Gregory v. Kansas City

149 S.W. 466, 244 Mo. 523, 1912 Mo. LEXIS 333
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 2, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 149 S.W. 466 (Gregory v. Kansas City) 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
Gregory v. Kansas City, 149 S.W. 466, 244 Mo. 523, 1912 Mo. LEXIS 333 (Mo. 1912).

Opinion

BROWN, J.

The general object of this action is to determine the constitutionality and legal effect of article 15 of • the charter of Kansas City, Missouri, adopted by the voters of that city in the year 1908, [535]*535which article purports to place the appointment, tenure of office and removal of certain appointees of that city under a system of competitive civil service. Plaintiffs had judgment below, from which all of the defendants appeal.

On March 1,1912, the appeals in this case and the case of Folk et al. v. Kansas City et al., reported at page 553 of this report, were advanced and set for hearing at our April term, and were heard orally and submitted for our determination on April 13, 1912. The issues in the case of Folk et al. v. Kansas City et al., involve a construction of the same municipal laws as the case at bar, and were tried below and upon appeal as one action.

These appeals were advanced and heard upon joint suggestions of appellants and respondents, in which said joint suggestions it was urged that said appeals involved matters of great public interest to the people of Kansas City.

On May 11, 1912, on motion of the attorneys for respondents and the attorney for part of the appellants, the submissions in both cases were set aside and the appeals dismissed.

On May 21, 1912, L. M. Luth, and certain other appellants who did not consent to the dismissal of their appeals in this case, moved this court to set aside its order of dismissal and reinstate the appeal and submission.

While resisting the reinstatement of the appeal and submission in this case, the respondents demand that if the appeal in this case be reinstated, then the appeal in the case of Folk et al. v. Kansas City et ah, shall likewise be reinstated.

In their suggestions in opposition to the reinstatement of the appeal in this ease, respondents urge that appellants Luth et al. have not perfected their appeal by filing certified copy of judgment and order granting appeal, and that they have failed to pay the docket [536]*536fee in this court, and have failed to file an abstract of the record and an appeal bond, as required by law.

Upon a consideration of these suggestions, we find that the copy of the order granting the appeals in this case embraces the separate appeal granted to defendants Luth et al. as well as the appeal granted to other defendants. The record does not show by whom the docket fee was paid, nor do we deem it a matter of importance by whom such fee was paid.

When several defendants appeal from the same judgment (as in this case) neither the law nor the rules of this court require each appellant to pay a separate docket fee, file a separate bill of exceptions or a separate abstract of the record.

When, as in this case, the bill of exceptions and abstract filed are acceptable to all appellants and are not objected to by respondents before the appeal is submitted, there is no reason why one appellant may not rely upon such bill of exceptions and abstract to sustain his appeal after other appellants have abandoned the same.

To require a separate bill of exceptions or separate abstract of the record or separate docket fee from every defendant who appeals separately or jointly with other losing defendants, would cast upon this court the duty of examining duplicate records, and also place upon the appellants needless expense; therefore, we will not require such vain and useless things to be done. These views find support in the case of Badger Lumber Company v. Stepp, 157 Mo. 366, l. c. 377.

It is true that appellants Luth et al. have filed no appeal bond, but such bond is not a necessary prerequisite to the right of appeal. [Sec. 2040, 2041 and 2042, R. S. 1909; Mercantile Co. v. Thurmond, 186 Mo. 410, l. c. 428.]

Respondents also seek to dismiss this action. There seems to be no statute specifically defining when [537]*537the plaintiff who has been successful in a trial court may dismiss his action.

By section 1980, Revised Statutes 1909, the plaintiff may dismiss his suit in the trial court at any time before it is finally submitted; but not afterwards.

Evidently the same reasons which prompted the enactment of said section 1980 which denies to a plaintiff the right to dismiss his action after he has forced the defendant to go through the whole expense of a trial, apply with greater force to a successful plaintiff who, after an appeal to this court, has forced the defendants to print briefs and send attorneys here to prosecute their appeal.

All parties interested in this action having joined in inducing us to put aside other important work to advance and hear these appeals, and it appearing that the issues tendered affect the validity of important laws of one of the chief cities of our State, and both cases having been carefully briefed and argued by eminent counsel; and it further appearing that if this action and said appeals be dismissed, as now urged by respondents, the same issues may soon be brought before us in another form, we deem it unwise to allow the appeals and submissions in this case and in the Folk case to be dismissed. We will therefore reinstate said appeals and submissions, and proceed to examine and determine the same on their merits.

The Revised Ordinances of Kansas City of the year 1898 placed the employees of the waterworks department in said city under the supervision of the “Board of Public Works.” That board prior to the year 1908 appointed as employees in said waterworks department: P. 0. Polk, chief clerk; John P. Anderson, superintendent for meter division; A. Gr. Slaughter, off-and-on clerk; H. E. Behan, permit clerk, superintendent’s department; Robert P. Shreve, clerk to auditor, who for convenience will hereafter be designated in this opinion, as “the old employees.”

[538]*538By the adoption of the new charter of Kansas City in 1908, the management of the municipal waterworks owned by said city passed under control of a board designated as the “Board of Fire and Water Commissioners,” but it is contended by the respondents that the old employees (P. 0. Folk et al.) were retained in their respective positions indefinitely by and under the provisions of section 1176 of the Revised Ordinances of Kansas City of 1898, and were not by the new charter placed in the competitive class of the classified civil service of the city. Said section 1176, Revised Ordinances of 1898, is as follows:

“That thereafter no person shall be appointed, employed or discharged in any branch of the waterworks service, for or on account of political considerations. That the board of public works and the assessor and collector of water rates each in respect to the employees in their respective branches of the water works service, shall have the right to suspend and discharge employees under their control and direction, for cause only; and this right shall be exercised only in the following manner, that is to say: An employee who has heretofore or shall hereafter serve for such length of time as to determine his efficiency and fitness for any given place, which period is hereby limited to six months, may be suspended by said board and said assessor and collector respectively, for cause; but the board or collector making such suspension shall immediately furnish to the employee suspended a statement in writing of the cause or causes for such suspension, and he shall in all cases be entitled to a hearing before being discharged.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
149 S.W. 466, 244 Mo. 523, 1912 Mo. LEXIS 333, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gregory-v-kansas-city-mo-1912.