City of St. Louis v. Meyer

139 S.W. 438, 235 Mo. 699, 1911 Mo. LEXIS 129
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 1, 1911
StatusPublished

This text of 139 S.W. 438 (City of St. Louis v. Meyer) 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. Meyer, 139 S.W. 438, 235 Mo. 699, 1911 Mo. LEXIS 129 (Mo. 1911).

Opinion

-LAMM, J.

— Defendant, found guilty and fined $25 for violating a milk ordinance, appeals.

The case is one of a group to test the validity of one or another of the milk ordinances of St. Louis in one or another phase. It is a companion case to that of St. Louis v. Ameln, handed down at our present sitting, and reported at page 669 of this Eeport. While differing in points of detail from that case, it has propositions in common. Where propositions are common reference will be made to the Ameln case, which should be read with this, since common propositions will receive no reconsideration.

The complaint is under ordinance 24297, as was that in Ameln’s case. While its form is criticized in motions below as vague, uncertain and as stating no offense in particulars discussed in Ameln’s case, yet defendant’s brief does not renew the criticisms here, and the complaint need not be reproduced. Defendant is charged with having in his possession, with intent to sell and expose for sale, skim milk mixed with water so as to lower and depreciate its strength and quality, contrary to the ordinance in such case made and provided, as was Ameln.

The city put on the stand an inspector, who testified he took a sample of skim milk from defendant’s wagon, at a time and place charged in the complaint, and turned it‘ over to an assistant of the city chemist. The chemist took the stand and testified he analyzed the sample and found it contained “added water.”

Such was the oral testimony'.

The city offered in evidence ordinance 24297. [ Vide Ameln’s ease for its terms.]

Defendant offered in evidence ordinance 24582, reading: “No skimmed milk shall be sold, kept offered or exposed for sale, stored, exchanged, transported, [704]*704conveyed, carried or delivered, or with such intent as aforesaid be in the care, custody, control or possession of anyone, unless it show on analysis not less than: One. Nine and one-quarter per cent of milk solids. Two. Eight and one-half per cent of milk solids, not fat.”

(Nota bene: No date of approval is shown by the record. Hence, unless controlled by the number, we may not know whether it is elder or younger than ordinance 24297.)

He next put in sections 499 and 505 of the Revised Code of St. Louis, 1907. [See Ameln’s case for their terms.]

He next offered section 555 of said Code, reading: “Sale of adulterated milk forbidden.- — Whoever shall sell or offer for sale any milk adulterated with water or other substance, or any milk produced from diseased cows, shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor.”

He next put in ordinance 24295, approved March 26, 1909 (Nota bene: the date of approval of the ordinance is the same as that of ordinance 24297, supra), reading: “Sec. 1. Any person, firm or corporation who shall sell, expose for sale, exchange, deliver, dispose of or transport, convey or carry, or with any such intent as aforesaid' have in his or her possession, any milk or cream having therein, or containing any added substance which is poisonous or injurious to health, shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor, and on conviction thereof shall be fined not less than twenty-five dollars nor more than one hundred dollars for each and every offense.”

Elaborate motions to quash, for a new trial and in arrest, were filed and overruled, due exceptions being saved. It would but pad the opinion to swollen proportions to set them forth. For our purposes, it is enough to say that the single and separate propositions announced by learned counsel for defendant in their brief, and upon which they rely for reversal, were presented and decided below; and that exceptions [705]*705to the decisions, nisi, well preserved in the record, are properly here for review.

Those propositions are:

(a) . That defendant should have been prosecuted under ordinance 24582 and not under ordinance 24297 (and herein that the former.is a later ordinance than the latter).

(b) . That if not prosecuted under ordinance 24582, he should have been prosecuted under section 555 of the municipal code.

(c) . That if not prosecuted under section 555, he should have been prosecuted under section 499 of the municipal code (and herein that ordinance 24297, ex vi termini, prohibits a ease like the instant one from being brought under its provisions).

(d) . That ordinance 24297 is invalid because it fails to repeal in express terms ordinance 24295 (and herein that they conflict and are repugnant to each other).

(e) . That their repugnancy and conflict make them both null and void (and herein that a study of them and a comparison with the acts of the Legislature and the acts of Congress will shew an “abominable condition” of milk regulations — conflicts, inconsistencies and contradictions so serious and numerous as to justify a judicial condemnation of them all).

Of these seriatim.

I. Of proposition “a.”

It goes .as of course that when a citizen is charged with the breach of a municipal regulation the complaint should put its finger on the ordinance breached. Certainty in that regard is a sine qua non. A false call is worse than none at all. It deceives and misleads defendant. The law, moving with sober dignity, tolerates no tricks of that sort. Therefore, if there be a false call for the ordinance in the complaint, absent amendment, the prosecution is halted and must fall. So, too, if the [706]*706ordinance alleged to be breached has been superseded or repealed by a later ordinance there can be no breach, for the ordinance is nil; hence there is nothing to •break. Out of nothing, nothing comes.

Based on such premises, defendant argues he is not guilty under ordinance 24297, the one charged, but is guilty, if at all, under 24582. Further, that the latter is later than the former; hence, as the newest, becomes the controlling legislative utterance.

Of the last branch of the contention, it would be sufficient to say that the date of the approval of 24582 is not shown by the record and we may not know whether it took effect after 24297 or before. If the ordinances of St. Louis are numbered and if a higher serial number always means a later ordinance, then we have some evidence on that score for we have the number. But a court that may not take judicial cognizance of any ordinance whatever unless it be introduced in evidence can hardly take judicial cognizance of the significance of an ordinance number, as bearing on the date of the passage and approval of a municipal law, absent evidence (as here) tending to show that the higher the number the younger the law. In this view of it, one of the theories of defendant is afield.

However, there is no need to let proposition “a” ride off, in part, on such technical view. Let it stand on its merits. We shall assume, as counsel on both sides do, that ordinance 24582 is a later law. The pivotal question then is: Does it cover the offense charged — that is, do both ordinances occupy the same territory and deal with the same phase of the subject? We do not think so. Ordinance 24582 provides a standard for saleable skim milk, with reference to milk solids — fatty and non-fatty — but is silent on adulteration by water or otherwise. Therefore, it is not in conflict with the elder law, ordinance 24297, which, inter alia,

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Bluebook (online)
139 S.W. 438, 235 Mo. 699, 1911 Mo. LEXIS 129, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-st-louis-v-meyer-mo-1911.