This is аil action for damages for injuries appellant alleges he suffered as a result of the burning of a building in St. Louis which respondent owned and, in part, occupied аs a banking house. The remainder of the building was occupied by the Missouri Athletic Club, respondent’s lessee. A general demurrer to the petition was sustained, and judgment rendered after appellant refused to plead further. The questions presented by counsel are such that it is not necessary to set out the petition in full. The basis оf the action is the alleged violation of the provisions of certain sections of city ordinances pertaining to buildings in St. Louis. These provisions will be set out sufficiently in connection with the consideration of the questions counsel discuss.
The briefs do not questiоn the authority of the city, in-the exercise of its delegated police power,- to impose restrictions upon the alteration, reconstruction, repair and augmentation of buildings of non-fire-proof construction situate in congested districts. The first question presented is whether the ordinance pleaded applies to the building described in the petition. It is not denied! that the allegations of the petition show that the building in question is not a “first-class building” as defined in the ordinance section set out in the. petition. It is urged that Section 101 of the ordinance, as pleaded, does not purport to apply to any building which was ninety or more feet high whеn the ordinance was passed in 1903. The argument is that the words “any building hereafter . . .
altered
or
enlarged
to a height greater than ninety feet above grade” includes only such buildings as, prior to the enactment of the ordinance, were less than ninety feet in height and were raised to a greater height than ninety feet by the# alteration or enlargement. Lеt it be conceded that a literal construction of the ordinance language would support this contention. It is also true that this langauge is susceptible of thе other construction that any alteration or enlargement which
reaches
a greater height than ninety feet, without regard to the original
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height of the building, constitutes an alteration or enlargement “to a height greater than ninety feet.” In choosing between these constructions it is appropriate to examine the principlе justifying the quoted regulations attempted by the city. The principal fcasis of it is the police power to impose regulations to prevent conflagrations. The ordinance in this case, so far as pleaded, apparently rests upon that power alone. With respect to this ordinance the city had no рower to found a classification of buildings upon an arbitrary distinction. [State ex rel. v. Stahlman,
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This disposes of the questions raised in the briefs. The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded to be proceeded with in a manner not inconsistent with this opinion.
