City of St. Louis v. Pope

126 S.W.2d 1201, 344 Mo. 479, 1939 Mo. LEXIS 427
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 4, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 126 S.W.2d 1201 (City of St. Louis v. Pope) 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. Pope, 126 S.W.2d 1201, 344 Mo. 479, 1939 Mo. LEXIS 427 (Mo. 1939).

Opinion

LUCAS, J.

This is a condemnation proceeding by the City of St. Louis under its Charter' to condemn property for the “Memorial Plaza.” The question fof decision on this appeal may be briefly stated as follows:

Is the City authorized and empowered by its Charter, in this particular proceeding, to establish a taxing district or benefit district for the ‘purpose of collecting special benefits from the properties within the taxing district, pursuant to Section 4 of Article XXI of its Charter, or is it a proceeding that comes under the provisions of Section 12 of said Article XXI requiring the City to pay all the damages ?

The facts as disclosed by the record are exceedingly voluminous, but for the purpose of this appeal we think the important facts may be stated as follows:

Some time prior to the year 1923, civic-minded citizens of St. Louis inaugurated a movement for municipal improvements and beautification of the City and advocated a city-wide bond issue as the means of financing these municipal improvements. It is conceded that St. Louis at that time needed numerous improvements due to the fact that it had become one of the exceedingly large cities of the country and the civic improvement and beautification of the City had been sadly neglected; for instance, the old Court House had become inadequate; the City was in need of a Municipal Auditorium as it had no place to entertain large gatherings; there were numerous other outstanding needs.

The people formed an organization known as the ‘ ‘ General Council on Civic Needs” which council consisted of one hundred and eighty-four representative and outstanding organizations of the City of St. Louis, and these organizations represented practically the whole citizenry of the City. This organization meant to improve and beautify the City. The people became so interested that the City enacted Ordinance No. 32,019 which ordinance called for a special city election to be held February 9, 1923, at which election there was submitted to the qualified voters of the City, twenty-one propositions for the people to vote upon and thereby determine whether the City should issue bonds of the City in the various amounts, and for the specific purposes stated in said ordinance. The propositions were:

*483 1. Establishing, opening' and widening streets, $8,650,000.

2. A public plaza opposite the union station, $2,600,000.

3. Paving, re-paving and otherwise improving streets and highways, $5,800,000.

4. Purchase and installation of electric street lighting system, $8,000,000.

5. Acquisition of site and erection of court house, $4,000,000.

6. Construction and reconstruction of public sewers and acquisition of rights-of-way, $8,000,000.

7. Improvement of River des. Peres, etc., $11,000,000.

8. Acquisition of land for additional public parks, squares, playgrounds, recreation fields, swimming pools and equipment therefor, $2,500,000.

9. Construction of buildings in, and improvements of, parks, squares, etc., $1,300,000.

10. Construction of aquarium in Forest Park, $400,000.

11. Plant to heat, light and furnish power to municipal buildings, etc., $1,000,000.

12. Acquisition of land and construction of, ■ and equipment of, hospitals, etc., $4,500,000.

13. For the acquisition of a site and the erection of a civic building to be known as the “Municipal Auditorium and Community Center Building,” to be used for the holding of public meetings, gatherings, and conventions, for the discussion of public questions, including matters submitted to the people under the referendum or the initiative, and to provide suitable meeting places for educational, moral, musical, industrial, labor and other purposes, $5,000,000.

14. For the acquisition of land adjacent to and in the neighborhood of the City Hall, in some or all of the following City Blocks, namely — (land as designated) for a public plaza to be knowni as “Memorial Plaza,”, and for the erection therein of a memorial building or monument in appreciation of the services rendered by the Qitizen Soldiers of Missouri in the late World War, and for the purpose of preserving the records and perpetuating the memory of their heroic achievements and sacrifices, $6,000,000.

15. Acquisition of sites and construction of fire engine houses, etc., $772,500.

16. City’s share of the cost of elimination of railroad grade crossings, $1,600,000.

17. Land and construction of west end approach of Municipal Bridge, $1,500,000.

18. Land and erection of east end approach of Municipal Bridge, $1,500,000.

.19. Armory, $1,000,000.

20. Public Markets, $1,250,000.

*484 21. Improvement and construction of new waterworks plant, '$12,000,000.

The total amount of bonds submitted at this election was approximately $88,000,000. All propositions carried except No. 19, which was a million dollars for an Armory. The propositions were submitted separately so that the voters could vote for or against any one or- more of the propositions. Section 5 of the ordinance provided that the proceeds of the sale, or sales, of any of the bonds aforesaid which may be issued upon the authority of an affirmative vote, as above stated, for any one of the specific purposes designated in this section . . . shall be used for such purposes only, namely:

“Proposition Thirteen: For the acquisition of a site and the erection thereon of a civic building to be known as the ‘Municipal Auditorium and Community Center Building, ’ to be used for the holding of public meetings, gatherings and conventions, for the discussion of public questions, including matters submitted to the people under the referendum or the initiative, and to provide suitable meeting places for educational, moral, musical, industrial, labor and other purposes, $5,000,000.”

“Proposition Fourteen: For the acquisition of land adjacent to and in the neighborhood of the City Hall, in some or all of the following City Blocks, namely City Blocks numbered 489, 490, 491, 492, 499, 500, 501, 505, 209 East and 209 West, for a public plaza to be known as ‘Memorial Plaza’ and for the erection therein of a memorial building or monument in appreciation of the services rendered by the Citizen Soldiers of Missouri in the late World War, and for the purpose of preserving the records and perpetuating the memory of their heroic achievements and sacrifices, $6,000,000.”

The City, by Ordinance No. 32,343, properly declared that twenty of the twenty-one propositions had received the necessary two-thirds vote and that $87,372,500 of municipal bonds had been authorized.

Prior to the election the “General Council of Civic Needs,” which organization cooperated with the then- city officials in advocating the benefits and need of the general bond issue, circulated generally and widely among the voters a pamphlet directed to the voters and which pamphlet contained several pages of information about the proposed improvements and how the money was to be supervised and expended.

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Bluebook (online)
126 S.W.2d 1201, 344 Mo. 479, 1939 Mo. LEXIS 427, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-st-louis-v-pope-mo-1939.