15 Mo. App. 173 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1884
delivered the opinion of the court.
The petition herein was filed March 31, 1882, and contains the following allegations: The plaintiff is, and since 1822 has been, a municipal corporation, having power to open and establish streets within its limits, and to appropriate private property therefor. Under municipal ordinances of said city, numbered 9150, which was approved July 15, 1874; 9899, approved January 28, 1876, and 10,076, approved July 7,1876, which ordinances are set out in the petition, proceedings were begun on November 26,. 1876, before the land commissioner of the city of St. Louis, in conformity with the charter of that city of March 4,1870,. as amended by the act of February 22, 1875, to open Jefferson Avenue from Market Street to Hebert Street. Commissioners were duly appointed in the proceedings, and duly filed1 their report. This report was duly approved and confirmed by the land commissioner on March 26, 1877. Special tax bills were duly issued by the land commissioner for the benefits assessed in said proceedings. The damages allowed therein for the property taken for the street were fully paid, out of the city treasury, to the persons entitled thereto. On all special taxes remaining unpaid at the expiration of thirty days after due notice thereof a judgment was rendered by the land commissioner, as required by the act of February 22, 1875. Under said act the sums to be paid by the owners of property specially benefited by the appraiser’s report are a lien on the property charged, and shall be collected, as provided by ordinance, by the sale of the property, and when collected shall be paid into the city treasury. By
The defendant demurred to the petition on nineteen grounds. The demurrer was sustained; and plaintiff declining to plead over, there was final judgment for the defendant.
The learned counsel for the defendant has not complied with the rule of court requiring the respondent to file a statement and brief. He has suggested nothing, whether orally or otherwise, in this court, in support of his demurrer, and we are left to consider each ground of demurrer and to conjecture as to which particular ground or grounds of demurrer were found to be fatal to the petition by the trial court.
The act of February 22, 1875, provides (sect. 4) that: “ The sums to be paid by the owners of property specially benefited by the improvement, as finally ascertained, shall be a lien on the property so charged, from the date of the
The seventeenth ground of demurrer is, that the plaintiff is not entitled to any relief other than that provided by this act of February 22, 1875, amending the old city charter.
The other grounds of demurrer seem to present no difficulty which is not successfully overcome by the suggestions of the learned counsellor for the city. It is not necessary, however, that we should pass judicially upon any of these objections to the petition, and we decline to do so upon this exparte presentation of the matter. The objection now to be considered strikes at the foundation of the present action, and is, we think, fatal to it. We think that the trial court properly sustained the demurrer to the petition, because the ordinance on which the plaintiff relies as the foundation of the relief prayed is not well pleaded; but, if we disregard this, and take the city ordinance to which we are referred as if written out in the pleading, it seems to give no warrant for the action.
It appears from the petition that the report of the appraisers assessing |220 as benefits against-the defendant’s lot was confirmed by the judgment of the land commissioner on March 26, 1877. The objection that the proceedings before the laud commissioner, begun on November 22, 1876, under the act of February 22, 1875, amending the old charter, were begun after the new charter was adopted, and after the land commissioner had ceased to have jurisdiction, is met by what is said and decided by this court in Adams v. Lindell (5 Mo. App. 197), affirmed by the supreme court, s. c., 72 Mo. 198. These proceedings were all, we think, validated by the de facto principle.
The charter expressly provides that all ordinances for the opening of any street, upon which proceedings have not been begun when the charter goes into operation, are repealed ; but that every case pending at the time, shall be conducted under the old law ; that all acts necessary to be done by the land commissioner, shall be performed by the city counsellor. Scheme and Charter, Art. XVI., sect. 4. This meets the objection as to the repeal of the ordinances pleaded in the petition. Whether this meets the objection that the judgment of the land commissioner in the case under consideration was rendered twenty days after the decision in The State ex rel. v. Sutton, we need not now determine. It seems probable, however, that that judgment, whether rendered by the proper officer or not, was validated.
It may, perhaps, have been with a view to the changes produced, and likely to be produced, by the new charter, that the municipal assembly passed the ordinance 10,811, of July 9,1878, governing proceedings in the condemnation of private property, and providing for the payment of benefits and the collection of damages. This ordinance the plaintiff pleads by its title and sets forth the provision of its fourth section to the effect that unpaid special tax bills for benefits in street opening proceedings shall be collected
This ordinance, however, is not properly pleaded. The three ordinances which are the foundation of the street opening proceedings are set out in full in the petition of the plaintiff; but this later ordinance, number 10,811, which is set up as a warrant for the present action, is pleaded only by its title and the date of its passage. In pleading a private statute, it is only necessary to refer to it by its title and the date of its passage ; the court is bound then to take judicial notice of the act so pleaded. But a by-law of a municipal corporation does not come under the description of a private act. It is not accessible, as is an act of the legislature to be found in the statute book. The court is not to take notice of it unless it be set out in the pleading. Because this act was not pleaded the demurrer to the plaintiff’s petition was, we think, properly sustained.
The ordinance, which is not set out in the petition, is set out at length in the appellant’s brief, and it is plain from
This ordinance for collecting tax bills by suit, passed in 1878, does not seem to be applicable to the act of February 22,1875, under which the sums chargeable against the property are already reduced to judgments on which special executions have issued which can be levied only on the property against which the sums are a lien. There has been no action of the circuit court, no certificate by the comptroller, in the case of the tax bill sued upon in the present action. They are tax bills under the act of 1875, made out in accordance with its provisions, and not the “ said special tax
We are of the opinion that the judgment of the circuit court should be affirmed. It is so ordered.