State Ex Rel. Attorney-General v. Kansas City

276 S.W. 389, 310 Mo. 542, 1925 Mo. LEXIS 882
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedOctober 7, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 276 S.W. 389 (State Ex Rel. Attorney-General v. Kansas City) 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 Rel. Attorney-General v. Kansas City, 276 S.W. 389, 310 Mo. 542, 1925 Mo. LEXIS 882 (Mo. 1925).

Opinions

*549 ATWOOD, J.

This proceeding is an information in the nature of quo warranto exhibited by the Attorney-General ex-officio against the present mayor and members of the upper and lower houses of the common council of Kansas City, Missouri. It challenges the validity of the new charter of Kansas City adopted February 24, 1925, and, among other things, charges that respondents “have usurped and now usurp and execute and threaten to execute ’ ’ said new charter.

This charter consists of four hundred and eighty-eight sections. Section 486 thereof provides that Sections 98, 108, 125, 417 to 425 both inclusive, 457, 458, 486 and 488 shall take effect immediately upon the adoption of said charter, and that the remaining 472 sections shall take effect at 10:00 a. m., April 10, 1926. Section 98 empowers the city council, as now constituted under the Charter of 1908, by ordinance, to authorize the comptroller to borrow money not to exceed twenty-five per cent of the estimated general fund revenue for the fiscal year then outstanding and uncollected. By Section 108 the city is authorized to issue bonds in any sum up to three millions of dollars for certain purposes therein specified. By Section 125 provision is made against restoration to office of or payment of salary or compensation to any person, after February 24, 1925, claiming to have been unlawfully removed or discharged from any office or position in the competitive class of the civil service prior to the first day of January, 1925. Sections 417 to 425, both inclusive, provide for holding a municipal election for the choice of all municipal officers under the provisions of said new charter on the first Tuesday in November, 1925'. Section 457 provides for a meeting of the first council-elect within three weeks after the election. Section 458 provides for the appointment of a committee to draft an administrative code to be introduced as an ordinance after the council takes office. Section 488 declares said charter to be a public act of which all courts shall take Judicial notice.

*550 Relator stands on his amended petition alleging that said new charter is illegal and void for the following reasons :

1. That Section 486 violates Section 16 of Article IX of the Constitution of Missouri.

2. That the sections specially named in Section 486 to become forthwith effective on the adoption of said charter are void as amendments to the charter of said city adopted in 1908, because the provisions of said Charter of 1908 governing the submission of proposed amendments thereto were not observed.

3. That the election of February 26, 1924, submitting the question, ‘ ‘ Shall a commission be chosen to frame a charter?” and at which thirteen electors were presented as candidates for membership on the proposed commission, was not provided for by ordinance as directed by Section 29, Article 18, of the Charter of 1908.

4. That said election of February 26,. 1924, was void because the question submitted whether a commission should be chosen to frame a charter and the names of the thirteen candidates to become members of said commission were printed on the same ballot and the voter was thereby remitted to the alternative of voting in the negative on said question or consenting- that the thirteen candidates become the commission to frame the charter.

5. That said election was void because the proposition submitted thereat was double, in that the ballot had printed thereon the question whether a commission should be chosen to frame a charter, and the names of the thirteen candidates for membership on said commission.

6. That said new charter was sought to be adopted under the provisions of Section 16', Article IX, of the Constitution of Missouri; that said section is not self-executing, and the Legislature has not enacted an enabling statute.

7. That said Section 16 of Article IX of said Constitution is vague, indefinite, inconsistent and unenforce *551 able, in that one clause thereof provides that petition for the nomination of candidates to constitute a commission to frame a charter shall be signed by not less than two per cent of the voters of such city, and another clause thereof provides that the signatures to such petition shall not be required to be more than one thousand.

8. That Articles II and III of said new charter are in violation of Article III of the Constitution of Missouri, relating* to the distribution of powers, and also are in violation of Sections 8842 to 8849, both inclusive, Revised Statutes 1919.

9. That said new charter in so far as it vests all the powers of the city in one house of the common council with authority to delegate its authority and power to a city manager, is in violation of Section 16' of Article IX of said Constitution, in that said section does not authorize said city to so vest its powers.

10. That said new charter is not consistent with Article III of said Constitution and with Sections 8842 to 8849, both inclusive, Revised Statutes 1919, in that the po'wers of government are not distributed as there required, and Section 16 of Article IX of said Constitution being only an amendment to the Constitution of Missouri, adopted November 2, 1920, should not be construed as authorizing said city to frame a charter not consistent with and subject to the Constitution and laws of Missouri.

11. That the election of February 26, 1924, is void because no notice thereof was published for at least three weeks in a newspaper printed in said city having at the date of such publication a. circulation of two thousand copies of each issue; nor was such notice published for said period of the election held on February 24, 1925.

12. That Articles IX and X of said new charter are in violation of Section 1 of Article XIY of the Amendments to the Constitution of the United States providing that no person shall be deprived of life, liberty or prop *552 erty without due process of law, or denied the equal protection of the laws.

13. That the election of February 26, 1924, is void because it submitted at the same time, at the same election and on the same ballot the question whether certain offices should be created and the names of those who would fill such offices.

14. That Section 16 of Article IX of said Constitution is void, unenforceable and not self-executing for the reason that its terms are vague, uncertain, indefinite and unworkable, and it is insufficient to provide suitable machinery for political action of the electors in the free choice of separate issues necessary to be submitted.

15. That Section 125 of said new charter is in violation of Sections 10, 15 and 30', Article II, of the Constitution of the State of Missouri, and Section 1 of Article XIV of the amendments to the Constitution of the United States.

16. That said new charter was framed by ten instead of thirteen electors, and it is therefore not in compliance with Section 16', Article IX, of said Constitution.

17.

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Bluebook (online)
276 S.W. 389, 310 Mo. 542, 1925 Mo. LEXIS 882, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-attorney-general-v-kansas-city-mo-1925.