Mandamus to compel the County Court of Ozark County to prepare and publish a financial statement of the County for the year ending December 31, 1948, in accordance with the provisions of Sections 13827 and 13828, R. S. 1939, Mo. R. S. A. After respondents filed return to the petition, relator filed a motion for judgment on the pleadings.
Respondents challenge the right of the Attorney General to bring this action and contend that relator’s petition was insufficient because it did-not állege that respondents were requested to prepare and publish the financial statement, because it did not show that the State has any definite interest in the subject matter of the action (claiming it to be a matter of only local interest) and because it did not show that there were any funds available for such purpose. Respondents also contend that these statutes are directory and not mandatory and that they are invalid because the title to the Act adopting them was defective. It is admitted that respondents, members of the county court of Ozark County, have not prepared and published any gush statement for the year ending December 31, 1948. *899 It is further stated that the members of the county court who preceded them in office have not done so for many years.
There can be no question about the mandatory character of these statutes. Section 13827 says that each year “the county court of each county in this state
'shall
prepare and publish * * * a detailed financial statement of the county for the year ending December 31, preceding.” The requirements of the statement are set out in this statute with particularity and Section 13828 provides that “the court shall forward one" proof (of publication of this statement) to the state auditor” and obtain his approval “that it complies with the requirements of this section” before paying for its publication or preparation. Furthermore, this section provides a penalty upon members of the county court for failure to prepare and publish such a statement; namely, that they shall not be entitled' to any compensation after April 1st of each year until the state auditor notifies the county treasurer that the proof of publication has been filed. Certainly statutes that use the word “shall”, and then provide a penalty for failure to do what is required, are mandatory statutes. (See
Likewise, public officers are required to perform mandatory duties of the office imposed by the Legislature (which are- “of a public nature affecting the people at large”) without any special request or demand from anyone. (State ex rel. Thompson v. Jones;
As to availability of funds, there is no allegation about it in the petition and respondents’ return makes the following allegations: “That the matter of preparing and publishing a detailed financial statement under the provisions of said Sections 13827 and 13828 was not called to the attention of the respondents herein until the month of June, 1949, after the budget for Ozark County for the year 1949 had been made, filed in the office of the state auditor and approved. That there were no funds available in the budget of Ozark County for the year 1949 for the preparation and publication of such financial statement. That there is no surplus funds with which to prepare and publish such financial statement, and that Ozark County is without any funds with which to prepare and publish such detailed financial statement. That all the income and anticipated income for Ozark County for the year 1949, has been obligated and warrants drawn for same, so that Ozark County has no funds with which to pay for the preparation and publishing a detailed financial statement of said county for the year ending December 31, 1948.” These allegations, in so far as they state facts, stand admitted by the motion for judgment on the pleadings. Respondents say that to compel them by mandamus to prepare and publish this statement, when all funds for the year in which it should have been published have been exhausted or obligated, would require them to do an illegal act.
Respondents’ failure to make provision for this in the county budget is not decisive. In Gill v. Buchanan County,
Even though all income collected and anticipated for Ozark County for 1949 “has been obligated and warrants drawn for same,” nevertheless, the cost of preparation and publication of this statement was a prior charge over other items in the budget not directed by the Legislature to be included therein. Furthermore, it is in effect, made a prior charge over respondents’ own compensation by Section 13828. In Nodaway County v. Kidder,
Respondents further contend that Sections 13827 and 13828 are unconstitutional and void, saying the title to the 1933 bill (Laws 1933, p. 353) enacting them contains more than one subject which was not clearly expressed in its title as required by See. 28, Art. 4, Constitution of 1875. The title to the 1933 Act was as follows: “An Act to repeal Sections 12165 and 12166 Revised Statutes of Missouri, 1929, relating to the preparation and publication of a detailed financial statement by county courts; and to enact two new sections in lieu thereof, to be known as sections 12165 and 12166 and relating to the iame subject.” (It may be noted that Section 13827 has been reenacted, Laws 1935, p. 317; and that Section 13828 has been amended, Laws 1937, p. 419.) The purpose of this Constitutional provision “was to limit the subject-matter of the bill to one general subject and to afford reasonably definite information to the members of the General Assembly and the people as to the subject-matter dealt with by the Bill;” and “this Court has recognized the impossibility of formulating any general rule or principle of universal application which can be safely applied to test the sufficiency of the titles of particular enactments and, in general, has given its sanction to the view that each case must be determined upon its own peculiar facts.” (Graves v. Purcell,
We have also held, when an amendment does not introduce any alien or unrelated matter, that “a mere reference to the section to be amended without other description of the subject matter of the amendatory law is a sufficient title to an act which deals exclusively with the subject of the act amended.” (Clark v. Atchison, T. &
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S. F. R. Co.,
It is ordered that our peremptory writ issue for that purpose. All concur.
