Strother v. Kansas City

223 S.W. 419, 283 Mo. 283, 1920 Mo. LEXIS 245
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 19, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 223 S.W. 419 (Strother v. Kansas City) 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
Strother v. Kansas City, 223 S.W. 419, 283 Mo. 283, 1920 Mo. LEXIS 245 (Mo. 1920).

Opinion

GOODE, J.

The parties are agreed about the facts and the issues in this case, so we adopt the statement of them prepared by the respondent.

“The Board of Police Commissioners of' Kansas. City, Missouri, made and certified to the Common Council of said city, an estimate of the amount of money necessary for the support and maintenance of the police department of said city for the fiscal year 1919, as required by Article 17 of Chapter 84 of the Revised Statutes of 1909, as amended. Thereafter, and on April 22, 1919, said Common Council passed and the Mayor approved Ordinance 34613, levying property taxes for said city for said fiscal year. The first section of the ordinance is as follows:

“ ‘Be it. Ordained by the Common Council of Kansas City:

*289 “ ‘ Section 1. Taxes for the fiscal year of 1919, commencing on the 21st day of April, 1919, are hereby levied on all property in Kansas City, Missouri, Hablé to taxation for state and county purposes, and not by general law exempt from municipal taxation, as follows, to-wit:

“ ‘First. A general tax of ten mills on each dollar of assessed value for general purposes.

• “ ‘Second. A tax of one mill on each dollar ot such assessed value, which tax is necessary and will be sufficient to pay the amount certified.to the Common Council by the Comptroller to be raised by taxation for the payment of coupons falling due during the fiscal year 1919.

“ ‘Third. A tax of one-half mill on each dollar of such assessed value, which tax is necessary for the maintenance of the Water Sinking Fund, created for the redemption of the city’s outstanding Kansas City judgment and water works bonds, at the time of their maturity.

“‘Fourth. A tax of one mill on each dollar of such assessed value, which tax is necessary for the maintenance of the General Sinking Fund, created for the redemption of the city’s outstanding Kansas City general bonds, at the time of their maturity.

“ ‘Fifth. A tax of two mills on each dollar of such assessed value for the support and maintenance of the Metropolitan Police System in Kansas City, Missouri.’

“The respondent Albert R. Strother, owning real property subject to- city taxation, tendered all the taxes levied by said ordinance, except the two-mill tax levied by subdivision fifth of Section 1 for the support and maintenance of the police department. This tender was refused. Thereafter said respondent, as plaintiff, filed this suit to enjoin the collection of said two-mill tax and to remove the cloud cast thereby upon his title to said real property. This suit was brought on behalf of the named plaintiff and all other persons similarly situated who might elect to come in and be made parties *290 thereto. Thereafter the respondent,- Williams Realty Company,' as owner of real property subject to city taxation, after a similar- tender and refusal, came in and was made a party plaintiff and filed a similar petition.

‘ ‘ The basis of the' suit is' that said two-mill tax is illegal and^ unconstitutional because in excess of the highest rate of taxation authorized by the charter of Kansas City and particularly by Sections 1 and 2 of Article 5 of such charter, and also in excess of the highest rate of taxation which Kansas City is authorized by the State ■ Constitution, and particularly by Sections 11 and 12 of Article 10 thereof, to levy, and is also in violation of Sections 1 and 8 of said 'Article 10, and Section 30 of Article 2 of said Constitution and of Section 1 of Article 14 of the Amendments to the Constitution of the United States.

“The answer of the defendants admits the facts pleaded, but denies the legal conclusions ’stated. It further pleads the estimate of the Board of Police Commissioners, and alleges that it was mandatory upon the city to provide the money to meet such estimate which could not be done, and also provide money for other city expenses by the ten mills levied for municipal purposes, and it was therefore ‘necessary, in order that sufficient money might be raised for municipal purposes to carry on and support the business of the city, to levy a tax of ten mills on the dollar, and ‘for the support and maintenance of the ■ Metropolitan Police System, a further -tax of two mills on the dollar; that said two-mill tax is not a. tax for municipal purposes, but is to meet an obligation or liability imposed on the city by . the State which can be met in no other way, and said levy is not violative of any provision of the charter, .or of any provision of the Constitution of Missouri, or of the .United States.’

‘ ‘ The reply admits the obligation of the city to support the police department and alleges that by the express terms of the law imposing such obligation it must be met ‘out of the annual revenues of said city and out *291 of no other source or revenue whatever, ’ and that there is no law authorizing said two-mill tax.

“It further alleged that if said two-mill tax is for ‘a state purpose as alleged in said answer (which allegations plaintiff denies) then any law by which' such obligation or liability was attempted to be imposed upon said city, and by which it was attempted to authorize said city to levy a tax to meet the same, would be in violation of said Section 1 of Article 10' and void, and said tax is therefore unconstitutional and void as in violation of said Section 1 of. Article 10. ’

“The reply then pleads Section 8 of Article 10 of the Constitution, and alleges that the taxable property of the State is more than $900,000,000, and that the County Court of Jackson County, on May 20, 1919, levied the full fifteen cents on the one hundred dollars for state purposes, and that if said two-mill tax is ‘a state tax, as alleged in said answer (which allegation plaintiff denies) then the same was and is in excess of the rate of tax for all state purposes as fixed by said Section 8 of Article 10 and by the laws of the General Assembly passed thereunder,’ and is therefore void. .

“The defendants filed a motion for judgment in their favor on the pleadings and this was overruled and exceptions saved. The case was submitted on the pleadings and agreed facts, and judgment was rendered for respondents as prayed in their petition, they paying into court, as required by such judgment, the taxes tendered and found legally due. After the usual steps, defendants appealed to this court.”

We .have been pointed to no statute and know of none which gives the power to the Common Council of Kansas City, to levy a tax of two mills on the dollar of assessed values in the city, in order to defray the cost" of maintaining its Metropolitan Police System. The able counsel for defendants' do not say there is a statute which directly confers the power, but insist it was conferred by necessary implication when the General Assembly enacted the law imposing on the city the obliga *292 tion to maintain the department.

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Bluebook (online)
223 S.W. 419, 283 Mo. 283, 1920 Mo. LEXIS 245, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/strother-v-kansas-city-mo-1920.