151 Mo. 189 | Mo. | 1899
Kansas City sued Joseph Stegmiller, formerly collector of the city of Westport, for moneys in his hands which he had collected and failed to turn over to the city of Westport, and procured judgment in the circuit court of Jackson county against him and his bondsmen.
One of the material allegations in the petition was that Kansas City had extended its corporate limits and absorbed the city of Westport, and had thereby become entitled under the law to collect from Stegmiller any money in his hands due the city of Westport.
The defendants in their answer admitted that Stegmiller was collector of Westport and that he had collected money due Westport and that he still owed the sum sued for to Wes l-port. He however, denied that he owed Kansas City any thing, and set up as a reason for not owing Kansas City that said city did not extend "its corporate limits so as to include Westport in accordance with the laws of the State of Missouri governing such matters, and assigned nine different reasons why the attempted extension was null and void. Among other reasons he alleged that section 1880 of the Revised Statutes of Missouri 1889, was void, said section being part of the law on which the extension was founded, as being in conflict with section 16 of Article IX of the Constitution of Missouri, and as being special legislation and otherwise unconstitutional. Defendants further averred that Kansas City was without power under the Constitution or laws of the State to extend its limits at iall.
In its reply the city traversed all the nine points raised in the answer.
The cause was tried in the circuit court of Jackson county, before Hon. E. P. Gates, one of the judges of the circuit court, and judgment was rendered for Kansas City.
The proceedings in this case began March 6th, 1897, when a resolution was passed by the common council of Kansas City, directing that the Mayor of that city notify the mayor of Westport of Kansas City’s intention to extend its limits so as to include, among other territory, Westport. Although this resolution of Kansas City was transmitted to the mayor of Westport by the mayor of Kansas City on March 10th, 1897, the mayor of Westport did nothing until August 23rd, 1897, when he issued his proclamation to the voters of Westport ordering a special election. Said special election was held in the city of Westport on September 28th, 1897, and a certificate embodying the result thereof was attested by the mayor of Westport and the city clerk thereof on October 4th, 1897. On the very same day that it was so attested and certified, the common council of Kansas City received it and filed it as part of the records of the city, and the mayor of Kansas City called the attention of the common council to the fact and officially recognized said communication from Westport’s mayor.
As soon as Westport had thus signified in proper manner its intention of becoming a portion of Kansas City, as extended, the law making authorities of Kansas City proceeded to do their part, and on October 26th, 1897, the common council passed a proposal to the qualified voters of the city that the Kansas City charter be amended by extending the city limits, and defined the limits accurately according to the map forming a part of the record in this case. This proposal will be found in the record. Its language is couched in the exact terminology used in section 16, article IX, of the Constitution, and in strict conformity to section 43, article XVII, ' of the city charter. This proposal was not only recommended by the mayor, but was approved by him, as part of the lawmaking authorities of the city, the same as other ordinances
The election in Kansas City occurred on December 2nd, 1897. The next general city election was held April 5th, 1898. The next day after the Kansas City election (December 3rd, 1897), the officials of Westport turned over all the official documents and moneys and property belonging to Westport to the Kansas City comptroller, and voluntarily went out of office, and no municipal functions .have been exercised by Westport from that time to this. The people of both cities acquiseced in the result.
The municipal government of Kansas City has adjusted itself to the new situation and has held one municipal election and one general election since the date of the annexation, to wit, December 2nd, 1897. Four new aldermen from the four new wards have taken their seats in the council.
I. With unfailing regularity the municipal affairs of Kansas City and Westport reappear at each recurring term of this court for solution.
This appeal challenges the right of Kansas City to extend its limits in any manner. Counsel asserts that neither in in the Constitution nor laws of the State can any authority for so doing be found.
It is scarcely necessary to state that Kansas City is now governed by a special freeholder’s charter, adopted by the voters of said city in pursuance of the provisions of sections 16 and 17, article IX of the Constitution of Missouri.
Among the provisions of section 16 is this: “Such charter so adopted may be amended by a proposal therefor made by the law-making authorities of such city published for >at least thirty days in three newspapers of largest circulation in such city, one of which shall be a newspaper printed in the German language, and accepted by three-fifths of the qualified voters of such city voting at a general or special election and not otherwise, but such charter shall always be
When confronted with this provision of our organic law as authority for the extension assailed in this case, learned counsel say they do not deny that Kansas City may amend its charter for some purposes, nor that ian extension of corporate limits is an amendment, but they deny that this kind of amendment, to wit, an extension is authorized by the Constitution. But this attempted restriction is not to be found in the Constitution itself. The only limitation of the power of amendment is that it must be adopted by three-fifths of the qualified voters at a general or special election after the due publication of the proposal and that the charter as amended shall always be in harmony with and subject to the laws of the State.
In City of Westport v. Kansas City, 103 Mo. loc. cit. 147, it was unanimously ruled by this court in Division No. One that it was “too plain to admit of doubt that any act on the part of Kansas City which contracts or expands its territorial jurisdiction is an amendment of its charter” and “an amendment too within the purview or section 16, of article IX of the Constitution.”
The amendment in that case was attempted by ordinance without the vote and assent of the voters of the city and for that reason alone was held ineffective. Both upon the authority of that case and the obvious reading of the Constitution we hold that in so far. as the action of Kansas City alone is concerned there is a plain constitutional grant of the power to extend its limits and a definite mode pointed out.
The argument based upon section 20 of article IX granting the city of St. Louis the right to .extend its limits so as to embrace the parks at that time beyond its boundary and other convenient and contiguous territory is foreign to the question. The specific rights accorded to St. Louis in no sense abridge the powers of cities that have or may avail themselves
Another and more serious question is presented in the next objection, that conceding Kansas City may amend its charter within its own limits still it has no power to legislate upon other cities without its boundaries and therefore no right to accomplish the dissolution of Westport. To this objection the counsel for Kansas City reply that the general law of the State as found in section 1880 of the Eevised Statutes of Missouri 1889, as amended by the act of 1895, fully provides for the extension when the additional territory consists of another municipality.
It was pointed out in Westport v. Kansas City, 103 Mo. 141, that on the tenth of March, 1887, the General Assembly passed an Act entitled “An Act providing that any city having’ a population of more than one hundred thousand inhabitants may frame a charter for its own government, and regulating the same” (Acts 1887, p. 42), and that said act was designed to aid cities organizing under section 16 of article IX of the Constitution. The forty-first section of that act provided that “any such city after the talcing effect of such charter, may at any time or times extend its limits by ordinance, provided that before such city shall extend its limits so as to include any incorporated city, town or village, four-sevenths of the qualified voters of the included city, town or village shall vote in favor of the proposition iand if they do so vote then the city making the extension may proceed to extend its limits as provided in this section.” That act as originally passed it will be observed, made no provision for the qualified voters of the city desiring to extend its limits to give their approval for the amendment of its
It was held that as the city was denied the right to amend its own charter save as pointed ont in the Constitution (section 16, article IX), so much of said act as gave the city the power to extend its limits by an ordinance without first submitting the proposition to and procuring the assent of three-fifths of the qualified voters of Kansas City was void.
Afterwards in 1895, said section 1880 (article I, chapter 31), Revised Statutes 1889, was amended by adding this provision: “Provided that if the city, the limits of which are to be extended, is organized under section 16 of article IX of the Constitution of this State, then the ordinance extending the limits shall, in all cases where the corporate limits are defined in the charter of such city, be in the form of a proposed amendment to the charter of such city, and before the same shall be of any force or effect, it shall be submitted to and accepted by three-fifths of the qualified voters of such city voting at a general or special election, in all respects and in compliance with all the requirements provided for amendments to the charter of such city.” [Laws 1895, p. 54.]
Met with this amendment, providing a complete scheme by. which the limits of a city with a freeholder’s charter may extend its limits in exact conformity with the section of the Constitution which authorizes such a charter, defendants assert that the act of the Legislature is void because special, and because it creates another class of cities and is an attempt to amend the charter on a local subject in defiance of the Constitution, and having been declared unconstitutional before it was amended, there was nothing left to amend.
Let us meet these objections fairly.
It is ti*ue that, because the General Assembly makes a single provision in a law which is invalid because in conflict' with the Constitution, so declared by the courts, it can not
This point is ruled against defendants.
It is next contended that the act creates a new class of cities contrary to section 7, article, IX of the Constitution, which provides that the General Assembly shall provide by general laws for the organization and classification of cities and towns and that the number of such classes shall not exceed four, and the powers of each class shall be defined by general laws, and all cities of the same class shall possess the same powers and be subject to the same provisions.
It is further provided that the Legislature, shall provide by general law whereby any city, town or village existing by virtue of any special or local law may elect to become subject to and be governed by the general laws relating to such corporations.
It is to be observed that the limitation of the number of classes to four applies only to those which the legislature is authorized to create.
On its face it is evident that the framers of the Constitution did not intend to destroy those cities then existing by special or local laws, but expressly gave them the option to continue under their special charters or to “elect to become subject to and be governed by the general laws relating to
Again we think it is plain that the framers of the Constitution ex vi teimini excluded from its legislative classification the city of St. Louis, which it expressly authorized to adopt its own scheme and charter, and all such cities as it authorized by section 16, article IX, to frame and adopt their own charters. These cities constitute two constitutional classes distinct from those chartered and classified by the legislature.
It follows that the legislature may legislate directly for these constitutional cities without infringing the Constitution, and in legislating therefor it does not create a new class but simply provides for a class created by the Constitution. Having expressly provided for these constitutional cities and having also provided in section 15 of the Schedule of the Constitution that “the General Assembly shall pass such laws as may be necessary to carry this Constitution into full effect,” it has become a settled rule of decision in this court that no law can be either local or special within the meaning of the Constitution which has for its object and purpose the carrying out of the constitutional command. It was and is apparent that these exceptional cities were not to be left without necessary legislation to govern them in respect to their relations and obligations to the State at large. As to subjects which bear upon their relation to the State government the General Assembly can by a general law provide for their government. [Ewing v. Hoblitzelle (1884) 85 Mo. 64 ; Kenefick v. St. Louis (1895) 127 Mo. 1 ; State ex rel. v. Higgins (1894) 125 Mo. 364 ; State ex rel. v. Hughes (1891) 104 Mo. 459 ; Spaulding v. Brady, 128 Mo. 653.]
The Legislature by section 1880, R. S. 1889, as amended by the Act of 1895 (Laws of 1895, page 55), provided a general law whereby cities of 10,000 inhabitants or less and having a special charter, and cities of more than one hundred thousand inhabitants organized under freeholders’ charters by authority of section 16, article IX, of the Constitution, might extend their limits, and that.whenever cities of either class desired to extend their limits SO' as to' include any other city of any class whatever, the consent of four-sevenths of the qualified voters of the city to be included should favor the same, and provided that the city extending its limits should also vote in favor of such extension by a four-sevenths vote of its qualified voters, thus requiring cities like Kansas City to conform to the Constitution from which it derived its powers in effecting such consolidtion, and the other cities of 10,000 inhabitants or less to conform to the statute giving them the power, and in so doing violated no provision of the Constitu- , tion, but conformed strictly to it.
As to the other objection that the act was special because confined to those cities only which had over 100,000 at the time of the passage of the act, it is sufficient to say that as to this class of cities it is an exact copy of the Constitution itself. If this objection be good it applies as well to the Constitution itself, and section 16, article IX, became inoperative the moment it was adopted because it is a fact of which we take judicial cognizance that at that time St. Louis alone
In State ex rel. v. Wofford, 121 Mo. 61, we ruled that a statute applicable to all cities of a certain population was a general law when it prescribed a rule for future government in all such cities as may in the course of time reach the requisite population, and is not restricted by its provisions to a state of facts then existing and not applicable to any other city which may in the future attain that population. This constitutional provision was designed for the future and permanent government of the State. It was prospective in its purpose and so was the act of 1887 and its amendment in 1895. Its provisions will apply to any other city when it attains 100,000 inhabitants as well as to Kansas City, nor is it at all improbable that contiguous to such large city may be villages, towns or small cities situated as Westport is to Kansas City.
We hold that the law of 1887 as amended by the act of 1895 is not a special or local law.
But again it is urged that this annexation of Westport is void because Kansas City did not pursue section 7, article I, of its own charter which provided for the extension by ordinance.
This court having held that section 7, of article I, of the charter was void, because it was in violation of the Constitution, that section no longer exists in contemplation of law.
In the language of counsel it was atrophied by the decision of Westport v. Kansas City, 103 Mo. 141.
After said section had been held void there still. remained in the charter of Kansas City a provision known as section 43, article XVII, which provides, “This charter may be amended at any time by proposal therefor made by the lawT
Another objection to the extension is that in violation of section 1885, E. S. 1889, territory was annexed to the city within four months next preceding the general city election held in Kansas City, held April 5th, 1898.
The facts are, as already stated, that the election, at which the proposed amendment was voted on, was held December 2nd, 1897. The next city election was held April 5, 1898. Four months had clearly intervened unless defendant’s further contention that the amendment did not take effect for thirty days after its adoption, be true. But there is no such provision of the Constitution. Unless otherwise provided either by the Constitution or laws all laws and amendments take effect from the date ®f their approval. _ Endlieh on Interpretation of Statutes, secs. 498 and 539.
It is also insisted that the elections for the extension were void because, there was no valid registration prior thereto. The election in Kansas City was held on December 2, 1897. Prior thereto the General Assembly of this State at the regular session beginning on January 6th, 1897, amended the law requiring registration in cities of over 100,000 inhabitants so that section 40 of .said act should read: “Section 40. At any special election occurring in a portion
As to Westport there was no law requiring registration in a city of its size and the Legislature in 1895 (Laws 1895, p. 170) expressly provided that the so-called Australian ballot system should not apply to cities of the fourth class to which it is conceded Westport belonged prior to the extension. The argument that because Jackson county had over 100,000 inhabitants, the Legislature was required by section 5, article VIII, of the Constitution, to provide for the registration of voters therein, falls short of establishing that an election therein is Amid prior to a law providing for such registration. The Constitution is not self-enforcing on this topic. Moreover it is clear that Westport did not. fall within the class of cities for which the Legislature was required to provide registration.
But the resources of defendants are not yet exhausted. They insist that the extension was void because the proposition submitted to Westport was, that Westport was to be included vrithin Kansas City, whereas at the time of the proposed extension Kansas City took in other territory.
Joint Resolution No. 1319, directing the mayor of Kansas City to inform the mayor of Westport of Kansas City’s intention to extend its limits, recited: “It is the desire of Kansas City by amendment to its charter to extend its corporate limits so as to include Westport and other adjacent territory.” Westport could only vote her own consent to be included and this she did, but she had full notice that other territory was also to be annexed.
This point is somewhat attenuated. It was admitted that the description of the proposed boundaries of Kansas
Another point is made and that is, that the extension would increase the debt of Kansas City beyond the constitutional limit.
The assessed value of the property in the included territory is $6,341,090. The indebtedness of "Westport was $120,000. The assessed valuation of Kansas City is $69,200,000, but there is no evidence of the indebtedness of the city, and hence there is no force in the point.
¥e have gone through all the points raised in this appeal because they were urged, and passed upon by Judge Cates, and it was just to him to hear the case on the theory on which it was tried before him and because in our opinion it is high time that the validity of the municipal acts and the status of Kansas City and Westport should be definitely settled.
But in strictness we do not concede that this is a proper proceeding to test this corporate action. Until questioned by quo warranto or other direct proceedings by the State, it is intolerable that every time a city sues on an account it must first establish its right to exist. As said by Judge Dileon in his work on Mun. Corp. (3 Ed.), sec, 899, “In all
We have reached the conclusion at which the learned circuit court arrived. Our labors have been shortened by the very clear memorandum filed by him when he gave his judgment.
We find no error and affirm the judgment.