113 Mo. 395 | Mo. | 1893
This is a suit to recover damages for tearing down a partly constructed frame house belonging to the plaintiff, which was situated within the fire limits of the defendant city, as those limits had been defined by ordinance before any part of the building had been constructed. The defendants, other than the city, are Hartwig, Westheimer and McNutt, who were respectively the mayor, acting mayor and chief of the fire department.
The defendants justify under the charter and ordinances. The second section of the act of February 8, 1865, amending the character of the city of St. Joseph (Acts 1865, p. 434) provides: “The mayor and city council shall have power, by ordinance, to levy and collect the following taxes, viz.: . First. To license, tax and regulate” numerous occupations and objects, all of which are named. “ Tenth. * * * to regulate restrain or prohibit the' erection of wooden buildings within such limits as may be prescribed by ordinance, and to provide for the removal of the same ■ at the expense of the owners thereof when erected and suffered to remain contrary to the ordinances of the city.”
The defendants set up and put in evidence two ordinances defining the fire limits, and a third which provides:
“Sec. 2. No building shall be erected within the fire limits * * * unless the same shall be constructed in conformity with the following provision: All outside and party walls shall be made of stone, brick or other fire proof materials; said walls, •shall not be less than eight inches in thickness.”
“Sec. 6. Whenever any wooden building shall be erected, enlarged or removed, or in process, of erection, •enlargement or removal, contrary to the provisions of*400 this chapter, upon information it shall be the duty of the mayor to issue an order to the owner, occupant, person in charge or builder thereof, to have such building taken down or removed to some place outside the fire limits, forthwith; and upon refusal or neglect of such person to comply with the requirements of such order within forty-eight hours after having received the same, the mayor shall-cause said building to be removed and the expense thereof may be recovered of the owner of such building by suit.”
The other evidence discloses the following facts: A sewer ran across the plaintiff’s lot upon which he first put up the walls of a brick house. These walls fell during a heavy rainfall; and, at a meeting of the city council held on the seventeenth of September, 1884, the defendants Hartwig and "Westheimer being present, he presented a petition asking permission to erect a frame building; and “on motion the petition was received and referred to the board of fire engineers and the two members of the council from the third ward, with power to give the permission asked for.” This board or committee and the two aldermen signed and gave to the plaintiff written permission to build a frame house, the roof to be covered with tin and the sides and ends with sheet iron. Defendant Westheimer was one of the persons who signed this permit. Armed with this permit the plaintiff made a contract for the' construction of the house and proceeded with the work.
Mayor Hartwig signed and caused to be served on the plaintiff and his contractor a written notice, dated, the second of October, 1884, stating that the building was within the fire limits, that it did not conform to' the ordinance, and directing them to stop work on the building and “to tear down all parts of said-building-already erected,” within forty-eight hours. Plaintiff testified that the notice was served on him, that he-.
The court directed a verdict for the defendants Hartwig and Westheimer and as to the other defendants submitted to the jury the question whether McNutt used such care as to cause no more injury to the materials than was necessary, and this issue the jury found for defendants.
The first contention on the part of the plaintiff is, that the charter power to regulate, restrain or prohibit the erection of wooden buildings carries with it the power to license the erection of such structures; that the charter being silent as to the form of the license, '
Where a charter commits the decision of a matter to the council, and is silent as to the mode of expressing the decision, it may be evidenced by resolution and need not be in the form of an ordinance. This propo-* sition is well settled by the authorities cited by the plaintiff. But it is just as well settled that when the mayor is part of the lawmaking power, his concurrence in legislative action is essential to its validity. If the charter provides that the power given must be exercised by ordinance, and it requires the concurrence of the mayor to pass an ordinance, action by a simple resolution of the council is invalid. Saxton v. Beach, 50 Mo. 488; Saxton v. St. Joseph, 60 Mo. 158; Thompson v. Boonville, 61 Mo. 283; Irvin v. Devors, 65 Mo. 627; Trenton v. Coyle, 107 Mo. 194.
By the charter provision before quoted the limits in which wooden buildings may be regulated, restrained or prohibited must be defined by ordinance. As to this there can be no question. We think it equally clear that the restraint, regulation or prohibition must ■ also be by virtue of an ordinance. The words “by ordinance” in the first clause apply to and qualify the tenth clause as well as the preceding nine clauses. Indeed the tenth clause makes this clear, for it says the mayor and council shall have power to provide for the removal of wooden buildings when “erected and suffered to remain contrary to the ordinances of the city.” The regulation, restraint or prohibition, whatever it may be, must be evidenced by an ordinance, and a simple resolution of the council is not sufficient. The charter is clear to the effect that every ordinance before it can become a law must be presented to the mayor for his approval. This resolution was not pre
It is doubtless' true that, under this charter, the city of St. Joseph could regulate, instead of prohibiting, the erection of wooden buildings, even in the fire limits. It could fix and determine the regulations by general ordinance, and make it the duty of every person to obtain a permit or license before erecting a building. With such general ordinance prescribing the regulations, a special ordinance in case of each permit would not be necessary. The power to examine the plans of a proposed structure and to issue the permit could be delegated to some officer, or the permit could be issued by resolution of the council. But all this does not aid the plaintiff in this case; for the mayor and council had enacted no such general ordinance. The ordinance and the only ordinance in force was the one which required all outside and party walls to be of stone, brick or other fire proof materials. The resolution and permit issued by the committee, to which the plaintiff’s petition was referred, undertake to suspend the operation of the ordinance in this particular case, and this the council could not do. It could only be done by the power that enacted the ordinance, that is to say, by the concurrent act of the mayor and council by an ordinance. The court committed no error in excluding the petition which the plaintiff presented to
2. It is next insisted that the ordinance directing the removal of the building is void because it attempts to justify the destruction of private property without judicial inquiry, and therefore violates that provision of the constitution which declares “that no person shall be deprived of life, liberty or property without due process of law.” And in support of this we are cited to Lowry v. Rainwater, 70 Mo. 152, and Rendering Company v. Behr, 77 Mo. 91.
In the first of these cases the defendants, acting pursuant to statutory law, seized and publicly destroyed a table used as a gambling table without judicial investigation or condemnation. The law was held unconstitutional. It was not the gambling table which constituted the offense, but it was the use to which it. was put. Here it is the house itself which violates the law. In the other case a city ordinance was held unconstitutional which- undertook to confer upon one person the right to remove and convert to his own use the carcasses of dead animals not slain for food. It was held that the ordinance could not be upheld as a police regulation, and this for the reason that it was not necessary to take property from one and give it to another, until the property was in such a condition that it or the use of it was likely to become a nuisance. Here the ordinance does not undertake to deprive the plaintiff of his property. The bare statement of these cases is enough to show that they are entirely unlike the one in hand.
Many of the powers exercised by municipal corporations are police powers, delegated to the corporations for the public good; and it is well settled law that every citizen holds his property subject to the exercise
Tbe power of a city to take all reasonable measures to prevent fires and their spread is of tbe greatest importance, for on its proper exercise depends tbe lives and property of tbe citizens; and it is accordingly held by a majority of the courts in this country that municipal corporations have tbe inherit power to prescribe fire limits and to regulate or prevent tbe erection of wooden buildings within sucb limits, though in a few states it is held sucb power exists only where it is conferred by express grant. Tbe eases on this subject are collected in 15 American & English Encyclopedia of Law, 1170. It is unnecessary here to express any opinion on this question; for. in this case tbe city has tbe express power to create sucb limits and to regulate or prohibit tbe erection of wooden buildings therein, and to provide for tbe removal of sucb buildings when erected or allowed to remain contrary to ordinance.
Tbe real question here is whether tbe city bad tbe right to tear down tbe building without any judicial proceeding against tbe plaintiff, tbe owner thereof. We find no real conflict in tbe authorities upon this question; for it is held in many cases that where a municipal corporation has tbe power to prohibit tbe
The right to tear down or remove the prohibited building is analogous to thé right which every individual has to abate a nuisance, the limits to which right of the individual we need not stop to consider. The cases cited also show that tearing down such prohibited buildings without judicial proceedings, erected in defiance of law, is not a forfeiture of private property; for as has been said it is but the exercise of a police power, and not the declaration of a forfeiture. Persons, however, executing the provisions of such ordinances, without judicial investigation, must be prepared to establish these facts: First. That the house was erected or permitted to remain in violation of law; and second, 'that in tearing down the building reasonable care was taken to preserve the materials. We may add that such ordinance must be reasonable, but there is nothing in this case to show or tending to show that this ordinance was or is unreasonable.
There is no doubt but the plaintiff began the construction of this frame house and expended some $500 ak.least, relying upon the permit; and the case is a hard .one. But it must be remembered this ordinance was enacted in. the , interest of the public good, and
3. To the ordinance fixing the fire limits, put in evidence by defendants, the plaintiff objected on the ground that there was no evidence tending to show that it had been passed by the council, which objection was overruled. The records of the council were not offered in evidence, but the document professes on its face to be the original ordinance. It was approved by the mayor and attested by the register, and is under the seal of the city. Section 4648, Eevised Statutes, 1879, provides: “All ordinances of the city may be proved by the seal of the corporation.’’ We cite this section of the general law because we understand the city of St. Joseph had come under the general law before the date of the trial of this case in the circuit court. The ordinance having the seal of the city attached was properly admitted in evidence. Further proof of its passage by the council was not necessary.
4. It is next insisted that the defendent McNutt stands before the court without a shadow of justification, because the letter or order addressed to him, as chief of the fire department, dated the twenty-first of October, 1884, and signed by acting mayor Westheimer, did not command or even request him to tear down the house.
The ordinance it will be' seen makes it the duty of the mayor to issue an order to the owner of the building to have the same taken down, and, upon the neglect of
5. The jury found that McNutt and the carpenters employed by him used due care in taking the house down, and no objections are made to the instructions relating to this branch of the case. The judgment is therefore affirmed.