The relators pray that a writ of prohibition issue, addressed to the respondent, a judge of the circuit court of Jackson county, to prohibit him from entertaining jurisdiction of a cause pending in that court.
The cause in question is a suit in equity instituted in the name of the State of Missouri, on the information and at the relation of the Prosecuting Attorney of Jackson county, plaintiff, against Kansas City, and certain individuals, named, as members of the Common Council of that city, the City Clerk, City Comptroller, City Treasurer, City Auditor, the Kansas City Missouri Gas Company, a corporation, and four unofficial individuals named as promoters of the project or scheme therein 'assailed. The defendants in the suit in equity are the relators in this proceeding. The statements in the petition in the equity suit are substantially to the following effect:
In 1865 a corporation was organized under the laws of this State to manufacture and furnish gas to Kansas City and its inhabitants, and a contract was entered into between that corporation and the city in which the use of the streets was granted for that purpose, and *549the corporation was to furnish gas to the people for $1.75 per 1000 cubic feet for a. period of thirty years. In 1895 the life of that corporation expired by its own charter limitation. In January, 1895, a new gas corporation, called, in the brief, the Snyder Company, was organized, and entered into contract with the city to furnish gas to the people until 1925 at the price of one dollar per 1000 feet. In August, 1895, a similar corporation was organized, called, in the brief, the Payne Company, with which the city made a like contract for the same period. The Payne Company was practically the old 1865 company, and succeeded to its tangible property. The Snyder Company built its works and laid its pipes. The effect of the two companies competing for trade was that the price of gas was reduced to 50 cents per 1000 feet.
In 1897 the two companies, by agreement with the city, were allowed to consolidate and operate as one, under the name of the Kansas City Missouri Gas Company, which is one of the defendants in the equity suit. Immediately after the consolidation the price of gas went up to one dollar per 1000 feet.
Under the contracts of 1895 with the Snyder and-Payne companies certain obligations were imposed on them and certain rights acquired by the city, among which were, first, the obligation of the companies, each, to furnish manufactured gas for the term of thirty years, that is, until 1925, for one dollar per 1000 feet; second, to sell their plants to the city at any time after 1907 at a valuation to be ascertained in a manner therein specified; third, to hold their franchises subject to the provisions of the city charter, among which was that they should not be renewed or extended before the last two years of their existence, that is, not before 1923. These obligations of the companies and rights of the city were continued in the contract with the consolidated company, wherein it was also stipulated that *550the basis of the valuation of the property, when the city should elect to purchase it, should be the then actual value of the physical property “exclusive of the value of the stock, unexpired franchise, earning capacity,” etc., or as construed by the counsel for the respondent, the value of old iron and material.
The consolidated company, the Kansas City Missouri Gas Company, was in the field operating under that contract and subject to those conditions in 1904 when natural gas in great quantities was discovered to exist in the vicinity of Kansas City.
After this discovery five different companies or associations were formed, each for the purpose of engaging in the business of furnishing natural gas to the inhabitants of Kansas City, and each made application to the Common Council for authority to construct works, lay pipes and mains in the streets, etc., for this purpose. Thereupon the Kansas City Missouri Gras Company, with the unofficial individual defendants above referred to, conspired with certain others, including members of the five proposed competing companies above mentioned, to shut off the threatened competition and obtain for themselves and their coconspirators a monopoly of the business, besides the annulment of the city’s rights and the consolidated company’s obligations above mentioned and that by the means presently mentioned, did on December 7, 1904, obtain the passage through the Common Council of an ordinance, numbered 27459, the nature of which will be presently mentioned. That ordinance was vetoed by the mayor on December 9, 1904, On April 27, 1904, an ordinance numbered 28549, identical' in title and of similar purport, except in points of minor detail, was passed by the Common Council, and was, at the time of filing the original petition in the equity case, pending before the Mayor for his approval or veto. The Mayor has since vetoed that ordinance also, and the defend*551ants who are members of the council are now threatening to and will unless restrained pass it over the veto. Upon the filing of the petition in the equity suit, the respondent, thfe judge of the circuit court, issued a temporary restraining order enjoining the members of the Common Council and other city officers from passing, signing or giving effect to either of the proposed ordinances and enjoining the .grantees from accepting the same. Thereupon the defendants in that suit filed their petition in this court for a writ of prohibition. It is unnecessary to set forth in full the first ordinance, No. 27459, or the second one, No. 28549, now pending before the Common Council on a proposition to pass it over the Mayor’s veto. For the purpose of determining whether a writ of prohibition shall issue as prayed, it is sufficient to' say of the contents of the last-named ordinance, as stated in substance in the petition in the equity suit, that it purposes to grant to the unofficial individuals named therein as defendants and their assigns the right to use the streets in which to lay pipes and erect necessary works to supply natural gas to the inhabitants of the city for a period of thirty years, authorizes them to acquire the property of The Kansas City Missouri Gas Company, and exercise the rights now possessed by that company, and when they shall have taken over the property and rights of the company they are relieved of the obligation to furnish manufactured gas (which the petition says is superior and safer than natural gas) on the terms and at the price in the existing contract required, yet extends the rights that the present gas company has under existing contract for a period of ten years beyond its present contract limit, contrary to the charter provision that it should not be extended or renewed until within two years of the expiration of its limit, and annuls the city’s right to purchase the property on the advantageous terms mentioned. Counsel for relators in their brief *552contend that the proposed ordinance does not relieve the grantees therein of the obligation to furnish manufactured gas at the stated price, and in support of their contention quote from the ordinance itself. Counsel for respondent do not agree to that interpretation of the ordinance; which of the two interpretations is correct is a judicial question which the circuit court can decide. It is not a vital question, however, in this prohibition proceeding, though it may have more significance in the equity suit (as to which we express no opinion), but however that fact may be, as the case now before us stands on demurrer to the return we look to the pleadings alone for the facts.
The petition alleges that the passage of this ordinance is the result of a conspiracy between the grantees therein named and tire persons composing the five other companies above mentioned who were seeking similar grants, and the members of the Common Council, all of whom are named, in which it was agreed that those members of the council were to have shares of stock in the corporation to be formed, and that those members of the council agreed with the grantees named in the ordinance that in consideration of the shares of the stock to be given them or to others for them they would vote for the passage of the ordinance. It is alleged in the petition that the prosecuting attorney can not state how much stock was to go to each member of the council named, but that the stock was to be divided for their benefit, and that was the price of their votes. It is averred as a legal proposition in the equity petition that the rights secured to the city under the contracts with the former companies and with the consolidated company are rights held by the city in trust for the people and that the city as trustee has no right to surrender them.
The foregoing is a very brief, perhaps it might be called a meager, statement of the facts of this case, but *553for the purpose of considering the question of the jurisdiction of the circuit court in the premises, it is sufficient. This cause was argued and submitted to this court for its decision on a demurrer to the return of the circuit judge showing the above facts.
There are two main propositions on which the relators rely: first, that the Common Council constitutes the legislative department of the city government and in the exercise of its discretion in passing the ordinance in question is independent of the judiciary; second, the petition in the equity suit does not state facts sufficient to constitute a case of fraud and corruption on the part of the relators.
I. We will consider the second proposition first. The sufficiency of the petition in equity in this particular is not to be judged in this case by the same rules as governed in the case of Nagel v. Railroad, 167 Mo. 89, to which we are referred, because we are here viewing the petition from a different standpoint. The itfagel case was before us on appeal from the judgment of the circuit court sustaining a demurrer to the petition. The circuit court in the exercise of its jurisdiction had adjudged the petition insufficient and we sustained that judgment. If we should adopt the theory of the relators on this point in this case we would take the case from the trial court before it had passed on the question. In the Nagel case the petition was not sufficient, yet we recognized the jurisdiction of the circuit court over the case and affirmed its judgment. So here, if the statements of fact are not sufficient to constitute fraud, the trial court will so decide, and there will be time enough for us to express our opinion on that question when it comes before us on appeal. If the case stated, or attempted to be stated, in the petition, is of a subject over which the circuit court has no jurisdiction, yet the court gives indication of a purpose to entertain it, *554an application for a writ of prohibition would be received, but if it be that the petition merely states defectively a cause of the nature of which the court has jurisdiction a writ of prohibition will not issue merely because it is feared that the court might erroneously decide that it was sufficient. We do not mean to imply from what is here said that the statements aiming to charge fraud in this petition are not sufficient or that they are of the same character as those in the Nagel case; we have no opinion on that subject, because the time for us to form an opinion has not arrived. In the case at bar the petition in equity states that- the scheme is to form a corporation to take by assignment the rights proposed to be conferred on the individuals named, and that shares of the stock of that corporation are to be given to the members of the Common Council named, in consideration of which they have agreed to vote for the ordinance. If the case is not beyond the jurisdiction of the circuit court on the ground that the Common Council is a legislative body independent of the judiciary, then that court has jurisdiction to decide whether or not the allegations of the petition are sufficient to make out a case of fraud.
And it has jurisdiction to pass on other questions that are discussed in the briefs, for example, that the rights acquired by the city under the existing contracts are in the nature of property rights held by the city in trust for the people and not to be bartered away in the maimer proposed, and other questions of like character to be decided according to the law, construing.the city charter and the ordinance in question. All such are questions for the judgment of the circuit court in the first instance and not to be taken away from that court on the apprehension that they may not be decided correctly.
A writ of prohibition will not go on such a theory.
*555II. The proposition, however, on which relators chiefly rely is that the Common Conncil is a legislative body and in passing an ordinance is independent of the judiciary.
This proposition rests for its foundation on article 3 of our State Constitution: “The powers of the government shall he divided into three distinct departs ments — the legislative, executive and judicial — each of which shall he confined to a separate magistracy, and no person, or collection of persons, charged with the exercise of powers properly belonging to one of those departments, shall exercise any power properly belonging to either of the others, except in the instances in this Constitution expressly directed or permitted.”
It is not within the power of the judiciary, therefore, to enjoin the General Assembly from passing a proposed statute or compel it by mandamus to do so. And to the extent that the Common Council of Kansas City is clothed with a legislative power under authority of the State, it is, in the exercise of that power, as free from control by the judiciary as the General Assembly itself. Yet an organization like the Common Council does not stand on an equality with the General Assembly even in this respect, because the General Assembly, as a body, is the legislative department of the State government, and because it is in itself and in its own right the legislative department of a' State it is free from control. But a common council is not an essential part of the legislative department of the State; it possesses no inherent legislative power and is not, in virtue of its own right, free from judicial control, but is so only when it is exercising legislative power conferred by law upon it and then only in respect of the exercise of that power. Nor does an act of a common council, after its passage, even though it be strictly legislative in its character, stand on exactly the same plane as an act of the General Assembly, for that whereas the valid*556ity of an' act of the General Assembly cannot he impeached in a conrt on the ground that its passage was obtained by fraud or corrupt influence, yet an ordinance may be so assailed. [Knapp, Stout & Co. v. St. Louis, 156 Mo. 353; Barber Asphalt Co. v. French, 158 Mo. 534, l. c. 547.]
A common council or board of aldermen may have, and indeed such bodies usually do have, both ministerial or administrative powers and governmental or legislative powers. They are mere agencies of the State government exercising delegated powers. In the exercise of their legislative powers they are not subject to judicial control, but in the exercise of their ministerial or administrative powers they have no such exemption. And even though when acting in either capacity they speak in the form of an ordinance, yet if what they say is not the promulgating or the making of a law, they are not exercising legislative powers. If, for example, the city owns a certain lot of land which the common council has authority to sell, and the common council, pursuant to an agreement with a purchaser, should pass an ordinance directing the mayor, upon payment of a certain sum of money, to execute a deed conveying the lot to the purchaser, would any one say that in the passage of the ordinance the council was exercising legislative power? The law in such case regards the substance of the act, not the form of its execution. A municipal. assembly, a common council, board of aldermen or body of that kind, by whatsoever name it may be called, derives its powers from the city charter, and, ordinarily, the charter is the grant of the State Legislature and has the force and effect of a statute. Under our State Constitution of 1875, a city having a population of 100,000' or more may frame a charter for itself subject to the Constitution and laws of the State. [Sec. 16, art. 9, Const.] The effect of that, provision of the Constitution is to transfer from the Gen*557eral Assembly to -tbe inb.abitan.ts of such city, if they elect to exercise it, tbe legislative power to frame a charter, tbe charter when adopted to have tbe same force and effect as it would have bad if, in tbe absence of that Constitutional provision, it bad been granted by tbe General Assembly. Tbe power conferred on a city by that clause of tbe Constitution covers, however, only tbe making of a charter for city government; it does not take from tbe State Legislature, or confer on tbe city, tbe power to make laws other than those appertaining to a city government. Therefore, though a charter framed by tbe freeholders and adopted by tbe people should essay to confer on tbe common council powers not of essence of city government, but appertaining to State authority, it would not in that respect have tbe force of a statute. But within tbe legitimate scope of tbe power conferred by tbe Constitution, tbe freeholders’ charter, when adopted by tbe inhabitants of tbe city in tbe manner prescribed, has tbe full force and effect of a statute.
It is essential to a well-organized city government that it should have both ministerial or administrative powers and legislative powers. These are usually confided to a mayor and board of aldermen or common council, as it is called in tbe charter of Kansas City, and their acts, both ministerial and legislative, are usually effected through tbe form of ordinances. If tbe city has a piece of property which it desires to sell, an ordinance is passed directing tbe mayor or some other officer to execute a deed; if a contract for tbe building of a fire-engine bouse is to be entered into, an ordinance is passed authorizing tbe proper officer to sign tbe contract ; if regulations are to be made governing tbe running of street cars or other vehicles on tbe streets or for tbe preservation of the health or safety of tbe people, an ordinance is passed. Thus, the ordinance is tbe form of official utterance, whether tbe act be ministerial *558.or legislative. The form in which the act is expressed is immaterial; the act done denotes its own character. ■A common council cannot shield a vulnerable ministerial act by covering it with the form used to inclose a legislative act.
In State ex rel. Subway Co. v. St. Louis, 145 Mo. 551, opinion by Burgess, J., the difference in the natures of these powers exercised by the municipal assembly, and their liability to control in the one class and freedom from control in the other, are pointed out, and quoting with approval from Ill. Trust & Sav. Bank v. City, 76 Fed. 282, it was said: “In contracting for waterworks to supply itself and its inhabitants with water, the city is not exercising its governmental or legislative powers, but its business or proprietary powers. The purpose of such a contract is not to govern its inhabitants, but to obtain a private benefit for the city itself and its denizens.”
And in Donahoe v. Kansas City, 136 Mo. l. c. 665, this court quoted with approval from McKenna v. St. Louis, 6 Mo. App. 320, wherein it is said: “Municipal corporations are considered by law in two aspects. In one, their functions are chiefly ministerial and relate to corporate interests only. These include the making and improving of streets, the construction of sewers and other improvements and keeping them in repair, the holding of property for corporate purposes, etc. But as to these matters of strictly corporate interest there are often duties to be performed of a legislative or judicial character. In the other aspect, the corporation is regarded as holding a quasi delegated sovereignty for the preservation of the public peace and safety and the prevention of crime. This includes the maintenance of a police force, the appointment of officers charged with the public health, the establishing of regulations for the suppression of vice, and other matters of public concern In which all people have a com*559mon interest .which it is the chief end of every good government to protect.”
These distinctions have been pointed ont in later decisions by this court (Ely v. St. Louis, 181 Mo. 723; Ruppenthal v. St. Louis, 190 Mo. 213); and are well observed in other jurisdictions. [Valparaiso v. Gardner, 97 Ind. 1; New Orleans Gas Lt. Co. v. New Orleans, 42 La. Ann. 188; Oliver v. Worcester, 102 Mass. 489; Spring Valley Water Works v. Bartlett, 8 Sawyer 555, and other cases cited in the brief for respondent.]
In Albright v. Fisher, 164 Mo. 56, which is relied on by relators, this court by its writ prohibited a circuit judge in St. Louis from enjoining members of the Municipal Assembly from passing an ordinance authorizing a street railroad company to extend its tracks through a certain street. That case was analogous to this in one important fact, that is, the ordinance sought to be enjoined was one conferring authority on a public utility corporation to use a street of the city. But in that case the right of the Municipal Assembly to grant the authority was challenged only on the ground that the requirements of an act of the General Assembly, of June 19, 1899, had not been complied with, in this, that the consent of the abutting- property-owners along the street had not been obtained. As the case was presented to this court, it was seemingly conceded that the passage of the ordinance was a legislative act, but it was contended that the constitutional provision that exempted the State Legislature from control of the judiciary did not apply to a Municipal Assembly. The main point in the opinion was expressed in these words (l. c. 64): “Taking this established doctrine of this court as a basis and a premise, it must needs follow that when the Municipal Assembly of the city of St. Louis is engaged in the performance of its legislative functions, it is quite beyond the power of the courts to interfere with the exercise of those functions in any manner *560whatever.” That was the law point on which the case turned and to that proposition we adhere. The contents of the ordinance in that case were not before the court further than they might be inferred from the title; the question of whether the ordinance was in effect a contract or a legislative act was not presented to the court for consideration and was not decided. ,
But in the case at bar the nature of the ordinance, the passage of which the circuit court is asked to enjoin, is shown to be merely that of a contract, by which the Common Council, in its ministerial or administrative capacity, is proposing to grant to certain individuals the use of its streets for certain purposes and relinquish certain rights that the city has under its former contracts. There is no legislative character about it. The mere fact that it takes the form of an ordinance does not change its character. If instead of stating, as the petition in the equity case does, that the members of the Common Council were about to pass an ordinance to the effect stated, it had stated that they were about to enter into a contract to that effect, it would have been as good, perhaps better, pleading, because it is the ultimate fact and not the evidence of the fact that should be pleaded. Now suppose the petition had stated the fact in that form, what would be thought of the answer if it should say, true it is we are about to enter into that kind of a contract and we are going to do it. for the price named, but we are going to do it in the form of an ordinance and therefore we are beyond the reach of the court? Yet that is in effect just what the relators say by their demurrer to the return. If the case were pleaded in that form it would unmistakably exemplify the difference between a ministerial and a legislative act.
The petition in the equity suit says that those rights of the city which it is proposed to relinquish are very valuable and are in the nature of property rights *561held by the Comm on Council in trust for the people and that the council has no authority to dispose of them; whether that is so or not, is a question which the circuit court is competent to decide. It also says that the extending of the rights of the present gas company at this time for a-period of ten years is in violation of the charter on that point; whether or not that is so is also a question for the circuit court. It also says, or attempts to say, that the whole scheme is the result of fraud; whether this is so or not, and whether as a matter of pleading the fraud is sufficiently stated in the petition, is also a question within the province of the circuit court to decide. We see no reason for interfering with the court in, the due consideration of the case.
Writ denied;^
All concur, except Marshall, J., who dissents on the ground/that in his opinion this decision is in conflict with .that in Albright v. Fisher and that in respect of the ordinance in question the Common Council is acting in r£s legislative or governmental capacity.