State Ex Rel. Russell v. State Highway Commission

42 S.W.2d 196, 328 Mo. 942, 1931 Mo. LEXIS 450
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedSeptember 28, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 42 S.W.2d 196 (State Ex Rel. Russell v. State Highway Commission) 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. Russell v. State Highway Commission, 42 S.W.2d 196, 328 Mo. 942, 1931 Mo. LEXIS 450 (Mo. 1931).

Opinion

*951 ELLISON, J.

This is an original proceeding in mandamus. The relators are citizens, freeholders and taxpayers of Jackson County, and owners and operators of motor vehicles upon which they regularly pay the registration fees and gasoline tax imposed by ther laws of 'this State (Secs. 7762, 7794, R. S. 1929). They sue on behalf of themselves and all taxpayers similarly situated. The object of the proceeding is’to compel the respondent, the State Highway Commission, to take cognizance of and pass upon a petition filed before it by the relators, petitioning for the widening and improving of United States Highway, Route No. 40, to a width of eighty feet from the east city limits of Kansasi City, Missouri, through Leeds, to 31st Street, at the expense of the State from funds derived from the. state road bond issue authorized by Section 44a, Article IV, of the Constitution, adopted in 1928. Throughout this whole distance the highway lies within the corporate area of Kansas City.

The Highway Commission has filed a return to the petition (waiving issuance of our alternative writ of mandamus) in which it is set up that under said section of the Constitution it has no power or authority to widen and improve the part of the highway, involved, because it is located within the corporate limits of Kansas City. Without joining issue by reply to any of the' facts pleaded in the return, the relators have filed a motion for judgment on the pleadings, which has the effect of admitting all facts well pleaded in the return. [State ex rel. Hueller v. Thompson, 316 Mo. 272, 275, 289 S. W. 338, 339; State ex rel. Tompkins v. Shipman, 290 Mo. 65, 71, 234 S. W. 60, 61.] Thus are raised clear-cut questions of law as to the construction to be put upon the provisions appearing in the above mentioned constitutional amendment.

In addition to the exhaustive briefs of the parties we have been favored with an able brief submitted by three members of the bar, Hon. Arch B. Davis, Herman Pufahl and Robert L. Ward, as amici curiae, who suggest our alternative writ should be quashed; and with another brief, equally able and pointed, filed on behalf of the Kansas *952 City Chamber of Commerce by its attorney, Hon. Lue C. Lozier, as amicus curiae, which contends the writ should be made peremptory. Altogether, the field of investigation has been well covered.

Section 44a of Article IY of the Constitution, adopted by a referendum vote at the general election in 1928, at which time it was generally referred to as “Proposition No. 3” for the seventy-five million dollar road bond issue, is about three pages long as printed in the 1929 statutes. We shall only summarize it. The preceding section, Section 44, forbids the General Assembly to contract or to authorize the contracting of any debt or' liability in behalf of the State, or to issue bonds or other evidences of indebtedness thereof, except in specified cases. Section 44a adds another exception. The parts particularly bearing on the use that may be made of the proceeds from the bond issue for road construction and improvement may be condensed as follows:

The first paragraph provides generally that ‘ ‘.the General Assembly shall, for the purpose of locating, establishing, acquiring, constructing, widening and improving hard-surfaced public highways in the State and in each county thereof, and of acquiring materials therefor and for the purpose of locating and constructing bridges across ■the' rivers and waters of the State and of participating in the construction of toll-free, interstate bridges, have the power . . to •issue bonds in the amount and on the terms specified.

The third paragraph provides: “The proceeds of the sale of the seventy-five million dollars ($75-,000,000) of additional bonds herein authorized shall be expendéd under the direction and supervision' of the State Highway Commission for the following purposes: To complete and widen or otherwise improve the state system of. primary and secondary highways as designated and laid out under existing law; to reimburse the various counties and political or civil subdivisions (including road districts) of the State for money expended by them in the construction or acquisition of roads and bridges now or hereafter taken over by the’ State as permanent parts of the state highway system to the extent of the value to the State of such roads and bridges at the time taken over, not exceeding in any ease the amount expended by such counties or subdivisions in the construction or acquisition of such roads and bridges; to construct other state highways and bridges, and to widen of otherwise improve existing state highways and bridges in 'the congested traffic areas adjacent to the cities of St. Louis and Kansas City; to locate, establish, acquire and construct supplémentary state highways and bridges, as hereinafter provided, ■ in each county of the' State, in addition to those state highways and bridges designated and laid 'out under existing law, and to acquire- matérials therefor.

-• The fourth paragraph names the sources of revenue from which the principal and interest due on the bonds shall be paid, including *953 certain fees, licenses and taxes-less tbe expense of collection and the cost of maintaining the State Highway Department and State Highway Commission, etc. This net revenue .above the annual requirements for interest and sinking fund for the bonds is to be credited to the State Koad Fund “to be administered and expended under the direction and supervision of the State Highway Commission, for the following purposes:” Here again follows an enumeration of the purposes, which are in the identical language appearing in the third paragraph, just set out, save for a few immaterial differences in punctuation and in the transposition of one phrase, and also in that the words “and maintain” are inserted as a part of each enumerated purpose. Further, a clause is added at the end of the- paragraph broadening the powers of the Commission in certain respects.

Without attempting a critical construction of these two paragraphs of the section, it seems the proceeds from the bond issue are to be used only for construction and improvement work, and to reimburse counties, etc., for highways taken over, whereas moneys derived from the specified revenue sources above the requirements • for paying off the bond issue may be used for those purposes and for maintenance as well. ' See Sections 8144-8148, Revised Statutes 1929. That point is not. up for decision in this ease, and we mention and consider these paragraphs only insofar as they have bearing on the question as to what kind of road building and improvement the State Highway Commission may do out of the proceeds of the bond issue.

The seventh paragraph provides that funds required to be allocated to the construction of “'supplementary” state. highways■ and bridges (mentioned'in the third and fourth . paragraphs) shall be apportioned to the counties of the State on the basis of area and population by dividing into two equal parts such funds as may at any time be allotted by the Commission; one part to be apportioned to all of the counties of the State, exclusive of the cities of St. Louis and Kansas City, in the ratio that the area

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Bluebook (online)
42 S.W.2d 196, 328 Mo. 942, 1931 Mo. LEXIS 450, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-russell-v-state-highway-commission-mo-1931.