State Ex Rel. St. Louis Police Relief Ass'n v. Igoe

107 S.W.2d 929, 340 Mo. 1166, 1937 Mo. LEXIS 438
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 4, 1937
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 107 S.W.2d 929 (State Ex Rel. St. Louis Police Relief Ass'n v. Igoe) 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. St. Louis Police Relief Ass'n v. Igoe, 107 S.W.2d 929, 340 Mo. 1166, 1937 Mo. LEXIS 438 (Mo. 1937).

Opinion

*1170 FRANK, P. J.

Action in mandamus brought in the Circuit Court of the City of St. Louis by the St. Louis Police Relief Association against the members of the Board of Police Commissioners of said city to compel them to forthwith. deliver to petitioner certain moneys now in their possession. An alternative writ of mandamus was granted which, on final hearing, was made peremptory. This appeal followed.

The St. Louis Police Relief Association was organized as a corporation in the year 1900 under statutory authority (now Sec. 8978, R. S. 1929). That section reads as follows:

“Any police force organized or existing by authority of the laws of this state in any city having a population of over one hundred thousand inhabitants, and in any city of the second class, is hereby authorized and empowered to form a relief association under the general incorporation laws of this state, and to create a fund for the purpose of affording relief to such members of their organization as may become sick or disabled while in the discharge of their duties, or who may become incapacitated by long years of service, and for aiding the families of police officers who may die while in the service of any police department, and for such other similar purposes as may be set forth in their articles of incorporation.”

The funds necessary for the operation of this relief association were provided for by statute (now Sec. 8979, R. S. 1929). -That section reads as follows:

‘ ‘ This fund shall be created in the following manner: All moneys at present remaining in the hands of any unincorporated police relief committee or association; all moneys arising from the sale of unclaimed personal property; all fines assessed against any delinquent officers by anjr board of police commissioners; all monthly, annual or periodical assessments of members as may be provided for by the rules of said association; all percentages of rewards allowed to member of any police force under the regulations of its department.”'

' The Police Relief Association has continued to operate for the purposes named in the statute from the date of its organization in 1900 to the present time. From 1900 to some time in 1923, the Board of Police Commissioners, in compliance with Section 8979, supra, delivered to the Police Association the funds accumulated pursuant to the provisions of that section. From 1923 to the present time said board has refused to deliver any of such funds to the Police Relief Association. As a result of such refusal, said board, at the date of the trial below, had in its possession from the sources *1171 mentioned in Section 8979 the total sum of $35,543.46. This mandamus action was brought to'compel said board to deliver said sum to the Police Relief Association.

Prior to 1926 neither the State nor any municipality thereof had authority to provide for the payment of pensions from public funds to "the members of any organized police force. In November, 1926, the Constitution was amended by the adoption of Section 48a of Article 4, which reads as follows:

“The General Assembly shall have the power to provide by law, or to authorize any municipality in this State to provide by ordinance, for the pensioning1 of members of any organized police force and-the widows and minor children of deceased members thereof; and nothing in this Constitution contained shall prohibit, or be construed to prohibit, the exercise of such power or authority by -the General Assembly.”

Pursuant to the provisions of above constitutional amendment, the General Assembly in 1929 enacted Article 2, Chapter 51, Revised Statutes 1929, consisting of Sections 8906 to 8918, both inclusive, known as the “Police Retirement Pension System in Cities of Five Hundred Thousand or More.” This act is a comprehensive police pension law and provides for service retirement benefits, ordinary death benefits, and accidental death benefits. It is appellants’ position that this 1929 enactment providing for the Police Retirement Pension System repealed or superceded Sections 8978 and 8979 under which the Police Relief Association was incorporated, and under which it has operated since its incorporation in the year 1900. Since the Police Relief Association’s right to the funds in question is based upon the provisions of Section 8979, it follows that if, as contended by appellants, said section was repealed by the 1929 act, such association would not- be entitled to the funds accumulated in the hands of the Board of Police Commissioners from the sources mentioned in said section after its repeal.

There is no express provision in the 1929 act repealing Section 8979. It follows, therefore, that the later act did not repeal the former statute unless it did so by necessary implication. We need not cite authorities to the effect that repeals by implication are not favored by the law. The question of repeal is one of intention and the presumption is against the intention to repeal where express terms are not used. [State ex rel. Moseley et al. v. Lee et al., 5 S. W. (2d) 83, 88, 319 Mo. 976; State ex rel. Heimburger v. Wells, 210 Mo. 601, 109 S. W. 758; State ex rel. Bond v. Rutledge, 321 Mo. 1090, 13 S. W. (2d) 1061, 1065.] We will not enter into an extended discussion of the law of repeal by implication because the 1929 act contains express provisions which, in our judgment, un-. mistakably show that it was not the intention of the Legislature, by that act, to repeal the statute under which the St. Louis Police *1172 Belief Association was organized and by which funds for its operation are provided. [Now Secs. 8978 and 8979, R. S. 1929.] Note the provisions of the 1929 act (now Sec. 8915, R. S. 1929). The pertinent parts of that section read as follows:

“Upon vote of a majority of the members of any incorporated police pension system or association now existing in said cities within ninety days from the date this article becomes effective, such association shall be dissolved and shall turn over to the retirement system such part of its assets as may be required to cover the pension reserve of all pensions payable to pensioners of such system or association on the roll October 1, 1929. The excess, if any, of the assets over the amount of such pension reserves shall be divided among the members of such system or association in accordance with a plan mutually agreed upon by the board of trustees of the retirement system and the board of trustees of such system or association. . . . Upon failure of a majority of the members of any such system or association to vote within ninety days of the date this article becomes effective, to dissolve the said system or association, it may continue to operate, but the retirement system shall assume no obligation to pay the benefits otherwise payable under the provisions of this section. ”

The provisions of the 1929 act, last above quoted, expressly authorized the St. Louis Police Belief Association to continue to operate unless a majority of its members, within ninety days after the 1929 act became effective, voted to dissolve. There is no showing that a majority of its members did vote to dissolve, within that ninety-day period or at any other time.

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Bluebook (online)
107 S.W.2d 929, 340 Mo. 1166, 1937 Mo. LEXIS 438, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-st-louis-police-relief-assn-v-igoe-mo-1937.