Appellant, MAJ Investment Corporation, appeals from a judgment imposed by the Circuit Court of the County of St. Louis upon de novo review of various municipal ordinance convictions for building and housing code violations obtained by respondent, the City of University City. We reverse.
Appellant, MAJ Investment Corporation, is the owner of a building, commonly known as the Tivoli Building, located in University City, Missouri. Between 1986 and 1992 respondent charged directors, officers and agents of appellant with violating provisions of the city’s housing and/or building codes. Appellant appealed its municipal court convictions of these violations to the Circuit Court for St. Louis County for de novo review. The court consolidated the various appeals for hearing.
On December 6, 1993, appellant and respondent submitted the case to the trial judge pursuant to a two-page stipulation. The stipulation substituted appellant for the various directors, officers and agents originally charged, and dismissed eight of the
The stipulation also stated in pertinent part:
The parties stipulate that the allegations contained in each Information filed in each cause listed above constitute violations of all University City municipal Code ordinances listed on each Information and plaintiffs evidence would be that said violations exist as alleged. The parties stipulate that said ordinances were in full force and effect on the date(s) alleged and listed on each Information, and that the punishment for each violation is a maximum of 90 days in jail and/or a maximum fine of $500. Defendant denies the allegations.
On December 7, 1993, the trial court, in handwritten orders, found appellant guilty on four of the causes and imposed fines for each cause except one, where sentence was suspended. On December 9, 1993, the trial court found appellant guilty on the final cause and imposed a fine. Appellant now appeals.
Appellant presents two points for appeal. Appellant first contends the trial court’s findings of guilt were erroneous, because respondent’s ordinances which served as the basis for the trial court’s findings were never before the trial court. Therefore, respondent failed to prove an essential element required in municipal convictions. Appellant’s second point concerns the trial court’s sentencing of appellant, which appellant alleges was in error for the following reasons: respondent failed to prove appellant’s guilt as set out in the first point; the sentencing occurred on the same day as the adjudication of guilt, in violation of appellant’s rights; appellant was not present for sentencing, as was appellant’s right; and the trial court twice assessed fines against appellant for the same charge.
On review, we must sustain the judgment of the trial court unless there is no substantial evidence to support it when the evidence and reasonable inferences therefrom are viewed in the light most favorable to the municipality; all evidence and inferences to the contrary are to be disregarded.
St. Louis County v. Afshari,
Appellant’s first point of error concerns the University City ordinances upon which the trial court found appellant guilty. Appellant contends the trial court’s findings of guilt should be reversed because the ordinances under which appellant was charged and convicted were never entered into evidence at the trial level. Therefore respondent failed to prove the contents of the city ordinances allegedly violated by appellant as required in municipal prosecutions. Respondent, in response, refers to the stipulation set out above, asserting that this stipulation sufficed as proof of the relevant ordinances.
Municipal enactments are not subject to judicial notice by trial or appellate courts.
City of St. Joseph v. Roller,
The question before us is whether the stipulation set out above suffices to prove the existence and terms of the ordinances under which respondent prosecuted appellant. We believe it does not.
In
City of Kansas City v. Narron,
Here, the parties stipulated the ordinances cited in each Information were in full force and effect, and the allegations in each Information constituted violations of those ordinances. However, the terms of the ordinances themselves cannot be found in the Informations, in the trial court’s orders, in the parties’ briefs, or anywhere else in the record before us. The terms of the ordinances appellant was convicted under are nowhere in evidence. The parties’ stipulation as to the existence of the ordinances does not suffice to avoid the unambiguous requirement under Missouri law that the ordinances themselves must be in evidence.
The applicable ordinance is an essential element of proof and must be before the court.
City of Kansas City v. Baker,
Reversed. 2
Notes
. The principles of double jeopardy preclude retrying appellant under the same municipal ordinances, where the error is due to the prosecuting authorities’ failure to set out an essential element of proof.
City of Kansas City v. Baker,
. Due to the dispositive nature of appellant’s first point of appeal, we need not address appellant’s second point.
