State Ex Rel. Jacobsmeyer v. Thatcher.

92 S.W.2d 640, 338 Mo. 622, 1936 Mo. LEXIS 530
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 18, 1936
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 92 S.W.2d 640 (State Ex Rel. Jacobsmeyer v. Thatcher.) 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. Jacobsmeyer v. Thatcher., 92 S.W.2d 640, 338 Mo. 622, 1936 Mo. LEXIS 530 (Mo. 1936).

Opinion

*625 HAYS, J.

Mandamus instituted by the relator as clerk of the Circuit Court of St. Louis County against respondents as judges of the county court of that county to compel the payment of a claimed arrearage in his official salary.

The issues tendered by our alternative writ issued herein may in substance be stated as follows: The relator was elected to the office at the general election in 1934, and assumed the duties thereof on January 7, 1935. The respondents, as constituting the county court, paid relator monthly out of the county treasury, for the first five months of 1935, compensation at the rate of $3000 a year, and paid nothing since. The relator claims a compensation at the rate of $5000 a year, payable in monthly installments, and seeks by this proceeding to compel payment of an accumulated arrearage of $2,183.31, remaining after the application of the payments mentioned above.

Relator’s demand is asserted under Sections 11808, 11813, and 11820, Revised Statutes 1929. Relator also pleads that the Legislature has enacted a later law on the same subject (Laws 1933, p. 369), purporting to repeal those three sections and certain others, and to supplant them — all but one (11813) — with new sections; that in lieu of former Section 11808 a new section of the same number, but providing a different basis from that contained in the former section, for establishing the population of St. Louis County and the other counties for the purpose of ascertaining the compensation of county officers was enacted. Under the old section the population was established by multiplying the highest vote cast at the last previous general election by five; under the new, by taking the population as given in the last decennial census of the United States.

It is further pleaded that said Act of 1933, particularly as to Sections 11808 and 11786 thereof, is unconstitutional and void (1) because of being in violation of Article IX, Section 12 of the Constitution of the State, which provides that the General Assembly, by a law uniform in its operation, shall provide and regulate the fees of all county officers; and (2) because it violates Article IV of Section 28 of the Constitution which provides that no act shall contain more than one subject and the subject of the act shall be clearly expressed in the title thereto. As specifying the particulars of such violation of the organic law the charge in substance is: ■

• Said act does not operate and regulate uniformly, because thereunder some of the circuit clerks of the State are compensated solely from the fees of their office, while others receive a fixed salary, and still -others receive no compensation. It is stated that as a whole the law of 1933, did not repeal Sections 11808 and 11813, Revised Statutes 1929, and that relator is entitled thereunder to a $5000 salary as alleged above.

*626 Issue was joined by general demurrer filed by respondents to the alternative writ, and the cause was briefed, argued and submitted on the issue so joined.

It was conceded in the oral argument that the population of St. Louis County as shown by the last decennial census of the government (the new basis) is 211,593 and on the vote basis 305,435; and that the only circuit clerk in the State who is not now receiving compensation for his services is relator. By counsel for respondents it was stated in oral argument, and not disputed by counsel for'relator, that the respondents have at all times been, and still are ready and willing to pay the relator a salary of $3000 a year, in monthly installments of $250 each, out of the county treasury. It is unnecessary to state the specific theory on which respondents base such salary. It will suffice to say that it does not presuppose the unconstitutionality of the new act and rests on the assumption the new act fails to make any provision for compensating the relator, which is a conceded fact.

Former Section 11786 by its terms applied, so far as pertinent here, to all counties having a population of 7000 persons and less than 300,000, and provided that in counties having a population of 100,000 and less than 300,000 persons the clerk of the circuit court “should receive the sum of $3000, annually,” for his services. Former Section 11813 provided that the salaries of the clerks coming within the purview of former Section 11786, and the salaries of their deputies and assistants, should be paid out of the county treasury in monthly installments. Former Section 11820 provided that in all counties and cities not within the limits of a county then or thereafter having a population of 300,000 inhabitants or more the circuit clerk of such county or city, might retain out of fees received for his services not exceeding $5000.

The vital section of the new act, Section 11786, supplants both old Sections 11786 and 11820. New Section 11786 in its terms is limited to apply to counties having a population ranging from less than 7500 persons to those having 70,000 and less than 80,000 persons, and specifies, according to the classification of the counties made therein, that “the aggregate amount of fees that any clerk of the circuit court . . . shall be allowed- to retain for any one year's service shall not in any case exceed the amount” therein set out. The amounts range from $1000 for those in the lowest brackets to $3000 for those in the highest.

This court exercised its discretion in issuing the alternative writ on the assumption, induced by the allegations contained in the application therefor, that many circuit clerks were in like situation with relator; that is, a situation involving a number of circuit clerks which ■might (though not necessarily) have made the decision of the matter *627 before us one of exacting public importance. But such is not the case; relator alone is attacking the constitutionality of the act.

What right has relator to so assail it by this proceeding? The demurrer admits the pleaded facts stated above; but not conclusions of law in relation to the unconstitutionality of the new law. And if it did admit the latter, this court would not be bound by such admission. Every presumption is in favor of the validity of legislative acts. [Lewis-Sutherland, Stat. Const., sec. 497.]

“The propriety of declaring a statute unconstitutional in order to award a discretionary writ such as mandamus, has been gravely questioned. Clearly it should not be done where the- right to the remedy, existing from questions of validity, is doubtful. ’ ’ Unless relator has some (legal) interest to be subserved by the suit he has no cause, of action; and it is always incumbent on a relator to allege and prove that he is so concerned in the cause of action averred, and is the party who has suffered injury by the acts of the respondent, or his refusal to act. [State ex rel. v. Brand, 305 Mo. 321, 265 S. W. 989; see, also, on the latter proposition, State ex rel. Ins. Co. v. Blake, 241 Mo. 100, 144 S. W. 1094.] In other words, the relator must have a clear legal right to the performance by the respondent of the particular duty sought to be enforced (20 R. C. L. 1030).

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Bluebook (online)
92 S.W.2d 640, 338 Mo. 622, 1936 Mo. LEXIS 530, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-jacobsmeyer-v-thatcher-mo-1936.