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STATE ex rel. DOUGLAS v. REYNOLDS et al., Judges. (No. 21012.)

GRAVES, J. Certiorari to the St. Louis Court of Appeals. The judgment sought to be quashed is one entered in an original proceeding in that court. Such judgment was

Supreme Court of Missouri, in Banc. Feb. 15, in a mandamus proceeding, and the Court of

1. EVIDENCE 69 OF CITIZEN.

1919.)

PRESUMPTIONS-ACTION

The law presumes right action, rather than wrong action, upon the part of a citizen.

2. MANDAMUS 154(4)-PLEADING-LETTER TO COMPLAINT BOARD-PRESUMPTION-MAL

ICE.

On mandamus to compel members of complaint board existing under St. Louis Charter, art. 14, § 2, to permit relator to inspect and copy a letter to the board complaining of relator as a city employé, to be used by relator in an action for libel, where there is no allegation that the letter was sent with malice, it will be presumed that it was written in the utmost good faith and without malice.

3. LIBEL AND SLANDER 48(2)-PRIVILEGED COMMUNICATIONS - LETTER TO COMPLAINT

BOARD.

Letter to St. Louis complaint board, created by St. Louis Charter, art. 14, § 2, complaining of city employé, is qualifiedly privileged in the absence of malice. 4. MANDAMUS

154(4)-PLEADING-INSPEC

TION OF LETTER TO COMPLAINT BOARD-
MALICE.

In mandamus proceedings to compel St. Louis complaint board to permit relator to inspect and copy letter complaining of him as a city employé, to be used by him in libel action against senders, writ was properly refused where there was no allegation that the letter was sent with malice, for such letter was qualifiedly privileged in absence of malice, and a copy would have been useless to relator.

Appeals has succinctly outlined the facts in an opinion filed thus (199 Mo. App. 404, 203 S. W. 465):

"It is set out in the petition for a writ of mandamus now before us that, by section 2 of article 14 of the charter of the city of St. Louis, a complaint board, consisting of three members, was created, with power in that board to employ a secretary. Setting out the section. it is averred that the respondents Tune, Walbridge, and Cassidy are such board, and the respondent Marsh its secretary, and that relator is an employé of the city of St. Louis in its streets and sewers department, and that one Lawrence McDaniel and one George E. Thomas, on November 29, 1916, wrote a certain letter, addressed to the complaint board, and filed the same with that board, and that thereby that letter became a public document and part of the records of the city of St. Louis. Averring that the relator could not set forth accurately the language of the letter, relator sets out what he avers is the substance of it. It is further averred that the relator, on December 29, 1916, filed in the circuit court of the city of St. Louis his action for libel against McDaniel and Thomas, in which he charged that the letter was written by them, and that by reason of the writing of the letter, the complaint board, or some one acting for it, or under it, or pursuant to its direction, caused a police officer to arrest the plaintiff, and he was taken to the city dispensary by a police officer, and thence to the city hospital in the city of St. Louis, where he was confined for a period of three days, to his damage, as he says, in the sum of $50,000. It is further averred that in that action it was necessary for the relator, as plaintiff therein, to accurately set forth the language used in the let

5. COURTS 231(4) — CONFLICT WITH SU-ter, which he contends is libelous; that through PREME COURT OPINION.

Judgment of Court of Appeals refusing writ of mandamus to compel St. Louis complaint board to permit relator to inspect and copy letter complaining of him, on theory that complaints to such board should not be made public on the ground of public policy, did not conflict with opinion of Supreme Court in libel case involving question of privilege in libel actions, and will not be quashed on certiorari.

his attorney he called upon the defendants, as members of the complaint board, and demanded that he be permitted to inspect and make a copy of the letter; that the complaint board, not only by its several officers, but also acting at a meeting thereof, refused to permit the relator to make or have a copy of the letter; that thereupon the relator, plaintiff in the abovementioned action against McDaniel and Thomas, gave due notice of his intention to take depositions, and applied to the division of the circuit court of the city of St. Louis, in which the cause was pending, for a subpoena duces tecum, commanding said Marsh, as secretary of the board, to appear at the taking of these depositions, and bring with him the letter referred to; that theretofore appointed to take depositions in the Marsh duly appeared before the commissioner case, but refused to produce the letter; that thereupon the commissioner duly reported to the court the refusal of the witness, and asked that Douglas W. Robert, of St. Louis, for rehe be held in contempt until the letter was proIator. duced; that Marsh, by his attorney, acting unChas. H. Daues and Everett Paul Griffin, der the direction of the complaint board, filed both of St. Louis, for respondents.

Certiorari by the State of Missouri, on the relation of Samuel J. Douglas, against the Honorables George D. Reynolds and others, judges of the St. Louis Court of Appeals, to quash judgment entered in an original proceeding in the St. Louis Court of Appeals. Writ quashed to the end that the record of Court of Appeals may stand.

a motion to quash the subpoena on the ground

For other cases see same topic and KEY NUMBER in all Key-Numbered Digests and Indexes

Supreme Court issued its alternative writ, to which respondents made return, and, on the cause being presented, the court vacated the alternative writ and dismissed the cause, holding that there was nothing disclosed by the record why the proceeding should not be brought in our court, saying of our court, in an opinion filed ([273 Mo, 255] 200 S. W. 1062), but not yet officially reported:

that the circuit court had no authority to issue | original proceeding on the like petition. The the same, which motion the circuit court sustained, as it is said in the petition, 'on the authority of State ex rel. McCulloch v. Taylor, 268 Mo. 312, 187 S. W. 1181.' Averring that a copy of the letter is necessary for the relator in the preparation of his action against McDaniel and Thomas, and will be necessary evidence at the trial of the case, and that there is liability that the letter may be lost between this time and the time the cause is set for trial, and that in that letter the relator, an employé of the city of St. Louis, is charged with certain offenses, and for that reason is entitled to have an inspection and copy of the letter, and that the letter is a part of the public records of the city of St. Louis, and for that reason the relator is entitled to have an inspection and make a copy, and that without a copy of the letter, and the letter itself at the proper time. relator cannot prepare or try his action against McDaniel and Thomas, and that the petitioner is remediless in the premises by or through ordinary process or proceedings. He prays our court to award its writ of mandamus against respondents Tune, Walbridge, Cassidy, and Marsh, commanding them to permit him [petitioner], his agent or attorney, to inspect or make a copy of the letter.

"On presentation of this petition an alternative writ of mandamus was issued.

"Respondents in their return, after admitting the allegations as to proceedings in the circuit court to obtain the production or inspection of the letter referred to, and averring that the complaint board was created by the terms and provisions of the charter of the city of St. Louis in the interests of the city of St. Louis and for the betterment and improvement of the public service in the various departments of the government of the city of St. Louis, and that it would be against public policy and against the public interests for the complaint board, or its members, to disclose the contents of a

letter or letters of the character described in the relator's petition, or to disclose the name or names of the writer or writers thereof, because such disclosure would deter people from making complaints which might be beneficial to the public interests and the public service, set up with great particularity why they should not be required to permit relator or others to inspect or make copies of complaints filed with them, and denying the power of the court to make the order or grant the relief asked; also claiming that, if relator is entitled to any order for the production of any letter, his remedy is in the circuit court.

"On this return being filed, relator moved for judgment, and the cause has been duly submitted and argued.

"This is the second time that this same case has been presented to us and writ prayed for as now. Considering it involved a matter beyond our jurisdiction-that is, construction of the Constitution of the state-and was ancillary to a suit for $50,000, which amount also placed the cause beyond our jurisdiction, we transferred it to the Supreme Court. See, under this same title, 191 S. W. 1078, a decision not to be officially reported. It seems that counsel for relator, to avoid delay, dismissed that case in the Supreme Court, and there commenced an

""That court has, under section 12 of article 6 of the Constitution, the same authority to issue writs of mandamus that this court has under section 3 of the same article, unless otherwise limited by other provisions of the Constitution. That there is no such limitation in this case there can be no question, for the reason that neither the subject-matter of the libel suit mentioned nor the amount involved therein is involved in this case. This is a collateral proceeding to that action, merely involving the right of the relator to compel the board of complaint to produce the letter mentioned for his inspection and use as evidence in said libel suit.'

"Relator thereupon instituted the present proceeding in our court, we issuing an alternative writ of mandamus."

The Court of Appeals quashed their alternative writ, and it is this judgment that is here for consideration. It is urged that this opinion of the St. Louis Court of Appeals conflicts with our opinion in Finley v. Steele, 159 Mo. 299, 60 S. W. 108, 52 L. R. A. 852. The facts are few and simple, and the issues are really matters of law.

[1, 2] I. To separate wheat from chaff, it should be noted that the relator herein (the plaintiff in an alleged libel suit) does not aver in his application for mandamus to the St. Louis Court of Appeals that the letter ten. So far as his petition for this mandawhich he seeks to see was maliciously writmus is concerned such letter was presumably written in the utmost good faith and without malice, because the law presumes right action rather than wrong action upon the part of the citizen. So far as the record before us, which we are allowed to consider, is concerned there is no allegation stating that the letter was maliciously written. This may be material later upon the alleged question of such letter being beyond what is known as a qualified privilege communication. The fact should be borne in mind. The application for mandamus simply states that the relator herein has brought and has pending an action for libel, and that it is necessary to have a copy of this letter, to his mind a public document. He alleges the character of the board to which the letter was addressed, but does not allege that the letter was sent out of malice. In other words, so far as the petition before us for review is concerned, we must presume, under the law, that the letter was sent in good faith and without malice.

[3] II. If we must say that the letter was sent without malice, in the absence of an aver

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sult.

III. The real question in this case is whether or not the opinion of the Court of Appeals conflicts with our rulings. It is urged that it conflicts with Finley v. Steele, 159 Mo. 299, 60 S. W. 108, 52, L. R. A. 852, and cases approving and following it.

ment in the application or petition for man- | doubtful. They only tend to show that the damus that it was maliciously sent, we must Court of Appeals was at least right in the rehold that the letter was at least qualifiedly privileged, and the qualified privilege would hold good in the absence of an allegation of malice. The petition for mandamus shows the board to which it was addressed was at least a governmental agency provided for the good of the city government. Complaints made to such a body, at the very least, must be held to be qualifiedly privileged, and the qualified privilege cannot be destroyed without a charge of malice.

[4] To destroy the patent qualified privilege of this letter, absence of good faith and presence of malice should have been charged. No such charge is made, and upon this theory alone the Court of Appeals reached a right result in refusing the writ.

In the law of libel qualified privileged communications are recognized. The ban of a qualified privilege cannot be raised except by a charge of malice and the proof thereof. In that most estimable work, 17 R. C. L. p. 341, we have the doctrine clearly stated in this language:

"This general idea has been otherwise expressed as follows: A communication made in good faith on any subject-matter in which the person communicating has an interest, or in reference to which he has a duty, is privileged if made to a person having a corresponding interest or duty, even though it contains matter which, without this privilege, would be actionable, and although the duty is not a legal one, but only a moral or social duty of imperfect obligation. In the absence of malice an utterance may be qualifiedly privileged, even though it is not true, and notwithstanding the fact that it contains a charge of crime. But mere color of lawful occasion and pretense of justifiable end cannot shield from liability a person who publishes and circulates defamatory matter. Hence a publication loses its character as privileged, and is actionable on proof of actual malice, or at least such gross disregard of the rights of the person injured as is equivalent to malice in fact. In the case of a qualified privileged communication, the occasion on which it was

made rebuts the inference prima facie arising from a statement prejudicial to the character of the plaintiff, and puts the burden on him to prove that there was malice in fact; that the defendant was actuated by motives of personal spite or ill will, independent of the occasion on which the communication was made."

The relator in this mandamus proceeding alleges all the facts necessary to put this communication or letter within the rule above announced. He fails to allege malice, the only thing which will take the communication from under the ban of a qualified privilege. This failure renders the letter or a copy thereof a useless thing for relator in the

course of his trial.

The foregoing remarks are all matters within the law of libel. Whether these paragraphs are material to the issues here is

The Court of Appeals did not discuss the libel rule of a qualified privilege, and for this reason we suggested, supra, that what we said in paragraphs II and III, supra might not be relevant to the real issue in this certiorari proceeding. The Court of Appeals first quotes section 2 of article 14 of the new city charter, thus:

"Article 14 of the present charter of the city of St. Louis, adopted by vote of the people June 30, 1914, is headed 'Public Welfare Boards.' Under the first section provision is made for the administration of the Mullanphy fund. The second section is as follows:

""Sec. 2. There is hereby established a complaint board, to consist of three members, to serve without compensation. Said members shall be appointed by the mayor for terms of one, two, and three years, respectively. Each year thereafter the mayor shall appoint one member for a term of three years. Members shall hold office until their successors qualify. Said board shall employ a secretary, and may appoint such other employés as may be provided by ordinance. It shall receive complaints against any department, board, division, officer, or employé of the city, or against any public utility corporation, and examine the same. It shall recommend to the proper city or state authorities any action deemed advisable.'

"The third section makes provision for other boards and institutions. The respondents are the members and secretary of the complaint board."

The said court then proceeds to discuss the character of this board and the purposes of the lawmakers (the people in this case) in enacting the charter. No case from Missouri Supreme Court rules upon this matter. Upon the character of this board the court says:

"As we understand the provisions of section 2 of article 14 of the charter of the city of St. Louis, the complaint board was established for the very purpose of promoting efficiency in the public service. That board is authorized to receive complaints against any department, board, officer, or employé of the city, and examine into the same. It has no power to take any action of itself. All that its power, after investigation and inquiry, consists of, is to recommend to the proper city or state authorities any action deemed advisable as to city employés and officers or public service corporations. They serve without compensation. In the very high

est sense, they are the confidential servants of the city and of its officers, for the purpose of advising those officers as to the character, fitness, ability, and suitability of the various em ployés of the city, as well as of the acts of pub

lic utility corporations. We can conceive of no higher, more important, and useful branch of public administration than the duties thrown upon this complaint board. It is almost a necessary implication, when we consider the creation and objects and scope of this board, that communications from citizens, complaints from citizens, are the main source for putting the powers of inquiry of the board into play. Surely this provision of the charter does not contemplate that the members of the board, who are serving without compensation, are to go around, of their own initiative, and investigate into and inquire as to all of the several officers and employés of the city, consisting of thousands of individuals. They must rely almost entirely upon information voluntarily given to them by citizens who may have knowledge of the conduct and character and fitness of city employés. The creation of the board, in itself and in a measure, invites complaints from citizens of their officers and of public employés. If every citizen who knows of the unfitness of an officer or employé, or of facts he thinks require an investigation, believes it his duty to lodge information before the board, he will hesitate a long while before doing so if he knows his complaint is to be made public and become of the public records, so that any one may have access to it and he subjected to action for a possible libel. It is not to be expected, if that is so, that very many will come forward and lodge a complaint. We think that if it was understood that the complaints lodged by citizens against these employés were to become public property, without the consent of the party filing them, that the very object for which this board is created would be defeated. It may be that in sealing the records, so far as relates to these complaints, from public inspection, some individual will be hurt, but the right of that individual must yield to the right and to the benefit of the public at large. In our opinion these communications by citizens to the complaint board, covering the conduct of public officers and employés, are to be considered as highly confidential, and as records to which public policy would forbid the confidence to be violated. Such is said to be the law where the question has been very fully considered in a recent work on evidence, namely, Jones' Commentaries on the Law of Evidence in Civil Cases, vol. 4, § 762, p. 576, to which, without repeating or reproducing, we refer. There the case of Boske v. Comingore, 177 U. S. 459 (20 Sup. Ct. 701, 44 L. Ed. 846), is referred to and quoted at length as sustaining the confidential character of such communications.

"In Gray v. Pentland, 2 Serg. & R. (Pa.) 23, the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania held that accusations preferred to the Governor of the state against a person in office are so far of the nature of judicial proceedings that the accuser is not held to prove the truth of them; that it is excused if they did not originate in malice and without probable cause; and that parol evidence cannot be given of the contents of a libelous deposition sent to the Governor, containing charges against an officer of his appointment, in an action for libel, though the court has refused a subpoena duces tecum; and that the Governor, to whom such a deposition is addressed, must exercise his own judgment

with respect to the propriety of the production of the writing. This same principle was subsequently recognized as sound by the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania in Yoter v. Sanno, 6 Watts (Pa.) 164 loc. cit. 166.

"In Worthington v. Scribner, 109 Mass. 487 (12 Am. Rep. 736), Judge Gray, afterwards Mr. Justice Gray of the Supreme Court of the United States, held [109 Mass. loc. cit. 488, 12 Am. Rep. 736]:

"It is the duty of every citizen to communicate to his government any information which he has of the commission of an offense against its laws. To encourage him in performing this duty without fear of consequences, the law holds such information to be among the secrets of state, and leaves the question how far and under what circumstances the names of the informers and the channel of communication shall be suffered to be known, to the absolute discretion of the government, to be exercised according to its views of what the interests of the public require. Courts of justice, therefore, will not compel or allow the discovery of such information, either by the subordinate officer to whom it is given, by the informer himself, or by any other person, without the permission of the government. The evidence is excluded, not for the protection of the witness or of the party in the particular case, but upon general grounds of public policy, because of the confidential nature of such communications.'

"While we have no decision of our courts that directly meets this proposition, we have its spirit applied in Smart v. Kansas City, 208 Mo. 162, 105 S. W. 709 (14 L. R. A. [N. S.] 565, 123 Am. St. Rep. 415, 13 Ann. Cas. 932). There it was held that a hospital physician who attends a patient at the hospital not only cannot testify as to what he learned of the patient's condition while so attending her, but that the official hospital record, into which has been copied the diagnosis of the case, is privileged and not admissible in evidence. It is further there held that the fact that the city ordinances require such records to be kept does not furnish any reason why the statute against disclosure of privileged communications should be violated. That opinion is not altogether germane to the

case before us, but is illustrative of the rule as to privileged communications. In line with this decision of our Supreme Court is that of Massachusetts Mutual Life Ins. Co. v. Board of Trustees of Michigan Asylum for the Insane, 178 Mich. 193, 144 N. W. 538 (51 L. R. A. [N. S.] 22, Ann. Cas. 1915D, 146).

"Our conclusion is that the respondents here were justified in their refusal to permit relator such letter was in their control, and in reto have an inspection of the letter, assuming fusing to allow the relator to make a copy of it. That is as far as we go in this case, except to say that neither our court nor the circuit court in which the action for libel is pending can compel the production of the letter for the purposes sought by relator. Whether the circuit court, in which the action for libel is pending, can proceed with the case in the absence of the original letter, and allow parol testimony to be given as to its contents, is a question which is not now before us and which we do not decide. The alternative writ heretofore issued is quashed and a permanent writ denied."

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In the creation of charitable trusts there must be a separation of the legal estate from the beneficial enjoyment indicated by words of donor, to prevent a merger. 3. CHARITIES 47

It must be noted that the opinion is pred- [2. CHARITIES 18 icated solely on the theory that it is against CREATION. public policy to permit publicity to be made of the complaints and information furnished this board by the citizens of St. Louis. The case of Finley v. Steele, 159 Mo. 299, 60 S. W. 108, 52 L. R. A. 852, discusses no such question. It does discuss the question of what is a qualified privilege in the law of libel, and how the ban of the qualified privilege may be raised. The discussion is along the very line of the rule announced in 17 R. C. L. p. 341,

supra. The court was discussing the law of libel and not the law of evidence. It had before it a libel case which had been fully tried

upon plaintiff's side, and a nonsuit forced by

the trial court.

In the instant case the Court of Appeals did not have before it a libel suit nor the law of libel. Privileged or qualified privilege in libel law was not before it nor discussed by it. The sole question it disposed of was the character of complaints before this board under the law of evidence.

It held that public policy demanded that complaints to this general welfare board should not be made public. Without such ruling conflicts with our rulings it must stand.

[5] We are cited to no case from this court

covering the groundwork of the Court of Ap

peals opinion. Certain it is that there is no conflict between their opinion and Finley v. Steele, supra, or any of the cases following that case. The subject-matters discussed are wholly different. In such case we are forced to quash our writ as having been improvidently issued. Our writ is therefore quashed, to the end that the record of the Court of Appeals may stand.

All concur; BOND, C. J., in result.

ROBINSON et al. v. CRUTCHER et al. (No. 19120.)

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CHARITABLE TRUST TRUSTEE-DESIGNATION BY COURT.

Where a charitable trust has been created,

it will not be permitted to fail because a trus-
tee has been erroneously or uncertainly designat-
ed, but the court in the exercise of its inherent
equity jurisdiction will appoint one.
4. CHARITIES

18-CREATION-DESIGNATION

OF TRUSTEE-NECESSITY.

residue of his property to the capital of townWhere testator by his will bequeathed the ship school fund, to the capital of public school fund, and to the capital of state school fund, no trust was created because of failure to designate a trustee capable of taking.

5. CHARITIES 18 CREATION OF TRUST DESIGNATION OF TRUSTEE.

In view of Rev. St. 1909, § 583, a court of equity, in order to sustain a trust in a will, cannot go to the extent of incorporating into the will the names of the donees who would take legal title to the funds bequeathed. 6. CHARITIES

19 CREATION

DESIGNA

TION OF DONEE. Where testator bequeathed the residue of and state public school fund, and directed his his estate to the capital of a township, county, executor to pay the property over to the lawful custodians of such funds, such direction was insufficient as a designation of the donees of the property under a charitable trust. 7. CHARITIES 20(5)-CHARITABLE Trusts—

COUNTY COURT AS TRUSTEE.

Under Rev. St. 1909, § 3746, a county court may act as a trustee of a charitable trust. 8. CHARITIES 19-CHARITABLE TRUSTSDESIGNATION OF DONEE COUNTY COURT JUDGES.

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Where testator bequeathed the residue of his estate to the capital of a county school fund, the names of the judges of the county court could not be inserted as custodians of the property; a charitable trust not having been sufficiently created to make applicable the provisions of Rev. St. 1909, § 3747.

(Supreme Court of Missouri, in Banc. Feb. 15, 9. WILLS 1919.)

1. CHARITIES 1-"PUBLIC CHARITY"-DEFINITION.

A "public charity" is a gift to be applied consistently with existing laws for the benefit of an indefinite number of persons, by bringing their minds under the influence of education or religion, by relieving their bodies from disease, suffering, or constraint, or by assisting them to establish themselves in life, or by erecting and maintaining public buildings or works, or otherwise lessening the burdens of government. [Ed. Note. For other definitions, see Words and Phrases, First and Second Series, Public Charity.]

462-CONSTRUCTION-INTERPOLA

TION OF WORDS-CONSTRUCTION BY IMPLI-
CATION.

The interpolation of words in a will or con-
struction by implication is only authorized where
there is enough expressed to indicate, but not
clearly to define, the purpose of the will.
10. TRUSTS

37-CREATION APPLICATION

OF CY PRES DOCTRINE.

Where testator bequeathed the residue of his property to the capital of a township, county, and state public school fund, but altogether failed to designate the trustee, the cy pres doctrine had no application; no trust of any kind having been created by the will.

Williams and Blair, JJ., dissenting.

For other cases see same topic and KEY-NUMBER in all Key-Numbered Digests and Indexes

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