Care & Treatment of Barlow v. State

114 S.W.3d 328, 2003 Mo. App. LEXIS 941, 2003 WL 21468759
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 24, 2003
DocketWD 61778
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 114 S.W.3d 328 (Care & Treatment of Barlow v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Care & Treatment of Barlow v. State, 114 S.W.3d 328, 2003 Mo. App. LEXIS 941, 2003 WL 21468759 (Mo. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

JAMES M. SMART, JR., Judge.

The State of Missouri appeals the decision of the Probate Division of the Circuit Court of Jackson County dismissing for lack of jurisdiction the Attorney General’s Petition filed against William Barlow under the Sexually Violent Predator Act, §§ 632.480 through 632.513, RSMo 2000. We vacate the dismissal and remand the case.

Statement of Facts

William T. Barlow (also formerly known as William T. Stitt) 1 has an extensive history of violent crimes against women. A brief history of his major offenses will suffice for present purposes. Barlow stabbed a girl, but did not kill her, when he was fifteen. At nineteen, he strangled to death a woman, while on a date with her, after she refused sexual activity. Barlow was convicted of murder in the second degree but was released on parole after only eight and a half years later due to good behavior while incarcerated. Barlow married after being released. He *330 states that he often beat his wife during sexual intercourse. Twelve years after the first murder, in 1968, Barlow stabbed his wife. He was not prosecuted but was sent into psychiatric care. While hospitalized, Barlow expressed thoughts of killing his wife. Despite this, Barlow was released from the psychiatric hospital.

Three years later, while driving, he observed a woman in a nearby car. Barlow had been having sadistic sexual fantasies, and he had been driving around “looking to do a disgusting thing.” Barlow intentionally forced the woman’s car off the road and then stabbed her to death. Soon afterwards, Barlow was caught molesting his eight-year-old stepdaughter. This resulted in a commitment to a psychiatric hospital. He told the hospital staff that he had “urges and feelings of committing rape and murder.” He was again released from psychiatric care.

About a year later, when he was reading in the newspaper about the fact that his murder of the woman driving the car remained unsolved, he again felt pressure or motivation to murder. He went out, looking for a victim. He wanted someone else to know the pain that he felt when he was raped as a fifteen-year-old, he later said. He observed a woman in a laundromat. He assaulted her and stabbed her to death. That crime also remained unsolved until Barlow was arrested as a suspect in a kidnapping and rape eight months later, and was questioned about that offense and others. At that time he confessed to the unsolved murders, although he denied the kidnapping and rape. Because he was deemed by the prosecution and medical authorities to be a “criminal sexual psychopath” under sections 202.700 to 202.770, RSMo 1978, Barlow was not prosecuted but, in lieu thereof, was committed by the Circuit Court of Jackson County to the care and custody of the Missouri Department of Mental Health in 1973 as a criminal sexual psychopath.

Barlow remains committed under the Criminal Sexual Psychopath Act (“CSP Act”) and resides at the Northwest Missouri Psychiatric Rehabilitation Center in St. Joseph. He still is considered a sexual sadist by the physicians overseeing his care. He has, however, sufficiently impressed the physicians that he has been allowed to work on a regular basis outside the hospital and been granted numerous passes to visit his brother in another city. Barlow has not demonstrated problems hr connection with his work. Barlow and his brother purchased a house, in which his brother lives and which Barlow visits. Barlow bought a vehicle and transports himself to and from work. Barlow also was briefly and unsuccessfully married since his commitment (to a woman whom, he said, was attracted to his sadistic tendencies). He stated that he was unable to experience an orgasm without simultaneously beating his wife. Barlow has not been found to have criminally re-offended since his commitment, but there have been incidents of inappropriate- conduct of a sexually related nature, such as sending unsolicited video footage of “bondage pornography” to a female psychiatric patient because he thought that she would appreciate it. Concerns also have been raised by his brother and others as to potential danger in some of Barlow’s activities related to women.

On August 21, 2000, the Attorney General filed a petition in the probate court of Jackson County seeking Barlow’s commitment under the Sexually Violent Predator Act (“SVP Act”), sections 632.480 through 632.513, RSMo 2000. Barlow filed a motion to dismiss the petition for lack of jurisdiction. The court granted the motion, holding that the probate court lacked jurisdiction over Barlow because he was *331 still under the jurisdiction of the Circuit Court of Jackson County under the CSP Act. The Attorney General now appeals.

Analysis

The Attorney General raises one point on appeal: that the probate court erred in dismissing the petition for lack of jurisdiction.

First, however, we address Barlow’s motion to dismiss and argument wherein he asserts that this court lacks subject matter jurisdiction to hear this appeal. Barlow argues that the proceedings to commit a person as a sexually violent predator are special statutory proceedings in which the right to appeal is explicitly limited to a case in which a person has been adjudicated to be a sexually violent predator. Barlow argues that the only right to appeal created in the SVP Act is contained in section 632.495, RSMo 2000, which provides:

The court or jury shall determine whether, beyond a reasonable doubt, the person is a sexually violent predator. If such determination that the person is a sexually violent predator is made by a jury, such determination shall be by unanimous verdict of such jury. Such determination may be appealed.

Barlow cites the case of In re Salcedo, 34 S.W.3d 862 (Mo.App.2001), for the proposition that there is no statutory right to appeal unless a person has been adjudicated a sexually violent predator.

The right to appeal is purely statutory. Where no statute grants the right to appeal, no such right exists. Farinella v. Croft, 922 S.W.2d 755, 756 (Mo. banc 1996). Missouri has a general appellate statute, section 512.020, RSMo 2000, which provides:

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 appeal to a court having appellate jurisdiction from any order granting a new trial, or order refusing to revoke, modify, or change an interlocutory order appointing a receiver or receivers, or dissolving an injunction, or from any interlocutory judgments in actions of partition which determine the rights of the parties, or from any final judgment in the case or from any special order after final judgment in the cause
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Salcedo held that the SVP Act was a “special statutory proceeding” under section 512.020. Salcedo, 34 S.W.3d at 868. Salcedo then noted the absence of any right to appeal except the one granted in section 632.495, RSMo 2000. Id.

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Bluebook (online)
114 S.W.3d 328, 2003 Mo. App. LEXIS 941, 2003 WL 21468759, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/care-treatment-of-barlow-v-state-moctapp-2003.