motion for maintenance, so there was
no ruling on that motion at all. Because this was not a trial on the merits, Relator was permitted
to file his application for change of judge thereafter.
Respondent contends that to allow the change of judge at this point in the litigation
encourages litigants to play “peek and run,” resulting in unnecessary burden on the judicial
administration and improper forum-shopping. Our courts share this concern, but have repeatedly
recognized the “important countervailing interest in the liberal allowance of one change of judge
as of right.” Riley, 994 S.W.2d at 549.
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Second, Relator’s failure to comply with Rule 51.05(c) is not fatal to his application.
That provision requires the filing party to also serve “notice of the time when it will be presented
to the court.” The purpose of this requirement is to allow the opposing party the opportunity to
contest the application. When the application is otherwise timely filed and timely served upon
the opposing party and a hearing is held at which the opposing party had an opportunity to
contest the application, the lack of notice is not a sufficient basis to deny the application. State
ex rel. Director of Revenue, State of Mo. v. Scott, 919 S.W.2d 246, 248 (Mo. banc 1996). “Such
a thin procedural argument alone cannot defeat such a significant right.” Id. Here, the court set
the matter for hearing on its own within days of Relator filing his application. The opposing
party was present at that hearing, had the opportunity to and did express her opposition to the
application.
There being no basis to justify the denial of Relator’s application for change of judge,
Respondent was required to grant it promptly. A writ of prohibition is appropriate where a judge
has improperly denied a timely filed motion for change of judge. State ex rel. Eckelkamp v.
Mason, 314 S.W.3d 393, 396 (Mo. App. E.D. 2010).
The preliminary order of prohibition is modified as follows and made permanent:
Respondent is ordered to refrain from all action in the premises, except to sustain Relator’s
timely application for change of judge.
ROBERT G. DOWD, JR., Presiding Judge
Writ Division Three
Angela T. Quigless, J., and
Gary M. Gaertner, Jr., J., concur.
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