Kalbfell v. City of St. Louis

211 S.W.2d 911, 357 Mo. 986, 1948 Mo. LEXIS 709
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMay 27, 1948
DocketNo. 40502.
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 211 S.W.2d 911 (Kalbfell 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
Kalbfell v. City of St. Louis, 211 S.W.2d 911, 357 Mo. 986, 1948 Mo. LEXIS 709 (Mo. 1948).

Opinions

Arthur F.D. Kalbfell and Marie K. Wimberley, partners operating a moving picture or cinema business under the name of Robin Theater in the City of St. Louis, instituted this action April 25, 1947, against the City of St. Louis, the Mayor, the Director of Public Safety, the Building Commissioner, the Chief of Police, and the Fire Marshal of said City, to enjoin defendants from closing said theater and also to enjoin defendants from demolishing the building under a notice of condemnation issued under the new Building Code of said City. The Robin Theater was closed by municipal officials for use as a motion picture theater on April 6, 1947, because the continued occupancy of the structure as a motion picture theater conflicted with Building Code provisions safeguarding the public against hazards of fire or panic; and another order, issued April 16, 1947, condemned the building, stating it was a Class VI structure under the Building Code and, unless it be made safe or removed within three days, city officials would remove it and place a lien against the property for the expense incurred. Plaintiffs' bill was dismissed. They appeal, claiming the property to be worth approximately $30,000 and that they are being deprived thereof without due process of law and denied the equal protection of the law in contravention of constitutional provisions.

Plaintiffs operated a cinema in the building since they acquired it in 1936. The Robin Theater structure had been in existence [913] for approximately thirty years, was rectangular in shape, seated 500 to 600 persons, and met the building requirements prior to the adoption of the present Building Code. Its framework and walls are of wooden construction, covered with sheet metal. A wall board known as "Celotex," a combustible material, is attached to the sheet metal on the interior and constitutes the surface of the inner wall. We understand the surface of the outer wall is imitation brick. Other features of the structure are not fire proof, but we need not detail them. There was testimony that the building was a Class VI structure under the Building Code but was being used for an occupancy calling for "Fire-protected Structures," a Class I or Class II structure; that it constituted a fire hazard when consideration was given to its occupancy as a cinema; and that it was the only one of like construction of the eighty-nine moving picture theaters in the City.

The existing Building Code of the City of St. Louis is Ordinance No. 43,114 and became effective April 5, 1945. It is lengthy, comprising 582 pages of printed matter; is divided into fourteen principal parts or divisions, with a total of 116 sections and many subsections and subdivisions of subsections. The ordinance specifies conditions, tests, regulations, and other requirements in great detail *Page 990 relating to buildings within said City. The stated purpose of the Code "is the promotion of the public health, welfare, safety and prosperity . . ." by the establishment of minimum standards for structures of any nature et cetera. Part I, Sec. 1-1-(2). The ordinance is "declared to be remedial and it shall be liberally construed . . ." Part I, Sec. 1-1-(5).

[1] Plaintiffs say the Robin Theater is not a "major theater" under Code definitions. We understand defendants do not dispute this; but they contend that while it does not fall within the definition "Theater, Major" in the Code,1 it requires a structure qualified to house a major theater, a fire-protected structure. This calls for a consideration of a number of specific Code provisions.

"Part XIII" of the Code covers "Detailed Regulations for Places of Assembly," being Secs. 80 to 91, inclusive. Section 81 thereof is applicable to "Cinemas, or Moving Picture Theaters"; and Sec. 81-1 reads:

"Every structure occupied for the purposes of a motion picture theater, or cinema, shall conform to the particular requirements of this section, which is supplemental to Sections 10 and 11, relating to occupancies, and to other applicable sections.

"Except for the expressed exemptions and the requirements of this section, every structure occupied for the purposes of a cinema shall conform to the applicable requirements of Section 80 for a major theater structure."

Section 80 relates to "Theaters, and Places of Public Assembly Equipped with Stages and Scenery" and Sec. 80-5, so far as material, reads:

". . . All parts of each structure housing a major theater . . . shall be of construction meeting the requirements of Section 22 for a Class I structure if the population thereof exceeds 700 persons, and for a Class II structure if the population is less." If a structure has fixed seats, its "nominal population shall be the full capacity of such occupancy provisions." Part V, Sec. 10-5, Building Code. The Robin Theater requires a "Class II" structure as it seats less than 700.

"Part VI," Secs. 21-27, inclusive, of the Code relates to "Requirements Based on Class of Construction." Section "21-1. Establishment of Classes," classifies all structures hereafter erected into six classes of construction, according to the materials used, "as follows:

"Class I, Fire-protected Structures. Class II, Fire-protected Structures. Class III, Mill Type Structures. Class IV, Ordinary *Page 991 Structures. Class V, Metal Structures. Class VI, Wood Frame Structures.

[914] "Structures of the various classes of construction shall meet the requirements of Section 22 to and including 27, respectively." Other provisions of Sec. 21 require the fire-resistive protection for structural elements of Classes I to IV, inclusive, to conform to Secs. 22-25, inclusive, an the fire-resistance ratings scheduled in Table 21A; and that structures classify within a specified "class" only "when all the requirements for that class are complied with." Table 21A, among other things, requires the "Walls" ("Bearing," "Non-Bearing," "Party" and "Fire Walls") of Class I and Class II structures to have a "Resistance in Hours" of "4".

Section 22 provides specifically detailed requirements for "Class I, Fire-protected Structures"; and Sec. 23 provides similar requirements for "Class II, Fire-protected Structures"; either of which sections require walls, structural framing members, floors and roofs to be of incombustible materials protected to provide fire resistance of not less than required in "Table 21A." The Robin Theater structure does not meet these requirements.

Although the Robin Theater does not fall within the definition in Code Sec. 4 of "Theater, Major," the structure housing the Robin Theater is subject to the provisions of the Code relating to a "major theater structure" by virtue of Code provisions relating to "Cinemas, or Moving Picture Theaters" (Secs. 81-1, 80-5), making major theater structure provisions applicable to "Cinemas, or Moving Picture Theaters."

[2] Plaintiffs argue that Sec. 10-2 of the Building Code, requiring structures housing specified occupancies to meet Code requirements after two years, is unconstitutional and, whether unconstitutional or not, that Sec. 1-3-(10) permits structures existing at the time of the enactment of the Code, such as and including the Robin Theater, to continue as theretofore unaffected by the Code provisions. We need not inquire into the constitutionality of Sec. 10-2 if it is not applicable.

"Part V" of the Code is entitled: "Requirements Based on Occupancy," being Secs. 10 to 20, inclusive.

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Bluebook (online)
211 S.W.2d 911, 357 Mo. 986, 1948 Mo. LEXIS 709, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kalbfell-v-city-of-st-louis-mo-1948.