City of Brunswick v. Myers

209 S.W.2d 134, 357 Mo. 461, 1948 Mo. LEXIS 649
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 8, 1948
DocketNo. 40627.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 209 S.W.2d 134 (City of Brunswick v. Myers) 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
City of Brunswick v. Myers, 209 S.W.2d 134, 357 Mo. 461, 1948 Mo. LEXIS 649 (Mo. 1948).

Opinion

*463 CLARK, J.

[135] Appeal by plaintiffs from an order of the circuit court dismissing their petition wherein they sought to enjoin the holding of a special franchise election in the City of Brunswick, a city of the fourth class. Appellants are Kinkhorst, the Mayor, and O’Reilly, a taxpayer and citizen of Brunswick. Respondents are the m'embers of the Board of Aldermen, a newspaper publisher and the Kansas City Power and Light Company.

On August 4, 1947, the board of aldermen, over the Mayor’s veto, enacted an ordinance granting the Power and Light Company a twenty year franchise to carry on a general power and light business in Brunswick j'providing that the ordinance be submitted to the qualified voters of the city at a special election on September 2; providing that the Power and Light Company should pay the cost of election and that, if approved by a majority vote at the election, the franchise should become effective if the grantee should file its written acceptance within thirty days. Section ten of the ordinance provided ‘ ‘ In consideration of the grant herein made, ’ ’ the grantee shall pay to the city “as a license fee” five per cent of gross receipts. “The tax herein required to be paid shall be in lieu of any other occupation * license or merchandising, tax but shall not be in lieu of any ad valorem tax.”

Plaintiffs filed their petition in the circuit court seeking to enjoin the holding of the special election. On motion of respondents the court dismissed the petition. Plaintiffs appealed and filed an application in this court to advance the cause, but the case reached us too late to be heard before the date of the special election. The election was held on September 2, and a majority of the votes cast' were in favor of granting the franchise

An injunction against the holding of the election was the only relief specially prayed for in the petition, although general relief was asked. ■ *464 The election has been held and that raises a serious question whether there is now any issue for ns to decide. However, as injunction was sought - before the election and as the validity of the election has been fully briefed and argued, we will discuss all the questions raised.

Appellants contend that their petition stated ground for injunction -because-the [136] franchise ordinance is void for three reasons:

■ 1. Section ten of the ordinance fixes a maximum rate of license tax, -in lieu of all other license taxes, for twenty years and prevents future boards of aldermen from changing the rate or method of levying license taxes against the Power and Light Company.

. 2. ’ The ordinance provides that the cost of the election shall be paid by the Power and Light Company.

3. - The ordinance reserves the right to the Power and Light Company to acceq>t or reject the franchise after it. has been ratified by a voté of the people.

Appellants say that under certain circumstances injunction will lie to restrain the holding of a municipal election. Typical of the cases cited by appellants on this point are: Baum v. City of St. Louis, 343 Mo, 738, 123 S. W. (2d) 48; State ex rel. Asotsky v. Regan, 317 Mo. 1216, 298 S. W. 747, and Missouri Electric Power Co. v. Mountain Grove, 352 Mo. 262, 176 S. W. (2d) 612. In the Baum case we affirmed a decree of the circuit court enjoining the submission of certain ordinances to a vote of the people under the initiative provisions of a city charter. The ordinances were for public work which had not been approved by the board of public service as provided by the city charter. We held that the city council was without power to enact the ordinances, until approved by the board of public service, and that the same restriction applied to their enactment by the initiative. In the Asotsky case the city had enacted an ordinance levying a tax on the sale of cigarettes, with an emergency clause. We held the emergency clause valid and, therefore, the ordinance was not subject to referendum. In the Missouri Electric -Power Company ease that company sought to enjoin an election to vote bonds for the purchsase or construction of a municipal power plant. The petition alleged a fraudulent conspiracy which' would not afford the voters a fair and free opportunity to express their views on the proposition. We held that the allegations did not authorize the issuance of an injunction

The above cited cases and other cases show that the holding of this court is that injunction is proper to prevent an election only when such election is plainly unauthorized by law.

In the instant'case the election to adopt a twenty year power and light franchise was not only authorized by statute, [Section 7178, Revised Statutes Missouri 1939; Mo. R. S. A.] but an election is the only method by which such a franchise can be legally granted by a city of the fourth class.

*465 But appellants say that tbe submission of tbe taxing section of tbe ordinance to tbe voters was unauthorized by law; and the inclusion of that section invalidated the entire franchise. Appellants argue substantially as follows: the power of the city to impose a license or occupation tax on the Power and Light Company is not dependent upon ratification by the voters; the inclusion of the taxing section in the franchise ordinance is an illegal attempt to prevent the presént and future boards of aldermen from changing the nature or rate of the license or occupation tax during the period of the franchise

Respondents concede that the power to impose a reasonable license or occupation tax is vested in the city and does not depend for validity upon -a vote of the people. [43 C. J., 586.] They also concede that ratification of the franchise by the voters cannot preclude the present board or future boards of aldermen from amending or repealing the provision for a license tax contained in section ten of the franchise, or from enacting a different kind of license tax 'with different rates. [City of Kansas City v. Corrigan, 18 Mo. App. 206.] Respondents further concede that even had the franchise provided, which it did not, that the five per cent provision should remain unalterable, that provision would be invalid.

Appellants contend that an attorney for the Power and Light Company drew the franchise ordinance with the purpose of binding the city for twenty .years to the particular license tax mentioned in section tén of the ordinance. That such purpose is shown by the statement, that the license tax [137] is levied “In consideration of the grant herein made . . .” While appellants do not clearly so state, we gather that- they mean to argue that the license tax must fail as a consideration for the franchise, and, therefore, the franchise itself must fail.

We 'are not concerned with the identity of the author of the ordinance nor with his purpose except as it' is validly expressed in the ordinance. ■

A franchise becomes a contract upon the passage of a valid ordinance, its ratification by the voters and acceptance by the grantee. It may be granted or accepted on conditions which, if valid, become a part of the contract. [K. C. Power and Light Co. v. Carrollton, 346 Mo. 802, 142 S. W. (2d) 849.] In the case of City of St. Louis v. Laclede Power and Light Co., 347 Mo. 1066, 152-S. W.

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209 S.W.2d 134, 357 Mo. 461, 1948 Mo. LEXIS 649, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-brunswick-v-myers-mo-1948.