STATE OF MISSOURI, at the Relation of VICTORIA L. KOWATS, a Citizen of the State of Missouri, Residing in the City of St. Louis, Relator, v. GLENDY B. ARNOLD, Judge of the Probate Court Within and For the City of St. Louis
No. 40226
Court en Banc
June 9, 1947
Rehearing Denied in Per Curiam Opinion filed, July 5, 1947
204 S.W. (2d) 254
ELLISON, J.—This is an original proceeding in mandamus to test the constitutionality of all or parts of thirteen statutes numbered
The relatrix, Victoria L. Kowats, a citizen and resident of the City of St. Louis [which is also a county under
We need not review at any length the recently enacted statutes involved, for they admittedly vest probate courts with the jurisdiction disputed by respondent. Thus,
The respondent’s opinion and return invokes the familiar provisions of Art. III, Const. 1875, now
| Sec. 36, Art. VI, Const. 1875 | Sec. 7, Art. VI, Const. 1945 |
| “In each county there shall be a county court, which shall be a court of record, and shall have jurisdiction to transact all county and such other business as may be prescribed by law. The court shall consist of one or more judges, not exceeding three, of whom the probate judge may be one, as may be provided by law.” | “In each county (not framing and adopting its own charter or adopting an alternative form of county government,) there shall be elected a county court of three members which shall manage all county business as prescribed by law, and keep an accurate record of its proceedings. The voters of any county may reduce the number of members to one or two as provided by law.” |
| Sec. 34, Art. VI, Const. 1875 | Sec. 16, Art. V, Const. 1945 |
| [After providing for the establishment of a probate court in every county]—“which shall be a court of record . . . Said court shall have jurisdiction over all matters pertaining to probate business, to granting letters testamentary and of administration, the appointment of guardians and curators of minors and persons of unsound mind, settling the accounts of executors, administrators, curators and guardians; and the sale or leasing of lands by administrators, curators and guardians . . .” | “There shall be a probate court in each county with jurisdiction of all matters pertaining to probate business, to granting letters testamentary and of administration, the appointment of guardians and curators of minors and persons of unsound mind, settling the accounts of executors, administrators, curators and guardians, and the sale or leasing of lands by executors, administrators, curators and guardians, and of such other matters as are provided in this Constitution.” |
It will be found that said
As regards probate courts, the situation is different. So far as pertinent here
Respondent’s opinion and return cites Downey v. Schrader, 353 Mo. 40, 44(4), 182 S. W. (2d) 320, 323(7). In that case the contention was that
“When the probate court holds a similar hearing for the purpose of appointing a guardian and administering an estate, it is transacting probate business. But they are not the same, and have not been through the years. Matters of probate business, as commonly understood and under all the authorities, pertain to the proving of wills, the appointment of guardians and curators, and the administration and settlement of decedents, incompetents and the like. 3 Words & Phrases (Perm. Ed.), p. 203; 26 ibid., p. 750; 34 ibid., p. 59.”
Another case cited by respondent is Van Loo v. Osage County, 346 Mo. 358, 361(1), 366(3), 141 S. W. (2d) 805, 806, 809(2). There, a probate court had held an inquisition on the sanity of a poor person under
On the other point—that the probate courts did have concurrent jurisdiction with the county courts to adjudicate the insanity of indigent persons—the Van Loo case pointed out that insanity inquisitions had been authorized ever since the enactment in 1817 of 1 Mo. Territorial Laws, p. 508, the jurisdiction being vested in the circuit courts, which then had probate jurisdiction, 1 Mo. Territorial Laws, p. 395. Probate courts were originally established by statute, 1 R. S. 1825, p. 268. Jurisdiction was conferred on them to appoint or displace guardians of insane persons by 1 R. S. 1825, p. 270; and authority to hold lunacy inquisitions by 1 R. S. 1825, p. 429. These inquisitorial and appointive powers were transferred to the county courts by R. S. 1835, p. 323; R. S. 1845, p. 593; and R. S. 1855, p. 864. And by G. S. 1865, p. 234 they were vested in the county or probate courts.
But after the probate court was established as a constitutional tribunal by
The first fact with which we are confronted is that under
However, in the sections of Senate Bill 284 cited in the beginning, there is no provision anywhere for the appointment of a guardian or curator. The whole tenor of the Act is that the sole questions for determination are whether the person under adjudication: is indigent; dangerous to himself and/or others; needs treatment and restraint; and should be sent to a state hospital at public expense. Can the probate court exercise that jurisdiction independent of the appointment of a guardian or curator? Respondent maintains that it cannot.
This last holding might be thought to signify that a guardian must be appointed as a part of the inquisition, as had been done in that case. And yet, if an indigent person be confined in a state hospital he is under restraint, and in a sense needs no guardian over his person, at least for the time being. Further,
We have traced the history of our law on this subject rather fully to show the background when the Constitution of 1945 was adopted. Under the Constitution of 1875 both the probate courts and the county courts were constitutional courts, and the statutory law for both ran parallel. As we said in the Downey case, supra, their spheres then were somewhat different. But now, under the Constitution of 1945 the powers of the county courts have been narrowed and their status changed. Is it unwarranted to say that the constitutional powers of probate courts over the insane may thereby have been correspondingly increased, even though the provisions of
But even if it were otherwise, we think the difference between the powers of county and probate courts while the Constitution of 1875 was in force, was essentially due to the statutes governing the two, and that has been rectified by Senate Bill 284. We can see no reason why a probate court may not be authorized by law to order indigent insane persons sent to the state hospitals at public expense. Respondent argues ab inconvenienti that under the 1875 Constitution and statutory authority the city of St. Louis treated the commitment of thousands of insane paupers to its asylums as a ministerial matter to be handled by its Hospital Boards and other municipal authorities;
Respondent’s final point is that under Senate Bill 284 the probate court may order the person under adjudication sent to a state hospital or city sanitarium and charge his upkeep to the City without notice to it or an opportunity to be heard, in violation of due process. But in these proceedings the city is a county, a unit of the State government; and for nearly a hundred years our laws have subjected each county to liability for the maintenance of its insane poor in the state asylums. While the City has a special charter and maintains its own mental sanitariums, yet its charter must be in harmony with the law of the state. And we are unable to see why it, anymore than any other county of the state, should be entitled to notice of each insanity inquisition on an insane pauper. The statute fixes the liability.
After consideration of the points made in respondent’s return, we conclude they are without merit, and that the alternative writ of mandamus heretofore issued should be made peremptory. It is so ordered. All concur:
PER CURIAM:
Respondent’s motion for rehearing invokes State ex rel. Buckner v. McElroy, 309 Mo. 595, 608, 274 S. W. 749, 751, which was not cited below in the Probate Court’s memorandum, or in our opinion. It ruled
Another new point made in the motion is that under the Scheme and Charter of the City of St. Louis, adopted in 1876 pursuant to
In that case the sheriff of the city sought to assume the powers of the city jailer under a general statute, now
The 1866 Act was in force when the City and County of St. Louis were merged by the Charter of 1876, and the jailer was continued in charge of the jail in the City. By Laws Mo. 1877, p. 188 the Legislature recognized that fact, and provided the duties of the sheriff of the City should be the same as those of the sheriff of the County under the General and special laws then in force, except where inconsistent with the Charter. And Laws Mo. 1879, p. 39, provided all general and special laws applicable to sheriffs of the several counties of the State before the adoption of the Charter, should still apply to the sheriff of the City. This history was reviewed in the Lefman case, cited by respondent, and it held on a construction of the prior laws that the jailer had not been deprived of his duties; not that they could not be taken away from him.
The third point in the motion for rehearing is this. Respondent complains that the probate court in this case ruled the power to hold insanity inquisitions and issue commitments thereunder is executive in nature and not judicial. And he insists he is entitled to a “categorical answer” whether that holding was correct. Our answer is that the power is now judicial and not executive. When the county court exercised that power under
For the reasons stated the motion for rehearing is overruled.
