State ex rel. Ridge v. Smith

51 S.W. 713, 150 Mo. 75, 1899 Mo. LEXIS 72
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMay 30, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 51 S.W. 713 (State ex rel. Ridge v. Smith) 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. Ridge v. Smith, 51 S.W. 713, 150 Mo. 75, 1899 Mo. LEXIS 72 (Mo. 1899).

Opinion

BURG-ESS, I.

This is -an original proceeding by mandamus begun in this court by relators against the respondent judges of the Kansas City Court of Appeals, to compel them as such court to transfer a cause therein pending on appeal, entitled the Dollar Savings Bank v. Thomas S. Ridge et al., to the Supreme Court, upon the ground of the want of jurisdiction in the Kansas City Court of Appeals to hear and dispose of th§ same, and the exclusive jurisdiction of the Supreme Court of said cause, there being involved a constitutional question.

To the alternative writ of mandamus issued against respondents, they make return as follows:

“Respondents for return to the alternative writ of mandamus, say that the case of Dollar Savings Bank v. Ridge et al., was not certified to the Supreme Coiirt and should not be for the reason that no constitutional point was involved in the decision in said case, and the alleged constitutional point raised in said case was not pertinent or relevant to the issues in said case, as will appear by the following opinion, filed in said case in the said Kansas City Court of Appeals. ...
“Defendants claim that a construction of the Constitution of this State is involved in the determination of this cause. Plaintiff denies this. The defendants set up by answer that the Constitution of the State was violated in the mode of adoption of the amendments to the charter of Kansas City, and that therefore the amendments are void. The special provision of the Constitution is not mentioned, but we infer from the brief that it was intended to refer to that portion of the [81]*81Constitution wliicb directs tlie mode of publication on proposed amendments. They likewise asked an instruction, which was refused, declaring the amendments to be ‘in violation of that provision of the Constitution of this State prohibiting retrospective legislation.’
“During the progress of the trial the plaintiff had entered an admission that the defendants’ contention that the amendments were void under the Constitution was correct. The admission was in the following words:
“ ‘Mr. Ingraham: "We want to make an admission in regard to this matter. (Reading) While it is clear that the fact that the upper house did not remain in session until the lower house adjourned, does not render the acts of the lower house invalid, especially in view of the fact that both houses met at the same time and entered into legal session, but such matter is entirely irrelevant to the .issues in this case. Eor, if all that defendant claims be true, it only results that the amendments were not legally adopted, and hence the old charter provisions remain in force and unaffected. We now desire to have the record show that we consent to defendants’ contention in regard to the charter amendments be determined in his favor and that the legality of the tax bills be determined according to the old charter provisions as they existed prior tó the amendments. Or, that the validity be determined by either or both the old charter or the amendments, at the option of counsel for defendant.’ Defendants objected to the admission, but the court overruled the objection.
“The plaintiff contended that the point as to the violation of the Constitution was ‘a sham,’ and was not brought into, the case in good faith That the defense in this case was based on points already ruled against defendants’ contention in the cases of Forry v. Ridge, 56 Mo. App 615; McQuiddy v. Vineyard, 60 Mo. App. 610; and Dollar Savings Bank v. Ridge, 62 Mo. App. 324; and that this was merely an effort to have those points passed upon by the Supreme Court. [82]*82Counsel for defendants conceded at the argument that his object in making the point on the Constitution was for the purpose of ousting this court of appellate jurisdiction, that the case might be heard in the Supreme Court, where it was hoped and believed that the eases just referred to would be overruled.
“Passing by the question of good faith in raising the point as to the Constitution and of the objection to plaintiff admitting that the point was well taken, we will consider the matter as it appears on the face of the record. We interpret plaintiff’s admission to concede thaj; the charter amendments were void under the Constitution, as contended by defendants. This left the validity of the tax bills to be determined without the aid of those amendments; in other words, to be determined by the charter as it stood prior to the amendments.
“But the defendants contended at the argument of the cause that plaintiff can not obviate their point on the Constitution by conceding it to be true and well taken. That when the record shows such point made in the trial court, this court could not have appellate jurisdiction. The Constitution confers jurisdiction on this court ‘in all cases where the amount in dispute, exclusive of costs, does not exceed the sum of two thousand five hundred dollars unless such cases are those involving the construction of the Constitution of the United States or of this State.’ It is apparent that the mere fact of a point being made on the Constitution during the trial of a cause does not necessarily involve the construction of the Constitution in the appellate court. For, if the party making the point should afterwards in the trial withdraw it, clearly the case would no longer involve a construction of the Constitution, So, it seems to us, that if the point made is conceded and the case is to be determined on other grounds, no construction is involved, and defendants have not been deprived of any right guaranteed by the Constitution. The question is eliminated from the ease. The court is then relieved of the duty of construing the Constitution. The reasoning of the [83]*83Supreme Court iu tbe recent case of Ash v. City of Independence, 145 Mo. 120, is applicable to tbe question.
“It is true tbe trial court refused an instruction offered by defendants, declaring tbe' charter amendments were in violation of that provision of tbe Constitution wbicb prohibits, retrospective legislation. But in view of tbe concession made by plaintiff, as above referred to, we must assume that the-court looked upon tbe instruction as being outside tbe case, and therefore not pertinent.
“It may be suggested that in tbe decision we now make we are construing tbe Constitution, and ‘that tbe question we are now deciding should be decided by tbe Supreme Court. But we necessarily must decide in tbe first instance whether we have jurisdiction of a case. We do this constantly in cer-tifiying cases to tbe Supreme Court and in refusing to certify. Our decision of such question is not final, since if we refuse to certify on tbe ground that we have no jurisdiction, our mistake may be, and frequently is, corrected by mandamus from that court; and if we certify a case to that com-t wbicb ought not to have been sent there, it may be, and frequently is, recerti-fied to this court. In these matters we do not construe tbe Constitution; we merely pass on the question whether there is anything in tbe case calling for tbe construction of tbe Constitution.”

Another point is passed upon in tbe opinion but it is not involved in this controversy.

“Relators for plea to tbe return of respondents to tbe alternative writ admit that a question of tbe jurisdiction of tbe Kansas City Court of Appeals in tbe case of tbe Dollar Savings Bank v. Thomas S.

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Related

Wright v. Quattrochi.
49 S.W.2d 3 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1932)
Dollar Savings Bank v. Ridge
82 S.W. 56 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1904)
State ex rel. Hawes v. Withrow
55 S.W. 460 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1900)

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Bluebook (online)
51 S.W. 713, 150 Mo. 75, 1899 Mo. LEXIS 72, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-ridge-v-smith-mo-1899.