City of St. Louis v. Christian Bros. College

165 S.W. 1057, 257 Mo. 541, 1914 Mo. LEXIS 306
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 13, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 165 S.W. 1057 (City of St. Louis v. Christian Bros. College) 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 St. Louis v. Christian Bros. College, 165 S.W. 1057, 257 Mo. 541, 1914 Mo. LEXIS 306 (Mo. 1914).

Opinion

BROWN, J.

Action to widen street. From a judgment for defendants plaintiff appeals.

In the city of St. Louis there has existed for many years a thoroughfare extending from Easton avenue to Penrose street, known as “Kingshighway Boulevard,” which is not a boulevard in fact, but a street. Said street probably traverses other parts of said city, but that fact is not pertinent to the issues before us.

[548]*548On March 27, 1907, the legislative department of St. Lonis enacted, in due form, an ordinance having for. its purpose the making of a real boulevard out of said Kingshighway Boulevard. This ordinance will hereafter be referred to in our opinion as the boulevard ordinance. Its purposes are quite fully indicated in the first and last sections thereof, which read as follows:

‘ ‘ Section One. The present Kingshighway boulevard from Easton avenue to Penrose street in the city of St. Louis, Missouri, is hereby changed into a boulevard to be known as ‘Kingshighway.’
“Section Seven. The city counselor is hereby authorized and instructed to cause said ‘Kingshighway’ to be established, changed and widened as a boulevard according to law.”

Other sections of the ordinance prescribe that the proposed boulevard shall be 150 feet wide, with sidewalks, driveways and parkways planted to shrubbery and trees, together with certain restrictions as to the character of travel upon said proposed boulevard. To secure a width of 150 feet it would have been necessary to condemn additional land fronting on said street.

Said ordinance also contains the following section regarding the construction of buildings near the proposed boulevard and the removal of other buildings:

“No structure of any kind whatever shall hereafter be erected on private property fronting upon saicb ‘Kingshighway’ between Easton avenue and Natural Bridge Road, nearer than fifteen feet from the respective east and west lines of said boulevard, and all existing structures of any kind whatsoever upon the private property fronting upon or adjacent to said ‘Kingshighway’ between the east and west lines of said highway and lines fifteen feet from and parallel to the said east and west lines, respectively, shall be removed therefrom.”

[549]*549No buildings were in fact removed as- contemplated by tbe last quoted section of tbe ordinance, nor were any structures erected within fifteen feet of the proposed boulevard.

This boulevard ordinance continued in force nearly two years, during which time nothing was done by the city to convert the aforesaid street into a boulevard. No action was instituted by the city to condemn the additional lands called for, nor did the owners of said lands convey the same to the city or spend any money towards the construction of the proposed boulevard.

On March 17, 1909, a new ordinance was enacted by the city, which, in addition to repealing the boulevard ordinance, directed the widening and improvement of Kingshighway as a street between Easton avenue and Penrose street.

This last mentioned ordinance will hereafter be designated as the repealing ordinance, and it was under its provisions that the plaintiff city instituted the present action to condemn lands of defendants for the purpose of widening Kingshighway as a street.

It is conceded that the repealing ordinance was enacted in exact conformity with the charter of St. Louis, except that the persons owning two-thirds of the property fronting on. the proposed boulevard did not consent in writing to such repeal.

The appellant contends that no such consent was necessary to repeal the boulevard ordinance, because nothing had been done towards carrying said ordinance into effect.

Two of the defendants filed answers asserting that such consent of the property-owners was necessary to a repeal of the boulevard ordinance; that the enactment of the boulevard ordinance in 1907 increased the value of their property, and that its repeal, without the consent of the property owners, violated sundry provisions of the State and Federal constitutions.

[550]*550The learned trial court sustained the contention of defendants, and gave judgment in their favor, dismissing the plaintiff’s petition, from which it prosecutes this appeal.

I. The charter of St. Louis provides for the establishment of boulevards-, the cost of which shall be taxed against the lands fronting thereon.

The provisions of said charter pertaining to the abandonment or discontinuance of boulevards read as follows:

o finance “The Municipal Assembly may at any time repeal any ordinance establishing or opening a boulevard, or changing an existing street into a boulevarc ^ aild thereupon such boulevard shall be and become a street in all respects' like other streets of the city, and the property abutting thereon shall be relieved from the restrictions imposed by such ordinance; provided, however, that such ah ordinance shall not be repealed without the consent in writing of the owners of at least two-thirds in frontage of all the property fronting on such boulevard, nor unless such repeal shall be recommended by the board of public improvements; and, provided further, that the procedure provided in this article for the establishing and opening of boulevards'shall be pursued for the ascertainment and payment of damages and benefits resulting from such repeal; except that no compensation shall be allowed or paid to any person consenting to the repeal of such an ordinance.” [Sec. .1, art. 6, Charter of St. Louis.]

It is apparent that in the letter of the charter provisions above quoted there is strong support for the contention of defendants, but plaintiff asserts that to construe this charter according to its letter would be to nullify its spirit. That, in order to give the charter a construction in harmony with the intent of its framers, we should hold that the assent in writing of prop[551]*551erty owners to the repeal of a boulevard ordinance is only necessary after a boulevard has actually been established by the construction of driveways, sidewalks, parkways, etc.

Section 1 of the boulevard ordinance enacted in 1907 declares in express terms that Kingshighway “is -hereby changed into a boulevard;” but it would contravene the- law of physics to say that a mere legislative enactment speaks into actual existence a boulevard, the eontsruction which we judicially know always requires the expenditure of money and labor. The Municipal Assembly, however, recognized this axiomatic truth, for, in the 7th section of the same ordinance, it directed the city counselor “to cause said Kingshighway to be established, changed and widened as a boulevard according to law.” This last quoted section may be considered a confession on the part of the eity’s lawmakers of a lack of that omnipotent power to consummate such physical changes in a street as defendants assert were effected eo instanti by the enactment of the boulevard ordinance.

Defendants, in seeking to support their contention by section 1 of the boulevard ordinance (before quoted) seem to overlook the vital difference between words and acts. The physical acts of taking possession of a street and adjacent lands, constructing sidewalks, driveways, parkways, etc., are what create a boulevard.

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Bluebook (online)
165 S.W. 1057, 257 Mo. 541, 1914 Mo. LEXIS 306, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-st-louis-v-christian-bros-college-mo-1914.