13 Mo. App. 407 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1883
Lead Opinion
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is an action upon eleven special tax-bills issued to the plaintiff by the president of the board of public improvements of the city of St. Louis. A case relating to the same subject-matter, between the same parties, was before this court at a former term, and decided adversely to the plaintiff. This court there held that the tax-bill there sued on was void for two reasons: 1. Because the entire work required to be done under one ordinance, the improvement of Lynch Street from Second Carondelet Avenue to the Gravois Road, had been by the city engineer let in three distinct contracts. 2. Because the bill was made out against eleven lots as an aggregate tract, whereas there should have been a bill against each lot separately. With this decision against him the plaintiff seems to have cast about him to see whether he could procure anything to be done which would avoid its consequences, and enable him to get the money which he had earned. Since his original
The circuit court, trying the case without a jury, gave the following declarations of law, which drove the plaintiff to anon-suit: —
1. “ The court declares the law to be, that ordinance No. 9391, given in evidence by defendant, fixes the extent of the work to be done on Lynch Street, to be the grading, curbing, guttering, macadamizing and cross-walks on said Lynch Street, from Second Carondelet Avenue to the Gravois Boad; and the city engineer of the city of St. Louis had no authority to make contract 3301, given in evidence by the defendant, or any other contract, except for the whole work as provided for in said ordinance 9391, from Second Carondelet Avenue to Gravois Boad.”
2. “ The court declares the law to .be that, inasmuch as it is shown by the evidence that the work mentioned in the petition and in the special tax-bills sued upon herein, was done and fully completed prior to October 15, 1875, and that on or before said date, city engineer of the city of St.-Louis computed the cost of said work, the said special*409 tax-bills herein sued upon, cannot be considered or received as evidence that the work and material charged in such bills have been furnished, or of the execution of said work, or of the correctness of the rates or prices or amounts thereof, or of the liability of the persons named therein as owners of the land, to pay the same ; and as there is no other evidence of these matters, other than the said tax-bills, the judgment must be for the defendant.”
Then the plaintiff finds himself in this situation : He has done work for the city under a valid contract; the city, by the terms of the contract and the law, is under an obliga tion to give him valid tax-bills, certified by its engineer, against each lot abutting on the street, along the line of the work which he has done. In the meantime, a change takes place in the city government. The old charter is abrogated and a new one is adopted. The officer who ought to have executed and delivered to him these tax-bills in pursuance of the contract which he has with the city, goes out of office ; the office itself by name is discontinued, and the duties which were devolved upon its incumbent are now devolved upon another officer of the new corporation. Has this change abrogated the contract between him and the city? It is a general rule of law relating to municipal corporations that, when such a corporation reorganizes under a new charter, the new corporation succeeds to the obligations and liabilities of the corporation which existed under the preceding charter. 1 Dill, on Mun. Corp. ( 2d ed.), sect. 52. It was not intended that the scheme and charter should have the effect of annulling any rights which had been acquired under the old charter; for this instrument contains the following provision: “All. ordinances in force
This reasoning disposes of the contention by the respondents’ counsel that the tax-bills certified by the president of the board of public improvements are not prima facie evidence that the work and the material charged for in such bill have been furnished, of the execution of the work, and correctness of the rates, or prices, the amount thereof, and of the liability of the person therein named as owner of the land to pay the same, except where such tax-bills are for work done under the new charter. The old chapter made tax-bills so certified .by the city engineer prima, facie evidence of the facts above stated. If we are right in holding that the president of the board of public improvements had power as the successor of the city engineer, and the custodian of the records of his office, to make out and certify these bills, we must give to them the same effect as evidence which they would have had if made out by the city engineer. The new charter devolves the same duty upon the president of the board of public improvements and contains the same provisions as to the facts of
Entertaining these views, we reverse the judgment of the circuit court, and remand the cause. Judge Lewis concurs, and files a separate opinion; Judge Bakewell dissents.
Separate opinion by
I do not think it is necessary to overrule the decision of this court in Eyerman v. Hardy (8 Mo. App. 311), nor do I think that the conclusion reached by the majority in the present case has that effect. The vital point determined in that case was, that “ the city engineer has no power to let out the work of improving a street between two given points in sections, and to compute the cost thereof in sections, instead of as an entirety.” A rule which forbids the concurrence of two distinct acts, does not necessarily forbid either one, when separated from the other. It was shown
Dissenting Opinion
Dissenting opinion by
I cannot see that the city engineer has any authority, express or implied, to let this work out in sections. I consider that I have nothing to do with the question whether he ought to have this power or not. I concurred in Eyerman v. Hardy (8 Mo. App. 311). That case was very carefully considered, and has been followed by this court in subsequent cases. I do not think that it ought to be disturbed.
I cod cur in what is said in the opinion of the court in this case as to the power of the president of the board of
The judgment should, in my opinion, be affirmed.