Crenshaw v. O'Connell

150 S.W.2d 489, 235 Mo. App. 1085, 1941 Mo. App. LEXIS 51
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 6, 1941
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 150 S.W.2d 489 (Crenshaw v. O'Connell) 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
Crenshaw v. O'Connell, 150 S.W.2d 489, 235 Mo. App. 1085, 1941 Mo. App. LEXIS 51 (Mo. Ct. App. 1941).

Opinions

This is an action by plaintiff, the widow of one Oliver Albert Crenshaw, to recover the damages sustained on account of the action of defendant, Dr. John O'Connell, the coroner of St. Louis County, in having an alleged unauthorized and unlawful autopsy performed upon the body of her husband, who died in St. Louis County on January 14, 1939.

Tried to a jury in the Circuit Court of the City of St. Louis, a verdict was returned in favor of plaintiff, and against defendant, for $5000 actual damages and $5000 punitive damages. As a condition to the overruling of defendant's motion for a new trial, the court ordered a remittitur of the whole amount of punitive damages awarded; and following plaintiff's entry of suchremittitur, the motion *Page 1089 for a new trial was overruled and judgment entered in plaintiff's favor for $5000 actual damages and costs, from which judgment defendant has perfected his appeal to this court in the usual course.

The deceased, at the time of his death, was in the employ of the Donnelly Company, the manufacturer of a lotion product, which had space in a building located at 6239 St. Louis Avenue, in Wellston, Missouri.

Plaintiff last saw her husband alive at 8:30 o'clock in the morning of the day of his death, when he took her down town to her place of employment with Stix, Baer Fuller Company, a mercantile establishment.

The deceased then reported for his own work, and gave no indication of anything unusual in his condition until about 11:30 o'clock in the morning, when two men, the one, Hayden, a resident in the neighborhood, and the other, Wood, an employee of a concern which jointly occupied the building with the deceased's employer, found the deceased lying on the sidewalk in front of the building, where he had fallen momentarily before.

Ascertaining that the pulse was still beating, Wood and Hayden placed the deceased in an automobile and drove to the office of Dr. Hicks, an osteopath located in the immediate vicinity, who pronounced the deceased to be dead, and then notified defendant, the coroner, who in turn instructed an undertaker to bring the body to the morgue in the St. Louis County Hospital.

Wood had had some slight acquaintance with the deceased, and although both he and Hayden had given their names to the ambulance driver who came out for the body in response to defendant's direction, no inquiry was ever made of either of them on behalf of the coroner's office with respect to the circumstances under which the deceased's body had been found.

Indeed, the only investigation that defendant purports to have made was in connection with his communication with Dr. Hicks who advised him that the deceased had reportedly fallen over dead while working with two men whose names and addresses were given, after which, without himself examining the body, without attempting to contact the relatives of the deceased although his name and home address appeared upon two envelopes found upon his person, and without ordering an inquest to be held, he directed an autopsy to be performed, according to his usual custom in such matters, by the Department of Pathology in the Medical School of Washington University.

Such autopsy was thereafter performed between the hours of three and six o'clock that afternoon by Dr. Mantz of the medical school in the presence of a group of students, and as a result it was found that the deceased had died of a cerebral hemorrhage, which fact defendant *Page 1090 then certified as the cause of death in the certificate of death which he executed over his signature as Coroner of St. Louis County.

Following the completion of the autopsy, the body was delivered to an undertaker who had been engaged at the instance of a cousin of the deceased; and it was not until some time after the funeral that plaintiff learned that the autopsy had been performed.

The deceased's cousin, incidentally, had received word of the deceased's death from the Donnelly Company, and he in turn not only notified plaintiff at her place of work, but also took her out to the St. Louis County Hospital at two o'clock in the afternoon for the purpose of securing whatever information they might regarding the status of the case. It appears, however, that neither of them was given any information by the persons from whom they inquired, save that the cousin was advised to make arrangements with an undertaker to take charge of the remains.

As we have already pointed out, the whole question, under the pleadings, was whether the autopsy was wrongfully and unlawfully performed so as to have rendered defendant liable to plaintiff for the damages she sustained by reason of it; and as a matter of chief insistence on this appeal defendant urges that the evidence did not make out a submissible case for the jury upon such issue as against his request for a peremptory instruction at the close of the entire case.

The coroner, as we know him in this State, is a constitutional officer (Mo. Const., art. 9, secs. 9, 10 and 11), whose powers and duties with respect to the holding of inquests and autopsies are more or less specifically defined and limited by statute, the same being sections 13227-13268, Revised Statutes of Missouri, 1939 (Mo. State. Ann., secs. 11608-11649, pp. 4279-4290).

The above sections of the statutes have but recently been construed (and we think correctly so) by the Kansas City Court of Appeals in the case of Patrick v. Employers Mutual Liability Insurance Co., 233 Mo. App. 251, 118 S.W.2d 116, an action by a widow against a compensation insurer for damages sustained on account of the mutilation of her deceased husband's body in connection with an autopsy which the coroner unlawfully permitted to be performed at the instance and for the benefit of the defendant insurer.

That case holds squarely that under such circumstances as confronted defendant in the case at bar, the law invests the coroner with no authority to have an autopsy performed except in connection with, and as an incident to, an inquest to be held before a jury upon the body of a person supposed to have come to his death by violence or casualty, the purpose of the inquest being to inquire, upon a view of the body, how and by whom such person came to his death; that while the coroner acts judicially, and has a discretion, with respect to determining whether an inquest shall be held, neither the inquest itself, nor the calling and holding of an autopsy in connection with it, *Page 1091 is a proceeding judicial in character so as to relieve the coroner from civil liability for his acts in relation to it; that it was never intended that the coroner should have the right to order an autopsy performed in any case where, in his mere judgment, an autopsy might be deemed proper for any such reason as the advancement of science or the like; and that while it might or might not be thought desirable that the coroner should have the power to hold an autopsy in order to determine whether an inquest should be held, the law gives him no such authority, so that in the case at least of a person who is merely supposed to have come to his death by violence or casualty, an autopsy performed except in connection with an inquest is unlawful and illegal, regardless of what might be the coroner's good faith in the exercise of a mistaken authority in the matter.

It is true, as was noted in the course of the Patrick case, that certain sections of the statutes, and particularly section 13255, Revised Statutes of Missouri, 1939 (Mo. Stat. Ann., sec. 11636, p.

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Bluebook (online)
150 S.W.2d 489, 235 Mo. App. 1085, 1941 Mo. App. LEXIS 51, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crenshaw-v-oconnell-moctapp-1941.