Parker v. Zeisler

73 Mo. App. 537, 1898 Mo. App. LEXIS 111
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 15, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 73 Mo. App. 537 (Parker v. Zeisler) 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
Parker v. Zeisler, 73 Mo. App. 537, 1898 Mo. App. LEXIS 111 (Mo. Ct. App. 1898).

Opinion

Bland, P. J.

The plaintiff by her petition prayed that the defendant, as collector of the city of St. [540]*540Charles, be enjoined from collecting tax bills which had been issued against her by the city and placed in the hands of defendant for collection, amounting to $690.48. The grounds of her complaint in brief are that she owns and resides upon lots 1, 2, 7 and 8 of block 1, and lots numbered 1 and 8 of block number 2 in R. H. Park’s addition to the city of St. Charles, which she claims is beyond the legal limits of the city, and for that reason said lots and her personal property are not within the jurisdiction of the city nor liable to taxation for city purposes. She further states that the right of the city to tax her property is based upon an ordinance approved on the thirteenth day of April, 1894, by which the city council undertook to extend its limits so as to embrace and take into such limits plaintiff’s residence and the aforementioned lots. She avers that the ordinance extending the city’s limits is illegal and void by reason of the following alleged facts:

First. That the extension, was not made with the consent of a majority of the legal voters of said city in the manner required by law.

Second. That there was no lawfully called or legally authorized election held in the city of St. Charles submitting the question of extension of said city limits to the legal voters of the city.

Third. That the attempted extension of the city limits is illegal, unjust, inequitable and unreasonable, for the reason that it embraces and takes in a new territory that is composed almost exclusively of agricultural or farming lands.

Fourth. That plaintiff’s property and residence do not and can not receive benefit by virtue of being taken into said city.

A demurrer was filed to the petition and overruled; an immaterial portion was stricken out on motion, and [541]*541then an answer was filed, admitting the ordinance extending the city’s limits; pleaded another ordinance relating to the same subject, approved January 16, 1894; admitted plaintiff’s property is within the limits as extended and the levy of the tax and the placing of the tax bills in the hands of the defendant as city collector for collection, and denied all other allegations. A motion to dissolve the temporary injunction which had been theretofore granted was filed; a hearing had; the motion to dissolve was overruled, and a perpetual injunction against the collection of the tax bills was awarded. After an unsuccessful motion to set aside this judgment the defendant appealed to the supreme court; that court decided that,it had no jurisdiction, but that the jurisdiction to hear and determine the case was in this court, and so certified the case to us.

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We are met at the threshold of this case by the contention of appellant that plaintiff has no legal capacity to sue; that the attack made nPon the ordinance extending the limits of the city is an attack upon the charter of the city, a strike at its corporate existence, which can not be made collaterally in a petition for an injunction to stay the collection of a tax. Were this petition a thrust at the life of the city and its corporate existence were to be determined by the suit, this contention would have to be sustained, for it is well settled that the right to exercise the franchise of a municipal corporation can be tested in but one way — by quo warranto brought by the proper officers in the name of the state. Cooley on Const. Lim., 312; State v. Bradford, 32 Conn. 50; Fredericktown v. Fox, 84 Mo. 59; St. Louis v. Shields, 62 Mo. 247; Kayser v. Trustees of Bremen, 16 Mo. 88. The corporate existence of the city of St. Charles is not called in question by this proceeding; its corporate existence [542]*542is averred in the petition and was conceded by plaintiff throughout the trial. It is not the validity of the act incorporating the city of which plaintiff complains, but the' validity of an ordinance passed by the city council, by which her property rights are affected. This may be done generally by any person against whom an attempt is made to enforce to his prejudice the provisions of an illegal ordinance, and in this state it has been repeatedly held that an ordinance extending the limits of a city are subject to the same tests as any other municipal legislation. Copeland v. St. Joseph, 126 Mo. 417; Kelly v. Meeks, 87 Mo. 396; Warren v. Paving Co., 115 Mo. 572. In Copeland v. St. Joseph, supra, the validity of .an ordinance extending the limits of the city of St. Joseph was tested by an injunction suit to stay collection of a city tax. In Kelly v. Meeks, supra, an ordinance extending the limits of the city of Kansas was tested by a replevin suit for some cows found within the new limits and impounded under an ordinance of the city.

In Warren v. Paving Co., supra, the validity of an ordinance extending the limits of the city of Westport was tested by a bill in equity to cancel tax bills issued for paving done on a boulevard in the new or extended limits. An extension of the limits of a city is necessarily a change of its- charter, and in some states it is held that the validity of an ordinance extending the limits can only be tested by quo warranto; but the decisions of the supreme court of our state have taken a different view of these ordinances and hold them subject to the same tests as any other city ordinance. It is stated in the petition and admitted by the answer that St. Charles is a city of a third class. By the provisions of section 2, Acts 1893, page 67, the mayor and city council, with the consent of a majority of the legal voters of the city voting at an election [543]*543therefor, have power to extend the city’s limits. It is contended by the respondent that this power was not legally and effectually exercised in this instance. On January 9, 1894, the city council passed the following ordinance:

“Section 1. The limits of the city of St. Charles, in the county of St. Charles, in the state of Missouri, are hereby extended so as to embrace and include all that part of said St. Charles county, lying within the following outboundary lines, to wit: (Description omitted.)

“Section 2. A proposition to extend the limits of the city of St. Charles as in the next preceding section set forth and described, shall be submitted to the voters of the city of St. Charles at an election to be held in said city on the 6th day of February, 1894.

“The mayor of this city shall give notice of such election by publication in the newspaper doing the city printing in this city; if there be no such paper, then said notice shall be published in any newspaper published in the English language in this city. Such notice shall be published at least fifteen days before the day of holding said election, and shall state the time and places of holding the same and shall clearly describe the out-boundary lines of the proposed extension.

“Such election shall be held and conducted as other elections are-held and conducted in this city.

“Section 3. The city clerk shall prepare and cause to be printed ballots to be used at such election which shall be in the following form:

“For extension of limits.Yes

“For extension of limits . .'.No

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Bluebook (online)
73 Mo. App. 537, 1898 Mo. App. LEXIS 111, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parker-v-zeisler-moctapp-1898.