Kroger Grocery & Baking Co. v. City of St. Louis

106 S.W.2d 435, 341 Mo. 62, 111 A.L.R. 589, 1937 Mo. LEXIS 575
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 21, 1937
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 106 S.W.2d 435 (Kroger Grocery & Baking Co. 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
Kroger Grocery & Baking Co. v. City of St. Louis, 106 S.W.2d 435, 341 Mo. 62, 111 A.L.R. 589, 1937 Mo. LEXIS 575 (Mo. 1937).

Opinions

This case presents the validity and constitutionality, State and Federal, of a chain store license fee ordinance of the city of St. Louis.

Upon the overruling of the city's demurrers to the original and intervening petitions of the merchants, the city refused to plead further and appealed from the judgment enjoining the enforcement of said ordinance.

Ordinance No. 39619 of the city of St. Louis, the ordinance in question, briefly stated, makes it unlawful for any person, etc., to operate branch or chain stores within the city of St. Louis without a license, defines "branch or chain" stores and "branch or chain store" operators, and exacts from such operators graduated multiple stores annual license fees, exempting therefrom persons, etc., whose principal business is the sale of petroleum products from bulk plants or service stations. The provisions of said ordinance, in so far as deemed essential to a determination of this appeal, title omitted, follow:

"Section One. From and after the first day of July, nineteen hundred thirty-two, it shall be unlawful for any person, firm, corporation, copartnership or association, either foreign or domestic, to establish, open, maintain, or operate any branch or chain store within this City without having obtained a license so to do from the License Collector of the City of St. Louis. *Page 69

"Section Two. The term `branch or chain store,' as used in this ordinance, shall be construed to mean and include any store or stores, or any mercantile establishment or establishments in excess of one which are owned, operated, maintained or controlled by the same person, firm, or corporation, copartnership or association, either domestic or foreign, in which goods, wares or merchandise of any kind are sold at retail.

"Section Three. Every person, firm, corporation, copartnership, or association establishing, opening, maintaining or operating within this City, under the same general management, supervision, ownership or control, two or more stores or mercantile establishments where any goods, wares, or merchandise are sold or offered for sale at retail, shall be deemed a branch or chain store operator, and for such stores established, opened, maintained or operated in excess of one shall pay the license fees hereinafter prescribed, for the privilege of establishing, opening, maintaining or operating each such store or mercantile establishment in excess of one.

"The license fees herein prescribed shall, except as herein otherwise provided, be paid annually, and shall be, in addition to the license fees and ad valorem taxes prescribed in the merchants' license ordinance of this City now in effect, or as the same may hereafter be amended. The license fees to be paid by operators of branch or chain stores shall be as follows:

"One. Upon two stores or more, but not to exceed five stores, the annual license fee shall be twenty-five dollars for each such store in excess of one.

"Two. Upon six stores or more, but not to exceed ten stores, the annual license fee shall be fifty dollars for each such store in excess of five.

"Three. Upon eleven stores or more, but not to exceed fifteen stores, the annual license fee shall be one hundred dollars for each such store in excess of ten.

"Four. Upon sixteen stores or more, but not to exceed twenty stores, the annual license fee shall be one hundred fifty dollars for each such store in excess of fifteen.

"Five. Upon twenty-one stores or more, but not to exceed twenty-five stores, the annual license fee shall be two hundred dollars for each such store in excess of twenty.

"Six. Upon each store in excess of twenty-five, the annual license fee shall be two hundred fifty dollars for each such store in excess of twenty-five.

"The license fees herein imposed shall not apply to persons, firms, corporations, copartnerships, or associations whose principal business is that of the sale of petroleum products from bulk plants or service stations; provided, however, that said business shall be exempt from the provisions hereof only so long as the same are taxed for *Page 70 municipal purposes under the existing gasoline sales tax ordinance or amendments thereto."

Other sections of the ordinance cover the application for license (Sec. 4), its examination by the license collector, etc., the issuance of the license and its display (Sec. 5), the expiration of the license on June 30 following date of issuance, etc. (Sec. 6), issuance of licenses subsequent to January 1st for one-half the full rate (Sec. 7), non-assignability of the license (Sec. 8), the forestalling of possible efforts to evade the license fees through schemes of business organization, corporate or otherwise (Sec. 9), penalties (Sec. 10), saving (Sec. 11) and emergency (Sec. 12) clauses.

The petitioner and intervenors are the following corporations: The Kroger Grocery Baking Company; Great Atlantic and Pacific Tea Company of America; United Cigar Stores Company of America; John R. Thompson Company; White Castle System of Eating Houses Corp.; F.W. Woolworth Company; S.S. Kresge Company; Wolff-Wilson Drug Company; Scott Stores, Inc.; Mavrakos Candy Company; City Ice Fuel Company; Moss Lowenhaupt Cigar Company; Walgreen Drug Stores; Thrifty Drug Stores, Inc. Each operates more than one store in the city of St. Louis, and the corporate names sufficiently indicate the nature of the several businesses transacted.

Numerous attacks are made against the validity, constitutional and otherwise, of Ordinance No. 39619 in the petition (embracing more than sixty pages of the printed abstract) of the Kroger Grocery Baking Company, a corporation, instituting the action as a class suit on behalf of said plaintiff and others similarly situated, and the petitions of the intervenors, some of said intervenors presenting additional issues. We deem it nonessential to state, much more nonessential to discuss, the many contentions presented, and shall limit this review to such issue or issues as may rule the case.

[1] Ordinance No. 39619 makes no attempt to regulate the business of the merchants. It seeks only the exaction of a license for the privilege of conducting business through chain stores. The license issues upon the payment of the fee. Upon its face it is a revenue, not a regulatory, measure; and an exercise of the taxing power, a high governmental function, in invitum in nature. [Kansas City v. J.I. Case T.M. Co., 337 Mo. 913, 919 (1), 87 S.W.2d 195, 198(2); City of Ozark v. Hammond,329 Mo. 1118, 1122, 49 S.W.2d 129, 131(1); Automobile Gasoline Co. v. St. Louis, 326 Mo. 435, 441 (I), 32 S.W.2d 281, 282(I); Viquesney v. Kansas City, 305 Mo. 488, 497 (II), 266 S.W. 700, 702 (4); State ex rel. v. Ashbrook, 154 Mo. 375, 385, 55 S.W. 627, 629.] For instance. As we read the abstract of the intervening petition of the White Castle corporation, it pays an annual merchant's license fee, based *Page 71 upon a seating capacity of less than twenty in each of its sixteen restaurants, under the merchants' license ordinance of the city of St. Louis, of $10 each, or $160, and under said Ordinance No.

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Bluebook (online)
106 S.W.2d 435, 341 Mo. 62, 111 A.L.R. 589, 1937 Mo. LEXIS 575, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kroger-grocery-baking-co-v-city-of-st-louis-mo-1937.