Board of Education v. City of St. Louis

184 S.W. 975, 267 Mo. 356, 1916 Mo. LEXIS 42
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 30, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 184 S.W. 975 (Board of Education 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
Board of Education v. City of St. Louis, 184 S.W. 975, 267 Mo. 356, 1916 Mo. LEXIS 42 (Mo. 1916).

Opinion

BROWN, C.

This suit was instituted April 11, 1912, against the defendant city and Stephen IT. Gilmore, its supervisor of plumbing, to obtain an injunction restraining them from interfering with work in course of construction under contract for a new school building in said city to be known as the Horace Mann School. The contract provided for a system of vents from the water-closets known as “a continuous venting system, doing away with all local vents to the fixtures, ’ ’ while a regulation of the Board of Public Improvements of the city of St. Louis provided for a different [359]*359system, requiring “sewer, soil, waste, and ventilation pipes to be arranged and constructed to admit of a free circulation of air from the fresh air inlet to each fixture trap and through the roof.” The petition charged that the defendants threatened to apply the ordinances and rules of the city, which are fully set out, to this work, and cause the arrest of any and all of plaintiff’s agents, servants, or employees who may go upon the premises under plaintiff’s direction to prosecute said plumbing work, on the charge of violating said ordinances, rules and regulations. There is no question raised as to reasonableness of the ordinances of the city or regulations of its Board of Public Improvements, nor as to whether either system of venting is superior to the other, but the case is presented and discussed upon the broad proposition ’as to whether or not the Board of Education, in this particular, is subject to the ordinances and regulations of the city in this respect. A general demurrer to the petition was overruled, and defendants declining to further plead, final judgment was rendered granting the injunction and the case is here upon the defendants ’ appeal.

Section 26 of article 3 of the charter then in force provided, among other things, that the mayor and assembly shall have power, within the city, by ordinance not inconsistent with the Constitution or any law of this State or of this charter, to do the following things: In clause two, to construct and keep in repair all bridges, streets, sewers and drains, and to regulate the use thereof; in clause twelve, to provide for the safe construction, inspection and repairs of all private and public buildings within the city; and in clause fourteen, to pass all ordinances not inconsistent with the provisions of the charter or the laws of the State as may be expedient in regard to the peace, good government, health and welfare of the city.

[360]*360It also provides (Sec. 3, art. 4) for a board of public improvements to consist of an elective president and five commissioners with certain prescribed powers, and adds the following provision: Section 42: “The municipal assembly shall provide by ordinance such additional duties of and requirements from the board of public improvements and its several members, as it may deem necessary, and for the appointment by them of such assistants and employees as the demands of the several departments may require!”

It was under these powers and ordinances passed in pursuance of them that the defendant superintendent of plumbing was appointed and the rule relating to the ventilation of water-closets, which the city is now attempting to apply to the Horace Mann School, was made.

When the framers of the present Constitution conferred upon the freeholders of the city the power to make their present charter they provided, with the most careful foresight. (Sec. 23, art. 9) that “such charter and amendments shall always be in harmony with and subject to'the Constitution and laws of Missouri, except only that provision may be made for the graduation of the rate of taxation for city purposes in the portions of the city which are added thereto by the proposed enlargement of its boundaries.”

In the same Constitution, and in pursuance of the uniform policy of the State from the beginning, it was provided (Sec. 1, art. 11) that “a general diffusion of knowledge and intelligence being essential to the preservation of the rights and liberties of the people, the General Assembly” (not the freeholders of the city of St. Louis) “shall establish and maintain free public schools for the gratuitous instruction of all persons in this State between the ages of six and twenty years. ” It was in obedience to this constitutional mandate that the Act of 1807 (as amended by the Act of [361]*361May 28, 1900') under winch, the public Schools of the city of St. Louis have ever- since been operated was enacted. It provided that ‘ ‘ every city in this State now having or which may hereafter have five hundred thousand inhabitants or over, together with the territory now within its limits, or which may in the future be included by any change thereof, shall be and constitute a single school district, shall be a body corporate, and the supervision and government ‘ of public schools and public school property therein shall be vested in a board of twelve members, to be called and known as the ‘Board of Education of . . . ’ ” ,[R. S. 1909, sec. 11030.]

The powers and duties of this hoard were highly specialized in the act, and included the general and supervising control, governing and management of the public schools, and public school property in such city; the power to appoint such officers, agents and employees as it may deem necessary and proper; to make, amend and repeal rules and by-laws for the government, regulation and management of the public schools and school property in such city and exercise generally all powers in the administration of the public school •system therein; and have all the powers of other school districts under the laws of the State except as herein provided. Particularizing further, it provides for the appointment by the Board of Education of a commissioner of school buildings who ‘ ‘ shall be charged with the care of the public school buildings of such city, and with the responsibility for the ventilation, warming, sanitary condition and proper repair thereof,” and “shall prepare, or cause to be prepared, all specifications and drawings required, and shall superintend all the construction and repair of all of such buildings.” [R. S. 1909, sec. 11036.] In the performance of these duties he was required to appoint such assistants as should be authorized by the Board of Educa[362]*362tion, one of whom"“shall he a trained and educated engineer, qualified to design and construct the heating, lighting, ventilating and sanitary machinery and apparatus connected with the public school buildings.” [R. S. 1909, sec. 11037.]

It will be noted that this act not only gives the Board of Education plenary power with reference to the construction, maintenance and care of the public school buildings of the city, but descends into matters connected with the health and comfort of the pupils including the designing as well as the construction and maintenance of the very appliances which are the subject of this litigation, ventilating and sanitary machinery and apparatus to be installed and maintained for the removal from the building of foul and noxious air necessarily generated in the use of the water-closets.

We have been favored by counsel on both sides with exhaustive and highly interesting briefs and arguments relating to the presumptions which should prevail in determining whether laws of the character of the charter of St. Louis and ordinances passed in pursuance of its terms are applicable to the sovereign, and whether they are repealed by general laws which do not in terms mention them.' We cannot appreciate the application of either of these questions to this case.

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Bluebook (online)
184 S.W. 975, 267 Mo. 356, 1916 Mo. LEXIS 42, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/board-of-education-v-city-of-st-louis-mo-1916.