State of Missouri Ex Rel. v. Sartorius

95 S.W.2d 873, 231 Mo. App. 807, 1936 Mo. App. LEXIS 202
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 10, 1936
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 95 S.W.2d 873 (State of Missouri Ex Rel. v. Sartorius) 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 of Missouri Ex Rel. v. Sartorius, 95 S.W.2d 873, 231 Mo. App. 807, 1936 Mo. App. LEXIS 202 (Mo. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

*809 PER CURIAM:

This is an original proceeding in prohibition. The relators are Jennie Mincke, Emily Runge, Beauford Miller, Mildred Calhoun, and Herbert F. Roessel, who for several years past have served as Deputy Probation Officers of the Juvenile Court of the City of St. Louis. The respondent is the Honorable Eugene J. Sartorius, one of the duly elected and acting judges of the Circuit Court of the City of St. Louis, and presently assigned to preside in the Juvenile Division thereof. The purpose of the proceeding is to have respondent prohibited from the enforcement of an order heretofore entered by him on May 16, 1936, but made to become effective on May 30, 1936, dismissing and discharging re-lators as deputy probation officers without having filed charges against them and without having granted them an opportunity for a hearing.

Relators have alleged in their petition that in undertaking to order and bring about their dismissal without charges preferred and a hearing thereon, respondent has acted in contravention of Section 14144, Revised Statutes 1929 (Mo. St. Ann., see. 14144, p. 861), which, in connection with Section 14145, provides for the appointment of probation officers and their deputies; and that in so purporting to act, respondent has exceeded and abused his rightful power and jurisdiction so as to warrant this court in prohibiting him from any further action in the premises.

Particularly have relators alleged in their petition that respondent’s predecessors in office have uniformly construed Section 14144 to mean that no deputy probation officer could be discharged from his office without having been advised of the ground on which his discharge was based, and without having been afforded an opportunity for a hearing on the charge made against him.

*810 Because of such allegation of fact on the part of relators, and in view of the distinct public interest which naturally attends the matter at issue, this court in its discretion ordered its preliminary writ of prohibition to issue. A return thereto was duly made by respondent; issue was joined under the pleadings; and the case is now here for our decision upon the question of respondent’s poiver and jurisdiction to carry out the order of dismissal heretofore made and entered by him as aforesaid.

Turning to Sections 14144 and 14145 of the current revision of the statutes, we find the pertinent law with reference to the appointment of probation officers and their deputies to be as follows:

“Sec. 14144. Appointment of probation officer — duties.—The circuit court of the criminal court where constituted as a juvenile court under this article shall appoint a discreet person -of good character, not under the age of twenty-five years, to serve as probation officer during the pleasure of the 'court. ... In counties-now or hereafter containing five hundred thousand inhabitants or more, the probation officer and persons in charge of places of detention shall be appointed on the basis of merit, after competitive examination had in pursuance of rules made a matter of record of the circuit court.”
“Sec. 14145. Deputies may be appointed. — The judge of the juvenile court shall have the authority' to appoint one or more deputy probation officers, to serve as probation officers during the pleasure of the court. ...”

The present law was enacted by the Legislature in 1911 -(Laws 1911, p. 177), when the then existing law relating to the creation of juvenile courts (Arts. VI and VII, Chap. 35, Revised Statutes 1909) was expressly repealed and the new law enacted. However, so far as concerns the specific question of the appointment of probation officers and their deputies, the only material change effected by the new law was the inclusion of the concluding provision of what is now Section 14144, providing for the appointment, in counties of five hundred thousand inhabitants and over, of probation officers and deputy probation officers on the basis of merit, after competitive examination had in pursuance of rules made a matter of record of the circuit court.

In a general way relators’ theory of the case is that in their capacity of deputy probation officers they are properly to be denominated “public officers” or “county officers,” so that the matter of their removal from office is to be governed by the provisions of Sections 11202, 11203, Revised Statutes 1929 (Mo. St. Ann., secs. 11202, 11203, pp. 6143, 6144), which have to do generally with the subject of the removal of county, city, town, and township officers for dereliction of or willful refusal to perform public duty, *811 and which provide for the filing of charges with the clerk of the' court having jurisdiction over the offense charged, and for a hearing upon the same.

We think that relators clearly misconceive the applicability of such statutes to their case. Conceding that because of the functions they serve within restricted territorial limits they are to be classed both as “public officers” and as “county officers” within the meaning of the laAV (Hasting v. Jasper County, 314 Mo. 144, 282 S. W. 700), yet it does not follow that the matter of their removal from office is necessarily to be governed by Sections 11202 and 11203. This for the reason that those sections of the statutes are purely general in their nature, and have to do with the subject of the removal from office of the several classes of officers specified therein serving terms of office which are definitely defined by law. Consequently, because of the fact that such statutes are merely general in their scope, and are intended to deal with the removal of officers elected or appointed for definitely prescribed terms, they can have no application to a situation where there is a special or particular statute which deals with the removal of a particular officer whose tenure of "office is indefinite and is to be measured by the pleasure of the appointing power. [State ex rel. v. Morehead, 256 Mo. 683, 691, 165 S. W. 746.]

In such a situation, that is, where the officer holds his office merely' “at the pleasure”' of the appointing power, the law is well settled that he may be removed from his office without formal charges of misconduct in office and without a hearing. In other words, in determining the right of the superintending authority to order their removal, the courts make a very clear cut and obvious distinction between officers appointed for definitely prescribed terms,-and those whose tenure of office is limited only by the pleasure of the appointing power. Where the appointment is for a definite term, the appointment' logically confers on the officer the right to serve out his full official period unless forfeited by his own misconduct, since the very fact of the definiteness of the official tenure necessarily negatives any idea of a reservation of power and authority on the part of the appointing .power to remove the officer at will.

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Bluebook (online)
95 S.W.2d 873, 231 Mo. App. 807, 1936 Mo. App. LEXIS 202, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-missouri-ex-rel-v-sartorius-moctapp-1936.