State of Missouri, el rel. Attorney General Eric Schmitt v. City of St. Louis ( 2022 )


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  •               In the Missouri Court of Appeals
    Eastern District
    DIVISION FOUR
    STATE OF MISSOURI, ex rel.                        )          No. ED108130
    ATTORNEY GENERAL ERIC SCHMITT,                    )
    )          Appeal from the Circuit Court
    Appellant,                 )          of the City of St. Louis
    )
    vs.                                               )          Honorable Michael F. Stelzer
    )
    CITY OF ST. LOUIS,                                )
    )
    Respondent,                )          FILED: January 4, 2022
    The attorney general (the “State”) appeals from the circuit court’s summary judgment
    declaring that the City of St. Louis had no obligation to make any payments under a settlement
    agreement in a civil rights lawsuit and that the entire obligation rested with the State through the
    State Legal Expense Fund (“SLEF”). Because the triggering date for indemnity from SLEF is the
    date an eligible claim is made—and because the statutes in effect at the time the underlying claim
    was made prohibited SLEF from paying claims or judgments against police officers—we vacate
    the judgment and remand to the circuit court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
    Factual and Procedural Background
    In 1983, George Allen, Jr. was convicted of capital murder, rape, sodomy and burglary and
    was sentenced to life without the possibility of parole for 50 years and to three consecutive terms
    of 15 years in the Department of Corrections. In 2012, a circuit court granted Allen’s writ of
    habeas corpus and vacated his conviction, and the Court of Appeals, Western District, refused to
    quash the writ. See State ex rel. Koster v. Green, 
    388 S.W.3d 603
    , 604-34 (Mo. App. W.D. 2012).
    He was released after three decades of imprisonment.
    In August 2014, Allen1 and his mother filed a federal civil rights lawsuit stemming from
    his 1983 conviction and imprisonment, which named as defendants the City of St. Louis (the
    “City”), the members of the St. Louis City Board of Police Commissioners (the “Board”), the
    former mayor of the City as a member of the Board, the former chief of the St. Louis Metropolitan
    Police Department (“SLMPD”) and several SLMPD officers. The City was represented by the
    city counselor’s office and tendered representation of the other defendants to the attorney general’s
    office. In December 2017, the parties settled the federal lawsuit. The Release and Settlement
    Agreement (“Allen Settlement”) provided for Allen’s estate and his mother to be paid a total of
    $13,825,000. The payments were to be made in installments and split between the City and the
    State.
    In conjunction with the Allen Settlement, the City and the State entered into a “Side Letter
    Agreement,” which acknowledged their dispute over their respective responsibilities for the
    payments due under the Allen Settlement. The Side Letter Agreement provided that the State
    would “initiate in a Missouri Circuit Court a declaratory judgment action to finally determine who
    must pay for the [Allen Settlement].” The State then filed the underlying declaratory judgment
    action and the City filed a declaratory judgment counterclaim. The State asserted that “the
    maximum amount that may be paid out of the [S]LEF toward the Allen Settlement is one million
    dollars, and that the City of St. Louis is responsible for the entirety of the Allen Settlement beyond
    the [S]LEF’s one million dollar contribution” because Allen’s civil rights claim was not filed until
    after amendments to the SLEF statute that excluded law enforcement from SLEF coverage. The
    1
    Allen passed away in 2016, prior to the resolution of the lawsuit, and the personal representative of his estate was
    substituted as a plaintiff.
    2
    City contended SLEF was responsible for the entirety of the Allen Settlement or, in the alternative,
    that the State was obligated to reimburse the City up to one million dollars per fiscal year.
    The City and the State filed cross-motions for summary judgment, and the circuit court
    entered summary judgment in favor of the City in July 2019. In its judgment, the circuit court
    found that “[t]he claims at issue in this case arose out of a conviction and imprisonment that
    occurred in 1983, well before the 2005 amendment to the SLEF and well before the transfer [of
    SLMPD] to local control. Accordingly, the SLEF covers the claims at issue.” The circuit court
    concluded the City had no obligation to make any payments under the Allen Settlement and the
    entire obligation rested with the State through SLEF. This appeal follows.
    Standard of Review
    “A circuit court’s grant of summary judgment is subject to de novo review on appeal.”
    Holmes v. Steelman, 
    624 S.W.3d 144
    , 148 (Mo. banc 2021); see also ITT Com. Fin. Corp. v. Mid.-
    Am. Marine Supply Corp., 
    854 S.W.2d 371
    , 376 (Mo. banc 1993). Summary judgment is proper
    where there is no genuine issue of material fact and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a
    matter of law. Rule 74.04(c)(6).2 When, as here, “the trial court’s decision was based on stipulated
    facts, the only question for [a reviewing court] is whether the trial court drew the proper legal
    conclusions from the facts stipulated.” Owners Ins. Co. v. Craig, 
    514 S.W.3d 614
    , 616 n.3 (Mo.
    banc 2017) (quoting Johnson v. McDonnell Douglas Corp., 
    745 S.W.2d 661
    , 662 (Mo. banc
    1988)).
    Discussion
    Since the creation of SLEF in 1983, its funds have been available “to pay claims or
    judgments against the state, its agencies, any officer or employee of the state or its agencies, and
    2
    All rule references are to the Missouri Supreme Court Rules (2018).
    3
    certain other designated individuals and entities.” Holmes, 624 S.W.3d at 149; see section
    105.711.13 (creating SLEF). Until 2005, SLEF included coverage for the Board as an agency of
    the State and for SLMPD officers as officers of the State. Holmes, 624 S.W.3d at 149-50; see also
    Smith v. State, 
    152 S.W.3d 275
    , 278-79 (Mo. banc 2005).
    In 2005, the General Assembly amended the SLEF statutes to specifically exclude coverage
    for claims against a board of police commissioners or a police officer. Holmes, 624 S.W.3d at
    150. Section 105.726.3, RSMo. (Cum. Supp. 2005), provided that “[m]oneys in the state legal
    expense fund shall not be available for the payment of any claim or any amount required by any
    final judgment . . . against a board of police commissions . . . including the commissioners, any
    police officer . . . .” The amended statutes “prohibit[ed] SLEF from paying claims or judgments
    against police officers if the claims were tendered to the attorney general after August 28, 2005.”
    Holmes, 624 S.W.3d at 150 (relying on sections 105.726.3-.5, RSMo. (Cum. Supp. 2005)).
    Although claims made after that date were no longer eligible for payment from SLEF, such claims
    can still qualify for representation by the attorney general’s office and for reimbursement from
    SLEF under section 105.726.3, which states, in relevant part:
    Moneys in the state legal expense fund shall not be available for the payment
    of any claim or any amount required by any final judgment rendered by a court
    of competent jurisdiction against a board of police commissioners . . . including
    the commissioners, any police officer, . . . other employees, agents,
    representative, or any other individual or entity acting or purporting to act on
    its or their behalf. . . . Except that the commissioner of administration shall
    reimburse from the legal expense fund the board of police commissioners
    established under section 84.350, and any successor-in-interest established
    pursuant to section 84.344, for liability claims otherwise eligible for payment
    under section 105.711 paid by such board up to a maximum of one million
    dollars per fiscal year.
    (Emphasis added).
    3
    All statutory references are to the Revised Statutes of Missouri (Cum. Supp. 2013), unless otherwise indicated.
    4
    “Section 105.711 set the terms of SLEF coverage, establishing a fund to pay claims and
    judgments rendered against state agencies, officers, and employees for conduct arising out of and
    performed in connection with official state duties.” State ex rel. Hawley v. City of St. Louis, 
    531 S.W.3d 602
    , 604-05 (Mo. App. E.D. 2017). From 1861 until September 1, 2013, SLMPD was
    under state control and was considered a state agency. 
    Id. at 604
    . In November 2012, Missouri
    voters passed an initiative authorizing a shift from state to local control of SLMPD. Id.4 Under
    this statutory authorization, the City established its own police force and assumed local control on
    September 1, 2013, which included the City accepting “the responsibility, ownership, and liability
    as the successor-in-interest of the Board’s contractual obligations, indebtedness, and other lawful
    obligations.” 
    Id.
    The 2005 SLEF amendments and the 2013 SLMPD transfer to local control resulted in a
    disagreement between the City and the State over SLEF’s obligations for claims against the Board
    and SLMPD officers. This dispute was recently resolved by the Supreme Court of Missouri in
    Holmes, which was decided after the circuit court entered summary judgment in this case. 
    624 S.W.3d 144
    . In Holmes, the Court held that eligibility for SLEF coverage is determined by the
    statutes in effect at the time an eligible claim is made, such as the date of the filing of a lawsuit
    against police officers, rather than those in effect at the time of the conduct that is the basis for the
    claim. 
    Id. at 155
    . The parties agree that, under Holmes, the circuit court erred in entering summary
    judgment in favor of the City.
    As in the present case, the dispute in Holmes centered on the obligations of the State and
    the City to pay a judgment arising from a vacated conviction and a related federal civil rights
    lawsuit against the Board, the City and SLMPD officers. 
    Id. at 147-48
    . In 2011, a federal court
    4
    This initiative resulted in the enactment of sections 84.344, 84.345.2 and an amendment to section 105.726.3. See
    Hawley, 
    531 S.W.3d at 605
    .
    5
    vacated Holmes’s 2003 conviction. See id. at 147. The following year, he filed a civil rights
    lawsuit against the Board, the City’s mayor and former SLMPD officers, which resulted in a $2.5
    million verdict in Holmes’s favor. Id. at 147-48. After SLEF denied Holmes payment, he filed a
    declaratory judgment action seeking to resolve whether the City or the State, through SLEF, was
    obligated to pay the judgment. Id. at 148. The circuit court ultimately entered summary judgment
    in favor of Holmes, declaring that the State, through SLEF, was obligated to pay the entire
    judgment. Id.
    At the time of the conduct underlying Holmes’s conviction in 2003, the SLEF statute
    provided for the payment of claims or judgments against law enforcement officers, and no other
    section limited that provision. Id. at 149; see section 105.711.2, RSMo. (2000). But by 2012,
    when Holmes filed his lawsuit against the Board and the former SLMPD officers, the SLEF
    statutes prohibited the payment of claims or judgments against law enforcement officers. See
    Holmes, 624 S.W.3d at 150; sections 105.726.3, 105.711. The question before the Holmes Court
    was “when the former officers’ rights to payment from SLEF first attached,” which determined
    “which version of the statutes governs Mr. Holmes’s demand for payment of his judgment against
    the former officers.” Holmes, 624 S.W.3d at 149. Holmes argued the claim arose when the
    conduct at issue occurred in 2003. Id. at 151. The State, however, asserted the claim arose at the
    earliest when Holmes filed his lawsuit in 2012. Id.
    The Holmes Court agreed with the State, reasoning that “the first act to which section
    105.711.2(2) attributes legal significance is the making of a claim, not the conduct underlying the
    claim,” and therefore “the right to SLEF payment does not arise until a claim is made.” Id. at 152,
    153. The Court explained:
    Because the event triggering an officer or employee’s right to indemnity is
    the making of a claim or the rendering of a final judgment, the former officers’
    6
    entitlement to SLEF indemnity must be resolved through application of the statutes
    in effect when Mr. Holmes first asserted his claim by suing the officers in December
    2012.
    Id. at 155. Therefore, the Holmes Court concluded, “the state of Missouri, through SLEF, [was]
    not obligated under section 105.711.2(2) to pay Mr. Holmes’s judgment against the former
    officers.” Id.
    Under the construction of sections 105.726 and 105.711 announced in Holmes, the
    triggering date for indemnity from SLEF is the date an eligible claim is made—here, August 12,
    2014, the day Allen filed his federal civil rights lawsuit against the Board and the SLMPD officers.
    See id. at 156. The version of section 105.726.3 in effect at that time prohibited SLEF from paying
    claims or judgments against the Board or SLMPD officers. See section 105.726.3. Therefore, the
    State, through SLEF, is not obligated to make payments as outlined in the Allen Settlement, and
    the circuit court erred in entering summary judgment in favor of the City.
    Conclusion
    For the foregoing reasons, we vacate the judgment and remand to the circuit court for
    further proceedings consistent with this opinion. All pending motions are denied as moot.
    ___________________________________
    MICHAEL E. GARDNER, Presiding Judge
    James M. Dowd, J., concurs.
    Lisa P. Page, J., concurs.
    7