158 Mo. 505 | Mo. | 1900
Appeal from the judgment of the circuit court of the city of St. Louis awarding a peremptory writ of mandamus, commanding the city and its board of
It appears from the record that in 1897 the city passed an ordinance requiring the board of public improvements to cause to be constructed a granitoid sidewalk on Easton avenue between Marcus avenue and Kings highway according to certain specifications, the work to be done by the contractor having the annual contract with the city for such work, and providing in the usual way of such ordinances for the payment of the same by special tax bills issued against the abutting property.
At the time this ordinance was passed there was a provision in the general ordinances' (section 569, Revised Ordinances 1892) in these words: “Whenever the municipal assembly shall direct by ordinance the improvement of a public street or avenue, the board of public improvements may, upon the application of' the owner of any property fronting or bordering such improvement, grant permission to such owner to construct the sidewalk in front of such property, but without such permission no sidewalk shall be constructed by any person other than the contractor having the annual contract for constructing new sidewalks.”
There was also in force at the time another general ordinance, section 1372, Revised Ordinances 1892, requiring the board of public improvements to let a contract annually “for the grading, constructing, reconstructing and repairing of sidewalks, and for the repairing of street and alley and gutter paving, and such other similar work as -may be ordered, by ordinance, or which may become necessary to be done during the year.” This ordinance was adopted in conformity to' the provision in section 15,- article 6 -of the city charter authorizing it. Under that ordinance such a contract had been let to Stifel and Ruekert for the year covering the events in ques
The relators own property abutting that street where the sidewalk in question was to be constructed and as such petitioned the board of public improvements for permission to construct that much of the sidewalk which would be in front of their property. The board refused to grant the permission and this proceeding is to compel them to do so. The circuit court awarded the peremptory writ as prayed 'and the defendants appeal.
That the sidewalk is a part of the street owned and controlled as such by the city, that the city had ample authority to pass the ordinance requiring the sidewalk to be constructed and the cost charged against the abutting property as therein provided, that the contract with Stifel and Euckert was authorized and valid, are propositions about which there can be no conflict of opinion. The authority of the city over this subject has been so recently expounded by this court that we deem it unnecessary to further discuss that subject. [Skinker v. Heman, 148 Mo. 349.]
But the point of difference between the parties to this suit arises out of their respective constructions of section 569, above quoted. Eelators are advised that under that section they have the right themselves to construct the sidewalk and that the board of public improvements have no discretion in the matter, no authority to refuse the permission therein provided for, but, in the discharge of a ministerial function only, are in duty bound to issue the license when demanded.
The words with which we have especially to deal are: “The bo'ard of public improvements may upon the application of the owner .......grant permission to such owner to construct the sidewalk in front of such property, but without such permission no sidewalk shall be constructed by any
The contention of the relators is that the word 'may’ is to be interpreted 'shall/ and that is the only point in their case. If the board of public improvements had no discretion in the matter, if there is nothing in such case for them to exercise their judgment upon, nothing that the lawmakers framing that ordinance could have contemplated as likely to arise in the multitude and variety of cases coming within its scope calling for a sound judgment, which might lead to the granting such application under some circumstances and refusing it under others, then the relators’ interpretation of the ordinance is correct. Put if the framers of the ordinance having in mind the general plan of letting the whole work of sidewalk construction in a district to contract, may be presumed to have forseen that cases might arise in which the public interest would not suffer, but on the contrary be promoted, and at the same time private interest advanced, by conferring on that department of the city government having the matter in hand the authority to make exceptions to the general plan when, in their good judgment, it would be best to do so, and in that view and to that end enacted the ordinance now under discussion, then the authority so conferred is to be exercised with good judgment and sound discrimination. ’ Of what was in the mind of the lawmakers we can only judge by the words they employed, but in interpreting those words we must bear in mind the subject treated of in the ordinance.
That the word 'may’ in a statute is sometimes construed to mean 'shall’ is undisputed. Put 'may’ does not always mean 'shall’ even when -used in a statute conferring power on a public officer. The true rule is this: if from the whole context we gather that the statute was designed to impose the act on tbe officer as a duty to be performed, then the authority to do it is an obligation to do it. It has been said that when
In Steines v. Franklin Co., 48 Mo. 167, the court construed a statute 'authorizing the county court to incur indebtedness for building public roads. The statute provided that “before any expenditures shall be made.......the county court may for the purpose of information submit the amount of the proposed expenditure to the voters,” etc. It then continued to the effect that if a majority at the election favored the scheme the expenditure might be made, otherwise. not. The court held that 'may’ there meant 'shall’ and that the act of the county court incurring the expense without submitting the question to a vote of the people was illegal. There was a plain duty imposed on the county court affecting the public-welfare and whilst in one part of the statute the words “may submit” were used, yet in another part in close connection were words forbidding the officers to incur the indebtedness without so submitting the question.
In State ex rel. v. King, 136 Mo. 309, the court held under the statute relating to fees of the recorder of deeds, wherein it is provided that he shall be allowed “such amounts for deputies and assistants in his office as the county court may deem necessary,” that the- officer was entitled to his actual 'expenses reasonably 'and necessarily incurred and that the word 'may’ did not leave it discretionary with the county court. In other words it was the plain duty of the county court to allow his necessary reasonable expenses.
Chancellor Kent expresses it thus: “And in respect to statutes, the rule of construction seems to be, that the word may means must or shall only in cases where public interests and rights 'are concerned, and where the public or third per
The Supreme Court of Pennsylvania expressed the rule as affecting private rights in Carr v. The Northern Liberties, 35 Pa. St. 324. In that case a municipal corporation was sued by an individual for damages resulting from flooding his premises in consequence of the failure of the corporation to construct proper sewers, the law having conferred on it the authority to make the sewers'. The court said, loc. cit. 330: “We do not admit that the grant of authority to the corporation to construct sewers, amounts to an imposition of a duty to do it. Where a person has the right to demand the exercise of a public function, and there is an officer or set of officers authorized to exercise that function, there the right and the authority give rise to the duty; but when the right depends on the grant of authority, and that authority is essentially discretionary, no legal duty is imposed.”
A New York statute conferred upon a trust company the right to be appointed administrator of estates of decedents, and authorized the surrogate to make such appointments; it was contended by the trust company that ‘may’ when addressed to a public officer meant ‘shall,’ and that having a personal interest to be served by the performance of the act authorized, it had a right to require the officer to perform it as a duty, but the court held the power to be discretionary. [In re Goddard, 94 N. Y. 544. Cited and quoted in Throop on Pub. Off. 550.] The learned text writer last quoted also says: “But the interest which entitles a private person to insist upon the execution by an officer, of a power conferred upon him, must be a definite and absolute legal right; a mere incidental benefit to accrue to him therefrom will not suffice.” [Id. 549.]
Those citations sufficiently illustrate the rule of construction to guide us in interpreting the provision of the general
As a matter of fact there is nothing attempted to be shown to indicate that the public welfare demands that 'relators be permitted to construct that part of the sidewalk, or for that matter even that relators themselves would be better off. It can not be assumed as a matter of law that relators would, if permitted, build' a better sidewalk for the public or at a less cost to themselves.. There is really no right or interest public or private in jeopardy that would convert the power in the officers to grant the permit into a public duty to do so.' The language of the ordinance relied on is: “the board of public improvements may grant permission to such owner to construct the sidewalk in front of such property, but without such permission no sidewalk shall be constructed by any person other than the contractor,” etc. If it had been intended to confer on the property owner the right to construct the sidewalk independent 'of what the board of public improvements might think of it, that purpose could have been expressed more easily in very much more apt terms, but if on the contrary it was intended to leave the matter in the discretion of the board it could scarcely have been expressed more clearly.
This court has often decided that the official act of an officer committed in the exercise of a discretion intrusted to him, when there is nothing to justify the idea that the act is capricious, oppressive, fraudulent or aught else than the result of his honest judgment, is not subject to review in a mandamus proceeding. [State ex rel. v. Gregory, 83 Mo. 123; State ex rel. v. State Board of Health, 103 Mo. 22; State ex rel. v. Oliver, 116 Mo. 188.]
The judgment of the circuit court is reversed.