City of St. Louis v. Flynn

31 S.W. 17, 128 Mo. 413, 1895 Mo. LEXIS 39
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMay 21, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 31 S.W. 17 (City of St. Louis v. Flynn) 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. Flynn, 31 S.W. 17, 128 Mo. 413, 1895 Mo. LEXIS 39 (Mo. 1895).

Opinion

Gantt, P. J. —

This proceeding was commenced in the second district police court of the city of St. Louis to collect a fine from the defendants for the violation of a city ordinance of said city, number 14000, secs. 418, 429, 434, 441, 442, 443 and 444, approved April 12, 1887. The complaint is, substantially, as follows:

“ City of St. Louis, Mo., Sept. 22,1891.
“Thomas Flynn and Christian Winter, composing the firm of Flynn & Winter, to the city of St. Louis, Dr., to five hundred dollars for the violation of an. ordinance of said city, entitled ‘An ordinance in revision of the ordinances of the city of St. Louis, and to establish new ordinance provisions, for the government of said city,’ being ordinance number 14,000, chapter 14, article 10, sections 418, 429, 434, 441, 442, 443, 444. Approved April 12, 1887, in this, to wit:
“ In the city of St. Louis and state of Missouri on, the twenty-second day of September, 1891-, and on divers other days and times prior thereto, the said Thomas Flynn and Christian Winter, composing the firm of Flynn & Winter, the defendants, being the owners, managers, agents, lessees, tenants and occupants of premises number 5341 Hall street, city block number 3406, in the city of St. Louis, and state of Missouri, on the twenty-second day of September, A. [417]*417D. 1891, and at divers times prior to that time, failed and refused to comply with an order of the health commissioner i/n and for the city of St. Louis, which said order was issued against, and legally served upon, said defendants on the tenth day of September, A. D. 1891, commanding the said defendants, within ten days from the service thereof, to remove, abate or discontinue a certain nuisance, then and there existing in and upon said premises, to wit: the filthy rendering establishment and filthy drain on public and private property, by discontinuing the said filthy drain on public and private property, and by discontinuing the discharge of noxious vapors from the building, and by thoroughly cleaning said premises inside and outside, and said defendants did then and there fail and neglect within the time specified in said notice, and have up to this twenty-second day of September, 1891, failed and refused to show good cause to said board of health and said health .commissioner, why they, the said defendants, aforesaid, could not, or ought not, to comply with the said order; said filthy rendering establishment and said filthy drain so owned, managed and conducted by Thomas Flynn and Christian "Winter, defendants, as aforesaid, and situated on the property as aforesaid, having been declared officially and of record by said board of health to be a nuisance and detrimental to the public health. ”

Along with the complaint there were filed a “red notice” and a “white notice,” the former dated August 13, 1891, being in the nature of a citation to defendants to show cause before the board of health on the twenty-seventh of August, 1891, and the latter was a notice that the board of health on August 27,1891, had declared their establishment a nuisance. The return on the “red notice” was as follows:

“Executed this notice, in the city of St. Louis, this seventeenth day of August, 1891, at the hour of [418]*4185:55 o’clock p. m., by delivering a true copy of the same to Thomas Flynn, a member of the firm of Flynn and Winter. “Emil Thomas, Marshal,
“By 0. H. Adams, Deputy.”

And that on the “white notice” in these words:

“Executed this notice in the city of St. Louis this tenth day of September, 1891, at the hour of 4 o’clock p. m., by delivering a true copy of the same at the usual place of abode of the within named defendants Thomas Flynn and Christian Winter with a member of their family over the age of fifteen years.
“Emile Thomas, Marshal,
“By Gr. Hoffman, Deputy Marshal.”

The defendants duly appeared in the police court, a trial was had, and on November 21, 1891, defendants were fined $100, and on the same day appealed to the court of criminal correction of the city of St. Louis, and filed their bond. On reaching the court of criminal correction, the defendants demurred on eleven different grounds, their demurrer was overruled, and on March 30, 1892, the cause was tried before the court on its merits.

The assignments of error are nineteen in number, covering a discussion of the law of nuisances in extenso, and raising a number of constitutional propositions.

I. It is not contended by the city counselor that the defendants’ business is a nuisance per se, and it will, therefore, not be profitable to review the cases defining what is, and what is not, such a nuisance.

While the complaint charges in general words a violation of seven distinct sections of chapter 14, article 10, of the revised ordinances, it is obvious from its reading that the only sections whose violation is charged with any regard to the rules of pleading are sections 418 and 419 of said chapter and article and the offense therein denounced.

[419]*419Section 6 of article 12 of the scheme and charter of St. Louis provides that in order to effect the abatement of nuisances, or the removal of accumulated filth, the health commissioner shall have power, whenever, in his opinion, such nuisances or filth exist, and after officially so declared of record by the board of health, to notify the owner or agents thereof, or his or their agents, to abate or remove the same, and if the owner fails so to do, within the time indicated in such notice, which time is made discretionary with the health commissioner, such owner shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor, and, on conviction, shall be liable to a fine not exceeding five hundred dollars. Under this provision in the charter, and sections 418 and 419, sufra, this proceeding must be sustained if at all. The reference to the other sections may be, and will be, treated as surplusage.

The complaint, then, is that the firm of Elynn & Winter were guilty of violating the city ordinance in that they failed to obey an order, of date September 10, 1891, from the health commissioner to abate a nuisance, and have failed to show cause, up to September 22, 1891, to the board of health, why they should not obey said order. The reference to the character of the nuisance in the complaint is merely incidental to the charge of disobeying the order of those functionaries which constitutes the gravamen of the complaint.

The charter and the ordinance both require that notice shall be served upon the owner or agent having charge of the property on which it is claimed a nuisance is maintained, “in the same manner as writs of summons are required to be served in civil cases.” The service of the first or “red notice” was upon Thomas Elynn alone. Winter was not' served and hence he could not have had his day before the board of health [420]*420to show cause against condemning the rendering establishment of his firm.

It is argued by counsel for the city that the service of notice on Flynn alone was sufficient, citing as analogous that the notice to one member of a firm of the dishonor of a note or bill of exchange is sufficient. But the language of the charter requires that the notice shall be served as writs of summons are.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
31 S.W. 17, 128 Mo. 413, 1895 Mo. LEXIS 39, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-st-louis-v-flynn-mo-1895.