Court Opinion

ID: 4561889
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2020-09-01 13:06:38.589833+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T11:51:47.701144
License: Public Domain

IN THE MISSOURI COURT OF APPEALS
                     WESTERN DISTRICT

 EMILY RIEGEL, et al.,                            )
                                                  )
                                Respondents,      )
                                                       WD83131
 v.                                               )
                                                  )
                                                       OPINION FILED:
                                                  )
                                                       September 1, 2020
 NICOLE FORSYTHE,                                 )
                                                  )
                                    Appellant.    )

                 Appeal from the Circuit Court of Jackson County, Missouri
                          The Honorable Kevin D. Harrell, Judge

               Before Division Two: Karen King Mitchell, Presiding Judge, and
                   Anthony Rex Gabbert and W. Douglas Thomson, Judges

       Nicole Forsythe appeals the judgment for sanctions arising from her representation of

defendants in an underlying wrongful death action. Forsythe raises three points on appeal. For

her first point, she argues that the judgment is appealable under the collateral-order doctrine

because the judgment is conclusive, it resolved important questions separate from the merits of the

underlying lawsuit, and it is effectively unreviewable on appeal from final judgment in the

underlying action. For her second and third points, Forsythe argues that the circuit court erred in

entering the judgment for sanctions in that the court violated her right to due process of law by

failing to provide her notice and an opportunity to be heard (Point II) and she did not act in bad
faith (Point III). Because the judgment from which Forsythe appeals is not a final judgment, we

lack appellate jurisdiction over her appeal, which we dismiss accordingly.

                                                Background

        Plaintiffs Emily Riegel, Allan Pickert, and Joann Pickert (collectively, Plaintiffs) filed the

underlying wrongful death action against David Jungerman, his daughter Angelia Buesing, and

several family-owned businesses and trusts (collectively, Defendants).1 The underlying action

includes a fraudulent transfer claim, alleging that Defendants made various asset and property

transfers to hinder or delay existing and future creditors, including Plaintiffs, from collecting on

their lawful claims. All claims as to all Defendants in the underlying action remain pending.

Forsythe represented the Defendants in the underlying action until she was permitted to withdraw

on July 8, 2019, due to a conflict of interest.

        In view of the number and size of the allegedly fraudulent transfers, the circuit court

appointed a receiver over Defendants’ property and assets; we affirmed the appointment. Riegel

v. Jungerman, 597 S.W.3d 695, 708 (Mo. App. W.D. 2019). Concluding that Defendants had

“intentionally withheld information from and, with their attorneys and others, ha[d] obstructed and

misled, intentionally or unintentionally, [him],” the receiver filed a motion (1) limiting attendance

at examinations under oath and (2) requiring confidentiality regarding such examinations. The

court entered an order granting the unopposed motion on April 5, 2019 (the Confidentiality Order).

The Confidentiality Order states, in relevant part:

        (1) the General Receiver may conduct examinations under oath of all Defendants,
        separately, and, except for the Defendant being examined and that Defendant’s
        counsel of record, no party or party’s counsel shall be permitted to attend such
        examinations; (2) the General Receiver may conduct examinations under oath of
        non-parties, and no party or party’s counsel shall be permitted to attend such

        1
          David Jungerman was arrested and charged with first-degree murder and armed criminal action in
connection with the death of Plaintiffs’ husband and son, Thomas Pickert. State v. Jungerman, No. 1816-CR01619-01
(Jackson Cty. Cir. Ct.). The criminal case is currently pending.

                                                       2
        examinations; and (3) all Defendant examinees and non-party examinees and their
        respective attorneys, if any, shall be strictly prohibited from disclosing to any party,
        to any non-party, or to any counsel for any party or non-party: (a) the fact that an
        examination took place; (b) the date, time, or place of such examination, or the
        identity of the examinee; (c) the content, nature, scope, or subject matter of any
        question asked or response provided during the examination; and (d) any specific
        information, documents, or other materials identified or otherwise addressed in any
        manner during the examination.

        On May 6, 2019, the receiver filed a motion requesting a show-cause hearing as to why

Defendants and Forsythe should not be held in contempt for violating the Confidentiality Order by

contacting a witness’s attorney and inquiring about the content of a confidential examination.

Specifically, the show-cause motion alleged that, following the receiver’s May 1, 2019

examinations under oath of two non-parties, the attorney for the non-party examinees informed

the receiver that, on May 3, 2019, he had received both “a call and an email from Nicole Forsythe

wanting to discuss the deposition with [the attorney].”2

        On May 6, 2019, the court granted the receiver’s show-cause motion and set a hearing for

May 9, 2019, “for Defendants and attorney Nicole Forsythe to show cause as to why they should

not be held in contempt.” On May 7, 2019, the court entered an order re-setting the hearing for

May 13, 2019; then, on May 9, 2019, the court entered an amended order and hearing notice

retaining the May 13 hearing date and providing additional notice of the purpose of the hearing:

        (1) for Defendants and attorney Nicole Forsythe to show cause as to why they
        should not be held in contempt; and (2) for the Court to take up the issues of
        whether, based upon the allegations set forth in the General Receiver’s Second
        Motion for Show Cause Hearing, Defendants and/or attorney Nicole Forsythe have
        acted in bad faith and, if so, whether the Court should exercise its inherent powers
        to enter sanctions against Defendants and/or attorney Nicole Forsythe.

        2
            A copy of Forsythe’s email was attached to the motion as an exhibit. In relevant part, Forsythe’s email
stated, “I just left you a voicemail and am following up with this message. I was wondering if you’d be willing to
discuss . . . Wednesday’s deposition with me.”

                                                        3
Forsythe filed a response to the receiver’s show-cause hearing wherein she admitted to

“contact[ing] the deponent’s attorney,” claiming she did so out of an “ethical obligation to

investigate this case,” that the conduct “did not violate the [Confidentiality Order], and that “the

[Confidentiality Order] is unlawful and unenforceable.”

       In his opening remarks at the May 13 hearing on the receiver’s show-cause motion,

Forsythe’s counsel requested clarification as to whether the contempt contemplated by the motion

was civil or criminal. The receiver stated that he would “leave it to the wisdom of the court to

determine what if any sanction and/or measure should be taken against” Ms. Forsythe. The trial

court took the issue under advisement. In response to counsel’s later objection to proceeding on a

criminal contempt motion, the court overruled the objection, but stated it would “conduct this

hearing in light of a civil contempt, again, taking the matter under advisement, though.”

       On May 14, 2019, the court entered its judgment finding that Forsythe “violated the spirit,

but not the letter,” of the Confidentiality Order by asking deponent’s counsel to discuss the May 1

deposition. The court concluded that Forsythe’s attempt to obtain information about the deposition

“was done contumaciously and in bad faith.” The court also found that Forsythe had previously

admitted in open court that she had not cooperated with, and had obstructed, the receiver, actions

which the court concluded also were “done contumaciously and in bad faith.”

       Finding that Forsythe was provided “[n]otice and an opportunity to be heard . . . via the

[May 9 notice and the May 13 hearing],” and that the court “has the inherent power to sanction

bad faith conduct,” the court sanctioned Forsythe $10,000.00 “for her bad faith conduct in this

matter” and ordered her to remit that amount to the receiver within 45 days of issuance of the

judgment.3 The court determined “the sanction to be reasonably necessary to protect the [c]ourt’s

       3
           On appeal, Forsythe does not offer any evidence that she remitted $10,000.00 to the receiver.

                                                          4
orderly administration of its business, namely reasonably necessary to allow the . . . [r]eceiver to

perform his duties as an arm of the [c]ourt.”

         On February 18, 2020, with the instant appeal pending, Forsythe moved the circuit court

to vacate the sanction judgment claiming it “violated Ms. Forsythe’s rights to due process of law

by failing to provide proper notice and an opportunity to be heard” and, alternatively, “to amend

its judgment to make an ‘express determination that there is no just reason for delay’” under

Rule 74.01(b). The court denied Forsythe’s motion.

                                                   Jurisdiction

         We begin our analysis with Forsythe’s first point, wherein she argues that the judgment is

appealable under the collateral-order doctrine, because we must first determine whether we have

jurisdiction over her appeal. If we lack appellate jurisdiction, we must dismiss the appeal.

Glasgow Sch. Dist. v. Howard Cty. Coroner, 572 S.W.3d 543, 548 (Mo. App. W.D. 2019).

         “The right to appeal is purely statutory and, where a statute does not give a right to appeal,

no right exists.” Wilson v. City of St. Louis, 600 S.W.3d 763, 767 (Mo. banc 2020) (quoting First

Nat’l Bank of Dieterich v. Pointe Royale Prop. Owners’ Ass’n, Inc., 515 S.W.3d 219, 221 (Mo.

banc 2017)). “Although many statutes govern ‘the right to appeal, the only statute even potentially

applicable to the present case is section 512.020(5),’ which provides that ‘final judgments’ are

appealable.”4 Id. (quoting First Nat’l Bank of Dieterich, 515 S.W.3d at 221). In relevant part,

§ 512.020(5)5 states,

         Any party to a suit aggrieved by any judgment of any trial court in any civil cause
         from which an appeal is not prohibited by the constitution, nor clearly limited in
         special statutory proceedings, may take his or her appeal to a court having
         appellate jurisdiction from any:

        4
          “The converse of a final judgment is an interlocutory order, which is an order that is not final and decides
some point or matter between the commencement and the end of a suit but does not resolve the entire controversy.”
Buemi v. Kerckhoff, 359 S.W.3d 16, 20 (Mo. banc 2011).
        5
          All statutory citations are to the Revised Statutes of Missouri, as updated through the 2018 Supplement.

                                                          5
         ...

         (5) Final judgment in the case or from any special order after final judgment in the
         cause . . . .6

As the Supreme Court of Missouri recently held in Wilson:

         [A] “final judgment” for purposes of section 512.020(5) must satisfy the following
         criteria. First, it must be a judgment (i.e., it must fully resolve at least one claim in
         a lawsuit and establish all the rights and liabilities of the parties with respect to that
         claim). Second, it must be “final,” either because it disposes of all claims (or the
         last claim) in a lawsuit, or because it has been certified for immediate appeal
         pursuant to Rule 74.01(b).

Wilson, 600 S.W.3d at 771 (footnote omitted).7

         Here, Forsythe appeals from the court’s judgment imposing sanctions for bad faith conduct.

The Court previously addressed a similar issue in Buemi v. Kerckhoff, 359 S.W.3d 16 (Mo. banc

2011). There, the Court held an order sustaining a motion for sanctions against a party did not

dispose of a “judicial unit” because “a motion for sanctions is not a legal claim filed ‘in an action’

         6
             Rule 74.01(b) (2018) provides:

         When more than one claim for relief is presented in an action, whether as a claim, counterclaim,
         cross-claim, or third-party claim, or when multiple parties are involved, the court may enter a
         judgment as to one or more but fewer than all of the claims or parties only upon an express
         determination that there is no just reason for delay. In the absence of such determination, any order
         or other form of decision, however designated, that adjudicates fewer than all the claims or the rights
         and liabilities of fewer than all the parties shall not terminate the action as to any of the claims or
         parties, and the order or other form of decision is subject to revision at any time before the entry of
         judgment adjudicating all the claims and the rights and liabilities of all the parties.

Here, the circuit court denied Forsythe’s motion to amend its judgment to make a determination under Rule 74.01(b)
that there is no just reason for delay. “[T]he question of whether an eligible judgment should be certified under
Rule 74.01(b) is left to the sound exercise of the circuit court’s discretion.” Wilson v. City of St. Louis, 600 S.W.3d
763, 771 (Mo. banc 2020). On appeal, Forsythe does not argue—and we do not find—that the judgment for sanctions
was eligible for certification under Rule 74.01(b), nor does she argue that the court abused its discretion in denying
her motion to certify the judgment under Rule 74.01(b).
         7
           The Court elaborated:

         A judgment is eligible to be certified under Rule 74.01(b) only if it disposes of a ‘judicial unit’ of
         claims, meaning . . . : (a) [it] disposes of all claims by or against at least one party, or (b) it disposes
         of one or more claims that are sufficiently distinct from the claims that remain pending in the circuit
         court.

Wilson, 600 S.W.3d at 771.

                                                              6
by way of a petition, counterclaim, cross-claim, or third-party claim, [and, therefore,] it does not

fall within the definition of a ‘claim for relief,’ as that term is used in Rule 74.01(b).” Id. at 21.

In Wilson, the Court clarified that, while Buemi was correct in holding that the order imposing

sanctions was ineligible for certification under Rule 74.01(b), the problem with the order was not

that it was a judgment that failed to dispose of a “judicial unit,” but that the order was not a

judgment at all. Wilson, 600 S.W.3d at 769 n.8.

         “[A] judgment is a legally enforceable judicial order that fully resolves at least one claim

in a lawsuit and establishes all the rights and liabilities of the parties with respect to that claim.”
Id. at 768 (quoting State ex rel. Henderson v. Asel, 566 S.W.3d 596, 598 (Mo. banc 2019)). “As

the Court explained in Buemi, 359 S.W.3d at 21, a motion for sanctions is not a ‘claim.’ Therefore,

an order granting such a motion cannot be a judgment.” Id. at 769, n.8. To be a “final judgment”

for purposes of § 512.020(5), “the order must—at a minimum—be a judgment.” Id. Thus, after

Wilson, an order, however denominated, for monetary sanctions against an attorney—even one

who no longer represents a party in the underlying litigation—is not a judgment, and therefore,

cannot be a “final judgment” under § 512.020(5).

         In her first point, Forsythe appears to concede that the judgment for sanctions is not a final

judgment within the meaning of § 512.020(5) and instead argues that the judgment is appealable

under the collateral-order doctrine, in that the judgment is conclusive, it resolved important

questions completely separate from the merits of the underlying lawsuit, and it is effectively

unreviewable on appeal from final disposition of the underlying action. While some federal courts

have recognized the collateral-order doctrine as an avenue for interlocutory review,8 the United

         8
           See, e.g., Knorr Brake Corp. v. Harbil, Inc., 738 F.2d 223, 226 (7th Cir. 1984) (finding award of attorneys’
fees assessed against non-parties who no longer had any connection to the case was appealable as a collateral order
because the award “conclusively determine[d] the disputed question, resolve[d] an important issue completely separate
from the merits of the action, and [was] effectively unreviewable on appeal from a final judgment.”) (quoting Coopers

                                                          7
States Supreme Court has called the application of the doctrine to monetary sanctions against

attorneys into question.9 Moreover, no Missouri court has adopted the doctrine, and we decline to

do so here.10

         As the Court noted in Buemi, while § 512.020(5) does not permit immediate appeal of a

court’s order imposing sanctions, such order can still be reviewed. Buemi, 359 S.W.3d at 24. “For

example, an order imposing sanctions can be reviewed after a final judgment is entered on the

underlying claims.”11 Id. “Alternatively, if appeal is an inadequate remedy because irreparable

harm will occur if immediate relief is not granted, a writ of prohibition can be used to obtain

interlocutory review in the absence of a final judgment.” Id.; see Transit Cas. Co. ex rel. Pulitzer

Publ’g Co. v. Transit Cas. Co. ex rel. Intervening Emp., 43 S.W.3d 293, 299 (Mo. banc 2001) (“As

a general matter, the proper course for an aggrieved party without a final judgment is ordinarily

by extraordinary writ.”). “Therefore, a party wishing to challenge a trial court’s imposition of

sanctions can either appeal the trial court’s order after a final judgment is entered on the underlying

claim or claim[s] or, when appropriate, seek a writ of prohibition before final judgment is

entered.”12 Id. at 25.

& Lybrand v. Livesay, 437 U.S. 463, 468 (1978)); but see Howard v. Mail-Well Envelope Co., 90 F.3d 433, 436-37
(10th Cir. 1996) (disagreeing that a sanction order against an attorney who no longer represents a party in the litigation
is appealable under the collateral-order doctrine).
          9
             See Cunningham v. Hamilton Cty., Ohio, 527 U.S. 198, 209-10 (1999) (holding that monetary sanctions
imposed on attorneys—even those no longer representing parties to the litigation—do not satisfy the requirements of
the collateral-order doctrine). Although Cunningham involved discovery sanctions, its application is not so limited.
See, e.g., Stanley v. Woodford, 449 F.3d 1060, 1065 (9th Cir. 2006) (“The precedential effect of Cunningham is clear.
We now expressly interpret Cunningham as extending to sanctions under a . . . district court’s inherent powers . . . .”).
          10
              In fact, in her dissent in Buemi v. Kerckhoff, Judge Stith cited the federal collateral-order doctrine as an
example of the “[d]ifferences in interpretation and dissimilarity of application of rules regarding certification for
interlocutory review between state and federal courts.” 359 S.W.3d 16, 27, 27 n.4 (Mo. banc 2011) (Stith, J.,
dissenting).
          11
              Forsythe asserts that the underlying litigation is likely to end in settlement, not a final judgment that is
appealable. But, according to Case.net, no settlement hearing is currently scheduled in the underlying case
(No. 1816-CV12977) and the parties are continuing to notice up depositions.
          12
              We acknowledge that this court previously denied Forsythe’s petition for writ of prohibition to stop the
circuit court from entering and enforcing the sanction judgment. State ex rel. Nicole Forsythe v. Hon. Kevin D.
Harrell, WD83694. “The denial of [Forsythe’s] request for an extraordinary writ does not constitute a ruling on the
merits of [her] challenge to the sanction order.” Buemi, 359 S.W.3d at 25 n.10. “Therefore, such denial does not

                                                            8
        Because “[t]his [c]ourt has no authority to grant a right of appeal beyond that given by

statute,” Wilson, 600 S.W.3d at 769 n.7 (quoting First Nat’l Bank of Dieterich, 515 S.W.3d at

222), and Forsythe’s appeal does not challenge a “final judgment” as that phrase is used in

§ 512.020(5), we lack appellate jurisdiction and, therefore, we dismiss her appeal.

        Point I is denied.13

                                                  Conclusion

        Because we lack appellate jurisdiction, we dismiss Forsythe’s appeal of the judgment for

sanctions.

                                                    Karen King Mitchell, Presiding Judge

Anthony Rex Gabbert and W. Douglas Thomson, Judges, concur.

preclude [Forsythe] from filing a new petition if circumstances arise that would make appeal an inadequate remedy,
such as an attempt to collect by the parties who were awarded monetary sanctions.” Id.
         13
            In light of our resolution of Point I, we do not reach Points II and III.

                                                        9