Walton v. Christian County

STATEMENT.

BOlND, C.

— Plaintiff is the treasurer of 'State-Hospital No. 3, and, as such, sued the defendant county for the keep of an insane criminal who had been transferred to said hospital upon the warrant of the Governor. The account filed runs from the first day of June, 1900, at intervals of six months, until the first day of June, 1906, and aggregates $902.85. The petition prayed judgment for said sum and interest, and' an allowance of the attorney’s fees to be taxed as-costs.

The answer of the defendant admitted the conviction of the person, Wesley Hartman, of the crime of *388arson, in the circuit court of the defendant, Christian County, in 1899. It denied his insanity; and denied the suspension of his sentence by the Governor; denied his transfer to the asylum, and denied that he was a resident of defendant county when convicted there; and averred that the county had no notice that the said 'Wesley Hartman had been transferred to the asylum, and that no demand had ever been made upon it for his keep while there.

There was evidence tending to show that the said Wesley Hartman was a resident of defendant county •at the time of his conviction there of the crime of arson in 1899, and was sent- from that county to the State Penitentiary; that, thereafter, to-wit, December 26, 1899, the Governor of the State suspended his sentence because he had become insane in' the penitentiary, and directed him to be taken to State Asylum No. 2, at Nevada, Vernon county, Missouri. The evidence further showed that this order or warrant of the Governor erroneously recited that said Hartman had been convicted in Wright county, Missouri. The evidence showed that an account and demand for his keep had been made upon Wright county, payment refused and suit had been instituted; and that, upon the discovery that said Wesley Hartman had never resided in said county, nor had been tried and convicted there, but that he had been a resident of Christian county and was tried and convicted there, the suit against Wright county was dismissed, and the present action was begun. There was evidence showing that during his residence in State Hospital No. 3, he fell heir to a small estate of about $121, coming from Virginia; that inquisition of lunacy was begun in the defendant, Christian county, which resulted in his being adjudged non compos. .A guardian of his estate was appointed, whose settlement showed a balance of $27.63, and that this was all the estate possessed by said Wesley Hartman, and that he was indebted beyond that.

*389The ease was submitted to the court without a jury. No instructions were asked or given, and judgment was rendered for defendant county, from which plaintiff appealed.

OPINION.

I. The judgment was for the wrong party. The evidence tended to.prove all the allegations alleged in the petition of plaintiff, and a judgment should have been rendered in his favor for the amount of the account not barred by the Statute of Limitation. .

The liability of the counties of the State for insane criminals, living and residing in said counties, who were insolvent when convicted and whose sentences have been suspended, as in this case, by the warrant of the Governor, in order that they may be transferred to the State institutions for the insane, is well' settléd. [Thomas v. Macon County, 175 Mo. 68; Shields v. Johnson County, 144 Mo. 76; Yarnell v. Cole County, 80 Mo. 80; R. S. 1899, secs. 2666, 4863, 4873, 4889 and 4891.]

Defendant contends that the misrecital of the place of the conviction of Wesley Hartman, contained in the Governor’s warrant for his transfer from the penitentiary to the State asylum, was conclusive evidence of his residence in Wright county. There is no merit whatever in this, contention. That part of the Governor’s warrant was simply narrative. The law does not require his warrant to state the county in which an insane criminal resided at the time of his conviction. The liability of the counties of the State imposed by statute in cases like the present is conditioned upon the residence and insolvency of the criminal at the time of his conviction and his subsequent insanity while in the penitentiary. These necessary elements were all shown by undisputed testimony, and entitled the plaintiff to recover.

*390For the error of the trial court in rendering judgment for defendant, said judgment is reversed, and this cause is remanded for a new trial.

Boy, G., concurs. PER- CURIAM:

— The foregoing report of the commissioners is hereby adopted as the opinion of the court.