122 Mo. App. 196 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1906
This suit is to have certain taxbills assessed against the property of the plaintiffs for street improvement, declared void. The defendants are sued as the holders of said taxbills.
It is alleged in the petition that on the 25th day of August, 1903, the city of Nevada passed a resolution to the effect that it deemed it necessary to improve Cherry street in said city from the west line of the Missouri, Kansas & Texas Railway Company’s right of way to the center of Ash street, by paving the same with vitrified brick, in accordance with plans and specifications to be furnished by the city engineer and approved by the city council, the improvement to be made from curb to curb on each side of the street, and on a line therewith to the crossings north and south of its intersections with other streets, and the cost of the work assessed against the abutting property-owners as provided by law, except all that part of the street between the rails of' the street raihvay and one foot on the outside of each side thereof, which shall be paid for by the street railway company. The resolution declared that the work and improvements were necessary and ordered the clerk to publish the
Plaintiffs complain of the illegality of said bills as MIoavs :
First. Because the plans and specifications were not on file Avhen the resolution was passed.
' Second. Because the plans and specifications were not filed and approved by the council until September 8, 1903, and tlxe resolution was published for the first time on August 26th.
Third. Because the resolution provides for paving Cherry street, Avhile Ordinance 489 provides that a contract be let to pave up to Avithin one foot of the rails on each side of the railAvay track.
Fourth. Because the space between the rails of the street railway Avas not paved in accordance with the plans and specifications for the balance of the street.
Fifth. Because the contrae! fails to conform to ordinance numbered 489, in that the contractor is given four months after commencing work to complete it, while the said ordinance gives him only three months.
Sixth. Because tlxe contractor failed to begin work within thirty days after the contract was signed, and did not begin until five months thereafter.
Seventh. Because the improvement Avas not completed Avithin a reasonable time.
The defendant Cockrell filed answer admitting that he owned the taxbills and denied the other allegations of the petition. Defendant Williams filed ansAver
Plaintiffs insist that the taxbills are void because the resolution of the council, that the improvement of Cherry street was necessary, was not published as required by law, the last publication not having been made ten days before the letting of the contract. This contention will be disregarded, because plaintiffs failed to allege in their petition the want of such sufficient publication as a ground for relief. And there is no general allegation in the petition that would authorize the court to take cognizance of such defect of the publication. The petition alleges seven different specific grounds for relief and no others. The said ground not having been relied on in the trial court, cannot be considered by this court. [Huling v. Bandera Flagstone Co., 87 Mo. App. 349; Dunningan v. Green, 165 Mo. 98; Lucas v. Cella, 115 Mo. App. 395; Wilson & McConnell v. Standard Operating Co., 93 Mo. App. 121.]
The resolution is charged to be defective in that it fails “to describe the kind and character of the work to be done, so as to give notice to the abutting property-owners in order that they may exercise their right to protest. In other words, the resolution must refer to plans and specifications in existence at the time of its passage.” In a case where the resolution declared, that “it is deemed by said council necessary to improve Brown avenue from Jefferson street to Michigan street by grading, paving, guttering and terracing said avenue,” the taxbills were held to be void. [City of Kirksville ex rel. v. Coleman, 103 Mo. App. 215.] But in this case the resolution did specify the material for the pavement and that the paving was to be done in accordance with plans and specifications to be furnished by the city engineer. Section 5859, Laws of 1901, p. 65, does not provide that the plans and specifications shall be on file when
There is nothing in said section 5859 that requires, in express words, the resolution to mention the material or the plans and specifications for the improvement, but it may be that such is to be inferred from the following language: “And if a majority of the resident owners of the property liable to taxation therefor shall not, within ten days thereafter (that is, after the publication of the resolution), file with the clerk of the city their protests against such improvements, then this council shall have power to cause such improvements to be made, and to contract therefor. .. . .”
It is true, that it is said in City of Kirksville ex rel. v. Coleman, supra, that the council should state in its resolution in what manner it proposed to improve the street, but we are not to infer from the expression used that, if the resolution calls attention to the plans and specifications to be furnished by the city engineer, the resolution was defective in that respect. The plans and specifications being so referred to, became a part of the resolution.
The plaintiff makes two specific objections in his petition to the plans and specifications, viz.: First.
The resolution called for an improvement of the entire street, which would, of course, include the space between the tracks of the street railway in the street and one foot on the outside of the two outside rails of each track. But the resolution itself provides that the street railway company shall pay that part of the cost of the improvement. It is contended that the contract for that part of the work was done under a separate private contract and in a different and inferior manner from that of the other work. The ordinance for the improvement required that the railway company have certain parts of the streets mentioned in the resolution improved at the same time and in the same way the balance of the street was to be paved. In Stifel v. MacManus, 74 M'o. App. 558, it was held: “The contractor who has paved the street on each side of the railroad track ought not to be denied the right to enforce his taxbill by reason of the neglect of the city to perform its duty by enforcing the obligation of the railroad company.” And a like
The evidence was, that soon after the contractor had got a part of his material on the ground to commence laying the pavement, the weather became cold and so continued all the winter with short intervals until the following spring when it became very rainy. It was shown that it was unsafe to lay concrete, the base for the pavement, during cold weather and that it was equally unsafe to lay it in wet weather and that the mayor and the city engineer requested the contractor to wait for a fitter time. The contention of the appellant is that bad weather does not excuse the contractor unless he provided against it in his contract. As a legal proposition, this is true. .[McQuiddy v. Brannock, 70 Mo. App. 535; Cochran v. Railway, 131 Mo. 607.] But the contract provided that the council might prolong the time for the completion of the contract, if it saw fit, for good cause. The council by ordinance at different times did prolong the time of the completion of the work and we must presume, as no cause was assigned for its so doing, it was on account of bad weather. At least, the council had the right to extend the time for completion of the work. [Hund v. Rackliffe, 192 Mo. 312.]
Lastly, plaintiffs contend that the work was not completed Avithin a reasonable time. Where no time was specified in the ordinance, nor in the contract for the completion of the work, and the paving to he done was less than two-thirds of a mile, and the work Avas not completed for more than a year, it was held, that the work AAas not completed within a reasonable time. [Turner v. City of Springfield, 117 Mo. App. 418, 93 S. W. 867.] There does not appear to have been a sufficient excuse for the extraordinary delay and the court so holds. When the evidence shoAved that many days elapsed without any Avork being performed; that the contractor was negligent, careless and shiftless, spending much of his
This case is somewhat different. The contractor commenced his work within the time fixed by the contract and was willing to go on and complete it notwithstanding the weather was unfit to do good work of the kind called for in the contract, and that he suspended work at the request of the mayor and the city engineer, and the council in order that the work should be good passed various ordinances from time to time to enable him to do his work in a satisfactory manner. The city authorities in extending his time were exercising the right it had wisely reserved under the ordinance for the benefit of the city and property-owner.
There is no complaint that the Avork of the contractor was. not good and in compliance Avith the contract. There was a full compliance by the contractor with all the proAdsions of the ordinance and the terms of his contract, and the judgment of the trial court ought to be upheld.
Affirmed.