Casper Ex Rel. Residents of Warson View Subdivision v. Hetlage

359 S.W.2d 781, 1962 Mo. LEXIS 648
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 16, 1962
Docket49001
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 359 S.W.2d 781 (Casper Ex Rel. Residents of Warson View Subdivision v. Hetlage) 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
Casper Ex Rel. Residents of Warson View Subdivision v. Hetlage, 359 S.W.2d 781, 1962 Mo. LEXIS 648 (Mo. 1962).

Opinion

DALTON, Judge.

This action involves the validity of an amendment to a Zoning Ordinance of St. Louis County. Plaintiffs seek a declaratory judgment that St. Louis County Ordinance No. 1536 is null and void and they further ask for an injunction to prevent the real estate described in the Ordinance from being used for other than the residential purposes for which it was originally zoned. The trial court declared the Ordinance void, but denied injunctive relief against the issuance of building permits on the ground that the issue was moot.

The action was instituted September 1, 1959, in the Circuit Court of St. Louis County by Ken Casper and Harold Meir, as class representatives for and on behalf of the residents of Warson View Subdivision, consisting of approximately seventy families in the City of Olivette, Missouri, as plaintiffs, against Richard Hetlage, Maurice Abramson, John Molloy, Thomas Dunne, John Dowling, George E. Bohrer, and Russell Grantham, constituting the St. Louis County Council, St. Louis County, Missouri; Herbert G. Poertner, Director of Public Works, St. Louis County, Missouri, and Industrial Properties, Inc., a corporation, defendants. The City of Olivette, a municipal corporation, was also joined as a defendant, although this defendant sought to support plaintiffs’ position in the trial of the cause and has filed the only brief in this court supporting respondents’ position on appeal.

Ordinance No. 1536 purported to re-zone some forty acres of real estate in St. Louis County lying outside of any of the various incorporated municipalities of the county. It re-zoned the particular area from “C” District (restricted to 20,000 square feet, single family dwellings) to “J” District (for light industrial use). The trial court held Ordinance No. 1536 invalid on the ground that Section 64.140 RSMo 1949, V.A.M.S. had not been complied with. Appellants’ position on this appeal is that under the Constitution of Missouri, 1945, Art. VI, Sec. 18, V.A.M.S., and under the various provisions of the St. Louis County Charter adopted pursuant to the said constitutional provision, Ordinance No. 1536 was validly adopted by the St. Louis County Council; and that compliance with the requirements of Section 64.140 RSMo 1959, V.A.M.S. was unnecessary, and its specific provisions inapplicable.

Plaintiffs’ petition for a declaratory judgment, as filed in the Circuit Court of St. Louis County, presented other issues in addition to the one mentioned, including an allegation that the “purported ordinance number 1536 (1959) constitutes illegal spot-zoning * * * and constitutes a subversion of the character of the neighborhood and will materially and substantially reduce property values and there is no relation to the promotion of the public welfare.” These issues were not ruled by the trial court in the judgment entered, but no objection was raised by the plaintiffs in the trial court to the trial court’s failure to deal with such issues; nor are any such issues briefed or presented by respondents on this appeal. Accordingly, we shall assume that these issues have been totally abandoned.

In the only brief filed by a respondent in this court it is admitted that the only issue before this court is the correctness of the trial court’s ruling that Ordinance 1536 is invalid because it “failed to comply with the requirements of Section 64.140 R.S.Mo.” In such situation the parties might well have stipulated in a few pages the facts necessary *784 for a decision by this court on the mentioned issue. Instead, the appellants have presented a 328-page transcript, most of which consists of the testimony of witnesses on the issue of whether or not Ordinance No. 1536 was reasonable or unreasonable and whether the ordinance, in fact, constituted spot-zoning. Neither appellants, nor the appearing respondent have in any manner reviewed on appeal this particular part of the evidence in the transcript. If such evidence had been excluded from the transcript this court could have avoided the necessity of carefully reviewing evidence which is wholly immaterial to the issue presented.

Appellants invoke the jurisdiction of this court on the theory that the construction of the Constitution of Missouri 1945 is directly involved because the trial court held Ordinance No. 1536 void on the sole ground that it was not adopted in full compliance with the provisions of Sec. 64.140, supra. Appellants’ contention that Ordinance No. 1536 is valid is based upon the proposition that a particular provision of the Zoning Ordinances of St. Louis County, to wit, Sec. 1003.340 of the St. Louis County Revised Ordinances (Ordinance 542), adopted pursuant to the “Home Rule Charter” of St. Louis County after the charter was adopted by the voters of St. Louis County pursuant to Art. VI, Sec. 18 of the Constitution of Missouri, supersedes the provisions of Sec. 64.140 insofar as the two are in conflict; and that compliance with the requirements of the State’s statutes, as to the unanimous vote of county judges, “is not mandatory upon St. Louis County as a ‘Home Rule’ Charter County under the provisions of the Constitution of Missouri.” Since the construction of a provision of the state constitution is required, this court has jurisdiction of this appeal.

In determining the issue presented, a portion of Sec. 18, Art. VI of the Constitution of Missouri 1945 must be set out.

“§ 18(a). County government by special charter — limitation. Any county having more than 85,000 inhabitants, according to the census of the United States, may frame and adopt and amend a charter for its own government as provided in this article, and upon such adoption shall be a body corporate and politic.

“§ 18(b). Provisions required in county charters. The charter shall provide for its amendment, for the form of the county government, the number, kinds, manner of selection, terms of office and salaries of the county officers, and for the exercise of all powers and duties of counties and county officers prescribed by the constitution and laws of the state.

“§ 18(c). Provisions authorized in county charters — participation by county in government of other local units. The charter may provide for the vesting and exercise of legislative power pertaining to public health, police and traffic, building construction, and planning and zoning, in the part of the county outside incorporated cities; and it may provide, or authorize its governing body to provide, the terms upon which the county shall perform any of the services and functions of any municipality, or political subdivision in the county, except school districts, when accepted by vote of a majority of the qualified electors voting thereon in the municipality or subdivision, which acceptance may be revoked by like vote.” (Italics ours.)

Reference may be had to the various other subdivisions of Sec. 18, supra, but we find it unnecessary to set them out herein at this time.

Of course, as stated in State on Inf. of Dalton ex rel. Shepley v. Gamble, 365 Mo. 215, 280 S.W.2d 656, 659, “St. Louis County, regardless of its charter, remains a legal subdivision of the state. Art. VI, §§ 1 and 18(a). As such, it is charged with the performance, of the state functions just as *785 other counties are.

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Bluebook (online)
359 S.W.2d 781, 1962 Mo. LEXIS 648, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/casper-ex-rel-residents-of-warson-view-subdivision-v-hetlage-mo-1962.