Church v. Hadley

145 S.W. 8, 240 Mo. 680, 1912 Mo. LEXIS 163
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 1, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 145 S.W. 8 (Church v. Hadley) 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
Church v. Hadley, 145 S.W. 8, 240 Mo. 680, 1912 Mo. LEXIS 163 (Mo. 1912).

Opinions

GRAVES, J.

Plaintiff, a resident taxpaying citizen of this State, by his bill in equity, seeks to enjoin the “Board of Fund Commissioners” of the State, which said board is made upi of the Governor, Attorney-General, State Auditor and State Treasurer, (1) from in anywise disposing of all the unsold bonds directed by acts of the General Assembly to be sold for the purpose of erecting a new State capitol building and purchasing additional grounds therefor, and (2) especially enjoining said “Board of Fund Commissioners,” constituted aforesaid, from entering into a contract with Francis Brothers & Company, or any other person, persons, copartnership or corporation, by which contract the said Francis-Brothers & Company, or any other person, persons, copartnership or corporation shall be allowed or paid any commission for services rendered in selling and disposing of said bonds.

[687]*687The petition also has a prayer for general relief.

The petition sets ont and pleads the three several acts of the General Assembly of this State, by which he avers an attempt is made to authorize the issuance and sale of $3,500',000 State bonds, due in thirteen years, hearing; interest at 3y2 per cent, for the purposes aforesaid. The petition further avers that the legislative act received, at a special election called therefor, more than two-thirds of the votes cast at such election, and such result was duly ascertained and proclaimed. The legislative acts referred to and set out in the petition will have to be discussed in the opinion and further details may well be omitted at this point. The petition then thus proceeds:

“That the defendants hereto, as said Board of Fund Commissioners aforesaid, have caused said bonds, hereinbefore mentioned, to be printed, engraved, prepared and executed in the form and with the recitals required and provided for in said Act of the Forty-sixth General Assembly of Missouri, approved March 16, 1911, and hereinbefore set out and referred to, and have advertised by public notice in the press of the State and otherwise, said bonds for sale at not less than par.
“That by reason of the fact that they bear an annual rate of interest of only three and one-half per centum a year, said board has been able to dispose of only two hundred and eighty thousand dollars in amount of said bonds, and the remainder thereof, aggregating the sum of three million two hundred and eighteen thousand dollars ($3,218,000'), said board is ■unable to dispose of at par, and will be unable to so sell and dispose of the same at par except on the payment of a commission of between four and five per centum of the proceeds.of the sale or' sales of said bonds to an agent or broker for his services in [688]*688making the sale or sales thereof and in connection therewith.
“That said Board of Fund Commissioners have received from the firm of Francis Brothers & Company, brokers of the city of St. Lonis, Missouri, an offer to take at par the entire amount of said bonds so-unsold, aggregating $3,218,000 in amount, and to dispose of and to sell the same to a buyer or to buyers, provided said Board of Fund Commissioners will allow and pay to said Francis Brothers & Company a broker’s or an agent’s commission of 4.21 per centum of the proceeds of the sale of said bonds payable out of the same.
“That plaintiff concedes that said commission, if legal (which plaintiff denies), is a reasonable one and probably the lowest commission for which said bonds can be disposed of. .
“That the defendants hereto, as said Board of Fund Commissioners, are about to and will conclude and consummate with said Francis Brothers & Company a contract of the character above indicated,- that is, to take and dispose of said bonds at par, said Francis Brothers & Company to be paid the aforesaid commission for their services in selling said bonds, and in connection therewith, payable out of the proceeds of the sale thereof, unless said board and the members thereof shall be hindered and restrained from so doing by this Honorable Court.
“Tour petitioner states that the issuance and sale of said bonds in the manner contemplated by said Board of Fund Commissioners, as hereinbefore indicated, will be wrongful, invalid and illegal.
“Because the Board of Fund Commissioners of this State is without legal or competent authority under its Constitution and laws, to sell or to dispose of' its said bonds aggregating in amount the sum of. $3,218,000; the power and authority purported to'be conferred on said board so to do, being inadequate and [689]*689insufficient in law and not authorized by the' Constitution of this State or by laws passed pursuant thereto or in conformity therewith.”

The prayer was as above indicated. In the circuit court the defendants constituting the “Board of Fund Commissioners” demurred to this petition in this language:

“Now comes the defendants, Herbert S. Hadley, Governor of Missouri; John P. Gordon, State Auditor; Elliott W. Major, Attorney-General, and James Cow-gill, State Treasurer, constituting the Board of Fund Commissioners of the State of Missouri, and demur to the petition filed by plaintiff herein and assign as grounds of demurrer the following:
“First. Said petition fails to state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action.
“Second. There is no equity on the face of the bill filed by complainant herein.
“Third. Said petition and the matters and things therein, as stated and set forth, are not sufficient in law or in equity, to entitle the plaintifTto the relief prayed for in the petition, nor to authorize the issuance of a restraining order or injunction prayed for therein.
“Fourth. Because the petition, upon its face, disclosed that the said defendants are authorized, under the laws and Constitution of the State, to issue and sell the bonds mentioned in said petition, and have the right and authority to pay a reasonable commission under the conditions and circumstances stated in said petition.
“Wherefore, defendants, for the reasons herein stated and covered, pray that the petition be dismissed, and that they be permitted to go hence without day and for costs. ”

This demurrer the circuit court sustained and entered its judgment accordingly. From such judgment [690]*690the plaintiff has appealed and the canse reaches this Court for final determination.

I. By an act approved March 16, 1911, the General, Assembly of Missouri, so far as it could, authorized the issuance and sale of $3,500,000 in State bonds and'in the same act (Laws 1911, p. 251) said:

“The proceeds of said sale or sales shall constitute a fund to be designated as the capitol building .fund, and shall be applied exclusively to the building of a new State capitol at the present seat of.government of the State, including the furnishing and other equipment of said building and the purchase by the State of additional capitol premises adjoining those now owned by the State.”

Under the Constitution, article 4, section 44, this act had to be submitted to a vote of the people.

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Bluebook (online)
145 S.W. 8, 240 Mo. 680, 1912 Mo. LEXIS 163, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/church-v-hadley-mo-1912.