Armstrong v. Adair County

990 S.W.2d 64, 1999 Mo. App. LEXIS 305, 1999 WL 136939
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 16, 1999
DocketWD 55814
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 990 S.W.2d 64 (Armstrong v. Adair County) 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
Armstrong v. Adair County, 990 S.W.2d 64, 1999 Mo. App. LEXIS 305, 1999 WL 136939 (Mo. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

In this declaratory judgment action, 10 Adair County taxpayers 1 asked the circuit court to declare that proceeds from a county sales tax approved on April 1, 1997, could not be used to build a new county jail and to declare that county commissioners violated the open meetings law. The circuit court ruled in favor of the county, and the appellants appeal. They contend that the circuit court’s ruling, which will allow Adair County’s commissioners to use the sales tax to build a new jail, was erroneous because it allows the commissioners to violate § 67.582, RSMo 1994. They also assert that the circuit court erred in dismissing their claim concerning the open meetings law as untimely because they had no way of knowing of the violations until the county commission announced its decision to use the tax funds to erect a new jail.

We reverse the circuit court’s judgment in part and affirm it in part. We agree with appellants that using the new law enforcement sales tax to build a new detention center would violate § 67.582. The circuit court correctly rejected the appellants’ open meetings challenge as untimely-

Acting on authority granted by § 67.582.1, Adair County’s commissioners passed an order on January 21, 1997, which said:

... Be it Resolved that the County Commission of Adair County, Missouri, imposes a sales tax for law enforcement purposes at the rate of Hz of one percent (.005%) for providing law enforcement services within such County, % of one percent to be set aside in a separate fund for future expansion of all the Den-tention [sic] Center, to alleviate the present and future problem of having to board prisoners in other Counties; and provides for submission of the proposal to the qualified voters of the County for *66 their approval at the Municipal Election 2 called and to be held in this County on April 1,1997.

Section 67.582.5 mandates that “[e]xpendi-tures may be made from the fund for any law enforcement functions authorized in the ... order adopted by the [commissioners.]”

The circuit court found — and the county does not contest the finding — that the commissioners “intended on January 21, 1997, and intends now, that [they] will not use any of the funds from the tax to enlarge or renovate the current [jail]. Instead, the County plans ... to construct a new [jail] facility on a site separate and apart from ... the current Detention Center.” The issue is whether the commissioners’ using half of the law enforcement sales tax fund to build a new jail would violate § 67.582.5. The county acknowledges that the statute prohibits it from using the funds for any purpose hot set out in its commissioners’ order, but it argues alternatively that building a new jail either is subsumed within the term “expansion” or falls into the category of “law enforcement services.”

We reject out of hand Adair County’s proposition that provision for a new jail was subsumed within the order’s use of the term “law enforcement services.” Although building a new jail can be deemed, in the proper circumstances, to be subsumed within “law enforcement services,” it is not in this case. The commissioners specifically mentioned the detention center and its expansion. A general principle of statutory construction provides that “the express mention of one thing implies the exclusion of another[.]” Yellow Freight Systems, Inc. v. Mayor’s Commission on Human Rights of City of Springfield, 791 S.W.2d 382, 387 (Mo. banc 1990). The Supreme Court, in construing statutes, has noted that “ ‘where ... special methods are expressly prescribed for the exercise of power, other ... procedures are excluded.’ ” Id. (quoting Broum v. Morris, 365 Mo. 946, 290 S.W.2d 160, 166 (banc 1956)). Although this is a county commission order and not a statute, the same principle applies.

By referring specifically to future expansion of the detention center, the commissioners’ proposition could have caused a cautious reader to conclude that “law enforcement services” referred to something other than services related to the detention center. Their express mention of expanding the jail implied exclusion of building a new jail from the term “law enforcement services.” We, therefore, reject this argument.

This leaves the issue of whether erection of a new jail on a different site was subsumed within the term “future expansion.” Expansion ordinarily means enlargement Or growth. WEBSTER’S THIRD New INTERNATIONAL Dictionary of the English LaNguage Unabridged 798 (1971). Arguably, the commissioners could have intended— and, given their openness from the outset concerning their intention to build a new jail, apparently did intend — for “future expansion” to mean enlarging the jail by building a new one which is bigger than the present one. We reject this, however, as the proper interpretation of “future expansion” as used in this order.

We determine the intention of a governing body’s order or ordinance by presuming that the body intended the plain and ordinary meaning of the words it used in its order or ordinance. Mediq PRN Life Support Services, Inc. v. Abrams, 899 S.W.2d 101, 110 (Mo.App. 1994). The plain and ordinary meaning of “expansion” does not connote enlarging a jail by building a new one on a different site which is bigger.

This becomes obvious in imagining a conversation between a husband and wife *67 contemplating what to do about their displeasure with their house’s smallness. If the husband were to suggest that the couple expand their house, and the wife replied, “Yes, I agree; let’s buy a lot and build our dream house,” we would understand perfectly the husband’s responding, “No, you misunderstood; I said expand our house, not build a new one.” He would have intended for his wife to understand “expand” in its ordinary sense: to make the house they had bigger by extending some of its walls. We would not assume, as the wife apparently did, that the husband meant “expand” to mean making the house bigger by building a different one which was bigger than the one the couple already had. The wife was understanding the term in an extraordinary sense: Rather than expand the house they already had, to expand their living space by building a different, larger house.

Adair County’s commissioners called for expansion of “the” detention center. They did not use language, which in its ordinary sense, would suggest building a different detention center. Hence, presuming the commissioners to have intended what the plain and ordinary meaning of their order’s words suggested, the circuit court should have concluded that they intended to enlarge the existing jail — not build a new one.

Indeed, the Supreme Court has instructed, in a case involving construction of an ordinance authorizing a bond issue, that such acts “are to be strictly construed.” Meyers v.

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Bluebook (online)
990 S.W.2d 64, 1999 Mo. App. LEXIS 305, 1999 WL 136939, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/armstrong-v-adair-county-moctapp-1999.