KANSAS CITY, MISSOURI, Aрpellant, v. SCHOOL DISTRICT OF KANSAS CITY, MISSOURI.
No. 40157
Division One
April 21, 1947
May 12, 1947
201 S. W. (2d) 930
The record shows such inequitable and reprehensible conduct on the part of appellant with reference to keeping the property hidden from her own creditors, after the death of her husband, that she may not now have the aid of a court of equity to remedy the situation in which she now finds herself.
The judgment is affirmed. Bradley and Van Osdol, CC., concur.
PER CURIAM: - The foregoing opinion by DALTON, C., is adopted as the opinion of the court. All the judges concur.
Blatchford Downing and Caldwell, Downing, Noble & Garrity for respondent.
It is the position of plaintiff-appellant City that the police power within the corporate limits of City of Kansas City is vested in City, not in School District; and the boilers, chimneys, fuel-burning facilities and elevators of public school buildings are subject to City‘s police power. City further says an inspection fee is a necessary incident to defraying the expense incurred in City‘s exercise of the power; and the exaction of such fee from School District constitutes neither a tax nor an unconstitutional grant of public funds to City.
(It is conceded by School District in its brief that the fees are reasonable in amount and are truly inspection fees, that is, the fees are not taxes in any sense.)
As we understand defendant-respondent School District‘s position, it does not herein question the validity of City‘s regulatory meаsures in their general application; nor does School District object
Since the State through its instrumentality, School District, has constructed public school buildings in the thickly populated areas of Kansas City the State must contemplate there is reposed in itself, in School District, or in City the power and the responsibility of taking measures to protect the people and the property of the people of Kansas City from conflagrations, explosions, smoke nuisances, noxious gases, and casualties which might be caused or occasioned by the facilities of the public school buildings. Now, if City‘s power to regulate and supervise School District‘s facilities in the respects herein involved is recognized, City, it seems, should have the right to collect such fees as are reasonable and incidental to and in reimbursement for the necessary expense of the regulatory inspections, inasmuch as the inspection of School District‘s facilities by City is made necessary in the full exercise of City‘s police power by the location of Schoоl District‘s school buildings within the corporate limits of the
In the case of Mayo v. United States, 319 U. S. 441, 63 S. Ct. 1137, cited by School District, a Florida statute required inspection and exacted a fee for the inspection of commercial fertilizer, the sale or distribution of which was comprehensively regulated by the statute. The Supreme Court of the United States held the inspection fee could not be collected from the United States for inspections of fertilizer owned by the United States and being distributed to farmers of Florida under the direction of the Secretary of Agriculture in the promotion of the national soil conservation program. In promoting the program, the United States was acting in a governmental capacity within its delegated powers, none of which may be exercised throughout the nation by any one state. The inspection fee was laid directly on the United States and was a money exaction, the payment of which, if enforcible, would be required before executing a function of government. Such a requirement is prohibited by the supremacy clause.
The duty to provide for free public schools is vested by the Constitution in the Legislature.
See the court‘s discussion in the case of Kansas City v. Fee, supra, in which case defendant (who, as a janitor of the school district‘s school building, was directly in charge of a steam-heating boiler) was charged with and convicted of the violation of an ordinance providing that no person, not a fireman or еngineer licensed by the city, should be in charge of any steam boiler used for steam-heating purposes. It is true that the licensing ordinance did not directly impress itself upon the facilities of the public school buildings; and that the school district was recognizing and consenting to the measure, and was admitting the measure did not interfere with the district‘s educational purpose. Nevertheless, the Kansas City Court of Appeals boldly (but correctly, we believe) discussed the case in affirmatively answering the question, “Are the public schools, or rather more specifically in this case, are the employees of the public schools located within a city subject to those regulations of the city which are purely police regulations and do not involve any other limitatiоn or control?” (174 Mo. App. at page 504, 160 S. W. at page 538.)
The decisions of the courts of other jurisdictions are not all in precise alignment with our decision. See cases collated in the Annotation at 31 A. L. R. 450 et seq., following the reported case of Cook County v. Chicago, supra, which collation includes the cases of Kentucky Inst. v. Louisville, 123 Ky. 767; 97 S. W. 402; and Salt Lake City v. Board of Education, 52 Utah 540, 175 Pac. 654, cited by School District in its brief. The differences in decision, it seems, are in part due to the diversity of language of constitutional and statutory provisions of the various states as well as by the interpretation and construction of such provisions which the courts of several states have deemed proper; the Annotation seems scoped generally to include cases involving the applicability of provisions of so-called municipal “building codes” to stаte and county buildings; and the
The judgment should be reversed and the cause remanded.
It is so ordered. Bradley and Dalton, CC., concur.
PER CURIAM:—The foregoing opinion by VAN OSDOL, C., is adopted as the opinion of the court. All the judges concur.
