Laclede Power & Light Co. v. City of St. Louis

182 S.W.2d 70, 353 Mo. 67, 1944 Mo. LEXIS 414
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 3, 1944
DocketNo. 38116.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 182 S.W.2d 70 (Laclede Power & Light 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
Laclede Power & Light Co. v. City of St. Louis, 182 S.W.2d 70, 353 Mo. 67, 1944 Mo. LEXIS 414 (Mo. 1944).

Opinion

*75 HYDE, J.

This is an action for a declaratory judgment to determine the validity of Ordinance No. 41572 of the City of St. Louis. Plaintiff seeks to have this ordinance declared invalid and to obtain a permanent injunction against its enforcement. The plaintiff prevailed in the circuit court and the city has appealed.

An opinion, reversing the trial court’s decree was adopted in Division 2 at the May Term 1943 and En Banc at the September Term 1943. Thereafter a rehearing was granted and the cause was re-arguecl at the present term. We adopt the statement of facts and issues from the Divisional opinion, by Barrett, C., as follows:

“The history and factual situation of the controversy is this:
“In 1857 the State of Missouri, through its General Assembly, granted the Laclede Gas Light Company a perpetual franchise to use the streets of the City of St. Louis (within the corporate limits as defined in 1839), for the purpose of conducting its business. Laws Mo. 1856-57, pp. 598-600; Laws Mo. 1868, p. 187. Under the terms of an instrument executed in 1926 the Laclede Power & Light Company, the plaintiff, is the successor to these franchise rights, as well as the franchise rights of the Phoenix Light, Heat & Power Company, and since that time has been supplying electric power to certain areas of the city.
“The Union Electric Company, (which counsel states is the only competitor of Laclede Power & Light Company), was organized in 1884 and obtained its franchise from the City of St. Louis and in so doing accepted and agreed to comply with Sections 2113 and 2123 of what is now the 1936 Code of the City of St. Louis. It may be added here that the plaintiff and its predecessor, Phoenix Light, Heat & Power Company, comply with those ordinances in so far as power-is furnished in the so-called “underground” section of the city. Those ordinances were enacted in 1884 and provided, in substance, that a power franchise would not be granted unless the company seeking the franchise accepted the ordinances and semi-annually paid the city five percent of its gross receipts. So, since that time the Union Electric Company and that part of the plaintiff’s business transacted as a successor to Phoenix Light, Heat and Power Company have paid and are now paying the City of St. Louis five percent of their gross receipts.
“But the plaintiff and its predecessor, Laclede Gas Light Company, have never accepted nor complied with the terms of these ordinances and have never paid five percent of their gross receipts from business in the chartered area, though the city has attempted to compel them to do so. Because the Laclede Gas Light Company’s perpetual charter was obtained from the state in 1857 and prior to the enactment- of *76 these ordinances and because it had never accepted them and was not compellable to do so because the five percent provided in them has been held to be contractual and a rental for a franchise and not a license tax the company and its predecessor has been held not liable for such sums under those ordinances. City of St. Louis v. Laclede Gas Light Co., 155 Mo. 1, 55 S. W. 1003; City of St. Louis v. Laclede Power & Light Co., 347 Mo. 1066, 152 S. W. (2d) 23.
“While the latter cause was pending and in May 1939 the city enacted the ordinance in question, No. 41572, and the pertinent and questioned sections are as follows:
“ ‘Section Two. — Every person now or hereafter engaged in the business of supplying electricity for compensation for any purpose in the City of St. Louis shall pay to the City of St. Louis as a license tax a sum equal to five percent of the gross receipts from such business.
‘ ‘ ‘ Section Five! — The tax in this ordinance provided shall not apply to any person, or successor thereto or assignee thereof, who has heretofore accepted ordinance twelve thousand seven hundred twenty-three and ordinance eighteen thousand six hundred eighty, or either of said ordinances, and has complied with the terms and provisions of Sections 2113 and 2123 of the Revised Code of St. Louis, 1936, and who shall make the payments therein required on the gross receipts from supplying electricity both within and outside of the underground district of the City of St. Louis.’ ”
“Under these circumstances the respondent contends that-the ordinance (No. 41572) violates Missouri constitutional restrictions and is therefore void as to it. The chief objection to the ordinance is that it violates Section 3, Article X of the Constitution of Missouri in that it provides for a license tax which does not bear equally and uniformly upon all persons engaged in the same class of business and by its exemptions makes an unreasonable, discriminatory, arbitrary and unfair classification of persons engaged in the same business. It is argued that the ordinance violates Sections 4 and 30 of Article II and Section 53 of Article IY of the Missouri Constitution in that it deprives the respondent of its property. without due process of law and is, in fact, a prohibited special law or act. Furthermore, it is argued that the ordinance impairs the obligation of contract.”

Section 53 of Article 4 provides: “The General Assembly shall not pass any local or special law”: (Specifying 33 items, of which plaintiff points to item 26 and the general provision in item 32.) “. . . 26. Granting to any corporation, association or individual any special or exclusive right, privilege or immunity, ... 32. . . . In all other cases where a general law can be made applicable, no local or. special law shall be enacted; and whether a general law could have been made applicable in any case is hereby declared a judicial question, and as such shall be judicially determined, without regard to any legislative assertion on that subject. ” We pointed out, *77 in City of Springfield v. Smith, 322 Mo. 1129, 19 S. W. (2d) 1, that there are only “three other states, viz., Minnesota, Kansas, Michigan, which have constitutional provisions expressly making the determination of the question of whether a general law can be made applicable a judicial question.” As also pointed out in that case “the above constitutional inhibition applies to city ordinances as well as state laws.”

In Reals v. Courson, 349 Mo. 1193, 164 S. W. (2d) 306, we stated the definition and tests of a special law thus: “ A statute which relates to persons or things as a class, is a general law, while a statute which relates to particular persons or things of a class is special

“ ‘The test of a special law is the appropriateness of its provisions to the objects that it excludes. It is not, therefore, what a law'includes, that makes it special, but what it excludes.’ . . . ”
“If in fact the act is by its terms or ‘in its practical operation, it can only apply to particular persons or things of a class, then it will be a special or local law, however carefully its character may be concealed by form of words. ’ ’ ’

In Reals v.

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Bluebook (online)
182 S.W.2d 70, 353 Mo. 67, 1944 Mo. LEXIS 414, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/laclede-power-light-co-v-city-of-st-louis-mo-1944.