State ex rel. Circuit Attorney v. Finn

8 Mo. App. 341, 1880 Mo. App. LEXIS 28
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 17, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 8 Mo. App. 341 (State ex rel. Circuit Attorney v. Finn) 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
State ex rel. Circuit Attorney v. Finn, 8 Mo. App. 341, 1880 Mo. App. LEXIS 28 (Mo. Ct. App. 1880).

Opinion

Bakewell, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

•This is an information in the nature of a quo warranto, filed by the acting circuit attorney of the Eighth Judicial Circuit, to try the right of John Finn, the sheriff of the city of St. Louis, to execute process of the St. Louis Criminal Court. A similar information was at the same time filed to try the right of Finn, as sheriff, to execute process of the Probate Court of the city of St. Louis, and of the Court of Criminal Correction. In each case the answer filed was the same, mutatis mutandis, and the subsequent proceedings were the same. The two causes, were argued and submitted together, and will be considered together.

The relator alleges that by the Constitution and the [343]*343Scheme and Charter, the office of marshal of the city of St. Louis exists; that it is by law the duty of the city marshal to execute all process of the St. Louis Criminal Court ; that Mason was elected to that office at the April election, 1877, and qualified and entered upon the performance of his duties as city marshal, and until October 13, 1879, continued to perform those duties ; that on the date last named, Finn intruded himself into the office of city marshal, and from that date until the filing of this information has, without any warrant of law, exercised the duties of that office and performed all the functions of marshal in the St. Louis Criminal Court.

The answer is to the effect that Finn, at the dates named, was sheriff of the city of St. Louis, and sets up as his sufficient warrant for exercising the functions of executive officer of the St. Louis Crimiual Court, an act of the General Assembly of May 1, 1879 (Sess. Acts 1879, p. 40), which provides that all process of the St. Louis Circuit Court, Criminal Court, Court of Criminal Correction, and Probate Court shall be directed to and executed by the sheriff of that city, and that it shall be his duty to attend these courts, and to perform all duties heretofore enjoined upon the marshal of the city; also an act dated May 1, 1879 (Sess. Acts 1879, p. 39), amending an act entitled “ An act to define and conform the laws of the State to sect. 23, Art. IX.,-of the Constitution ; also an act dated April 29, 1879 (Sess. Acts 1879, p. 29), to repeal the act of May 2, 1877, relating to the office of marshal of the city of St. Louis; also an act dated April 29, 1879, repealing the act of May 2, 1877, in relation to final process from courts of record in St. Louis, and the duties of certain officers relative thereto.

The relator demurred to the answer. The question presented for our determination is whether, under the Constitu-. tion, the Scheme of Separation of the city and county, and the charter of the city of St. Louis, treated of in Art. IX., sect. 20, of the Constitution, and which were subsequently [344]*344adopted by the people, and which went into force October 22, 1876, and the acts of the General Assembly set out in the answer, the marshal or the sheriff of the city of St. Louis is the proper person to execute process of the three courts named in these two informations.

The Constitution of 1875 authorized a board of freeholders of the city and county of St. Louis to “ prepare a sbheme for the enlargement and definition of the boundaries of the city, the reorganization of the government of the county, the adjustment of the relations between the city thus enlarged and the residue of St. Louis County, and the government of the city thus enlarged by a charter in harmony with and subject to the Constitution and laws of Missouri” (Art. IX., sect. 20), and provided that the city shall * * * “ collect the State revenue and perform all other functions in relation to the State in the same manner as if it were a county in the Constitution defined ; and the residue of the county shall remain a legal county.” Sect. 23. The definition of a county in the Constitution is “ a legal subdivision of the State.” Art. X., sect. 1.

The office of sheriff exists in Missouri by constitutional provision. At common law the sheriff served the process of the State. Under our laws he executes writs issued in the name of the State, though directed to him by the courts of another county. At the date of the adoption of the Scheme and Charter, there existed in St. Louis, and had existed there for many years, a Probate Court, Criminal Court, and Court of Criminal Correction. These were all State courts; but they were not all expressly provided for by the Constitution, as were the Circuit Courts and the County Courts (Const. 1820, Art. V., sect. 1; Const. 1865, Art. VI., sect. 23), and they were created by the Legislature alone, under the general power given to the Legislature to establish from time to time inferior tribunals. The Legislature had provided that the process of these three courts should be served, not by the sheriff, but by an' officer callee] the [345]*345county marshal; and in 1876 the process of these cojirts had been for many years served by this officer. The framers of the Scheme of Separation provided (sect. 6) for an officer to be called the marshal of the city of St. Louis, who was to discharge, under the altered condition of affairs, within the extended limits of the city of St. Louis, the duties that had heretofore been discharged by the county marshal.

We held in The State ex rel. v. Mason, 4 Mo. App. 377, that, the office of county marshal being abolished, it was competent for the freeholders to provide that the duties theretofore pertaining to that office should devolve upon the city marshal. The Constitution provided (sect. 24) that the jurisdiction of these three courts should continue as before the adoption of the Scheme and Charter, until otherwise provided by law. Under these circumstances, even if it was not absolutely necessary, it was at least obviously fitting and congruous that the Scheme should contain some provision as to the service of the -process of these courts. The office of sheriff of St. Louis must at once come into existence, as soon as the legal subdivision of the State called the city of St. Louis was formed. The laws in force as to these courts provided that their process should not be served by the sheriff. The freeholders were surely under no obligation to provide that the sheriff of the city of St. Louis should become the executive officer of these courts. It was obvious that some express provision should be made, were it only to remove all ground for doubt or difficulty in so important a matter; and the provision actually made, creating the office of city marshal to replace the old county marshal, and providing that he should discharge within the city the duties formerly discharged by the county marshal, was one which it was competent for the freeholders to insert in the Scheme, in providing for the reorganization of the respective governments of the city and county and adjusting their relations. In divesting the city of the bur[346]*346den of a double government through city and county organizations, certain offices and their functions were necessarily abolished, and when one of these officers, as in the case of the marshal, was an officer specially appointed to serve the process of certain courts which would continue to exist, with the same jurisdiction, extending, until the Legislature should adjust the matter, over the same territorial limits of.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
8 Mo. App. 341, 1880 Mo. App. LEXIS 28, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-circuit-attorney-v-finn-moctapp-1880.