City of Kansas City v. Hertz Corporation

499 S.W.2d 449, 1973 Mo. LEXIS 1042
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedSeptember 10, 1973
Docket57239
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 499 S.W.2d 449 (City of Kansas City v. Hertz Corporation) 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 Kansas City v. Hertz Corporation, 499 S.W.2d 449, 1973 Mo. LEXIS 1042 (Mo. 1973).

Opinion

BARDGETT, Presiding Judge.

Plaintiff-appellant, City of Kansas City, Missouri, a municipal corporation (hereafter City), appeals from the judgment of acquittal entered in favor of defendant-respondent Hertz Corporation (hereafter Hertz).

This case involves a construction of a traffic ordinance of the City of Kansas

City with respect to the owner’s liability for illegally parked cars. The question is whether the ordinance imposes liability on the owner-lessor of a car when the car is being permissively used by a lessee and is illegally parked and, if so, whether the ordinance is in violation of the due process clause requirements of Art. I, § 10, Const, of Missouri 1945, V.A.M.S., and the U.S. Const. Amend. 14. The resolution of the issues on this appeal requires a construction of the due process clause of the Missouri and United States Constitutions. This court has jurisdiction. Art. V, § 3, Const, of Mo. 1945, as amended.

The parties have stipulated on the facts.

Hertz is a corporation engaged in the business of renting automobiles to the public in Kansas City, Missouri, and rented a car to one Burton Shapiro of Minneapolis, Minnesota, who was the permissive user of the car at the time it was found illegally parked on September 24, 1970, in violation of Kansas City Rev.Ord. § 34.194 (m). The car was duly ticketed. The violation ticket was not paid and Mr. Shapiro did not appear in any court on this ticket. No employee of Hertz parked the car illegally.

The information filed in municipal court charged defendant Hertz with the violation of § 34.194(m), 1 supra. Hertz pled not guilty. The municipal court found Hertz guilty and imposed a fine of five dollars and costs. Hertz duly appealed to the circuit court where the case was tried to the court on stipulated facts. As stated supra, the circuit court sustained Hertz’s motion for judgment of acquittal and the City has appealed.

The pertinent parts of the city ordinances involved are as follows:

“Section 34.194(m). No driver of a vehicle shall stop, stand or park or cause such vehicle to be placed, left or stopped in any of the following places . . .
*451 “(m) In an officially designated bus zone “Section 34.1 . . .
“Owner . . . The operation or use of a motor vehicle in violation of the provisions of this chapter shall be prima facie evidence that said motor vehicle was at the time of such violation controlled, operated and used by the owner thereof.
“Section 34.344. Registered owner pri-ma facie responsible for violation.
“If any vehicle is found upon a street in violation of any provision of this chapter, the owner or person in whose name such vehicle is registered in the records of any city, county or state shall be held prima facie responsible for such violation, if the driver thereof is not present.”

From the outset Hertz has contended an ordinance imposing liability upon an owner who was not driving or present but who had rented or bailed the car to another constituted a violation of the due process clause of the Missouri and U. S. Constitutions.

The trial court found that neither Hertz nor its agent or employee was the “driver” of the automobile under §§ 34.1 and 34.-194(m) of the city ordinances, and that Ord. § 34.344 does not impose liability for a parking violation merely because of ownership of the car and the giving of permissive use of it to another. Having made the foregoing determination, the trial court found it unnecessary to pass upon the constitutional question.

The position of the City on this appeal is (1) that Ord. § 34.344, supra, does impose liability for parking violation fine upon a non-driver owner who permits another to use his car, and (2) that the ordinance does not violate the due process clause of either the Missouri or U. S. Constitutions.

The position of Hertz is (1) that the trial court was correct in holding that the ordinance does not purport to impose liability upon a non-driver owner who permits another to use his car, and (2) if the ordinance does impose such liability, then it violates the due process clause of the Missouri and U. S. Constitutions.

The first question therefore is whether or not the Ord. § 34.344 imposes vicarious liability for the violation of Ord. § 34.194, a no-parking ordinance, upon a non-driver owner who has given permission to another to drive his car when that car is found to be parked illegally.

Hertz is the owner of the automobile in question which was rented by Hertz to Shapiro and while so rented it was illegally parked in violation of Ord. § 34.194(m).

Ord. § 34.194 (m) specifies that which is prohibited, to-wit: a car being left, parked, or stopped in certain specified places. The word “driver” is used and obviously the driver who performs the prohibited act is liable for the penalty. If this were the only ordinance relating to the designation of those who are liable for the violation it would be clear that the intent of the ordinance was to fix the penalty only on the driver.

Ord. § 34.344, however, specifies that when a vehicle is found upon a street in violation of the chapter, the owner or person in whose name the car is registered shall be prima facie responsible for such violation, if the driver thereof is not present.

Ord. § 34.344, supra, directly imposes liability for the parking violation on the owner, providing the driver of the car is not present. It does not require that the owner be the driver. Of course, in order for a car to be in the parking place a driver had to be present at some time. The phrase “providing the driver thereof is not present” means that the driver was not present when the car was found to be illegally parked. In the instant case the driver was not present when the car was found illegally parked.

*452 The words “prima facie”, as used in this ordinance, do not mean that the owner is presumed to be the driver. The phrase, as used here, means that a rebuttable presumption exists that the car was not being operated by the driver without the consent of the owner and that the registration of the car is correct. Unless that presumption is rebutted, the ordinance imposes liability for the parking violation upon the owner.

In Kansas City v. Howe, 416 S.W.2d 683 (Mo.App.1967), the court construed the Kansas City ordinance which defines “owner.” The pertinent portion of that definitional ordinance is set forth supra as § 34.1. That section generally creates a rebuttable presumption that the owner was the operator in control of the vehicle at the time of the violation. The Court of Appeals noted that the question of the constitutionality of the presumption portion of this type of ordinance had been upheld by this court in City of St. Louis v. Cook, 221 S.W.2d 468 (Mo.1949). City of St. Louis v.

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Bluebook (online)
499 S.W.2d 449, 1973 Mo. LEXIS 1042, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-kansas-city-v-hertz-corporation-mo-1973.