State Ex Inf. Anderson Ex Rel. Weinstein v. St. Louis County

421 S.W.2d 249, 1967 Mo. LEXIS 740
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedNovember 13, 1967
Docket52890
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 421 S.W.2d 249 (State Ex Inf. Anderson Ex Rel. Weinstein v. St. Louis County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Inf. Anderson Ex Rel. Weinstein v. St. Louis County, 421 S.W.2d 249, 1967 Mo. LEXIS 740 (Mo. 1967).

Opinion

HOLMAN, Chief Justice.

This original proceeding in the nature of quo warranto was instituted by the Attorney General at the relation of Hon. Noah Weinstein, Judge of the Juvenile Division of the Circuit Court of St. Louis County. The respondents are St. Louis County and various officials of said county whose duties involve the budget and civil service functions of the county.

Respondent St. Louis County is a county of the first class governed by a charter duly adopted pursuant to Article VI, § 18 (all constitutional references are to the *251 Constitution of Missouri 1945), V.A.M.S., in the year 1950. The charter provides for a County Council as the governing body of the county and it is given authority by ordinance “to designate the maximum number of assistants, deputies, clerks, and other persons who may be employed in all offices and departments of the county,” and “to designate the maximum and minimum range of compensation of all other county employees.” The charter also contained a provision for the establishment of a merit or civil service system for the appointment of all employees in certain departments of the county, including the Department of Public Welfare, and the Civil Service Commission was given authority to establish classification and compensation plans for said employees.

For many years St. Louis County has owned and maintained a Children’s Building which contains the courtroom and offices for the judge of the juvenile court and offices for all personnel employed in both the administration and detention functions of the juvenile court. The building also contains living quarters, school rooms, and other facilities for the accomo-dation of an average child population of 32. The charter placed control of the Children’s Building under the Welfare Commissioner, and since the adoption of the charter the employees of that building have been employed and paid under the merit system. On November 8, 1966, a charter amendment was adopted which, with certain exceptions not here relevant, provided that “the merit system is hereby extended to all other employees of the county.”

St. Louis County has 15 divisions of circuit court, and Division No. 3 has been designated as the Juvenile Division of which relator is the judge. The juvenile court supervises a large volume of work, there having been a total of 7,396 referrals in the year 1966. There have been employed in carrying on the work of the juvenile court a juvenile officer who is also director of court services and commissioner of the welfare department. There are 73 other persons engaged in that work, 48 of whom were appointed by relator or his predecessors in office, who are engaged in administrative functions, and there are 25 employees who are associated with the detention functions of the court. The salaries of all of these employees are paid out of the general revenue fund of the county, except a statutory allowance of $4,250 which the state contributes to the salary of the juvenile officer.

In the fall of 1966 relator, as judge of the juvenile court, prepared and submitted to the budget officials of the county estimates for the requirements of the juvenile court for the year 1967. His requests totaled $1,130,044, of which $833,176 was for juvenile court administration, and $296,868 for maintenance and operation of the detention facilities. Reductions were made in these estimates by the budget officer and upon submission to the County Council the amount approved for the juvenile court was $639,892 for administration, and $219,907 for the detention facilities. It will be noted that more than $190,000 was deleted from the estimates of the juvenile court for administration, and more than $80,000 was deleted from the estimates for the detention facilities. One of the principal items deleted from the administration estimates was an amount for the salaries of 18 additional employees in that department. Likewise, a large item deleted from the detention estimate was an amount for the salaries of eight additional employees in that department. Also, the salaries of some 34 persons in the administration department had been increased by relator and the amounts of said increases were not allowed by the budget officer. None of the 25 persons serving in the detention department were given increases by relator, but all of those were given a 5% increase in salary by respondents, which increases were not authorized or consented to by relator.

The budget estimates of relator for the juvenile division were approved by the Circuit Court en Banc prior to submission to the budget officer. On December 20, 1966, *252 a certified copy of the order of the circuit court increasing the salaries here involved was delivered to the County Supervisor and various other county officials. Thereafter, the budget director advised relator that all juvenile court personnel was under the merit system by virtue of the charter amendment adopted November 8, 1966, and that accordingly “all salary adjustments must be approved by the Civil Service Commission.” On November 9, 1966, the Civil Service Commission had adopted a resolution which purported to assume jurisdiction over all county employees to whom the merit system was extended by the aforementioned charter amendment, and said commission had advised relator that all employees of the juvenile court were under the merit system and that said commission had the responsibility to control all phases of personnel administration regarding those employees.

There are a number of issues presented by the pleadings in this case. It is the primary contention of the relator that under certain provisions of the County Budget Law and of the Juvenile Code the Juvenile Court of St. Louis County has the authority to employ, discharge, and fix the salary of the employees of the juvenile court, and that neither the budget officer nor the County Council has any authority to change the budget estimates of the juvenile division of the circuit court without its consent. In his brief he states the question as follows: “There is squarely presented in this case the issue of whether the County Budget Law and the Juvenile Code are applicable to St. Louis County, or whether, because of the status of that County as a so-called ‘Special Charter County’ under Article VI, Section 18 of the Constitution of Missouri 1945, those statutes are inapplicable to such County.”

In general it is the contention of respondents that, as relates to the issues here presented, neither the County Budget Law nor the Juvenile Code applies to St. Louis County so as to permit the juvenile judge to “hire, fire and set the pay of county administrative employees”; that the inherent power of the circuit court to do the things necessary to preserve its functions does not extend to expenditures for personnel involved in juvenile administration; that personnel engaged in performing administrative and detention functions of the juvenile court are county employees and subject to the county’s merit system, and that if the County Budget Law and the Juvenile Code are construed in the manner giving relator the authority he seeks they are unconstitutional in contravention of Article VI, § 18, respecting charter counties, and Article II, § 1, which provides for the separation of powers.

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Bluebook (online)
421 S.W.2d 249, 1967 Mo. LEXIS 740, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-inf-anderson-ex-rel-weinstein-v-st-louis-county-mo-1967.