SUPREME COURT OF MISSOURI
en banc
ARTHUR L. LEBEAU, JR., et al., )
)
Appellants, )
)
v. ) No. SC94348
)
COMMISSIONERS OF FRANKLIN )
COUNTY, MISSOURI )
)
Respondent. )
APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF FRANKLIN COUNTY
The Honorable Robert D. Schollmeyer, Judge
Opinion issued March 31, 2015
Background
In 2012, the 96th Missouri General Assembly truly agreed to and finally passed
House Bill No. 1171 (HB 1171), titled “[an act to] repeal sections 67.320 and 211.031,
RSMo, and to enact in lieu thereof two new sections relating to courts.” H.B. 1171, 96th
Gen. Assemb., 2d Reg. Sess. (Mo. 2012). The legislation was subsequently signed into
law by the governor. HB 1171, in part, amended section 67.320, permitting any first-
class county within a certain population range to establish a county municipal court
division. 1 Id. HB 1171 also amended section 211.031 relating to proceedings in the
juvenile and family divisions of the circuit court. Id.
After HB 1171 became law, the Franklin County Commission entered a county
order establishing a municipal court division pursuant to the amended section 67.320.
Arthur LeBeau, Jr., and other residents and taxpayers of Franklin County (Taxpayers)
sued the members of the commission, arguing that HB 1171’s enactment violated the
Missouri Constitution: namely, the original purpose provision of article III, section 21,
and the single subject provision of article III, section 23. As a result, they claimed the
commission’s order and the Franklin County Municipal Court Division itself were void.
The trial court dismissed the amended petition, holding that Taxpayers did not have
standing and that the suit was not ripe for judicial review.
On appeal of that judgment, this Court had jurisdiction pursuant to article V,
section 3 of the Missouri Constitution because the case challenged the validity of a
Missouri statute. This Court held that Taxpayers had sufficiently established standing to
challenge HB 1171 and that the suit was ripe for review because the petition alleged that
funds to establish the Franklin County Municipal Court Division pursuant to the authority
of the allegedly unconstitutional bill had already been expended. LeBeau v. Comm’rs of
Franklin Cnty., 422 S.W.3d 284, 290-91 (Mo. banc 2014) (LeBeau I).
On remand to the trial court, Taxpayers offered no evidence other than a copy of
this Court’s opinion in LeBeau I. They did not seek leave to amend their petition to
include a challenge to SB 636, a bill enacted during the same legislative session as HB
1
Franklin County is a first-class county and within the population range set out in the bill.
1171 and which contained an identical amendment to section 67.320 as that of HB 1171. 2
S.B. 636, 96th Gen. Assemb., 2d Reg. Sess. (Mo. 2012). Rather, as they did when the
case was first tried, they continued to maintain that they only requested that the court
address the constitutional validity of HB 1171. The trial court found that HB 1171’s
enactment did not violate constitutional prohibitions against multiple subjects and change
of original purpose. It also held that Taxpayers’ failure to challenge SB 636 rendered
any ruling on HB 1171 an impermissible advisory opinion because the Franklin County
Municipal Court Division could be established independently of the success of the suit,
and, consequently, a ruling on HB 1171 would have no practical effect upon an existent
controversy.
Taxpayers again appeal to this Court, invoking jurisdiction under article V, section
3 of the Missouri Constitution. After the trial court’s ruling on remand but while the
instant case was pending on appeal, the 97th Missouri General Assembly truly agreed to
and finally passed, and the governor signed into law, Senate Bill No. 621 (SB 621). SB
621 repealed and reenacted section 67.320, including the language regarding
establishment of a municipal court division. SB 621, 97th Gen. Assemb., 2d Reg. Sess.
(Mo. 2014). Shortly after SB 621 became effective, the commissioners moved to dismiss
this case as moot.
2
In LeBeau I it was noted that, on remand, Taxpayers were free to seek leave to amend their
petition to include a challenge to SB 636. 422 S.W.3d at 290 n.5.
3
Taxpayers’ Cause of Action is Moot
Mootness implicates the justiciability of a controversy and is a threshold issue to
appellate review. State ex Rel. Reed v. Reardon, 41 S.W.3d 470, 473 (Mo. banc 2001).
As a result, before addressing the merits of the appeal, this Court must first determine
whether the case is moot due to the recent passage of SB 621, which repealed and
reenacted section 67.320.
In that regard, the standard for mootness of a cause of action is set out in Humane
Society of United States v. State:
A cause of action is moot when the question presented for decision seeks a
judgment upon some matter which, if the judgment was rendered, would
not have any practical effect upon any then existing controversy. When an
event occurs which renders a decision unnecessary, the appeal will be
dismissed. And where an enactment supersedes the statute on which the
litigants rely to define their rights, the appeal no longer represents an
actual controversy, and the case will be dismissed as moot.
405 S.W.3d 532, 535 (Mo. banc 2013) (emphasis added).
In Humane Society, the plaintiff challenged the validity of a statute by alleging the
bill that amended the statute violated article III, section 21 of the Missouri Constitution.
Id. at 534. In Humane Society, as in this case, the General Assembly subsequently
repealed and reenacted the statute that was the basis of the plaintiff’s challenge; as a
result, the trial court determined the cause of action was moot. Id. On appeal, the
plaintiff urged this Court to hold instead that procedural defects follow a statute through
repeal and reenactment. Id. at 536. That argument was rejected, however, and this Court
held that once the General Assembly repealed the statute on which the litigants relied, the
“basis for deciding the constitutionality of that statute evaporated.” Id.
4
Humane Society is dispositive of this case. The 2014 repeal and reenactment of
section 67.320 in SB 621 renders Taxpayers’ challenge to HB 1171 moot. Section
67.320 as amended by HB 1171 is the authority “on which the litigants rely to define
their rights.” Humane Society, 405 S.W.3d at 535. Section 67.320 as amended by SB
621 now supersedes section 67.320 as amended by HB 1171. Taxpayers’ appeal no
longer represents an actual controversy, and the case is dismissed as moot. 3
Conclusion
The cause of action is moot, and the appeal is dismissed.
______________________________
Mary R. Russell, Chief Justice
All concur.
3
While this appeal was pending, several motions were filed and taken with the case, all of which
are either overruled or rendered moot by the disposition in this opinion. In particular,
Taxpayers’ motion opposing the commission’s appointment of private counsel to represent them
in this case is overruled. See section 56.670, RSMo 2000 (county commission may appoint a
private attorney in lieu of or in addition to the county counselor). Similarly, Taxpayers’ “Motion
to Strike SB 621 as Unconstitutional” is overruled. A constitutional challenge to SB 621 is an
entirely new cause of action that must be raised first in the trial court.
5