143 Mo. 439 | Mo. | 1898
The respondent is president of the council of the city of St. Louis. On the ninth of August, 1897, an alternative writ of mandamus was issued by the circuit court, city of St. Louis, commanding the respondent to sign house bill number 59, being an ordinance granting certain rights, privileges and franchises to the relator, or show cánse why he should not. To which writ, for such cause, the respondent made return, in substance, that said house bill number 59 never was read on three different days before the council, of the municipal assembly as required by the charter. On the hearing it appeared from the journal that the bill was read in the council “on three different days, May 25th, May 28th and July 20,” and oral testimony was introduced, over the objections of relator, tending to prove that the bill “was read at length in the council once on May 25th; by its title on May 28th,' again by its title on July 13th, and at length in committee of the whole on July 20th, and that there was no other reading before its alleged passage.” Thereupon the court found for the respondent, dismissed the relator’s bill, rendered judgment in respondent’s favor for costs, and the relator appealed to the St. Louis Court of Appeals, where the judgment of the circuit court was reversed, Judge Biggs dissenting, and deeming the decision of the majority of the court in conflict with the decision of this court in State ex rel. v. Stone, 120 Mo. 428, the case was certified here for determination.
By the charter of the city of St. Louis its legislative power is vested in a council and a house of delegates styled the “Municipal Assembly of the City of St. Louis” (sec. 1). The council consists of thirteen members, one of whom chosen on a general ticket by the qualified voters of the city for four years is “president” (secs. 2 and 8). It is further provided by the charter that “No ordinance shall be passed except by bill, and no bill shall be so amended in its passage through either house as to change its original purpose. Bills may originate in either house, and may be amended or rejected by the other, and every bill shall be read on three different days in each house. No bill shall be considered for final passage unless the same has been reported upon by a committee”.......(sec. 13). No bill shall become an ordinance unless on its
That the municipal assembly in thus making a law by virtue of the power vested in it under the Con
The respondent is a public officer of the city of St. Louis, who is required to perform the act of signing his name to a bill passed by the municipal assembly,' at that stage of the procedure in that body when the bill shall have reached him for that purpose in the manner prescribed by the charter. Is he by the charter, that legal authority from which he derives all his power in the premises, invested with any discretion whatever as to whether he will or will not then sign the bill? This is the crucial question, and is answered by the terms of the charter itself. The state of facts is therein given in which he shall, and in which he shall not sign the bill. “If no objection be made he shall in the presence of the house, in open session and before any other business is entertained affix his signature. “If any member shall object that any substitution, omission or insertion has occurred so that the bill proposed to be signed is not the same in substance and form as when considered and passed by the house such objections shall be passed upon by the house and if sustained the presiding office shall withhold his signature,.” The conditions upon which he shall either sign or withhold his signature,, are here prescribed in unmistakable terms. ■ If no objections be made “he shall sign.” If objections are made and sustained by the house he “shall withhold his signature,” and conversely, if objections are made and not sustained by the house, he must sign, and this he must do without regard to his own judgment or opinion concerning the propriety or impropriety of the act. In the language of the charter his act has to do with a bill which has