State Ex Rel. Lambert v. O'Malley

121 S.W.2d 228, 234 Mo. App. 773, 1938 Mo. App. LEXIS 88
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 8, 1938
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 121 S.W.2d 228 (State Ex Rel. Lambert v. O'Malley) 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. Lambert v. O'Malley, 121 S.W.2d 228, 234 Mo. App. 773, 1938 Mo. App. LEXIS 88 (Mo. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinions

This is an original proceeding in prohibition which presents the legal question of whether the Circuit Court of the City of St. Louis has the jurisdiction to entertain and adjudicate an action brought by a police officer against the Board of Trustees of the Police Retirement System of the City of St. Louis for the recovery of the accidental disability retirement allowance alleged to be due him under the provisions of the Police Retirement Pension System Act (secs. 8906-8918, R.S. Mo., 1929 [Mo. Stat. Ann., secs. 8906-8918, pp. 6258-6276]).

Prior to 1926 neither the State nor any municipality thereof possessed authority to make provision for the payment of police pensions from public funds, but in that year there was adopted an amendment to the constitution (Art. 4, sec. 48a) which provides that the General Assembly shall have the power to provide by law, or to authorize any municipality in this State to provide by ordinance, for the pensioning of members of any organized police force and the widows and minor children of deceased members thereof, and that nothing in the constitution contained shall prohibit, or be construed to prohibit, the exercise of such power or authority by the General Assembly.

Pursuant to the authority thus granted by such constitutional amendment, the General Assembly in 1929 enacted the act above cited, which, in cities of this State having a population of five hundred thousand or more, creates and establishes retirement or pension systems for the purpose of providing retirement allowances for policemen in such cities.

Roughly speaking, all policemen in any such city are automatically made members of the system, the general administration of which is vested in a board of trustees of seven persons, comprising the president of the board of police commissioners, the comptroller of the city, two members appointed by the mayor of the city, and three members elected by the members of the retirement system.

It is provided in the act that each trustee shall be entitled to one vote, with four votes necessary to a decision of the board, and that subject to the limitations of the act, the board of trustees shall, from time to time, establish rules and regulations for the administration of *Page 777 the several funds created by the act and for the transaction of the board's business.

Elsewhere it is provided that the board of trustees shall be the trustees of the funds in question, and that it shall have full power to invest and reinvest such funds, subject to all the terms, conditions, limitations, and restrictions imposed by law upon life insurance companies in the State of Missouri in making and disposing of their investments.

With respect to retirement benefits or allowances the act provides (section 8911) a service retirement allowance, an ordinary disability retirement benefit, and an accidental disability retirement benefit. The method of computation of the particular benefit or allowance is in each instance specifically fixed by the act, with the amount of the same made dependent upon the member's accummulated contributions and his average final compensation.

The member's right to be retired with the service retirement allowance is in nowise contingent upon proof of disability, but not so with the two remaining benefits which are provided for. In either of such instances it is made the mandatory duty of the board of trustees to retire the member with a disability retirement allowance whenever it is certified by the medical board that the member is mentally or physically incapacitated for further performance of duty; that such incapacity is likely to be permanent; and that such member should be retired. If the disability has resulted from natural causes and not from accident within the meaning of the act, only the ordinary disability retirement benefit is payable, but if it is made to appear that the member "has become totally and permanently incapacitated for duty as the natural and proximate result of an accident occurring while in the actual performance of duty at some definite time and place through no negligence on his part," then the member is entitled to be retired with the substantially greater accidental disability retirement allowance.

So far as the controversy leading up to this proceeding is concerned, it appears that one Casey, a member of the Police Retirement System of the City of St. Louis, became totally and permanently incapacitated for duty as the result of the loss of the sight of both eyes, and that the medical board so certified to the board of trustees.

It was Casey's contention that at a stated date, while he was at Twelfth Street and Clark Avenue in the City of St. Louis picking up and delivering police department messages in the actual performance of his duty as a policeman, an accident occurred through no negligence on his part, in that a storm arose and blew dust, sand, lime, and other foreign substances in his eyes, as the natural and proximate result of which he sustained the loss of vision.

Thereafter Casey made application to the board of trustees to be retired with an accidental disability retirement allowance of $119.22 *Page 778 a month for life computed upon the basis of his accummulated contributions and average final compensation. We gather that the issue before the board was that of whether his disability was accidental in its origin as he claimed, or whether, to the contrary, it was merely attributable to natural causes or disease so as to entitle him to be retired with only an ordinary disability retirement allowance. Evidence was taken by the board at a series of hearings which were held, and finally the board ordered him to be retired as of September 1, 1930, with an ordinary disability retirement allowance of $44.43 a month computed upon the basis of his accummulated contributions and average final compensation, which sum has since been paid him each and every month from and after the time of the taking effect of the retirement order.

Following the final denial of his application to be retired with an accidental disability retirement allowance, Casey instituted an action against the board of trustees in the Circuit Court of the City of St. Louis, in which action he seeks to recover the sum of $5,534.46, with interest, representing the gross total of the difference in monthly payments between ordinary and accidental disability retirement allowances for the period of seventy-four months elapsing between the date of his retirement by the board and the date of the institution of his action.

There after the members of the board demurred to the petition upon the ground that the same did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, and upon their demurrer being overruled by respondent, the judge presiding at the time in the assignment division of the circuit court, they instituted this proceeding in prohibition in this court to test out the jurisdiction of the circuit court to entertain and adjudicate the action pending before it. In other words, their position is not that the petition, as it now stands, is fatally defective or insufficient in some respect as to which it is capable of amendment, but rather that the case in which the petition is filed belongs to a class of cases as to which no cause of action could be stated over which the circuit court could have jurisdiction. If the case fell within the former category, the question would of course be merely one of error reviewable only by appeal or writ of error, but inasmuch as the court's jurisdiction over this character of case is brought in issue by the demurrer, an extraordinary proceeding in prohibition is available to relators. [State ex rel. v. Sevier, 339 Mo. 483,

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Related

Williams v. Board of Trustees
500 S.W.2d 31 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1973)
Scism v. Long
280 S.W.2d 481 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1955)
State Ex Rel. Police Retirement System v. Murphy
224 S.W.2d 68 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1949)
State Ex Rel. Lambert v. Padberg
145 S.W.2d 123 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1940)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
121 S.W.2d 228, 234 Mo. App. 773, 1938 Mo. App. LEXIS 88, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-lambert-v-omalley-moctapp-1938.