City of St. Louis ex rel. Duff v. Karr

85 Mo. App. 608, 1900 Mo. App. LEXIS 494
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 20, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 85 Mo. App. 608 (City of St. Louis ex rel. Duff v. Karr) 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
City of St. Louis ex rel. Duff v. Karr, 85 Mo. App. 608, 1900 Mo. App. LEXIS 494 (Mo. Ct. App. 1900).

Opinion

BLAND, P. J.

— Respondent brought her action against Nicholas Karr, formerly superintendent of the workhouse of the city of St. Louis, and his sureties on his official bond, to recover damages for false imprisonment in the workhouse.

On June 8, 1898, respondent was convicted of the violation of a city ordinance of the city of St. Louis and her punishment was assessed by the police court at a fine of $100 In default of payment of the fine she was committed by the court to the workhouse, where she was retained by Karr, the superintendent of the workhouse, for more than six months, and until she was released from her imprisonment on May 2, 1899, by writ of habeas corpus.

Respondent recovered a judgment in the circuit court. Karr and his sureties appealed.

1. To justify the detention of respondent beyond the period of six months appellants rely upon clause 10 of section 26 of article 3 of the city charter and sections 1806, 1807 and 1814 of the city ordinances. Clause 10, section 26, article 3 of the charter provides, among other things, that “any offender who shall neglect or refuse to pay the fine, penalty or costs imposed upon him or her (on conviction of a violation of a city ordinance), shall be committed to the workhouse until such fine, penalty and costs be fully paid, with this .proviso, that “no such imprisonment shall exceed six months for any one offense.” The ordinances relied on are as follows: .

[612]*612“Section one thousand eight hundred and six: The superintendent shall keep all persons committed to the workhouse employed at such useful and profitable labor as their health and strength will permit, ten hours each day; but no prisoner shall be required to work before sunrise or after sunset, except in extraordinary cases, and then he shall be allowed extra pay at the rate of fifteen cents per hour.
“Section one thousand eight hundred eleven: Any. person who shall refuse to work, or who shall behave in a riotous or disorderly manner, or shall resist or attempt to escape from the workhouse, may be committed to close and solitary confinement and may be fed on bread and water until he consents to perform his duty; and may, if necessary, be put in irons; but the board of public improvements shall have power to control the superintendent in the extent and manner of punishment.
“Section one thousand eight hundred fourteen: Any prisoner who may be placed in solitary confinement, or may refqse to perform his task, shall not be allowed a credit for the time of such confinement or refusal; and the cost of his boarding during the time of such confinement or refusal shall be added to the amount for which he was committed, and worked out by him. If any prisoner shall be sick and unable to work, he shall be allowed his time as though he had worked; but the amount of his board shall be charged to him. If the weather should be so inclement that the prisoners can not work, those who can not be kept at work for that reason shall, nevertheless be allowed a credit as though they had worked, but their board for such time shall be charged to them.”

The evidence is that the respondent refused to: work, and that she was a riotous and disorderly prisoner; that solitary confinement and a diet of bread and water were ineffectual [613]*613to calm her turbulent disposition or to induce her, to work; that her detention beyond the term of six months was for the purpose of makng up the days for which she had received no credit as a prisoner on account of her misconduct and refusal to work, and it is admitted that the superintendent’s action in detaining her for more than six months was to enforce the rule of discipline prescribed by section 1814 of the ordinances requiring the superintendent to disallow time credit against the term of imprisonment for any day or days the prisoner was placed in solitary confinement for misconduct, or had refused to work, and that if this provision of the ordinances prescribes a reasonable rule of prison discipline and is within the power of the legislature of the city to pass them, the detention of respondent by Karr beyond the period of six months was justifiable, there being no element of malice in the case.

That the city may by ordinance make reasonable rules of discipline for the government of the inmates of the workhouse, is beyond question. Ulrich v. St. Louis, 112 Mo. 138. A rule of discipline requiring the prisoners in that institution to labor, is a reasonable rule both for discipline and for sanitary reasons. In Ex parte Mills, 135 U. S. 263, it is said, that “although the punishment provided for crime be imprisonment merely, that nevertheless where the defendant may be sentenced under a Federal statute to a state’s prison or penitentiary, he may be put to hard labor under such sentence, if that be one of the rules of discipline and treatment in such prison.” In the case of the City of Topeka v. Boutwell, 53 Kan. 20, the court ruled that incorrigible girls and boys, who, for disregarding the commands of their parents, were committed to the industrial and reform schools of the state, might be compelled to labor to a reasonable degree as a part of the discipline and treatment of these [614]*614institutions; that labor under the circumstances could not be called involuntary servitude within the meaning of the constitution. The character and disposition of persons convicted of crime and sentenced to servitude in penal institutions are such as to require the enforcement of stringent and sometimes severe rules of discipline to preserve order and decorum and to enforce rules of discipline. But section 1814 of the ordinance does more than this; it in effect confers upon the superintendent of the workhouse the power, under the guise of enforcing a rule of discipline, to judicially convict, sentence and confine a prisoner in that institution beyond the maximum period prescribed by the charter; and so much of this ordinance as authorized the superintendent to not allow credit for any days of service in the workhouse against the time of imprisonment for which the offender was convicted, violates the city charter, violates section 30 of our Bill of Rights, in that it authorized the superintendent of the workhouse to deprive a citizen of her liberty without due process of law (State v. Julow, 129 Mo. 163), and is for-these reasons void.

2. It is not claimed that Karr, in detaining the respondent over time, was actuated by malice, and it is conceded that his proceedings were in accord with the provisions of the ordinance. On this state of the case appellants contend that notwithstanding the invalidity of the ordinance, Karr is not liable to respond in damages for the wrongful detention of the respondent, for the reason that he was a city officer, and as such was not bound to inquire into the constitutionality of the ordinance, which he took for his guide. In support of this contention counsel for appellants cite the following eases: Tillman v. Beard (Mich.), 3 Mun. Corp. Cas. 246; Brooks v. Mangan, 86 Mich. 576, and Worley v. Columbia, 88 Mo. 106. In the Tillman case it was held, [615]

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Related

State ex rel. Shackleford v. McElhinney
145 S.W. 1139 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1912)
Duff v. Karr
91 Mo. App. 16 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1901)

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Bluebook (online)
85 Mo. App. 608, 1900 Mo. App. LEXIS 494, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-st-louis-ex-rel-duff-v-karr-moctapp-1900.