207 Mo. 354 | Mo. | 1907
The relators sued out a writ of certiorari in the circuit court, against the defendants, the city of St. Louis, the Board of Health and the Health Commissioner of the city, the aim of which was to quash the record of the Board of Health declaring a certain plant, which relators were operating in the city, a nuisance, inimical to the public health. Upon the final hearing the court quashed the writ of certiorari and from that judgment the relators have taken this appeal.
From the record it appears that the relators had contracts with the city for the improvement of certain streets which required the use of a material called “binder,” in the composition of which melted asphalt-urn at a high degree of temperature mixed with other material was used, which process of melting and mixing was being conducted by relators within- the city limits, when a written complaint was filed with the Health Commissioner by twenty-eight resident taxpayers in the vicinity saying that the operation ‘ sends out, fills and permeates the surrounding atmosphere in and about our homes and the streets fronting the same with a most offensive, obnoxious and foul smelling odor which is a constant source of annoyance and makes life in and about the neighborhood in which we live intolerable.” And besides the discomfort it was charged that the fumes and gases were injurious to health. Four days after receiving that complaint the Health Commissioner caused to be served on the relators a written notice that in his opinion the business, as they were conducting it, was a nuisance and injurious to public health and would be so reported to the Board of Health on the 23rd day of July, 1903, and notified them to appear before the board on that day and show cause why the nuisance “should not be abated, discontinued or removed.” The relators appeared before the board and were rep
Four days thereafter the Health Commissioner issued a notice in writing to the relators, reciting the order of the board and notifying them to remove, abate or discontinue the operation of the plant or by making such additions, alterations and improvements as would prevent the escape of the odors, noxious fumes, gases and dust, etc., within twenty days from the service of the notice and that on failure to do so they would be subject to prosecution and fine not less than twenty nor more than five hundred dollars according with the charter and ordinances of the city.
The following provisions of the city charter are discussed in the briefs as bearing on the merits of the cause: Art. Ill, sec. 26, clause 6, p-. 2486, R. S. 1899 (defining the powers of the legislative department of the city government): “. . . . and to regulate or prevent the carrying on of any business which may be dangerous or detrimental to the public health, or the manufacturing or vending of articles obnoxious to the health of the inhabitants; and to declare, prevent and abate nuisances on public or private property, and the causes thereof.” Clause 14, same section, p'. 2488, is: “Finally to pass all such ordinances, not inconsistent with the provisions of this charter, • or the laws of the
Article XII relates to the Health Department. Sec. 1 of the article creates the office of Health Commissioner and Board of Health.
Sec. 2. The board to consist of the mayor, the president of the council, a commissioner of police, two physicians and the Health Commissioner. Three members to constitute a quorum.
“Sec. 3. The Health Commissioner shall have general supervision over the public health of said city, and see that its regulations, and the laws and ordinances of said city in relation thereto, are enforced and observed, and for that purpose he is authorized and empowered to make such rules and regulations, with the approval of the board, not inconsistent with this charter or any city ordinances or law of this State, as will tend to preserve and promote the health of said city; to appoint such employees, with the approval of the Board of Health, as may be necessary for the execution of his orders; to enter into or authorize and require any employee or police officer to enter into and examine, in the day time, all buildings, lots and places of every description within the city, and to ascertain and report to him the condition thereof, so far as the public health may be affected by it; to declare and abate nuisances in such manner’ as may be provided herein, or by ordinance; but all condemnations must first be approved by the Board of Health, whose action thereon shall be final. He Shall obey all orders not inconsistent with this charter and city ordinances, emanating from the Board of Health, and shall annually report to the mayor the general operations of his depart-
Section 6 is in part as follows: “In order to effect the abatement of .nuisances or removal of accumulated filth, the Health Commissioner shall have power whenever in his opinion such nuisance or filth exists, and after officially so declared of record by the Board of Health to notify the owner or owners thereof, or his or their agents to abate or remove the same. ... If the owner shall fail within the time . . . to comply with such order, or shall fail to show good cause to said Health Commissioner why he cannot or ought not to comply with such order, for which purpose he shall be entitled to be heard before said Health Commissioner and Board of Health, if he so request it, he shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor, and on conviction shall be fined not exceeding five hundred dollars, and the nuisance shall be abated and special tax bills rendered against the property in the same manner as against non-residents, except that notice by advertisement shall not be necessary.”
The following city ordinances are also discussed in the briefs:
“Sec. 616. It shall not be lawful for any person, corporation or firm to erect any building for the purpose of manufacturing or producing any article, or to manufacture or produce any article, the manufacture of which is injurious to the public health, or which in the manufacture thereof emits an offensive odor to the extent of creating a nuisance to the surrounding inhabitants, without first having obtained the permission so to do from the Municipal Assembly by proper ordinance.
“See. 617. Every act or thing done or made, permitted, allowed or continued on any property, public*362 or private, by any person or corporation, tbeir agents or servants, to the damage or injury of any of the inhabitants of this city and not hereinbefore specified', shall be deemed a nuisance.
“Sec. 631. It shall be the duty of the Health Commissioner, whenever he has any knowledge, or when any complaint has been made to said Health Commissioner by any citizen, that any business, trade or profession carried on in the city, by any person or persons or corporations, agents or managers, is detrimental to public health, or whenever any nuisance or filth exist on the property of any person or corporation, to notify such person or persons or corporation, agent or manager to show cause before the Board of Health at a time and place to be specified in such notice, why the same should not be abated, discontinued or removed, which notice of the Health Commissioner shall not be valid unless served on the party to whom it is directed at least five days before the time specified in such notice (except in case of epidemic or pestilence, when the Health Commissioner may, by general order, direct a shorter time).
“Sec. 632. Such notice shall be served upon said persons, corporation, agent or manager in the same manner as writs of summons are required to. be served in civil cases.
“See. 634. At the time fixed in such notice for the parties to appear before the Board of Health, said parties may appear in person, by attorney, or cause may be shown by affidavit.
“Sec. 635. After hearing all the facts in the case, if, in the opinion of the Board of Health, no good and sufficient cause be shown why said nuisance, business, trade, or profession should not be abated, discontinued or removed, said board shall direct the health commissioner to order the parties to abate, discontinue or*363 remove the same within such time as the Health Commissioner may deem reasonable.
“Sec. 636. Any person or persons failing or refusing to obey the order or orders of the Health Commissioner relating to the abatement of nuisances shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor, and upon conviction thereof shall be fined not less than twenty nor more than five hundred dollars; and such person or persons shall be subject to like fines for each and every day he, she or they shall continue such nuisance, business, trade or profession after the expiration of the time specified in the order of the Health Commissioner for the abatement, removal or discontinuance of the same. The fines mentioned in this article shall be collected as other fines paid into the city treasury.”
In the petition of relators for the writ of certiorari they aver that the order of the board declaring their plant a nuisance and ordering its abatement was void because the board had no jurisdiction to make such an order and that its execution would deprive them of their property without due process of law and violate their rights under article 2, sections 30 and 21, Constitution of Missouri, and amendment 14, section 1, U. S. Constitution. And in their motion to quash the proceedings of tbe board they aver the infringement not only of their constitutional rights above mentioned but also of section 10, article 1, Constitution United States, and section 15, article 2 of the State Constitution.
Defendants in obedience to the writ of certiorari sent the record of the Board of Health relating to this matter to the circuit court and moved the court to quash the writ.
After the record was lodged in the circuit court the relators suggested a diminution in that the record as sent up omitted to show that certain proof offered by relators was rejected by the board and they moved
That evidence was to the effect that relators were operating this plant to make material to be used in the construction of the streets under their contracts with the city and that the city ordinances required that material to be used.
As already said, the circuit court on final hearing quashed the writ of certiorari and dismissed the defendants without day.
I. Appellant’s first proposition is that since what they were doing was in the line of the performance of their contract with the city and was in the making of the mixture which their contract with the city called for and the city ordinance required, it did not comport with the city’s attitude in the situation to declare the operation a nuisance and order its abatement.
We do not gather from the record that either their contracts with the city or the city ordinance under which it was made required the process of melting and mixing to be done in the streets that were to be improved, or that it was. to be done as and where it was done; but even if that were so it would not justify the committing of an act destructive of the comfort of the people residing in that vicinity and injurious to the public health. The city itself could not lawfully commit such an act or authorize another to do’ so. The city has a dual character, administrative and governmental. In its contracts for street improvements it acts m its administrative capacity, and, to some extent, is on a plane with any other party to a business contract. But in the exercise of its police power to protect life and health it acts in its govern
We are referred in the brief for appellants to cases tbat hold that what the law authorizes to be done cannot be declared a nuisance, but that well-known principle has no application to the facts of this case, because there is no law authorizing the act here in question to be done.
Authorities are cited to show also that the city cannot create a nuisance on the .property of a citizen and compel him to abate it, but that is foreign to this case.
Randle v. Railroad, 65 Mo. 325, is cited to show that odors, smoke and cinders emitted from locomotive engines in a street were held not to be a nuisance for which an action would lie against the railroad company by an abutting property-owner. But that case was submitted to the court with the express admission on the part of the plaintiff that the defendant had lawful authority to run its engines and trains through that street, and the court said that that admission ended the controversy.
Appellants also refer to section 616 of the general ordinances which says that it shall be unlawful “to manufacture or produce any article'the manufacture of which is injurious to the public health, or which in the manufacture thereof emits an offensive odor to the extent of creating a nuisance to the surrounding inhabitants, without first having obtained permission so to do from the Municipal Assembly by proper ordinance.”
If appellants mean that the Municipal .Assembly could by ordinance authorize them to carry on an operation destructive of public health or loading the atmosphere with offensive odors to the serious annoyance of the surrounding inhabitants we cannot agree
A writ of certiorari brings up only the record proper of the tribunal to which it is addressed; it does not bring up the evidence (Sholar v. Smyth, 3 Mo. 416; Hicks v. Merry, 4 Mo. 355; Railroad v. State Board, 64 Mo. 294; State ex rel. v. Teasdale, 101 Mo. 174; Ward v. Board of Equalization, 135 Mo. 309; State ex rel. v. Baker, 170 Mo. 383); therefore, the court does not know whether the evidence justified the conclusion of the board or not, but the record does show that the board was dealing with a subject within its peculiar province and that its proceedings were regular; therefore, with its decision we must be satisfied.
II. Appellants contend that the Health Commissioner was disqualified from sitting as a member of the Board of Health, and that since without him there was no quorum when the board acted in this case there was no lawful condemnation of the relators ’ works.
The alleged disqualification of the Health Commissioner was, in the opinion of appellants, caused by the fact that before the board met to consider the case, to-wit, in the written notice issued by the Health Commissioner to relators, calling them to. appear before the board to answer the charge, he stated that in his opinion the works as operated constituted a nuisance and
The Health Commissioner is a city officer exercising duties appertaining to his office alone, independent of his membership in the Board of Health. [Sec. 3, art. 12, charter.] But he is also a member of the Board of Health and in addition to his duties as Health Commissioner he has the duties of a member of the board to perform. In that respect he is like the Mayor, who besides being Mayor and charged with the duties of that office, is also a member of the Board of Health and charged with duties appertaining to that function. In the absence of the Mayor the charter provides that the Health Commissioner shall preside at the meetings of the Board of Health.
By section 3, article 12, the Health Commissioner is required to enter into premises and examine their condition as affecting public health, and “to declare
Then comes section 631 of the general ordinances, above set out, making it his duty, “whenever he has any knowledge,” or when a citizen complains to him, that a business is being conducted in a manner injurious to public health or constituting a nuisance, to notify the person so conducting the business to appear before the Board of Health at a time and place to show cause why the nuisance should not be abated. Thus he is required to issue the notice on his own knowledge or on the complaint of a citizen. If complaint is made and instead of issuing the notice at once he should deem it more prudent to visit the premises him-» self to see if there is reasonable ground for the complaint, it would be within the line of his duty to do so, and if, after inspection, he was satisfied that the thing was a nuisance it would not be improper for him to so inform the proprietors. The charter provision above quoted does not authorize him to abate the nuisance on his own judgment of condemnation, but after saying that he shall declare and abate nuisances, adds: “but all condemnations must be first approved by the Board of Health, whose action thereon shall be final.” Thus the law in express terms authorizes the Health Commissioner “to declare” the nuisance, but requires his condemnation to be approved by the Board of Health before it is put into execution. Sec. 3, art. XII of the charter does not mean that the Health Commissioner must in every case first declare the thing a nuisance before the board can pass judgment of condemnation on it, but it does mean that it is the duty of the Health Commissioner, when a matter injurious to public health is brought to his notice or comes under his observation, to declare it a nuisance by force of his own official judgment and give notice to the offending parties to appear before the board and
III. Appellants, complain that by the proceeding of condemnation before the Board of Health, if it is permitted to stand, they are deprived' of their property without due process of law; that the State is impairing the obligation of their contract with the city and denying them the equal protection of the law in violation of their rights under the State and Federal constitutions.
Appellants’ complaint on these points lies more in their apprehension of what may hereafter occur than what in fact has occurred. The city has not, so far as this record shows, laid its hands on the property of relators or on the relators themselves. The Health Commissioner and the Board of Health have, in the exercise of their authority under the city charter and city ordinances, declared the relators’ plant, as it was then and there being operated, a menace to public health and a nuisance, and have notified relators to either abate it or remove it or so alter the mode of operation as to obviate the offensive character of the plant, giving them twenty days in which to do so, and admonishing them, that if they neglected to do so they would be subject to a prosecution under the city ordinance wherein they were liable to a fine not less than twenty nor more than five hundred dollars. That is the extent of the injury, if any, relators have suffered. If hereafter they should be prosecuted the courts in which the trials may be had, or through which they may pass on appeal, will take care of relators’ constitutional rights.
We find no error in the record.
The judgment is affirmed.