Baum v. City of St. Louis

123 S.W.2d 48, 343 Mo. 738, 1938 Mo. LEXIS 479
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 20, 1938
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 123 S.W.2d 48 (Baum v. City of St. Louis) 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
Baum v. City of St. Louis, 123 S.W.2d 48, 343 Mo. 738, 1938 Mo. LEXIS 479 (Mo. 1938).

Opinions

This suit was filed by respondent, plaintiff below, as a citizen and taxpayer of the city of St. Louis, against the city, the election commissioners of the city and the treasurer and comptroller of the city to enjoin the holding of an election threatened to be called for the purpose of voting on two ordinances proposed under the initiative provisions of the city charter. A number of *Page 741 taxpayers of said city filed a petition seeking to intervene in the suit as defendants. This petition was granted. The trial court entered a judgment in plaintiff's favor enjoining the defendants, election commissioners, from calling an election, and the treasurer and comptroller from paying expenses to be incurred in the holding of such an election. From this judgment the intervening defendants appealed.

The purpose of the two ordinances proposed may be best stated by quoting the titles thereof. The title to Ordinance (a) reads as follows:

"`An ordinance providing for the acquisition of a five cent fare municipal mass transportation system, estimating the cost of such system at twenty-five million dollars, authorizing the issuance of public utility revenue bonds in the amount of twenty-five million dollars to pay therefor, secured by mortgage on such system, together with an appropriation to pay for such system.'"

The title to Ordinance (b) read as follows:

"`An ordinance calling and providing for an election on May 22, 1936, to vote on the proposition to issue public utility revenue bonds in the amount of twenty-five million dollars to pay for the acquisition of a five cent fare municipal mass transportation system.'"

[1] The petition charged that the election commissioners were threatening to call an election pursuant to initiative petitions which had been filed with the city officials; that an expense of $8,000 had been incurred and a further expense of $65,000 was intended to be incurred in checking the signatures to the initiative petitions. It was also alleged that an election on the proposals would cost the taxpayers of said city in excess of $200,000. The petition then charged that the proposed ordinances were void because of Sections 1 and 2, Article 22, of the city charter. Section 1 reads as follows:

"Section 1. Recommendation by board of public service ordinances public work or improvement. — No ordinance for public work or improvements of any kind, or repairs thereof, shall be adopted, unless prepared and recommended by the board of public service with an estimate of the cost endorsed thereon."

[2] It was admitted that the Board of Public Service had not recommended either of the proposed ordinances. Appellants contend that the restrictions contained in the section above quoted do not apply when the people of the city desire to enact an ordinance under the initiative provisions of the charter, Section 1 of which reads as follows:

"Ordinances proposed and adopted by initiative. — The people shall have power, at their option, to propose ordinances including ordinances proposing amendments to this charter, and to adopt the *Page 742 same at the polls, with the same effect as if adopted by the board of aldermen and approved by the mayor, such power being known as the initiative. It shall be exercised as hereinafter provided, subject to the provisions of this charter."

It has been definitely decided by this court that the Board of Aldermen of the city of St. Louis does not have authority to adopt any ordinance which may come within the provisions of Section 1, Article 22, supra, unless the same has been recommended by the Board of Public Service. In the case of American Tobacco Co. v. Mo. Pac. Railroad Co., 247 Mo. 374, 157 S.W. 502, this court en banc held that the Board of Aldermen could not even adopt an ordinance for a public improvement, which improvement had been recommended by the Board of Public Service, where the plans in the ordinance of the Board of Aldermen were at variance with the ordinance and recommendations prepared by the Board of Public Service. It was there decided that the Board of Aldermen could not, under any circumstances, pass such ordinances unless recommended by that board. The question in this case then is, do the restrictions in Section 1, Article 22, apply when such ordinances are proposed under the initiative provisions of the charter? We think so. It will be noted that the restrictions are all-inclusive. No exceptions are made. The section reads:

"No ordinance . . . shall be adopted, unless prepared and recommended by the board. . . ."

The initiative provisions of Section 1, Article 5, are not all-inclusive. The section reads:

"The people shall have power, . . . to propose ordinances . . . and to adopt the same at the polls, with the same effect as if adopted by the board of aldermen and approved by the mayor, . . .subject to the provisions of this charter." (Italics ours.)

We find in the adjudicated cases good reasons why the citizens of a large city place such restrictions in their charter. For example, in the American Tobacco case, supra, this court made the following comments which will be found in 247 Mo. 374, l.c. 530, 157 S.W. 502, l.c. 553:

"In my opinion, no intelligent man, be he lawyer or layman, can read those provisions of the charter of the city of St. Louis, in connection with the general provisions thereof regarding public improvements, and come to any conclusion, except that it was the design of the framers thereof that every kind and character of the public work or improvement, or the reconstruction and repairs thereof, should be under the supervision and control of the board of public improvements, and that no work or improvements of that character or any contract for the doing of the same should be valid or binding without *Page 743 authorized by ordinance recommended by said board, after faithfully complying with all charter requirements prerequisite to its action in the premises. The clear purpose of the charter is and was to provide a wise, comprehensive, durable, and symmetrical system of public improvements, and create a board of public works, and place it in charge thereof, with power and authority to see that all public work desired by the City should conform to that system. The object of placing the system of improvement in the hands of the board was to secure to the public, and the owners of the property affected by the work, the benefit of the knowledge, skill, and unbiased judgment of a body of scientific men, unaffected by local influences, incident to all public improvements. [State v. Butler, 178 Mo. 278, 77 S.W. 560; Bambrick v. Campbell, 37 Mo. App. 460.]"

Again in State ex rel. Belte v. City of St. Louis, 161 Mo. 371, l.c. 379, 380, 61 S.W. 658, l.c. 661, this court said:

"The purpose of the freeholders in thus restricting the assembly is manifest and twofold. They sought to create a board whose experience and ability would especially fit it for the duty of contracting for a vast system of public improvements, and whose estimates should guide the assembly in entering upon them; and, secondly, to guard against extravagance by requiring that, before public work was ordered to be done, there should be expert estimates made thereof."

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Bluebook (online)
123 S.W.2d 48, 343 Mo. 738, 1938 Mo. LEXIS 479, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baum-v-city-of-st-louis-mo-1938.