Hagerman v. City of St. Louis

283 S.W.2d 623, 365 Mo. 403, 53 A.L.R. 2d 1423, 1955 Mo. LEXIS 590
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedSeptember 12, 1955
Docket44557
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 283 S.W.2d 623 (Hagerman v. City of St. Louis) 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
Hagerman v. City of St. Louis, 283 S.W.2d 623, 365 Mo. 403, 53 A.L.R. 2d 1423, 1955 Mo. LEXIS 590 (Mo. 1955).

Opinion

BOHLING, C.

[624] Lewis B. Hagerman and Herman Sparber, licensed auctioneers of the city of St. Louis, instituted this action for a *406 declaratory judgment and injunctive relief to test the constitutionality of St. Louis ordinance provisions regulating the “retail auction sales of jewelry, watches, clocks or silverware.” The trial court held the provisions unconstitutional and void. The plaintiffs pleaded that the questioned ordinance provisions contravene § 40(30), Art. Ill, Mo. Const. 1945, prohibiting special laws (the section applies to city ordinances — McKaig v. Kansas City, 363 Mo. 1033, 256 S. W. 2d 815, 816[2]), and § 1, 14th Amend., U. S. Const., (sic) : “which, among other things, provides that no state shall make or enforce any law which shall deny to any persons within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws”. The city contends said provisions are a valid exercise of its police power. The case is of first impression.

The provisions here involved are §§ 19 — 24 of ordinance 46591, approved April 10, 1953, amending Chapter 7, §§ 1 — 20, Revised Code, City of St. Louis, 1948, p. 237, relating to Auctions and Auctioneers. Certain of said §§ 1 — 20, which plaintiffs comply with and do not question, are material to the instant issues. Judicial sales or sales by executors or administrators are specifically exempted from certain provisions. Sections 6 — 11, 14, and 18 are immaterial here. We quote or state the substance of the material provisions.

Section 1 defines certain terms: (a) Auction crier. One who assists a public auctioneer, “(b) Fill in stock. Merchandise added to the stock on hand with the intention of selling it at public auction, (c) Public auctioneer. Any person who shall arrange for the disposal of any goods, wares, merchandise, fruits, stocks, bonds and other securities, livestock or other personal property, or any real estate # * in any building *. *, or in any other place in the city at public offering’ * *, either in person or by duly employed and licensed auction criers * *. (d) Stock on hand. Any merchandise that a merchant usually and ordinarily carries throughout the year” and not acquired for sale at public auction.

Section 2 requires a license as a public auctioneer to auction “any property, whether the same shall be his own property or the property of others. ’ ’

Section 3. Applicants for license as public auctioneer must state in writing, among other things, the length of time of residence in Missouri and in the city as a licensed auctioneer or crier, or retail or wholesale merchant; the auctions conducted in the city within two years; a general description of the merchandise to be auctioned, its owner and place of the auction.

Section 4 authorizes, upon proper application, the issuance of a license if the applicant has been a resident of the state and continuously engaged in business in the city for one year next prior to the application as a licensed public auctioneer, or licensed auction crier, or as a' retail or wholesale merchant; gives other information required by the license collector, pays the license fee, and gives an approved bond.

*407 Section 5 requires the applicant to tender a $3,000 bond before any license be issued to a public auctioneer, with a surety company authorized to do business in Missouri as surety; said bond to be payable to the city and conditioned upon the principal paying all losses and damages occasioned by any material misrepresentation of fact or belief or any suppression of fact concerning any property sold at auction or any violation of said Chapter 7.

Section 12. The license collector may investigate any part or all of the property before or after issuing the auctioneer’s license.

. “Section 13. False statements by auction crier. It shall be unlawful for any person acting as auction crier to make any statements which are false, in any particular, or which have a tendency to mislead any person present, or to make any misrepresentation as to the quality, quantity, character, [625] present condition, value, cost, general selling price, or whether new or secondhand of any property offered for disposal by auction sale.” Auction criers may not sell any “fill in” article without first stating such fact in a clear audible voice to all persons present.

Section 15 makes it unlawful to auction any “fill in” article unless every advertisement of the auction clearly and unequivocally states that fill in merchandise has been added to the “stock on hand.”

Section 16 requires the owner of auctioned property to give every purchaser at a price of $2.50 or more “an invoice, containing a full description of the article, its selling price and a statement giving each and every warranty under -which the article was sold. ’ ’

Section 17 provides for the revocation of any license for cause.

Section 19 prohibited “any retail auction sale of jewelry, wmtches, clocks or silverware at any time during the month of December. ’ ’

Section 20 was the penalty section.

On November 13, 1951, § 19, supra, prohibiting the sale of jewelry etc. during the month of December, was held to contravene § 40 (30), Art. Ill, Mo. Const., and the 14th Amend., IJ. S. Const, in Morgans Credit Jewelry Company,'Inc. v. City of St. Louis, e.t al., in the Circuit-Court of the City of St. Louis, which judgment became final.

Thereafter, on April 10, 1953, ordinance 46591, relating to “retail auction .sales of jewelry, watches, clocks and silverware,” was passed. (For convenience, unless otherwise indicated the word “jewelry” refers to jevrelry, watches, clocks or silverwrere.) It amended said Chapter 7 by repealing §§19 and 20, supra, and adding §§ 19 — 25 to said Chapter. Section 25 re-enacted the penalty provisions. Sections 19- — 24, here in controversy, are to the following effect.

Section 19 makes it unlawful to conduct “any retail auction sale of jewelry, watches, clocks or silverware, at any time during the months of June and December in any year. ”

. Section 20 makes it unlawful to conduct “any retail auction sale of jevrelry * *, unless the person or firm -whose stock is being offered for *408 sale at auction shall have been in the retail jewelry *• * business at the location andi in the premises at which said, auction sale is to be cried for at least one year next before the commencement of the said auction sale, and shall not have conducted an auction sale at any time within said one year period at said location or on said premises. ”

Section 21 makes it unlawful to conduct a “retail auction sale of jewelry * * over a period of more than 15 days,” and “between 'the hours of 6 p.m. and 8 a.m. the following day.”

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Bluebook (online)
283 S.W.2d 623, 365 Mo. 403, 53 A.L.R. 2d 1423, 1955 Mo. LEXIS 590, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hagerman-v-city-of-st-louis-mo-1955.