State Ex Rel. Zoological Board of Control v. City of St. Louis

1 S.W.2d 1021, 318 Mo. 910, 1928 Mo. LEXIS 605
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJanuary 18, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 1 S.W.2d 1021 (State Ex Rel. Zoological Board of Control v. City of St. Louis) 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. Zoological Board of Control v. City of St. Louis, 1 S.W.2d 1021, 318 Mo. 910, 1928 Mo. LEXIS 605 (Mo. 1928).

Opinion

*916 WALKER, C. J.

This is an original action in mandamus. Its purpose is to compel the respondents to appropriate out of the taxes levied for municipal purposes in the city of St. Louis for the current year the equivalent of two cents on each hundred dollars of the assessed valuation of the taxable property of said city for the maintenance of a zoological park and to place the amount so appropriated at the disposal of the relators. The relators are members of the Zoological Board of Control of the City of St. Louis, and comprise a majority of said board. The respondents are the Mayor, the Comptroller and the President of the Board of Aldermen who constitute the Board of Estimate and Apportionment. Other respondents are the Collector and the Treasurer.

The Pleadings: Respondents waived notice, consented to the issuing of the alternative writ, acknowledged service of same, entered their appearance and agreed to file a return on a day designated.

It appears from the pleadings that in 1915 the General Assembly of this State adopted an enabling act (Sees. 9009 to 9016, R. S. 1919), which provided a method whereby any city having 400,000 or more inhabitants might establish a zoological park and determine for itself to levy a tax of one-fourth of one mill on each dollar of the taxable, property of said city for the maintenance and operation of such park. The city of St. Louis, in 1916, being within the class designated in the act of the General Assembly, submitted to the voters of said city at the general election in that year a proposition for the levying of a tax of one-fifth of one mill for the establishment and maintenance of such a park as was authorized by said act, and at said election a majority of those voting voted for said levy. Thereafter an ordinance, numbered 29743, in acceptance of the act of the State Legislature, was adopted by the Municipal Assembly of said city and under the authority of same the Zoological Paiii was located and established in Forest Park. The care and supervision of said park was vested in a Zoological Board of Control, authorized by said act and ordinance, to consist of the five city officers therein designated, and four citizens to be appointed by the mayor. The board was by said act and ordinance given complete supervision over the Zoological Park and its operations, including the control and expenditure of all moneys collected and required to be placed to the credit of the *917 park fund. Tbe fund arising from the annual levy and collection of the tax of one-fifth of one mill was required to be deposited in the city treasury to the credit of said park fund, and was to be kept separate and apart from the other moneys of said city and was to be drawn upon by the proper officers of said city upon vouchers authenticated by the Park Board. The authority conferred upon the Park Board was exercised by it to the full extent authorized by said act and ordinance until and including the year 1927. On April 14, 1927, the Board of Estimate and Control of said city, charged with the establishing of the tax rates for the current year, refused to submit and recommend to the Board of Aldermen of said city a bill providing for the levy of one-fifth of one mill for the Zoological Park Fund; and recommended the passage of an ordinance establishing the 1927 city tax rate for municipal purposes at one dollar and thirty-five cents on each one hundred dollars of the taxable property of said city, that being 'the full amount of the levy authorized under the Constitution of this State. It is alleged by the relators that said ordinance so submitted and adopted ignored the statute and ordinance for the levy of one-fifth of one mill for the support and operation of the Zoological Park and refused to make the same. That said city, through its duly constituted officers, have continued to refuse to make said levy and have declared their purpose not to provide for the assessment and levy of said tax for the support of the Zoological Park or to perform any duty in connection therewith, on the ground that the act of the General Assembly (Sees. 9009-9016, R. S. 1919), and the ordinance of said city (No. 29,743), are unconstitutional and void.

The relators further say that it is now too late for the Board of Estimate and Apportionment to submit t'o the Board of Aider-men and for that board to pass an ordinance levying a special tax of two cents on each one hundred dollars of the assessed value of property in said city for the Zoological Park fund for 1927. It is therefore prayed that the said Board of Aldermen be required by ordinance to appropriate out of the said tax for “municipal purposes” the part thereof which should have been levied for the Zoological Park fund, amounting to two cents on each one hundred dollars of assessed valuation of the taxable property in said city and place the same to the credit of the Zoological Park Fund, to be drawn on and expended by the Zoological Board of Control in accordance with said act and ordinance. The relators, alleging that they are otherwise remediless, save through the issuance of and enforcement of this writ, pray that said city and its officers charged with the assessment, levy, and custody of the revenue therein, be required to comply with the provisions of said act and ordinance; and that said city, through its officers authorized to perform that duty, be required by mandamus to treat said levy of one dollar and thirty-five cents on the taxable *918 property of said city for “municipal purposes” as including the levy of said tax- of one-fifth of one mill on the dollar on the property of said city for the year 1927, as and for the Zoological Park Fund for said year; and when collected that the same be deposited in the city treasury to the credit of the Zoological Park Fund; and that the Zoological Board of Control be permitted to exclusively direct the expenditure of said fund, and to permit said fund to be drawn upon by the City Comptroller only upon authenticated vouchers of said Board of Control.

An alternative writ was issued embracing the allegations of the petition.

The respondents’ return thereto alleges that the provisions of Sections 9009 to 9016, Revised Statutes 1919, are void as in violation of Sections 1 to 10 of Article 10 of the Constitution of Missouri, in that under said constitutional provisions as applicable to the facts in this case, only the corporate authorities of a municipal corporation are authorized to levy taxes for municipal purposes; and that said Sections 9009 to 9016 delegate to the voters of any city of the class named therein the right to impose a tax upon the taxable property in such city to be levied and collected as other taxes. That the city of St. Louis, under Sections 20 to 25 of Article IX of the State Constitution is authorized to and has framed a charter which the people have ratified and that the same can be amended only in the manner therein provided; that this charter provides for the government and control of all local matters within said city; that the establishment and maintenance of a zoological park is a local matter for the establishment of which no provision has been made in the city charter and which can only be effected by an amendment thereto, that no such amendment has been made. That the adoption by the Slate Legislature of Sections 9009 to 9016 was unauthorized, in that the' power therein; attempted to be exercised was local in its nature and had been confided to the people of St. Louis under its charter.

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Bluebook (online)
1 S.W.2d 1021, 318 Mo. 910, 1928 Mo. LEXIS 605, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-zoological-board-of-control-v-city-of-st-louis-mo-1928.