65 S.W.2d 97 | Mo. | 1933
Royle Ellis, Prosecuting Attorney of Barry County, by information in the nature of a quo warranto, at the relation of two other individuals designated, invokes the original jurisdiction of this court and seeks thereby to oust the respondent from the office of mayor of the city of Monett, a city of the third class, and from the exercise of the franchises and privileges of said office. To our alternative writ the respondent for his return demurred. The cause was by stipulation of the parties submitted on said writ and return.
The charges in the information are that respondent is the duly elected, qualified and acting incumbent of said office and by virtue thereof has full charge and management of the city waterworks system of said city, with authority to employ and appoint the ordinary employees to operate said system; that by virtue of his said office respondent is authorized to vote for and appoint the city collector of said city and did, in the exercise of such authority, in April, 1932, employ and appoint to the position of pumper for said water system one Carrol Cox, who was at said time a first cousin of respondent; that said Cox has retained said position since the date of his appointment; and further that in connection with the commissioners of said city respondent did vote for and appoint one Milburn Walker, a second cousin to respondent by marriage, to the office of city collector; and that respondent has since such employments were made continued to hold and usurp the office of mayor of the city of Monett, a city of the third class operated under the commission form of government, and to exercise the functions and duties of said office without legal warrant, — all in violation of Section 13 of Article 14 of the Constitution of the State. The information is signed by said Ellis, as prosecuting attorney, and to it is appended his oath.
The grounds of the demurrer are essentially (1) That the information fails to set forth any special interest in the persons named as relators; (2) that the information fails to show that the respondent is an officer of the State or any political subdivision thereof within the contemplation of Article 14, Section 13 of the Constitution. The demurrer otherwise admits the matters charged in the information. *1180
[1] The first objection stated is well taken. In the heading and opening statement of the information it appears that the proceeding was ostensibly instituted in behalf of persons designated as relators, but nothing is stated in the body of the information with reference to the purported relators and no facts tending to show that they have any special interest in the case. Elementary rules of pleading require that such facts be stated in the information before a purported relator can have any standing in court as a relator in a proceeding such as this. [State ex inf. v. Heffernan,
[3] We cannot agree to the second contention of the respondent, viz., that it is not shown that respondent is an officer of a political subdivision of the State.
Respondent grounds this phase of his demurrer upon Article VI, Section 12 of the Constitution citing in support Smith v. City of Sedalia,
"Any public officer or employee of this State or any political subdivision thereof who shall by virtue of his said office or employment have the right to name or appoint any person to render service to this State or to any political subdivision thereof, and who shall name or appoint any relative within the fourth (4th) degree either of consanguinity or affinity, shall thereby forfeit his or her office or employment."
This section is self-enforcing as has hitherto been held by our court, [State ex inf. Norman v. Ellis,
The first question in this connection is: Is the mayor of a city of the third class a public officer? The answer must be yes. A public office is well defined to be:
"`The right, authority and duty, created and conferred by law, by which, for a given period, either fixed by law. . . . an individual is invested with some portion of the sovereign functions of government, to be exercised by him, for the benefit of the public;'" and a public officer is one who receives his authority from the law and discharges some of the functions of government. [Hastings v. Jasper County,
The statute makes the respondent mayor a public officer:
"The following officers shall be elected by the qualified voters of the city, and shall hold their offices for two years, and until their successors are duly elected and qualified, to-wit: A mayor, marshal, attorney, police judge, assessor, collector and treasurer . . ." [R.S. 1929, sec. 6723.]
He is invested by statute with power to appoint subordinate officers, as he may be authorized by ordinances to appoint, with the approval and consent of majority of the members of the city council. This power of appointment, also the exercise thereof by the making *1182 of the appointments in question and the relation of the appointees to the respondent, are all conceded by the demurrer.
[4] Is a city of the third class a political subdivision? A standard work on municipal corporations so defines it in the following language:
A municipal corporation, in its strict and proper sense is abody politic and corporate constituted by the inhabitants of a city or town for the purposes of local government thereof. Municipal corporations as they exist in this country are bodiespolitic and corporate of the general character above described, established by law as an agency of the State to assist in civil government of the country, but chiefly to regulate and administer the local or internal affairs of the city, town or district which is incorporated." [1 Dillon (5 Ed.), sec. 31.] (Italics ours.)
Section 47 of Article IV of the original Constitution, prohibiting the lending of credit, refers to counties, cities, towns or townships as "political corporations or subdivisionsof the State." (Italics ours.)
We approve the following observations made in Kinney v. Astoria,
"Pure municipal corporations, such as cities, are merely instrumentalities of the State established for the convenient administration of local government; they are state governmental agencies; they are auxiliaries of the State for the purpose of local self-government; they are mere political subdivisions of the State created by authority of the State for the purpose of exercising a part of its powers."
[5] Obviously, said appointee Cox, the first cousin, was within the express prohibition, of the nepotism section of the Constitution quoted supra. Respondent by making said appointment was thereby guilty of abuse of his power and authority in the premises whereby he has forfeited his right and title to said office and its franchises and is unlawfully usurping the powers and prerogatives thereof. Therefore, judgment of ouster from said office should be entered against him and our final writ of ouster should issue. It is so ordered. All concur.