State Ex Rel. State Building Commission v. Smith

81 S.W.2d 613, 336 Mo. 810, 1935 Mo. LEXIS 334
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 8, 1935
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 81 S.W.2d 613 (State Ex Rel. State Building Commission 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. State Building Commission v. Smith, 81 S.W.2d 613, 336 Mo. 810, 1935 Mo. LEXIS 334 (Mo. 1935).

Opinion

LEEDY, J.

Original proceeding by mandamus to compel respondent, the State Auditor, to draw his warrant on the State Treasurer, chargeable to the State Building Fund, in payment for sundry articles of equipment ordered and approved by relator, State Building Commission.

Upon the filing of relators’ application for the writ, respondent, by stipulation, waived the issuance of the alternative writ and agreed that relators’ application should be taken as and for such writ, and filed his return thereto. Whereupon, relators filed what is denominated a “motion for judgment notwithstanding respondent’s return,” *812 reciting “that tbe allegations in said return do not constitute a lawful reason wby said warrant should not be drawn.” "We look, therefore, to the facts stated in respondent’s return as the ultimate facts of the case.

Involved here are varying quantities of seventeen separate and distinct items or articles of equipment, all portable, and not such as, when installed, become appurtenances or fixtures of the building. They are divided into classifications, as follows: (1) Furniture and fittings; (2) Food service; (3) Laundry; (4) Clinical, and (5) Industrial. The following units are typical of the several classifications mentioned, and will serve the purposes of this opinion without enumerating them all at length: (1) Tubular steel chairs, bedside tables, wheel chairs, hospital chart files; (2) Knives, forks and spoons; (3) Electric irons, canvas baskets; (4) Colonic irrigation outfit; (5) Forge, hand drill.

A constitutional amendment authorizing the bond issue in question was submitted by resolution of the Fifty-seventh General Assembly, Extra Session (Laws of Missouri, Ex. Sess., 1933-1934, p. 174), and adopted at a special election. The history of the bond issue, including the pertinent provisions of the constitutional, amendment and the statute enacted in pursuance thereof, will be found narrated in an opinion of this court, by Gantt, J., in State ex rel. v. Smith, Auditor, 335 Mo. 840, 74 S. W. (2d) 27, wherein the validity of the bonds was sustained. It may be here stated that the constitutional amendment, declared that the bonds were authorized “for the purpose of repairing, remodeling or rebuilding, or of repairing, remodeling and rebuilding State buildings and properties at all or any of the eleemosynary institutions of this State, for building additions thereto and additional buildings where necessary.” But it further expressly provided, “The proceeds of the sale of the Ten Million Dollars ($10,000,000) of bonds herein authorized shall be expended for the purpose of repairing, remodeling or rebuilding any of the public buildings of the State of Missouri devoted to eleemosynary and penal purposes, and for building additions thereto, and additional buildings where necessary.” (Italics ours.) [Constitution, Art. 4, sec. 44d.]

It is a provision of Section 5 of the statute above mentioned which, by the record and briefs in this case, we are asked to construe. It reads as follows: “. . . All improvements, repairs or additions which may be made to any of the state eleemosynary or penal institutions under this act, shall be of fireproof construction throughout, and shall be provided with proper heating, lighting and ventilating facilitiés and with the most modern approved sanitary arrangement and equipment.” (Italics ours.) [Laws of Missouri, Ex. Sess., 1933-1934, p. 110.] It is the contention of relators that the word “equipment” as used in the italicized portion of the above- *813 quoted act embraces items of the character in question, because the term' is to be taken in its plain, ordinary and usual sense. [Sec. 655, R. S. 1929.] On the other hand, the respondent, in his brief, says: “The serious question in this case is as to whether the word ‘equipment’ . . . is to be construed in its plain, ordinary and usual sense so as to provide all the furnishings usual and necessary for the operation of the penal and eleemosynary institutions. . . . That the term ‘equipment’ is not only to be interpreted as reflected by the entire enactment and sentence in which it appears, but even more strictly to the phrase of which it is a part. The term ‘equipment’ clearly modifies ‘sanitary arrangements’ and we submit that what the Legislature had in mind was sanitary equipment, and not equipment as the term is generally defined when standing alone.” Obviously, the question tendered by the parties is one of statutory construction.

So much for the case as made by the pleadings and briefs. Were we to hold that the term “equipment” as used in the statute is to be construed in its usual and ordinary sense, it would admittedly include the items in question, and our alternative writ would have to be made permanent, if decided on the statute. But if a proper construction of the restrictions placed upon the purposes by the constitutional amendment excludes equipment in its general and ordinary sense, an entirely different result would necessarily follow. It is elementary that the statute could not authorize an expenditure out of the proceeds of the bond issue not sanctioned by the constitutional amendment itself. In other words, the purposes for which the statute directs expenditures can be no broader than the restrictions placed thereon by the constitutional amendment. And so in the view we take of it, it is upon the meaning of the words employed in the Constitution rather than the peculiar wording of the statute, that the case must turn. “Being possessed of the cause, and having the express right to determine constitutional questions, undoubtedly we have inherent power to decide them whenever necessary to a proper disposition of the case presented. . . . And . . . this court may decide such (constitutional) questions when inherently involved in the determination of the case, although they have not been raised as orderly procedure requires.” [Ex parte Bass, 328 Mo. 195, l. c. 201, 40 S. W. (2d) 457.] It is manifest, therefore, that the cases ruled in other jurisdictions are of negligible value because of the fact that it is almost, if not quite, impossible to find words used in the organic laws of other states which are even substantially like the language of our own Constitution. [State ex rel. v. Orear, 277 Mo. 303, 210 S. W. 392.] For like reasons, it would serve no useful purpose to review the Missouri cases construing the purposes of other bond issues under varying constitutional and statutory authorization. We mention only a few:

*814 In Meyering v. Miller, Mayor, 330 Mo. 885, 51 S. W. (2d) 65, there was under consideration an ordinance of the city of St. Louis submitting a bond issue to the voters, which set forth the purposes for which the proceeds of the bonds should be used in the following language: “For the acquisition of land and the construction of additions to and extensions and equipment of public hospitals and institutions for the care of delinquents and the indigent tubercular, insane, feeble-minded, infirm, and sick patients.” Out of the proceeds of the sale of the bonds so voted, the city proposed to erect an entirely new hospital located more than four miles from existing hospitals, and it was contended that this would be a misappropriation and misapplication of the funds.

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Bluebook (online)
81 S.W.2d 613, 336 Mo. 810, 1935 Mo. LEXIS 334, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-state-building-commission-v-smith-mo-1935.