State ex rel. Knittel v. Longfellow

67 S.W. 665, 93 Mo. App. 364, 1902 Mo. App. LEXIS 379
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 18, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 67 S.W. 665 (State ex rel. Knittel v. Longfellow) 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
State ex rel. Knittel v. Longfellow, 67 S.W. 665, 93 Mo. App. 364, 1902 Mo. App. LEXIS 379 (Mo. Ct. App. 1902).

Opinion

BLAND, P. J.

— This is a mandamus proceeding commenced in the circuit court of the city of St. Louis, July 17, 1901.

[366]*366The material averments of the petition are that defendant, as commissioner of public buildings of the city of St. Louis, appointed relator to the office of building inspector on '.January 5, 1900, for a term of four years; that his appointment was approved by the mayor of said city; that he executed his official bond in the sum of five thousand dollars- for the faithful discharge of his duties as such inspector, which was duly approved by the mayor and city council, and that relator thereupon entered upon the discharge of his duties as such inspector and continued the performance thereof until the thirty-first day of October, 1900, after which date the defendant refused to recognize him as inspector or to assign him to duty or to permit him to perform the functions of his office.

An alternative writ of mandamus' was issued on the petition to which defendant made return admitting the existence of the office of commissioner of public buildings in the city of St. Louis and that defendant was the incumbent of that office; pleaded the right of defendant as building commissioner to remove the relator under the provisions of certain specified ordinances of the city and averred that “relator was not appointed for a term of office, and alleging that the interests of the city required the relator’s removal because the appropriation of public funds for the department- of public buildings was insufficient, and further alleging that the relator was not at any time an officer of the city of St. Louis or in possession of an office, but was a mere employee of the city and an assistant of the defendant and removable at his pleasure, and further, that defendant had slept upon his rights for a time that should bar his right to- a judgment herein.”

The return was denied by a reply.

On the hearing, relator read in evidence the appointment dated January 5, 1900, and his duly-approved official bond for the faithful discharge of his duties as inspector in the penal su'm of five thousand dollars, reciting that he had been ap[367]*367pointed for a term ending on the first Tuesday in April, 1903.

The following letter, dated October 31, 1900, was also given in evidence:

“Mr. Ferdinand I. G. Knittel, City.
“Dear Sir: You are hereby notified that your services as inspector of buildings will not be required by the city of St. Louis after October 31, 1900, and the undersigned being of the opinion that the interests of the city require it, do hereby, under the provisions of section 12 of the municipal code of St. Louis, remove you from your said employment and position of inspector, such removal to take effect at the time aforesaid.
“Respectfully,
“L. C. F. Stemme,
“Deputy Commissioner of Public Buildings.
“Approved: Robt- E. McMath, President.”

Relator read in evidence ordinance No. 20152, showing ■an appropriation for the fiscal year ending April 8, 1901, of thirteen thousand nine hundred dollars for salaries of commissioner of public buildings, deputy, inspectors, clerk and •draughtsman for said year. Of this sum, it was agreed by counsel there was unexpended November 1, 1900, five thousand and ninety-one dollars and sixty-nine cents; on February 1, 1901, two thousand two hundred and sixteen dollars and seventy cents; and on March 1, 1901, nine hundred and fifty-•eight dollars and thirty-seven cents.

' Relator also gave evidence that immediately on his appointment and approval of his bond he took the oath of office and entered upon the discharge of the duties of his office and performed the same until October 31, 1900, and that thereafter he was not permitted by defendant to perform any of the duties of inspector of buildings although he had tendered [368]*368liis services to the defendant from day to day. That he had sued the city before a justice of the peace for his salary of one hundred dollars per month for the- months of November and December, 1900, and the month of January, 1901, and obtained a judgment for three hundred dollars, from which the-city had taken an appeal to the S.t. Louis City Circuit Court where, the cause was then pending.

Relator also read in evidence certain ordinances of the city of St. Louis which will be noticed further on.

Defendant offered evidence that in the absence of Longfellow, the defendant and commissioner of buildings, from the city, Stemme, the deputy commissioner, wrote and caused to be delivered the above letter of discharge to the relator, for the reason that he apprehended that the annual appropriation for salaries in the department of public buildings would not hold out to the end of the fiscal year unless a reduction in the number of building inspectors was made.

Defendant also read in evidence sections 25 and 26 of' the municipal code, to be hereafter noticed, and rested his case.

The court denied a peremptory writ of mandamus and entered judgment for defendant, from which, after taking the necessary preliminary steps, relator duly appealed.

The relator was discharged without cause, that is, without charges being first preferred against him and without notice of such charges and without an opportunity to be heard.

I. Relator’s contention is, that he is an appointed officer of the city of St. Louis within the meaning of section 43, article 4, of the charter and for this reason can be removed for cause only. An officer is by the above section declared to “include all persons holding any situation under the city government or its departments with an annual salary or for a definite term of office.” The office of inspector of buildings is not provided for by the charter, but by section 45, article [369]*3694, of that instrument, the legislative assembly of the city has power, by ordinance passed by a two-thirds vote of the members elect of each house, to create any office not provided for by the charter that it may deem necessary. We must, therefore, look to the ordinances of the city offered in evidence, in relation to the building department of its municipal' government, to ascertain whether or not the relator by his appointment as inspector of buildings became an officer of the city.

The original section of the ordinance providing for inspectors of buildings, provided for “five inspectors of buildings to be appointed, by the commissioner of public buildings, to be approved by the mayor, who shall be practical builders and whose salaries shall be payable in monthly installments at the rate of $1,200 per annum each. . . . The first appointments of inspectors of buildings shall be for the term ending on the first Tuesday in April, eighteen hundred and ninety-five, and thenceforward tire appointments shall'be made for the term of four years.” On April 7, 1897, this section was re-enacted without changing the wording except to provide for six instead of five inspectors. On December 23, 1899, the above ordinance was struck out and a new section enacted in lieu thereof, which reads as follows:

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Related

Magner v. City of St. Louis
78 S.W. 782 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1904)
State ex rel. Bartraw v. Longfellow
69 S.W. 596 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1902)
State ex rel. Magner v. Longfellow
69 S.W. 599 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1902)

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Bluebook (online)
67 S.W. 665, 93 Mo. App. 364, 1902 Mo. App. LEXIS 379, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-knittel-v-longfellow-moctapp-1902.