Horseshoe Bend Property Owners Ass'n v. Camden County Commission

748 S.W.2d 848, 1988 Mo. App. LEXIS 475, 1988 WL 20038
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 10, 1988
DocketNo. 15268
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 748 S.W.2d 848 (Horseshoe Bend Property Owners Ass'n v. Camden County Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Horseshoe Bend Property Owners Ass'n v. Camden County Commission, 748 S.W.2d 848, 1988 Mo. App. LEXIS 475, 1988 WL 20038 (Mo. Ct. App. 1988).

Opinion

CROW, Chief Judge.

On December 8, 1986, the County Commission of Camden County entered an order declaring the incorporation of Village of Four Seasons as a body politic and corporate pursuant to chapter 80, RSMo 1986. The order designated the metes and bounds of the village and appointed a five-member board of trustees.

On January 6, 1987, a “Petition to Review Incorporation of Village of Four Seasons” was filed in the Circuit Court of Camden County by Horseshoe Bend Property Owners Association and 54 individuals. The petition averred that the individual plaintiffs resided in or near the newly created village, and that the decision of the Commission was improper in sundry respects. The petition prayed that the Circuit Court “reverse” the Commission’s decision and “disincorporate” said village or, in the alternative, that the Circuit Court “remand the case” to the Commission for a rehearing with directions to take and hear evidence, make a proper record, and determine the issue upon the evidence received. Named as defendants were the Commission and its three Commissioners.

The defendants responded by filing a motion to dismiss the petition for failure to state a cause of action.

The Village of Four Seasons and its five trustees subsequently filed a motion for leave to intervene, which was granted. The intervenors then filed their separate motion to dismiss the petition, averring that the plaintiffs “lack standing and are not aggrieved parties under Chapter 536, RSMo 1986.”

On June 8, 1987, the Circuit Court granted the defendants’ motion to dismiss and granted the intervenors’ motion to dismiss. In a letter accompanying its ruling, the Circuit Court indicated that the plaintiffs were without standing to bring the action.

The plaintiffs appeal, briefing two assignments of error. The first alleges that inasmuch as the plaintiffs are residents in and near the newly incorporated village, they have personal and property rights which will be directly and substantially affected by said village. Consequently, say plaintiffs, they have standing to obtain judicial review of the Commission’s decision.

Plaintiffs’ petition asseverates it is brought per § 49.230, RSMo Supp.1985, which provides:

“Appeals from the decisions, findings and orders of county commissions shall be conducted under the provisions of chapter 536, RSMo.” Laws 1985, p. 361, S.B. 405.

Section 536.100, RSMo 1986, provides:

“Any person who has exhausted all administrative remedies provided by law and who is aggrieved by a final decision in a contested case, whether such decision is affirmative or negative in form, shall be entitled to judicial review thereof, as provided in sections 536.100 to 536.140....”

Proceedings for judicial review are instituted by filing a timely petition in the circuit court of the county of proper venue. § 536.110.1, RSMo 1986.

In 1920, the Supreme Court of Missouri was confronted by a similar case: In re City of Uniondale, 285 Mo. 143, 225 S.W. 985 (1920). There, a petition was filed in [850]*850the County Court1 of St. Louis County seeking an order incorporating certain territory in said county as a city of the fourth class. A number of alleged citizens and taxpayers residing in the designated territory filed a “remonstrance” protesting the incorporation. The County Court, after a hearing, entered an order incorporating the designated territory as a city of the fourth class. The remonstrators appealed to the Circuit Court of St. Louis County. The newly incorporated city moved the Circuit Court to dismiss the cause on the ground that no appeal lay from such an order. The motion was granted. On appeal, the Supreme Court stated that the issue presented was whether the so-called remon-strators had the right to appeal. 225 S.W. at 986. The Supreme Court explained that the statute pertinent to the incorporation of cities of the fourth class (§ 8529, R.S. 1909) did not provide that the taxable inhabitants of the subject territory who did not sign the petition could appear and contest it. 225 S.W. at 987. Emphasizing that the incorporation process was a special statutory proceeding, the Supreme Court said:

“The statute that created the right provides the remedy and prescribes the procedure. It is complete within itself, and it alone, therefore, determines who may be parties.... Taking it as the criterion, it must be held that the proceeding is in no sense adversary. The action of the [remonstrators] in filing a remonstrance in order to become parties, was entirely futile. Their relation to the proceeding might be considered that of amici curiae, but nothing more. It follows that they were not entitled to appeal.” Id.

The Supreme Court acknowledged an argument could be made that taxpayers opposed to incorporating the territory within which they reside should be accorded the right to be heard, as such incorporation would subject them to the burdens of municipal taxation. Id. However, said the Supreme Court, the giving or withholding of such right is a matter that rests wholly within the discretion of the legislature. Id.

The issue surfaced again in Kansas City v. Rooney, 363 Mo. 902, 254 S.W.2d 626 (banc 1953). There, certain landowners appealed to a circuit court from an order of a county court denying their petition for incorporation of certain territory as a village. A prohibition proceeding was commenced in the Supreme Court of Missouri — apparently by opponents of the incorporation— seeking to bar the circuit court from adjudicating the appeal. The Supreme Court denied relief, stating: “An appeal from the judgments and orders of County Courts is authorized by Section 478.070 [RSMo 1949]. See In re City of Uniondale....”2 254 S.W.2d at 627.

The opinion in Rooney went on to explain:

“... the 1945 Constitution has taken all judicial power from the County Court so that it is no longer a judicial court but has become an administrative body. Section 22 of Article V of the Constitution authorizes appeals from decisions of administrative bodies and provides the scope of review.” Id.

Article V, § 22, Constitution of Missouri (1945), referred to in Rooney, provided:

“All final decisions ... and orders of any administrative ... body ... which are judicial or quasi-judicial and affect private rights, shall be subject to direct review by the courts as provided by law; and such review shall include the deter[851]*851mination whether the same are authorized by law, and in cases in which a hearing is required by law, whether the same are supported by competent and substantial evidence upon the whole record.”3

Applying the above constitutional provision, the Supreme Court in Rooney concluded that the circuit court was authorized to decide whether the county court could have reasonably made its findings and reached its result, upon consideration of all of the evidence before it. 254 S.W.2d at 627-28.

So far as we can determine, the next case to reach the Supreme Court of Missouri involving judicial review of a decision of a county court on a petition to incorporate a municipality was Petition to Incorporate the City of Duquesne,

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748 S.W.2d 848, 1988 Mo. App. LEXIS 475, 1988 WL 20038, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/horseshoe-bend-property-owners-assn-v-camden-county-commission-moctapp-1988.