State ex rel. Wood v. Schweickardt

109 Mo. 496
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedOctober 15, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 109 Mo. 496 (State ex rel. Wood v. Schweickardt) 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. Wood v. Schweickardt, 109 Mo. 496 (Mo. 1891).

Opinion

Sherwood, P. J.

The relator, by this proceeding, prays for an injunction against the defendants, enjoining and restraining them from selling whiskey, wine, liquor or any kind of intoxicating refreshments, in Forest Park; from carrying out the terms and provisions of ordinance number 16002; for a decree declaring said ordinance and the contract made thereunder null and void; for tearing down the cottage, built pursuant to the contract; for the ejection of defendant Sehweiekardt, and for other and further relief. This petition the defendant city answered, setting up certain constitutional, statutory, charter and ordinance provisions, as justifying her course, and denying the general charges of the petition. Sehweiekardt, the codefendant, subsequently joined in this answer. Upon a full hearing of the cause, the circuit court dismissed the petition; hence, this appeal.

Ordinance number 16,002, upon which the contract made thereunder this litigation is chiefly bottomed, is. [501]*501as follows: “16002. An ordinance to lease to Charles Schweickardt the cottage, outbuildings and refreshment privileges in Forest Park. Be it ordained by the municipal assembly of the city of St. Louis as follows:

“Sec. 1. The board of public improvements is hereby authorized and directed to enter into a contract in writing with Charles Schweickardt, for the exclusive privilege of selling refreshments in Forest Park, for a period of ten years from the first day of April, 1891, for the annual rental of $1,000 payable monthly in advance, on the terms and conditions herein contained, and this ordinance shall be set out in said contract.

1 1 Sec. 2. Said lessee shall erect a restaurant building to cost not less than $15,000, upon plans, to be approved, and in a place designated by the board of public improvements; and at the expiration or other termination of said contract said building shall become the property of the city of St. Louis, without compensation. The lessee may also erect and maintain, not to exceed three, ornamental refreshments stands, upon plans and in places designated by the park commissioner.

“Sec. 3. No public bar shall be maintained within the limits of said park, but all liquors or refreshments shall be served by competent waiters to persons seated at tables to be furnished by said lessee, and no liquors or refreshments shall be furnished or sold in any other way, and no liquors shall be served except at said restaurant building. The premises of the lessee shall be open to the inspection of the park commissioner, and shall be maintained in a neat and orderly manner, and the buildings kept in good repair, and the orders and directions of the park commissioner in the above matters shall be obeyed and observed.

“Sec. 4. In the event that the said lessee shall keep said restaurant in a disorderly manner, or shall [502]*502fail for thirty days to pay any monthly rental, or shall sell intoxicating liquors to either-minors or intoxicated persons, or shall sell or furnish liquors or refreshments otherwise than as stipulated in section 3, or fail to complete the restaurant building within the specified time, then said lessee shall forfeit to the city of St. Louis, as liquidated damages, the sum of $50 for every day either of said acts shall be committed. . Whenever said penalties shall reach the sum of $1,000, said lease and this ordinance shall become null and void, and all the buildings and improvements erected and made by said lessee shall be forfeited to the city of St. Louis, and a resolution of the municipal assembly, approved by the mayor, on the above matters or any of them, shall be binding and conclusive on the lessee and his sureties.

“ Sec. 5. The said lessee shall not sell or transfer the rights and privileges granted by this ordinance, without first obtaining an ordinance permitting such assignment to be made.

“Sec. 6. The provisions of this ordinance shall be accepted by said lessee within thirty days' after the approval thereof by the mayor; and the lessee shall complete the erection of said restaurant building within twelve months after the approval of the contract and bond. During the erection of said restaurant building, said lessee shall have the use of the existing restaurant buildings.

“Sec. 7. A good and sufficient bond in the sum of $10,000, with sureties to be approved by the mayor and council, shall be executed by said lessee to the city of St. Louis, for the faithful performance of the conditions of this ordinance, and for the payment of rents due or falling due, and all penalties accruing under said contract, and becoming due to the city of St. Louis; and said contract shall be subject to' and shall not take [503]*503effect until approved by the mayor and council; and said bond shall be renewed from time to time on the order of the mayor. Nothing in this ordinance shall prevent the park commissioner from granting the privilege of a day to a school or church to sell refreshments other than beer, wine or whiskey for their own use.

“Approved March 6, 1891.”

This ordinance was duly consummated by a contract in conformity to its provisions.

I. It is contended that this ordinance is invalid because of being opposed to the provisions of the act of the legislature approved March 29, 1875. But if it be true that there is such conflict then such statute must be regarded as abrogated, under the express terms of section 20 of article 9 of the constitution, which declares that upon the adoption of such scheme it “shall become the organic law of the county and city, and such charter the organic law of the city * * * and supersede the charter of St. Louis * * * and all special laws relating to St. Louis county inconsistent with such scheme.” But be that as it may, whether inconsistent with the scheme and charter or not is of no moment, because of the terms of that statute. The prohibition of section 2 of that act is that “no buildings, booths or stands, for the gift or sale of any spirituous, vinous, fermented or malt liquors, shall be erected or kept within a district embraced within the limits of eight Inmdred feet outside of the out loimdary of said parle; and any person or persons who shall offer for sale or sell any of the liquors aforesaid within the district aforesaid of eight hundred feet shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor, and shall be fined, for each and every offense, the sum of $5 to be recovered in the name of the state before any justice of the peace.”

This prohibition has its precise boundaries and its express limitations, and to attempt to extend such pro[504]*504hibition beyond the plain limits assigned it by the legislative will, is unwarranted by either reason or precedent. That prohibition does not, and never was, intended to apply to Forest Park itself, and could not do so, if language has any force or words any meaning; the act of 1875, therefore, constitutes no barrier to the validity of ordinance 16002. This point is too plain for argument. u Perspicua vera non sunt probanda.”

II.

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Bluebook (online)
109 Mo. 496, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-wood-v-schweickardt-mo-1891.