State Ex Rel. Schmill v. City Dept's of Springfield

203 S.W.2d 670, 239 Mo. App. 939, 1947 Mo. App. LEXIS 355
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 11, 1947
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 203 S.W.2d 670 (State Ex Rel. Schmill v. City Dept's of Springfield) 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. Schmill v. City Dept's of Springfield, 203 S.W.2d 670, 239 Mo. App. 939, 1947 Mo. App. LEXIS 355 (Mo. Ct. App. 1947).

Opinion

*943 BLAIR, J.

The parties in this case will be referred to as relators and as respondents.

Relators filed their petition for mandamus, alleging, among other things, that the relators are electors of the City of Springfield, Missouri, and that respondents are the commissioners of said city, and, as such, constitute the council of said City of Springfield, Missouri; that on September 30, 1946, said city council passed Council Bill No. 6872, Ordinance No. 425, with an emergency clause, by the terms of which, a tax of $1.00 per thousand was levied on all cigarettes sold, offered or displayed for sale, within the said city! Said petition further alleged, and it is admitted, that afterwards relators asked by sufficient petitions that said Ordinance No. 425 be repealed or submitted to a referendum vote of the voters of the said city, and that thereafter respondents refused, either to repeal said ordinance or submit it to the voters of said city, claiming that said ordinance went into effect immediately upon passage and approval, under the emergency provision in said ordinance.

In order that said ordinance, which is set out in full by relators and attached to their petition, may be sufficiently understood, it seems best here to set out the parts thereof in controversy, towit:

“AMENDING Council Bill No. 2717, General Ordinance No. 132, passed on January 17, 1940, by adding, after Section 156, fourteen (14) new sections to be known as 156A-1 to 156a-14 inclusive, of Article 2, Chapter 111 of the Revised Ordinances of the City of Springfield, Missouri, 1936, relating to a permit for an occupation license and payment of a registration fee of one ($1.00) dollar, and providing for an occupation tax of one ($1.00) dollar per thousand on all. cigarettes sold, offered or displayed for sale' within the City of Springfiield, Missouri; licensing and the regulation for retail sale of cigarettes; providing for the method of payment thereof; providing for the means and methods for the administration and enforcement thereof; containing a penalty clause, and providing for an emergency clause, . ...

“. . . There being no ordinance in the City of Springfield, Mis *944 souri, licensing and regulating the retail sale of cigarettes and it being necessary in the interest of the public peace, health and safety that this ordinance be passed so that the retail sale of cigarettes be licensed and regulated, an emergency exists within the meaning of the law governing cities of the second class, this ordinance being necessary for the immediate preservation of the public peace, health and safety, this is hereby declared to be an emergency act and it shall be in full force and effect from and after its passage.”

Relators then alleged that said ordinance was not “necessary for the immediate preservation of the public peace, health and safety, within the meaning of Section 6625, Revised Statutes Missouri, 1939, and that such statement contained in said Ordinance was false and untrue and not made in good faith, and was an attempt on the part of the City Council of the City of Springfield, Missouri, to prevent said Ordinance from being referred to the people of the City of Springfield, Missouri, and that the action of the Respondents in refusing to suspend the operation of said ordinance and refer it to the people of the City- of Springfield, is arbitrary and unfair; that by the refusal of the Respondents to suspend said Ordinance and to call an election to permit the 'people of the City of Springfield to vote for acceptance or rejection of said ordinance, the Relators and all other citizens of the City of Springfield, Missouri, have suffered and will suffer irreparable wrong and injury and that the people of the City of Springfield, Missouri, will be denied their right to vote for the approval or rejection of said Ordinance and will be entirely without redress of said wrongs without the interposition and interference of this Court by its writ of mandamus.”

Relators prayed this Court to issue its writ of mandamus directing and commanding respondents “to forthwith repeal Council Bill 6872, General Ordinance No. 425 or to suspend operation and enforcement of Council Bill No. 6872, being General Ordinance No. 425 and to call a special election for the purpose of submitting said Ordinance to the people of’the City of Springfield for their acceptance or rejection.”

Thereafter we issued our alternative writ of mandamus, commanding and enjoining respondents that they repeal said ordinance, or that they call an election for the purpose of submitting said ordinance to the people of the City of Springfield, for their acceptance or rejection, and requiring respondents to appear in this Court and to show cause for their refusal so to do.

Thereafter respondents appeared in this Court and filed their return admitting that, as the Council of said city, and on September 30, 1946, they had passed Council Bill No. 6872, being General Ordinance No. 425, and that the petitions for referendum were sufficient in number and form but-insufficient in fact to compel the submission of said ordinance to the people of the City of Springfield, because of the emergency *945 clause iu Section 3 of said ordinance, and set out that respondents, as such City Council, had passed Council Bill No. 6962, Resolution No. 2025, attached to such return.

Respondents further stated in their return that they thought “that the public peace, public health and public safety of the city was also in immediate danger because of the lack of finances to meet the necessary and current payroll expenses in the police department, fire department, street department, health department and utility department, and, that on September 30, 1946, if. additional revenue was not anticipated, secured and obtained from some other source other than that already received some of the employees of the police department, fire department, street department, health department and utility department would of necessity, due to the financial straits of said city, be laid off and thus the police protection, fire protection, health and safety of the citizens of said city would be drastically curtailed, and the public peace, public health and public safety of the citizens of said city would be in immediate danger, and Respondents further state that the City Council, under its charter powers, is invested with the right, duty and authority to protect tho lives, property and health of its citizens; that the city has a right to exist in the matter of protecting the lives and property of its citizens, and, to' this end, fix tax rates and raise revenue. Respondents further state that on September 30, 1946, they had found the necessary operations and maintenance of the general government of said city for 1946, up to that time, had cost the sum of $788,488.19, and said city had only collected in the fiscal year of 1946 revenue in the sum of $544,213.47 for the operation of its general government, wdiich is the department of said city as set out above, and Respondents further state and allege that on said September 30, 1946, the City had borrowed $100,000.00 by selling current expense bonds, and, taking into account a surplus from prior years and transfering funds from the contingency reserve fund, there still remained an- estimated deficit of $72,274.72.

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Bluebook (online)
203 S.W.2d 670, 239 Mo. App. 939, 1947 Mo. App. LEXIS 355, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-schmill-v-city-depts-of-springfield-moctapp-1947.