State ex rel. Board of Control of St. Louis School v. City of St. Louis

115 S.W. 534, 216 Mo. 47, 1909 Mo. LEXIS 319
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJanuary 5, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 115 S.W. 534 (State ex rel. Board of Control of St. Louis School 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
State ex rel. Board of Control of St. Louis School v. City of St. Louis, 115 S.W. 534, 216 Mo. 47, 1909 Mo. LEXIS 319 (Mo. 1909).

Opinion

GANTT, J.

This is an original proceeding in this court to obtain a peremptory writ of mandamus directed to the city of St. Louis, commanding it and its proper officers and agents to draw proper warrants against what is termed the Art Museum Fund, collected and to be collected under the Act of the General Assembly of Missouri, of March 7, 1907, and now in the treasury of said city, upon vouchers of the relator, and to require said city, in fixing its tax rate in the future, to include therein an annual tax of one-fifth of a mill on the dollar for the benefit of relator.

The return was made on the day fixed by this court and a reply to that return was duly filed. Thereupon Hon. Theodore Brace was appointed to take the proofs, and make return thereof to this court. In due- time the commissioner took and filed his report of the evidence and exceptions were filed. Upon the p-leadings and evidence the cause was argued and submitted upon full briefs.

The petition of the relator is perhaps as succinct a statement of relator’s claim as can be made. It alleges in substance that: the St. Louis School and Museum of Fine Arts was established about the year 1874, and had continuously been maintained and conducted as a voluntary association, supported by pri[57]*57vate contributions and endowments; that in the year 1879 "VVayman Crow erected, at Nineteenth and Locust streets in said city, at his own cost, a museum building valued at $143,000, and conveyed the same in trust with the right of relator to use the same upon condition that $25,000 be raised as an endowment fund; that said condition was complied -with, and the income from said sum has been used for the support of “such institution;” that other endowments have since been added, until on March 13, 1900, there was used and employed in and about said business and the educational features thereof property of the value of $1,250,000; that prior to March 13, 1900; said School and Museum of Fine Arts was largely conducted and operated as a public and free educational institution, and all of the revenues derived in any manner therefrom were used, devoted and employed for the maintenance and support of said School and Museum of Fine Arts, and none of them were or are used for profit or gain. That on March 13,1900, the respondent city passed Ordinance 19969, entitled, “An ordinance authorizing the erection in Forest Park of a building to be devoted to the purposes of art education;” that section 1 of said ordinance provided that the Board of Control of said School and Museum of Fine Arts were authorized to erect within Forest Park a building which, together with the site upon' which it is located, shall be devoted to the use of the institution forever, for the exhibition of pictures and sculpture, etc.;.that section 2 provided that the location of said building should be determined by said Board of Control; that section 3 provided that said building should be erected subject to the conditions and provisions that when completed the building should be the property of the city for the uses hereinafter provided and no other; that “the building and its affairs shall be under the direction and jurisdiction of the Board of Control of the School and Museum of Fine Arts, augmented by the [58]*58Mayor, Comptroller and Park Commissioner of the city of St. Lonis, who shall he ex-officio members of snch Board of Control of said building;” that there should be an exhibition of pictures and sculpture in said building Sunday afternoons from one o’clock to sundown, “and such exhibitions shall be opened free to the public as much oftener as in the opinion of te Board of Control the financial condition of the institution will permit.” That relator accepted the provisions of said ordinance and said Board of Control was thereafter organized as required by the ordinance with the addition of the Mayor, Comptroller and Park Commissioner; that the relator selected as the location a certain place in said park now known as “Art Hill,” and that when relator was about to begin the erection of such building the respondent authorized the Louisiana Purchase Exposition Company to use a large part of Forest Park, including* the site S0‘ selected by relator, for the St. Louis World’s Fair; that a part of the arrangement between said Exposition Company and the respondent provided that after the Fair the buildings erected therefor should be removed by the Exposition Company, and the park restored to its former condition; that among the buildings erected by the Exposition Company was what is commonly known as the “Art Building,” which was erected upon the site selected by the relator for said museum building, and was constructed in a substantial, durable and fireproof manner, so as to safeguard the valuable works of art that were contributed, loaned and used at said World’s Fair; that said building, erected at a cost of between $750,000' and $1,000',000, is of great value and appropriate for use by relator as a school and museum of fine arts as contemplated by Ordinance 19969; that pursuant to said arrangement with the city the Exposition Company has removed all of the buildings erected by it, except said Art Building, but that instead of removing it the Exposition Company, by [59]*59and with the knowledge, consent and acquiescence of the respondent, has permitted the relator take possession of said building, prior to March 7, 1907, and to continue to occupy and use the same ever since, for the purpose specified in Ordinance 19969, on the agreement that when the affairs of said Exposition Company are finally wound up it will convey to the relator for the city of St. Louis, all its right, title and interest in and to said building, and the same will be considered as in all thing’s full compliance by relator with the provisions of Ordinance 19969, and will be used by relator for the purpose therein specified, and the said building will become the property of respondent for the purposes specified in said ordinance; that ever since possession of said building was turned over to relator it has occupied and used the same for said purposes ; that prior to and on March 7, 1907, said School and Museum of Fine Arts was so constituted and in existence; and respondent had a population of more than 400,000 inhabitants; and there was already constituted and in existence, operation and authority, an administrative board endowed by ordinance and other legal authority with power to occupy and administer public property devoted by law to the use of an art museum located in a public park by virtue of municipal authority; that the park herein referred to- is Forest Park; that the property devoted to the uses of an art museum is the building aforesaid, and that relator constituted the said administrative board endowed by city ordinance with power to administer said property and said museum. That at its forty-fourth session the General Assembly passed an act entitled, “An Act providing for the establishment, extension and regulation of museums of art in cities of 400,000 inhabitants or more, or which may hereafter have 400',000 inhabitants or more, and authorizing taxation for the same, with emergency clause, ’ ’ approved March 7, 1907;. that by section 1 of said act it is provided that when one [60]

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Bluebook (online)
115 S.W. 534, 216 Mo. 47, 1909 Mo. LEXIS 319, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-board-of-control-of-st-louis-school-v-city-of-st-louis-mo-1909.