The City of Kansas City (“the city”) appeals from the trial court’s judgment dismissing with prejudice its petition for delinquent taxes against Southwest Tra-cor, Inc., and Woolridge Corporation of Missouri, Inc., partners in RSKC Associates (“the corporation”).
The parties submitted the case to the trial court based on the following stipulated facts. The corporation operated a business, the Radisson Suites Hotel, which is subject to the city’s Earnings and Profits Tax (“profits tax”) and Convention and Tourism Tax (“tourism tax”). The profits tax is a one-percent tax on a corporation’s net profit that is earned as a result of business conducted in the city. Overdue taxes are subject to a five percent penalty per month, up to a maximum of twenty-five percent. In addition, the city is entitled to collect interest on past-due amounts in the amount of six percent annually for tax years 1993 and earlier, and twelve percent annually for tax years after 1993. The corporation failed to pay the profits tax for 1993 and 1994. At trial, the corporation owed $727.98 for 1993 and $860.56 for 1994.
The tourism tax is a one-and-three-fourths percent tax on gross receipts from retail food sales and a five-and-one-half-percent tax on sleeping rooms. Overdue tax is subject to a penalty of five percent, and the city is also entitled to collect interest. The corporation failed to pay the tourism tax for the periods ending December 31, 1994, January 31,1995, and February 28, 1995. The amounts due at trial were $35,486.52, $35,398.90, and $35,214.92, respectively.
In addition to the outstanding tax, penalties and interest, the city charter provides that the city is entitled to ten percent of the delinquent tax as attorney fees, which amounts to $7,609.24 for this case. The parties stipulated that the city is also entitled to statutory post-judgment interest at the rate of nine-percent annually. Finally, the city may collect costs associated with the lawsuit, which at the time of trial were $70 for a special process server and $22 in court costs.
The parties also stipulated that on March 13, 1996, the city filed a lawsuit in Cass County, Missouri, to collect the unpaid taxes. The city failed to take action
The stipulation incorporates by reference a petition filed by the city on July 30, 1996, in an unrelated case, alleging that Southwest Tracor had breached a parking agreement with the city. Southwest Tra-cor had agreed in a contract dated July 1, 1994, to pay the city for parking tickets validated by the Radisson Suites Hotel. The hotel validated tickets used by hotel patrons and employees who used the Auditorium Plaza Garage. The garage is managed by the city’s Convention and Entertainment Centers Department. Before trial, the city and Southwest Tracor negotiated a settlement. Southwest Tracor agreed to pay the city $7,000, and the city executed a release, incorporated in the stipulation by reference, which states in relevant part:
Full Release
KNOW ALL MEN BY THESE PRESENTS, that CITY OF KANSAS CITY, MISSOURI, upon the receipt of the sum of SEVEN THOUSAND AND NO/100 DOLLARS ($7,000), will forever discharge, SOUTHWEST TRACOR, INC., and its agents, servants, employees, partners, directors, officers, heirs, personal representatives, successors and assigns from any and all actions, liens and compensation arising out of any event, known or unknown, occurring pri- or to the date of this release, including but not limited to transactions between the parties which in any way relate to Case Case [sic] No. CV96-17000, pending in the Circuit Court of Jackson County, Missouri; and specifically, without restricting said release, from any and all actions, causes of action, claims, demands, damages, costs and expenses directly or indirectly related to the transactions between the parties, in issue, or existing.
The terms hereof are contractual and not mere recitals and that they state the entire agreement between the parties.
The party executing this document on behalf of CITY OF KANSAS CITY, MISSOURI, and represents he/she is authorized to take this action on behalf of said party.
The release is dated April 1, 1997. It was signed by William LaMette, the then Acting Director of Convention and Entertainment Centers.
On April 15, 1999, the city again filed its suit against the corporation for delinquent taxes. The corporation argued in its answer that the petition was “barred by accord and satisfaction” because the “full release” that resulted from the parking contract dispute also released the corporation from paying the overdue taxes.
The parties stipulated to the facts and submitted trial briefs. On May 9, 2001, the trial court entered its Judgment of Dismissal, finding that the agreement was unambiguous and fully released “Southwest Tracor Inc. and its partners” from all actions prior to the date of the release, including the petition for delinquent taxes. The city brings this appeal.
The trial court’s decision in a case submitted on a stipulation of facts is considered to be a judgment on the merits. King v. Jones,
In its first point on appeal, the city argues that the trial court erred in dismissing its petition. The city contends that its charter does not permit the abatement or release from the duty to pay taxes and that the release could not have excused the corporation from this obligation.
The one-page Judgment of Dismissal shows that the court’s judgment was based on the language in the release and does not indicate whether the trial judge considered the effect of the city charter on the release. The judgment states in relevant part:
After reviewing the stipulation and the trial briefs, and being fully advised in the premises, the Court finds that the April 1,1997 Full Release is not ambiguous and fully released Southwest Tracor Inc. and its partners from all actions prior to the date of the release which would include the subject matter of this cause of action.
In general, the presumption is that executed releases are valid. Blackstock v. Kohn,
As noted by the city, however, a municipality’s freedom to enter contracts is constrained by § 432.070, RSMo 2000, which states in relevant part: “No county, city, town, village, school township, school district or other municipal corporation shall make any contract, unless the same shall be within the scope of its powers or be expressly authorized by law.” Public Water Supply Dist. No. 16 v. City of Buckner,
The requirements of § 432.070 are “ ‘mandatory and not merely directory.’” Software A.G. of N. Am., Inc. v. City of Columbia,
In Software A.G., this Court determined that a municipality could not be bound by an agreement that would have violated a city ordinance requiring re-bidding of contracts that were more than five years in duration. Software A.G. of N. Am., Inc.,
In the case at bar, the city entered into an agreement with the corporation to settle a dispute involving a parking contract. The city does not contest that the agreement released the corporation from its liability under the parking contract. The corporation argues that the “Full Release,” incorporated in the settlement agreement, does much more, however, in that it releases the corporation from “any and all actions, liens and compensation arising out of any event, known or unknown, occurring prior to the date of this release.” The trial court determined that this language unambiguously released the corporation from all actions prior to the date of the agreement, including the action for delinquent taxes. But the trial court apparently did not consider whether the city was authorized to enter into an agreement that released the corporation from its previously assessed tax obligations.
Article XII, § 391 of the Kansas City Charter provides:
Abatement and reduction in valuation. No person or property shall be exempted or released from any burden imposed by or according to law. No general or special tax or assessment, or interest or penalty thereon, shall be remitted or abated, or the right to enforce payment thereon be released, except in correction of a clerical error. After the levy of any tax, neither the amount thereof nor the valuation of any property for the levy shall be reduced except only in the correction of clerical errors.
This provision prohibits the city from releasing a taxpayer from the duty to pay taxes, except when done to correct a clerical error. As noted supra, a city may not enter into a contract beyond the scope of its authority, and any such agreement is void. Software A.G. of N. Am., Inc.,
The trial court’s judgment dismissing the city’s petition with prejudice is reversed, and the cause is remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
All concur.
Notes
. Section 2-201 of the Code of Ordinances of the City of Kansas City, Missouri, permits a taxpayer to pay taxes under protest and thereafter litigate the issue of liability as to those amounts paid under protest.
. Since the judgment is reversed on Point I, we need not address the second point raised by the city on appeal.
