State Ex Rel. Pickering v. City of Willow Springs

This cause is in mandamus to compel the defendant city to abate a nuisance. On trial what might be termed a judgment of peremptory mandamus was rendered directing the abatement of the nuisance. From this judgment the defendant city appealed.

Near the defendant city, but just beyond the corporate limits, is a creamery from which the washings and waste are discharged into a drain or branch. This branch passes near relator's dwelling. The waste discharged does not pass down the branch and away, only at intervals, because the branch does not flow freely only after heavy rains. The consequence is that the waste gathers along in pools and gives off a very offensive odor, and according to the evidence is a nuisance. It appears also that a part of the stench may be due to the sewage from a hotel and a railroad building. Relator after describing the nuisance alleges that same could be abated by piping at small expense to the city.

Defendant in its return filed what may be considered as a demurrer, but coupled with it allegations to the effect that the city is "broke" and is already taxed and bonded to the legal limit. No answer or pleading to the return was made, but no point is made in this respect.

That relator and others similarly situated have suffered and are suffering a grievous wrong, there is no *Page 4 doubt. The mayor and other city officers who were witnesses admitted in effect that relator's grievance was well founded, and no one even intimated that relator had in anyway magnified the discomfort and menace that are ever present at his home and that of his neighbors. Will mandamus lie? Defendant is a city of the fourth class. The statute, section 8694, Revised Statutes 1919, gives authority to the city to abate this nuisance. It is held in Sallee v. St. Louis, 152 Mo. 615, 54 S.W. 463, that it is the absolute duty of a city to abate such a nuisance. But if the officers of a city fail to do their duty, can they be compelled to do so in a suit not against them, but against the city? Or if against the officers in such a case as here, will mandamus lie to compel the proper ordinance and procedure to abate this nuisance? We think that the first question answers itself. Here the city only is named as defendant. The judgment of peremptory mandamus directs that the nuisance be abated, and that "the city of Willow Springs shall immediately take steps to abate the same." The city of course can act only through its officers or agents, and we do not know how a judgment like the one rendered here could be enforced. But granting that relator's cause was directed against the proper officers, let us then consider the situation from that viewpoint. The general rule is that mandamus will not lie to control the discretion of public officers, but will only lie to require the performance of a plain ministerial duty. [State ex rel. v. Bourne, 151 Mo. App. 104, 131 S.W. 896; State ex rel. v. Fort, 180 Mo. 97, 79 S.W. 167.] The record discloses that the mayor and board of aldermen have passed no ordinance or taken any steps to abate the nuisance except to merely talk about it and discuss it. As to whether the alleged nuisance is in fact a nuisance and subject to abatement is a question of judgment on the part of the legislative body of the city, and certainly we have no authority to direct the subject-matter of legislation on the part of the city council. It is their duty to relieve the inhabitants of the city *Page 5 of this nuisance; but such duty is not, in the state of this record, a ministerial duty, and, therefore, cannot be directed in mandamus.

In State ex rel. v. Bersch, 83 Mo. App. 657, l.c. 668, the law is declared to be that when a municipal assembly or council acts within the sphere of its authority, its discretion is as wide as that possessed by the general assembly of the State and is as free from judicial interference. In writing of manadamus in connection with its application Judge McQUILLIN, 7 McQuillin On Municipal Corporations, sec. 1380, says: "If the duty of the proper officers to abate the nuisance and remove the obstruction is clear, ministerial and not discretionary, mandamus will usually lie." But that is not the case here. Plaintiff is entitled to redress and relief by proceeding against those responsible for the nuisance, and we decline to uphold the present proceeding. We find no authority to justify us, and plaintiff's learned counsel has not. Merely because plaintiff's rights have been grossly transgressed does not authorize the relief sought here. The judgment below should be reversed, and it is so ordered. Cox, P.J., and Farrington, J., concur.