Steinbrenner v. City of St. Joseph

226 S.W. 890, 285 Mo. 318, 1920 Mo. LEXIS 169
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 13, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 226 S.W. 890 (Steinbrenner v. City of St. Joseph) 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
Steinbrenner v. City of St. Joseph, 226 S.W. 890, 285 Mo. 318, 1920 Mo. LEXIS 169 (Mo. 1920).

Opinions

GRAVES, J.

Action by certain taxpayers of the City of St. Joseph, to restrain such city.from issuing improvement bonds in the sum of $1,850,000. The petition charges some thirteen reasons for the invalidity of this bond issue. The ones chiefly'urged are (1) the failure, of legal notice, and (2) that such an issue would allow the city to become indebted in excess of the constitutional limitation.

On March 31, 1919, there were introduced five separate ordinances in the, Common Council of the City of St. Joseph, and these were passed by such Council and approved by the Mayor oil the 21st day of April, 1919. These five several ordinances carried the total of $1,850,000 proposed bonded indebtedness. These ordinances fixed the election date at May 27, 1919. On April *323 14, 1919, the County Court, in anticipation of said election, made an order for a special registration of voters 'for said election, such registration to be held April 29th and 30th, 1919.

On April 28, 1919, the city, pursuant to the provisions of Section 8671, Revised Statutes 1909, presented the ordinances to the Judge of the Circuit Court and obtained from him a certificate to the effect that the total amount of said bonds could be issued without violating the Constitution of the State. The date of the issuance of the bonds was fixed as of July 15, 1919.

The election was held on May 27, 1919, each of the five propositions being voted upon separately. Each carried by an overwhelming vote, so that unless there are fatal defects in the proceedings, or that the proposed issue so increased the indebtedness of the city as to be violative of constitutional provisions, the bonds are valid. Of the objections in the course of the opinion, where the relevant facts can best be outlined.

Effective ; Approval^01 S I. It is urged that the notice of the election was not sufficient. The lower court held that the bonds were void by a general judgment for the plaintiffs. The particular grounds upon which the injunction against the issuance of the bonds was made, are not specified. We are therefore left to grapple with the whole category of objections lodged in the petition, save and except such as have been abandoned here, or as might have been abandoned below as indicated by the course of the trial. The statute which governs the publication of notice in this ease is Section 8672, Revised Statutes 1909, which reads:

“After such certificate the city shall -cause to be published, once each week for four consecutive weeks, in the newspaper at the time doing the city printing, the last insertion to be not more than five days prior to the time for election,,a copy of such ordinance and certificate, with a proclamation, according to law, that an election will be held at the time.appointed in the ordinance *324 for the voters of the city to vote oil the proposition for the issue of bonds, as proposed by the ordinance.”

The following admission was-made of record:

“It is admitted in this case that the ordinances referred to in the petition and introduced in evidence were published on April 29, 1919, May 5, 1919, May 12, 1919, May 19, 1919, and May 26, 1919, in the St. Joseph G azette, the>paper at the time doing’ the official printing for the City of St. Joseph.”

It will be observed, that there were five publications, the last of which was within five days of the election. The statute, supra, only requires four publications, ‘ ‘ one each week for four consecutive weeks.”

The point made is, that under the law the ordinances did not become effective until May 2, 1919, and the city had no power before that date to act in anyway thereunder.

St. Joseph is a city of the first class, of which we will take judicial knowledge. Concerning such cities we have Section 8859, Revised Statutes 1909, which, so far as applicable, reads:

“No ordinance passed by the council, except when otherwise required by the general laws of the State or by the provisions of this article, except an ordinance for the immediate preservation of the public peace, health or safety, which contains a statement of its urgency and is passed by a four-fifths vote of the council, shall go into effect before ten days from the time of its final passage.”

This is' the referendum statute for such cities, and the ordinances before us do not by their terms fall within the excepted classes named in this statute, unless the very face of the ordinances exempt them from this provision. These ordinances do not in the language of the statute, supra, contain “a statement of its urgency/,” although the vote in the council was unanimous, so far as the vote of the five present members, show. By Section 8548, the common council of cities of the first class *325 shall consist of five members, so that there was a unanimous vote on these ordinances, and they might have come within, the excepted classes under Section 8859, supra, had they contained the necessary recitation of “a. statement of its urgency.” This purely on the theory that they were ordinary ordinances, and not ordinances of the character shown by their face.

In our judgment Section 8859 has no reference to ordinances of the character here involved. As said, this is the referendum statute of cities of the first class. Its purpose was to have a reference to the voters upon an. ordinance that would become effective at the date of its passage and approval, and then ten days was allowed for the purpose of the reference. Bui the ordinances before us are mere references to the people of the questions therein involved. They do not purport to be completed ordinances, for they themselves provide for a reference of their terms and the adoption of their terms,* and the questions by them submitted. They are ordinances only in a limited sense. They are really proposed ordinances for the ratification of the voters. When ratified by the voters, they become ordinances. They might be said to fall within that line of ordinances mentioned in said Section 8859, supra, by the clause except when otherwise required hly the general laws of the State,” if perchance this section covered proposed ordinances of this kind at all. We do not think that this section applies at all.

When the mayor signed these proposed ordinances that branch of the legislative power had done all that could be done to make them effective. When the voters ratified them, they became finally effective, barring legislative or constitutional defects. The passage. of such proposed ordinances was but the first step in the general plan to increase the indebtedness of the city. This step was complete upon the approval of the Mayor, and all other steps could then be taken, in accordance with the proposed ordinances, as would be necessary, under the *326 city charter, to complete the ordinances by a vote of the electorate. Under this view of the law there were five valid publications of the notice, and if this he true, all objections as to the notice-fails. Not only do the objections to the notice fail, hut all objections to things done under the proposed ordinances from April 21st, the date of their approval by the Mayor.

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Bluebook (online)
226 S.W. 890, 285 Mo. 318, 1920 Mo. LEXIS 169, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/steinbrenner-v-city-of-st-joseph-mo-1920.