State Ex Inf. McKittrick v. Murphy

148 S.W.2d 527, 347 Mo. 484, 1941 Mo. LEXIS 641
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedFebruary 28, 1941
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 148 S.W.2d 527 (State Ex Inf. McKittrick v. Murphy) 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
State Ex Inf. McKittrick v. Murphy, 148 S.W.2d 527, 347 Mo. 484, 1941 Mo. LEXIS 641 (Mo. 1941).

Opinion

*487 HAYS, J.

Original action in quo warrcmto against the Unemployment Compensation - Commission of Missouri, hereinafter referred to as the commission, and the individual members thereof. ■

To the information, filed by the Attorney General ex officio, the respondents have jointly demurred upon the ground, among others, that it does not state facts sufficient to entitle relator to the relief sought. For the purpose of ruling the demurrer, all of the facts well pleaded in the information must be taken as true. Hence we summarize the material allegations of that pleading. ’ ■

The commission is a subordinate branch of the ¡executive department of the State government. As such it is charged’ with the administration of the Unemployment Compensation Act..of 1937 and acts amendatory thereto. [Laws of Mo., 1937, p. 574 et seq.; Laws of Mo., 1939, p. 887 et seq.] ■ - .

. Immediately after the original act went into-effect,-the: commission sét up its central office at Jefferson City,-Missouri. This, was ¡at first located in the- State Capitol Building, but was later re'moved-to a building which had formerly been used as a shoe' factory. ■ From time to time the commission - entered into' negotiations with the' Jefferson City Chamber of Commerce and with'the municipal government-of that city, looking toward the erection of a suitable fireproof building for the commission’s permanent headquarter's. It- will be'unnecessary to trace in detail the course of these negotiations. They culminated *488 in the authorization by the city of a $200,000 bond issue, the proceeds of which might be used to erect the building. In March, 1940, the city made a formal proposal to the commission to the effect that it would erect a fireproof building with 40,000 sq. ft. of floor space satisfactory to the commission, and would lease the same to the commission at an annual rental of one dollar for a term of two'years, “with the privilege of renewal for a like period, and subject to cancellation by the commission on thirty days’ notice after one year’s occupancy under the original lease or renewal thereof.”

For a considerable time respondents, in interviews, news releases and otherwise, have asserted the right to remove their headquarters from Jefferson City. They invited other cities to submit proposals for the erection and leasing of office buildings and proposals were actually received from Carthage, Sedalia, Hannibal, Columbia, Moberly, and elsewhere. Thereafter in June, 1940, the commission passed a resolution declaring that “the five most desirable propositions have been submitted by the cities of Carthage, Sedalia, Hannibal, Jefferson City and Moberly.” It also declared that “the proposal made by Jefferson City, Missouri, is unsatisfactory for the reason that proposals submitted by several other cities are, in the opinion of the commission, more desirable and advantageous to the agency.” On the same day the commission passed another resolution accepting the proposal made by Sedalia. In that proposal the city of Sedalia offered to construct and furnish a modern fireproof office building with adequate space and to lease the same to the commission for ten years at an annual rental of one dollar, with the privilege of cancellation after the end of the first year.

The relator contends that in the actions above set out the respondents have usurped a franchise not given to them by law, to-wit: the power to remove the headquarters of the commission from Jefferson City to some other point in the State. This action is alleged to be outside of and beyond the powers conferred upon the commission by Sec. 4a of the Unemployment Compensation Act of 1939, supra, p. 926. It is also alleged by the relator that if the last-cited statutory section be construed so as to give the commission the power it claims, it would be, as so construed, unconstitutional for the following reasons: (1) The Constitution, so relator claims, requires the offices of all branches of the executive department, of which respondent commission is said to be one, to be located at the seat of government in Jefferson City, Cf. Const. of Mo., Art. IV, Sec. 56, Art. V, Sec. 1; (2) Eelator claims that if the act'be so construed, its provisions would not only be broader than the title of the original bill, as passed by the Legislature, but would directly contravene the title, and hence that the portion of the statute construed to grant such power would be void because of the violation of Sec. 28, Art. IV of the Constitution.

*489 Respondents contend that the information does not state facts sufficient to entitle relator to any relief available in a. quo warranto proceeding. Assuming all of the facts in the information to be true and assuming, for the purpose of argument only, that the commission erred in construing the Act of 1939 as authorizing it to remove its headquarters from Jefferson City, respondents contend that quo warranto is not a proper remedy to correct this error of construction.

The jurisdiction of this court to hear and determine original proceedings in the nature of quo warranto is expressly conferred upon us by See. 3 of Art. VI of the Constitution. The fundamental law does not, however, define the term “quo warranto.” Those words must be taken to have been used at their recognized common law significance as that was understood in 1875 when the Constitution was adopted. The nature and history of the writ of quo warranto were discussed in the case of State ex rel. v. Lawrence, 38 Mo. 535. Originally the proceeding was authorized by the statute of Gloucester, 6 Edw. I, ch. 1, amended 18 Edw. I, st. 2. Proceedings founded upon this act were of a quasi-criminal nature and had for their purpose the punishment of those who, without authority, attempted to exercise a franchise which could be lawfully granted only by the Crown. The writ, like all other original writs, issued out of chancery but was returnable to the King’s Bench, and hence the action was at common law and not in equity. The original form of the proceeding proved so cumbersome that at an early date it was superseded by an information in the nature of qu,o warranto filed by the Attorney General ex officio. The right to file such information, with leave of court, was extended in certain instances to private litigants by the statute, 9 Ann. ch. 20. In so far as the lower courts of Missouri are concerned quo warranto procedure has been regulated for many years by statutes which now appear as Art. 13, Ch. 8, R. S. Mo. 1939. These statutes are, to some extent, modeled upon the Statute of Anne, last cited. While our - jurisdiction is derived from the Constitution and hence cannot be modified by statute, the terms of these various statutory enactments may be looked to for the purpose of ascertaining what the Constitutional Convention meant by the term “quo warranto.”

The various procedural changes we have outlined do not affect the basic purposes for which the writ was originally designed. These purposes are expressed by Blackstone in the following language:

“A writ of quo warranto

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Bluebook (online)
148 S.W.2d 527, 347 Mo. 484, 1941 Mo. LEXIS 641, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-inf-mckittrick-v-murphy-mo-1941.