266 Mo. 523 | Mo. | 1916
This is a case growing out of the prosecution of, defendant in error for an alleged violation of an ordinance of the city of St. Louis. Being cast in the police court and likewise in the Court of Criminal Correction to which it appealed, the city
The section of the city ordinances which the complaint alleges that defendant violated, reads thus:
“See. 341. No fourth-class buildings shall hereafter be built within the district known as the fire limits, as hereafter defined, except such buildings as are provided for in sections 342 and 343 of this article.” (Here follows a description of the fire limits.)
When the case reached the Court of Criminal Correction a motion to quash the complaint was filed by defendant, but action thereon was deferred by the learned judge nisi till he had heard the case on the merits. Thereupon the case was presented below upon agreed facts, which the court heard and thereafter entered an order quashipg the complaint. Therefore, though we follow the language of the court nisi in stating that the motion to quash was sustained, it is plain that the case was actually heard and decided on the merits.
The agreed facts are lengthy; but since in the view we take of the controversy, alone, the method of the construction and physical nature of the structure erected and used by defendant is important, we will not burden the statement of the case with more of the facts than will but suffice to illuminate this single point. Specifically, defendant was prosecuted for erecting and using as a moving-picture theatre, a certain structure which plaintiff contends violated the provisions of the section of the city ordinances which we quote above. The erection and use of the structure within the fire-limits were admitted. It is therefore manifest that the whole case turns on the nature of the structure so erected by defendant. The agreed facts
“Said shelter or structure is ninety-seven feet in length and fifty-eight feet in width, and has a height along the center of thirty feet, and a height along the sides, between the ground and the eaves, of eight feet. It is supported by two telegraph .poles fourteen inches in diameter firmly set in the ground, one at the front end, facing Jefferson Avenue, on the inside, about ten feet west of the entrance, and in the center thereof. The other on the outside and west of the west end thereof. Said telegraph poles are. thirty-five feet high, and between them is stretched a wire cable an inch and a half or two inches in diameter. To said cable are attached ropes which extend down to the top of the canvas cover and support the same. Also at intervals of eight feet, ropes extend down from the center of the top of the cover of said shelter or structure to the sides and bottom thereof, and most of them are connected with wooden posts securely driven in the ground and which are located about ten feet outside of the canvas cover, which keeps the covering taut. There are thirty of said poles upon each side of said shelter or structure', one-half of which are eight feet in height and the remainder twelve feet in height. Said poles are about three and one-half inches in diameter, and in the center of the top thereof is an iron peg securely driven therein, about one-half inch in diameter and eight inches in length and which projects above the top of the said pole about five inches. The canvas covering is composed of 12-ounce Army Duck Canvas. At the front end of said shelter or structure two wire cables or guy cables extend from the top of the front telegraph pole, one to the northeast comer of-the lot upon which said shelter stands, and the other to the southeast corner. Said cables are attached to*527 posts firmly embedded in the ground fifteen feet outside of said shelter. At the rear end of said structure or shelter are three guy cables which extend from the top of the telegraph pole at the rear of said structure to posts firmly embedded in the ground, one of them at the northwest corner of the lot upon which said shelter or structure is located, another at the southwest comer and another at the west and near the center of the west end of said lot. The* front and rear ends of said shelter or structure are supported by two poles, eighteen feet high, at each end thereof, which support the canvas cover at a point fifteen feet from the top of the cover on each side and at the end thereof. At the rear end of said shelter or structure is located a stage or platform, built of wood, upon each side of which are wings or dressing rooms composed partly of wood and partly of canvas. Inside of said structure or shelter are rows or tiers of seats in bench form. Between said rows of seats there is one aisle down the center six feet wide, and on each side of said shelter or structure there is also an aisle eight feet wide. There aré sixty-four benches, each of which will seat ten people, so that said shelter or structure has a seating capacity of six hundred and forty persons. The said shelter or structure is equipped with electric lights set in iron conduit for lighting in the evening, and the stage or platform is also equipped with electric footlights set in conduit. Said shelter or structure is constructed in such a way that the sides can be raised up in the summer time and lowered in the winter time, and in the winter time the- said sides are lowered, and at all places, except exits, when the sides are lowered, are banked along the outside with earth sufficient to shut out drafts. Said shelter or structure is equipped with four so-called cannon, or heavy cylindrical, stoves for heating, one stove being placed in each corner thereof, and the stovepipe goes out*528 through a hole in the side, which is fortified with asbestos and tin, and projects ten feet outside of the canvas cover. The floor of said structure or shelter is of earth and cinders, except that in front of each seat there is a board plank eight inches wide upon which the audience rest their feet. And in each aisle there is a board walk eight feet wide composed of one by two boards laid flat on the ground and nailed to cross pieces sunk in the ground. And between the ticket office and the east side of said shelter or structure are also similar boards laid in like manner. The seats are built of wood, in the form of benches. Along the street line or entrance to the lot upon which said shelter or structure stands is a series of door panels, composed of wood and glass, and consisting of eight such door panels. Six of said panels swing on hinges, and may he opened for the admission or exit of persons. Immediately inside of said outside entrance is an open space of ten feet where there exist two brick columns with wood jambs upon which two swinging doors are hung, composed of wood with glass windows, about seven feet in width and eight feet high.' Between the' two entrances there is a booth made of wood seven feet high and in the shape of a half moon, and is located outside of the shelter or structure. After passing through said inside entrance doors the audience are admitted into a small corridor or chamber, with a canvas cover, with canvas sides, which leads through a canvas curtain directly into the main auditorium. In the summer time these doors and the corridor are done away with, and the audience simply pass from the ticket office into the main auditorium. There they are seated for the purpose of witnessing exhibitions of moving pictures, etc. One exhibition is held every evening, and further, there is an exhibition every Sunday afternoon. Such, in general, is the description of the structure or shelter in question.”
The city ordinances define buildings of the several classes thus:
“ ‘Building of the First Class’ shall be taken to mean a building of fire-proof construction throughout, the structural parts of which are wholly of brick, stone, or tile, concrete, iron or steel, or other equally substantial and incombustible materials. ‘Building of the Second Class’ shall be taken to mean a building of mill or slow combustion construction, wherein all floors and roofs are constructed of heavy dressed timber, exposed beams, girders and planking and supported upon masonry walls, or on wooden or fireproofed iron or steel columns. ‘Building of the Third Class’ shall be taken to mean any building not of the first or second class, the external and party or division walls of which are wholly of brick, stone or other .equally substantial and incombustible materials. ‘ Building of the Fourth Class ’ shall be taken to mean*530 any building- not of tbe first, second or third classes.” [Sec. 336, R. C. St. Louis.]
There is but little doubt we opine that within limits not necessary here to discuss (since obviously the boundaries are wide enough to include the facts here), a legislative body may define the-objects affected or designed so to be by its own. enactments, and that we are bound ordinarily in construing its acts or ordinances to follow its own definitions., [State ex rel. v. Allison, 155 Mo. 325.] Therefore we note that a “building” is thus defined by the ordinances of plaintiff city:
“ ‘Building’ shall be taken to mean any structure for the support, shelter, or enclosure of persons, animals or chattels; and when separated by division walls without openings, then -each portion of such building shall be deemed a separate building.” [Sec. 336, R. C. St. Louis.]
So again narrowing the limits of the question and the scope of the instant inquiry, we n-eed only to ascertain whether the structure in question was a building within the purview of the above definition.
Defendant strenuously insists that the structure in controversy is a tent, and that a tent is not a building. Quod era-t demonstrandum. We may question this position from two angles: (a) Can it be maintained upon the facts, and (b) if it can be so maintained will the legislative definition nevertheless include it and make of it a building when, absent the definition, it was before but a tent?
The lexicons, under the statutory admonition that words found in statutes are to be.regarded ordinarily as being used in their plain, usual and everyday meaning- (Sec. 8057, R. S. 1909), define the word “tent” thus: “A pavilion, or.portable lodge consisting of skins, canvas or some strong- cloth stretched and sustained by poles, used for sheltering
The above definition of the lexicographers, is in line with that of the courts, as witness the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals which defines a tent thus: “A ‘tent,’ in the ordinary acceptation of the word, is a pavilion, portable lodge, or canvas house, inclosed with walls of cloth and covered with the same material.” [Killman v. State, 2 Tex. App. 222.] Likewise pertinent to the question whether a tent is a house, and therefore a building, the curious may consult the cases of Nowell v. Boston Academy; 130 Mass. 209; Blakemore v. Stanley, 150 Mass. 6; Favro v. State, 73 Am. St. 950; Williams v. State, 70 Am. St. 82; State v. Poole, 65 Kan. 713; People v. Stickman, 34 Cal. 242.
Analyzing the facts of construction in the light of the, definitions, supra, but leaving out of view the dimensions of this structure, which are ninety-seven by fifty-eight by thirty feet, we observe that it seems to lack portability, ■ in that it is supported by telegraph poles fourteen inches in diameter “set firmly in the ground.” These telegraph poles are bound together by a two-inch wire cable, which serves as, and in lieu of, a ridge-pole. From these telegraph poles other wire cables, five in all, called guy-cables, run down to an attachment to other posts “firmly em; bedded in the ground.” Likewise a departure touching the sort of materials used in construction is noted. For at the rear of the structure there is “a stage built of wood, upon each side of which are wings or dressing rooms composed partly of %uood and partly of canvas.” This stage and the whole structure for that, matter, is equipped with electric lights, and at the front of the stage there are footlights set in a conduit. Practically the whole of the floor, in fact all space, except that on which the seats sit, is covered
So, examined by the touchstone of similarity of earmarks, we must conclude that the structure in controversy is not a tent, as the latter word is generally understood. In passing we may say that the word ‘tent” as used in our statutes, numerously cited to us by defendant, means “tent” as the word is ordinarily understood, and therefore the language of those statutes is in no way pertinent to contradict what we say above.
Looking at the legislative definition and measuring the structure here thereby, there is no escape from the conclusion that it is a building within the purpose and mtent of the fire-limits ordinance, and so we rule.
Let the case be reversed and remanded, with directions to the court nisi to overrule the motion to quash the complaint and to retry the case in such wise as is not inconsistent with the views herein expressed.