In this action resident taxpayers have sought a declaratory judgment with respect to the legality of a cooperation agreement between St. Louis County and the Housing Authority of St. Louis County. Because of the asserted invalidity of the agreement the plaintiffs initially asked for a temporary restraining order enjoining the defendants from carrying out the agreement. The only partiеs defendant are St. Louis County and its supervisor and the Housing Authority of St. Louis County, its commissioners and executive director-secretary. Upon defendants’ separate motions to dismiss for failure to state a claim upon which relief could be granted, the trial court, in effect, made no declaration other than the single conclusion that “St. Louis County had authority to contract with St. Louis Cоunty Housing Authority, a municipal corporation, by resolution or order.” Upon that single conclusion, apparently, the trial court dismissed the plaintiffs’ petition. The plaintiffs have appealed and urge that the cooperation agreement is void for several reasons, that the trial court did not declare, determine and adjudicate the rights of the parties, and it is insisted thаt this court declare the contract void and accordingly adjudicate the respective rights of the parties and reverse the trial court’s judgment dismissing the petition.
The Housing Authorities Law (V.A.M.S. §§ 99.010 to 99.230) and cooperative agreements between the City of St. Louis and Kansas City and their respective housing authorities have been before this court on three occasions; St. Louis Housing Authоrity v. St. Louis,
For example, it is said that the agreement is void in that it binds the county to waive taxes for the school districts in which the housing developments are located and requires the school districts to furnish facilities to the housing projects when in fact the county or the county council have no *496 jurisdiction over school districts, their taxes and facilities. It is said that the agreement is void in that it binds the county to furnish the housing authority with sewers when sewers are under the exclusive control and jurisdiction of the Metropolitan St. Louis Sewer District. It is said that St. Louis County “has no authority to contract to pass future legislation” and therefore the agreement is ultra vires in so far as the county agrees in the future to vacate streets or alleys or modify the county zoning law. Some of the statements contained in the argument are mere assumptions on the part of the plaintiffs and the assumptions do not correspond with the actual terms of the agreement. To illustrate, as to zoning the agreement provides, “In so far as the Municipality may lawfully do so” the county will “make such changes in any zoning of the site and surrounding territory of such Project as are reasonable and necessary for the development and protection of such Project and the surrounding territory.” The county agrees to furnish “public services and facilities of the same character and to the same extent as are furnished from time to time without cost or charge to other dwellings and inhabitants in the Municipality” and it agrees that it will accept, upon request, the dedication of streеts and sewers constructed and paid for by the authority, but we do not find any provision requiring the county, without regard to the powers and functions of the Metropolitan St. Louis Sewer District, to furnish sewers.
These examples are sufficient to illustrate the point that the agreement does not purport to bargain away the powers and duties of either the county zoning board or the Metropolitan St. Louis Sewer District or of any other political subdivision, and, of course, the county could not barter away any of these functions. State on Information of Dalton v. Metropolitan Sewer Dist.,
It has been expressly held on two occasions, and all the reasons were fully considered, that housing authority property is exempt from ad valorem taxes. Laret Investment Co. v. Dickmann, supra; Bader Realty & Inv. Co. v. St. Louis Housing Authority, supra. See also: Annotations
Paragraphs 9 and 10 of the agreement refer to contracts and loans between “Local Authority” (Housing Authority of St. Louis County) and “PHA” (Public Housing Administration) and therefore it is said that the contract “does not set out the whole agreement between the parties” as required by the cooperation agreement statute, Y.A.M.S. § 70.230. It is said that no time is fixed and no consideration to the county expressed or provided and therefore the agreement is void. As indicated, the two latter contentions were before the court in St. Louis Housing Authority v. St. Louis, supra. The Public Housing Administration is not a party to this suit and it does not appear from this petition how any contract or loan agreement between the local housing authority and the Public Housing Administration could or would affect the agreement between St. Louis County and Housing Authority of St. Louis County. If in fact there is such an agreement or loan (and of course there is), it is not possible to say what its effect may be inasmuch as it has not been included in this action for a declaratory judgment. The cooperation agreement is expressly authorized by the constitution and statutes, it is in writing, it is dated, it is made upon a consideratiоn wholly to be performed subsequent to its execution, it is signed by the parties, and as against the objections here made appears to meet the formal requirements of the general statutes governing contracts by counties and other political subdivisions. V.A.M.S. §§ 432.070, 432.-080, 70.220.
The difficult and essentially meritorious problem upon this appeal is the fact that the county entered into this cooperation agreement by order and resolution of the county council and not by ordinance. In their petition the plaintiffs allege as a ground of invalidity that the cooperation agreement was entered into and approved by an order of the county council, that it was amended by an order or resolution rather than by an ordinance as required by section 22(18), Artiсle III, of its charter and was therefore void. In their separate motions to dismiss the county and its supervisor admit, as is the incontestable fact, that the agreement and its amendment were entered into by an order and resolution. The contract was executed by order and resolution despite the fact that the Home Rule Charter of St. Louis County contains this explicit provision, Art. Ill, Sеc. 22(18) :
“Section 22. Pursuant to and in conformity with the Constitution of Missouri and without limiting the generality of the powers vested in the Council by this Charter, the Council shall have, by ordinance, the power:
⅜ ⅜ ⅜ ⅜ ⅜ ⅜
“(18) To cooperate or join by contract or otherwise with any city, county, state or political subdivision or agency thereof, or with the United States or any agency thereof, for the planning, development, construction, acquisition or operation of any public improvement or facility, or for a common service; and to accept, in the name of the County, gifts, devises, bequests, and grants-in-aid from any city, county, state or political subdivision or agency thereof, * * *.”
The respondents meet this challenge and problem in this manner: The constitution, section 16, Article 6, provides that any political subdivision may contract and co *498 operate with other political subdivisions “in the manner provided by law.” Pursuant to this constitutional authorization the General Assembly has provided, in the statutes governing cooperation agreements between governmental units, that “Any municipality may exercise the power referred to in section 70.220 by ordinance duly enacted, or, if a county, then by order of the county court duly made and entered, or if other political subdivision, then by resolution of its governing body or officers made and entered in its journal or minutes of proceedings, which shall provide the terms agreed upon by the сontracting parties to such contract or cooperative action.” (Italics supplied.) V.A.M.S. § 70.230. In addition to the charter section (22(18)) empowering the county council to do certain things by ordinance, there is another charter pro-, vision, section 23(4), art. Ill, which says: “In addition to all other powers and duties vested in or required of the Council under the provisions of this charter, the Council shall have power, by order or resolution, to do the following: * * * (4) To exercise and perform any and all other powers of a non-legislative nature which it may possess and any and all other duties which it may need to or be required to perform by the Constitution, laws and this charter.” With respect to public housing and cooperation agreements it is said that public policy on a statе-wide basis was declared when the General Assembly enacted the statutes and that the county in thereafter entering into a cooperation agreement concerning a housing project had no legislative function to perform, that in this regard it could only act as an instrumentality of the state, and that as to the procedure to be followed the county council аcted in the capacity of a county court, and if that is not sufficient to authorize the execution of a contract by order that it acted in an administrative capacity only and therefore under its charter (section 23(4)) had the power and authority to enter into the contract by resolution.
In general, if only the constitutional, statutory and charter provisions pointed to by the respondents were involved the argument could be accepted. If that were true the philosophy of the well-reasoned, well-written California case, Kleiber v. City and County of San Francisco,
In so far as taking advantage of the housing act is concerned it may be that the county acts administratively, but it will be observed that in inserting subdivision (18) in the ordinance section the authors of the Home Rule Charter for St. Louis County copied, almost literally, the language of the сonstitution and the cooperation statute. Const.Mo.1945, art. 6, § 16; V.A.M.S., § 70.220. St. Louis County could and did become “a charter” county (Const.Mo. art. 6, §§ 18a-18e), but having done so its charter became its fundamental, organic law and the county council “is obliged to look to the charter for its powers, and acts beyond the powers granted or necessarily implied therefrom are void.” State ex rеl. Town of Olivette v. American Telephone & Telegraph Co., Mo.App.,
Aquamsi Land Company v. Cape Girardeau,
“But we have also ruled against respondents by holding thе three alleged contracts between the City and the W. P. A. for the construction, maintenance and completion of the project were void. Does that call for a judgment reversing the decree of the trial court and substituting a decree enjoining the respondents from performing those three illegal contracts? We think not when it is considered that our judgment speaks only frоm the present. The whole theory of respondents’ defense has been that the three contracts and performance thereunder were legal. In other words they have sought to show they are within the law, not to justify its violation. There is no ground for assuming or anticipating they will continue performance of the contracts now that we have held them void. They can make new сontracts which will be valid if they are executed as the statute requires and do not unduly delegate the City’s administrative and legislative power. We therefore think the decree below denying a permanent injunction should be merely affirmed.”
The respondents, Housing Authority of St. Louis County and St. Louis County, should be given a reasonable opportunity to enter into a valid agreement. The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
PER CURIAM.
The foregoing opinion by BARRETT, C., is adopted as the opinion of the Court.
All concur.
