State v. St. Louis County

603 S.W.2d 545, 1980 Mo. LEXIS 422
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 15, 1980
DocketNo. 62114
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 603 S.W.2d 545 (State 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 v. St. Louis County, 603 S.W.2d 545, 1980 Mo. LEXIS 422 (Mo. 1980).

Opinions

ORIGINAL PROCEEDING IN MANDAMUS

SEILER, Judge.

This is another of the annual disputes which take place in St. Louis County over the juvenile court budget. The judges of the 21st judicial circuit (St. Louis county) seek the issuance of a writ of mandamus directing the county and its officials to approve relators’ budget estimate, as modified, for juvenile court administration for 1980, after the county council had instead adopted a budget which eliminated twenty-two positions included in the relators’ amended budget estimate.

The budget year in St. Louis county runs from January 1 to December 31. During the summer of 1979, relators submitted their budget estimates for 1980, including that for the juvenile court. The county executive’s recommendations would have deleted various proposed expenditures, including the twenty-two positions i-n question. On December 4, 1979, there was a public hearing on the proposed 1980 budget. Representatives of various civic organizations, public officials and county residents appeared and urged the county council to fund the juvenile court budget in full and to reject the proposed budget cuts. On December 6, 1979, Judge Corrigan, the judge of the juvenile court, appeared before [546]*546the county council in support of the budget estimates. The record contains a transcript of his remarks. Judge Corrigan also submitted a memorandum responding to the proposed budget deletions and a report, entitled “State of the Juvenile Court.” The latter set forth the reorganization made by Judge Corrigan 1 in the juvenile court operation to improve internal accountability and communication, public accountability and responsiveness, and improved cooperation with the police and the schools. One of the reorganized departments was the court-community intake department, which has twenty of the disputed positions, and another was the clinical services unit, which has two of the disputed positions. There also were letters and telegrams sent to the council during December 1979 and January 1980 in support of the juvenile court from various legislative, school, law enforcement, and civic representatives and groups.

On January 3, 1980, the county council approved a budget which would have restored the twenty-two positions in the clinical services department and the court-community intake department which had been proppsed for deletion. The bill approving the budget was vetoed by the county executive.

Thereafter relators through the juvenile court judge discussed the budget estimate for juvenile court administration with representatives of the council and relators modified their budget estimates. On February 28, 1980, the council approved the proposed budget as modified, which included the twenty-two positions in dispute. Again, however, the budget was vetoed by the county executive.

On March 27, 1980, a bill approving another proposed budget for 1980 was introduced and upon suspension of the rules was perfected and passed. The following day it was approved by the county executive. This budget ordinance eliminated the twenty-two positions in dispute, totalling $353,-089 in salaries.

On April 1, 1980, the relators notified the county council that the circuit court could not consent to the reductions, stating that the proposed reductions would impair the availability and quality of the judicial system and would hamper the court in carrying out its constitutional and statutory functions. The relators requested immediate reconsideration and stated their willingness to review again the need for the funds and the severe impairment of the proper functioning of the juvenile court which would result from the cuts.

On April 1, 1980, counsel for respondents notified relators that the county did not intend to take any legal action in the matter and notified the employees whose positions were not funded that they would not be paid for any work after April 12, 1980. Counsel took the position that personnel employed in court-community services 2 had been ruled not reasonably necessary for the functioning of the court in the decision of In re 1979 Budget of the Juvenile Court of St. Louis County, 590 S.W.2d 900 (Mo. banc 1979). In the respondents’ return herein, respondents amplify that position to say that the same is also true of the diagnostic treatment services program.3 Respondents say further that the testimony at the public hearings and the documentary material submitted by relators show that the items deleted from the 1980 juvenile court budget [547]*547were the same items which this court held could be deleted from the 1979 budget in the above mentioned case; respondents say further that the issue of whether the positions in question are reasonably necessary for the functioning of the juvenile court has already been decided by this court against relators in the case mentioned above and that the issues raised by relator herein are therefore res judicata. Respondents conclude by asserting that there were no facts submitted to respondents that the juvenile court would not be able to perform its essential functions without the twenty-two positions which are here in dispute.

The relators on April 7, 1980, instituted the present mandamus action.

In State ex rel Weinstein v. St. Louis County, 451 S.W.2d 99, 102 (Mo. banc 1970), we outline the procedure to be followed when conventional methods fail as follows:

“If, after the juvenile court, acting under the supervisory control of the circuit court of St. Louis county, determines its needs as to personnel and fixes compensation, the county council deems such action to be unreasonable, the county council may file a petition for review and final determination of such question in this Court . . . Necessarily, in order not to interfere with operations of the juvenile court, such petition must be filed without unnecessary delay. In the absence of a determination, pursuant to such petition for review, that action of the juvenile court is unreasonable, its order with respect to the personnel reasonably needed and their compensation will be final, and under such circumstances mandamus will lie, if necessary, to compel payment.” (Emphasis supplied).

Here the county council has seen fit not to file a petition for review. One reason given is that the matter is res judicata, it having been decided in the 1979 budget case that positions of the type in question here were not required to be funded. Upon the meager record before us in that petition for review case (meager at least from the standpoint of the juvenile court), we concluded that certain experimental projects were not expenditures fixed by statute or absolutely reposed in the discretion of the juvenile court and finally that the juvenile court had failed to carry its burden of proving that its expenditures sought to be authorized were reasonably necessary and constituted a factual and not merely a declared need. In re 1979 Budget of the Juvenile Court of St. Louis County, 590 S.W.2d at 901-02. In the 1979 case, $127,-597 of the $262,651 requested for the court-community services program (the predecessor, as we understand it, of the current court-community intake department) was deleted and all the $110,504 requested for the diagnostic treatment services program was deleted.

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Bluebook (online)
603 S.W.2d 545, 1980 Mo. LEXIS 422, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-st-louis-county-mo-1980.