State ex rel. Missouri Highway & Transportation Commission v. Pruneau

652 S.W.2d 281, 1983 Mo. App. LEXIS 4338
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 13, 1983
DocketNos. 13060, 13064
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 652 S.W.2d 281 (State ex rel. Missouri Highway & Transportation Commission v. Pruneau) 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. Missouri Highway & Transportation Commission v. Pruneau, 652 S.W.2d 281, 1983 Mo. App. LEXIS 4338 (Mo. Ct. App. 1983).

Opinion

GREENE, Chief Judge.

This is a prohibition proceeding instituted at the relation of the Missouri State Highway and Transportation Commission (Commission) to prohibit and restrain George J. Pruneau, Associate Circuit Judge of Wayne County, Missouri, Presiding Judge William F. Boyer and Associate Judges Wayne Bearden and Herman Wilfong of the Wayne County Court from taking any further action, and to stay enforcement of a peremptory writ of mandamus issued by Judge Pruneau on December 15, 1982, in Wayne County Circuit Court Case No. CV— 9-82-137-CC.

The facts and legal history of this case are unusual, to say the least, and raise serious questions as to who has the authority and responsibility to take lawful emergency measures, including commandeering, seizing, and using property not their own, to alleviate the effects of disasters, either natural or man-made.

On December 4, 1982, Kenneth J. Roth-man, Acting Governor of the State of Mis[283]*283souri, by Executive Order 82-23, declared Wayne, Bollinger and Butler counties to be disaster areas by reason of heavy rainfall followed by severe flooding. The order recited that the safety and welfare of the citizens of those counties required an invocation of § 44.100, RSMo 1978. This statutory section specifies the powers of the governor during an emergency, the definition of which term includes a natural disaster, such as a flood of major proportions. §§ 44.010(3), (4). Those emergency powers include the right, during the period that the state of emergency exists or continues, to “seize, take or requisition to the extent necessary to bring about the most effective protection of the public” certain things, such as communications systems, fuel, and facilities for housing, feeding, and hospitalization of the people. § 44.100.1(4)(c). The statute also authorizes the governor to enforce and put into operation any plan relating to disasters, to assume direct operational control of all emergency forces and volunteers, and to take action and give direction to state and local agencies as “may be reasonable and necessary for the purpose of securing compliance with the provisions of this law and with the orders, rules and regulations made pursuant thereof.” §§ 44.100.1(4)(a), (b).

Executive order 82-23 went on to authorize that the approved “Missouri Comprehensive Emergency Preparedness and Disaster Relief Plan” be activated, and authorized the use of “such agencies, personnel and equipment of the State as may be necessary for the preservation of life, property and the restoration of public facilities in those counties.” It also specifically authorized and ordered several state agencies, including the Commission, to utilize the personnel and equipment of their agencies “in support of local government as may be deemed appropriate under the circumstances” during the period the order was in effect, which was until February 1, 1983.

On December 10,1982, Wayne County, by and through its county court, consisting of Presiding Judge William R. Boyer and Associate Judges Wayne Bearden and Herman Wilfong, filed a petition in the Circuit Court of Wayne County asking for relief consisting of a court order in the nature of mandamus directing nine defendants, who were members or employees of the Commission “for their cooperation and for the loan of 3 motor graders, 3 dump trucks, and 1 front end loader, together with their operators, for utilization by plaintiff for the ensuing five-day period or until further Order of this Court, and for such other and further relief as the Court deems proper and just in the circumstances.” The petition recited that the state of Missouri owned, and that the Commission operated certain equipment for the use and benefit of the people of Missouri, and that a part of that equipment, including motor graders, dump trucks and front end loaders, and operators for the same, were in Wayne County. It further recited that because of the flood, much of the county-maintained road system was unusable, and that Wayne County did not have the equipment and personnel to repair the roads for evacuation and rescue purposes, and to permit the Wayne County residents served by the roads to travel them to obtain food, water, and other supplies. The petition stated that “Plaintiffs have requested assistance through the District Engineer, who has responsibility for the Wayne County area regarding defendants’ equipment, but defendants, through their District Engineer, have failed and refused and continue to fail and refuse to provide said equipment [the motor graders, dump trucks, and front end loaders] and operators, in violation of law.” The petition did not state what law defendants were violating, and did not state what ministerial duty defendants had, if any, to furnish the demanded equipment and operators to Wayne County or its county court. The petition closed by stating the county had no adequate remedy at law except the requested court order, and that it needed the equipment and operators “for the purposes of emergency repairs of public and county roadways and thoroughfares, as to plaintiff seems necessary in its discretion.”

The filing of the petition triggered a series of events which, in retrospect, seem [284]*284incredible. On the same day that the petition was filed, before service was obtained upon defendants, and without notice to them, Judge Pruneau issued a “preliminary order of Mandamus.” As a basis for his alleged jurisdiction, the associate judge declared that no circuit judge was within the county to take up and consider the petition,1 that a condition of extreme emergency existed, and that the allegations of the petition were true. He then ordered the defendants, upon receipt of the writ and petition, to provide County Judge Boyer, as the chief executive officer of Wayne County, with three motor graders, three dump trucks, one front end loader and competent operators for the equipment, for utilization by Wayne County “untill [sic] further Order of a Court of competent jurisdiction is entered disolving [sic] this Order or until a peremptory Writ of Mandamus may be entered after a hearing to resolve the issues which affect the rights of all parties.” The order closed by directing the defendants to appear before the judge on December 15, 1982, at 10 a.m. and “show how you have complied with this Writ and to respond to the allegations of the plaintiffs.” The order did not authorize any agent of Wayne County to seize the property in question.

On Saturday, December 11, armed with the order, Boyer, Bearden, and an accompanying entourage of deputy sheriffs, newsmen, and county employees, without notice to any of the defendants, proceeded to two storage sheds north of Piedmont, Missouri, entered the buildings by means of acts that would constitute felonies if not committed under legal authority (breaking latches of locked doors), and removed two motor graders, two dump trucks, and a front end loader, the property of the Commission, from the sheds. Boyer, Bearden, and their associates evidently used the equipment that day in repairing county roads, and returned it to the sheds that evening. During the night, Commission employees removed the equipment from the county, fearing a repetition of the incident.

The record does not indicate that any of the named defendants were ever personally served. It does indicate that a summons, directed to defendant J.B. Dillingham, Chairman of the Commission, was received at the Commission’s office in Jefferson City at 10:30 a.m. on December 13, directing him to answer the petition and to appear in court before Judge Pruneau on December 15 at 10 a.m.

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Bluebook (online)
652 S.W.2d 281, 1983 Mo. App. LEXIS 4338, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-missouri-highway-transportation-commission-v-pruneau-moctapp-1983.