30 Mo. App. 380 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1887
I. At the trial plaintiff introduced the tax bill, proved the assignment and rested. Defendant demurred to the evidence on the ground of the insufficiency of the tax bill to make a prima-facie case. The demurrer was overruled. By section 24, acts of 1873, page 370, charter of Sedalia, it is provided that certified tax bills “ shall in all cases be prima-facie evidence that the work and material charged in such bill have been furnished, of the execution of the work, the rates or prices, amount thereof, and of the liability of the person therein named as the owner of the land charged with such bill to pay the same. ” One great fault with this tax bill is its failure to allege defendant to be the owner of the property sought to be charged, as required by the charter. It levies “against John Newton a special tax, ” but nowhere intimates him tobe the owner of the property. Besides this defect, the tax bill as a whole is liable to much adverse criticism, it should and can be amended. Kiley v. Cranor, 51 Mo. 541. There is no direct statement of the execution of the work, or who did it, or that material was furnished, or that the property sought to be charged was in this state. These
II. ' It is insisted that the ordinance under which this improvement was made is void, in that it does not itself provide for the mode, material or character of the work, but refers to “specifications in the hands of the city engineer. ” The charter empowers the mayor and board of aldermen “to grade, pave, macadamize or otherwise improve” a street by ordinance only ; and it is well settled that they cannot delegate this power, or exercise it in any other way. But does it follow that the mode, material, or character of the work shall be specified in the ordinance itself ? We have cases in this state where an ordinance has been upheld which, though insufficient and incomplete in itself, refers to other ordinances theretofore enacted. Moran v. Lindell, 52 Mo. 229; Carlin v. Cavender, 56 Mo. 288. In State v. Mayor, 3 Vroom, 49, an ordinance declared that a street should ‘£ be laid out and opened as defined on the map filed in the office of the town clerk, and then finder a videlicet purports to state what that definition is, but makes the error stated” in that case. The ordinance was upheld notwithstanding the false description ; the reference to the map saved it. So in State v. Morristown, 5 Vroom, 445, an ordinance was held valid which referred for grade lines to maps and profiles on file in the office of the town clerk, and that though the map appeared not to have been filed, it was subject to identification by proof. To the same effect is Stone v. Cambridge, 6 Cush. 270. My conclusion is, that if the specifications were “in the hands of the city engineer” at the time the ordinance Avas adopted it was sufficient for all legal and practical purposes. The mayor and board of aldermen by ordinance adopted the specifications as they existed at the time in the official custody of the city engineer.
III. The contract as let by the committee is not the contract contemplated by the ordinance or the specifications. The specifications referred to in the ordinance
It is, however, said by counsel that that portion of the contract not authorized by the ordinance may be rejected and there will yet remain a valid contract which is within the terms of the ordinance. But the difficulty with the application of this contention is, that this improvement was made under the portion which it is suggested to reject. If that is eliminated, then the labor was performed and the material furnished without a contract to support it.
Again, the contract as let is not such as was advertised for bidders, which of itself is enough to render it illegal. People v. Board, 43 N. Y. 227. The advertisement for bidders for this work was under the terms of
IY. Plaintiff interposes the plea of estoppel as a relief from the difficulties which lie in the way of his recovery. I am of the opinion there is no estoppel. The contract was different from the ordinance. The work was not done under the contract contemplated by the ordinance, it was done under the contract as changed. Admitting defendant said all that is claimed by the evidence, yet he was so speaking under the idea that there was a valid
We have not been referred to any case from this-state bearing on the question in the shape it is presented here. There is a class of cases which hold that mere knowledge that work is being done by a municipal corporation is sufficient to put the property-owner upon-inquiry as to the right of the corporation, and that if the owner remains silent and fails to assert his remedy until after the improvement has been made and paid for by the municipality, he cannot resist the tax assessment on-the ground of illegality of the proceedings ; and this, though it does not appear that the owner had knowledge of the illegality. Of this class are Hampson v. Mayor, 36 N. J. L. 159, and Youngster v. Mayor, 40 N. J. L. 244. Of the correctness of these and like cases, it is not necessary to say aye or nay.
There is another class of cases where parties who have been guilty of laches in asserting their remedy have been held not entitled in equity to an injunction restraining the collection of a tax, but are left to their remedy at lato. Of this class is Kelley v. Ely, 15 Ohio St. 64, and Metz v. Detroit. 18 Mich. 495, 528.
In the Pennsylvania case, supra, the property-owner signed a petition asking for a street improvement under a certain law; in pursuance of this petition the ordinance was passed, the signer was elected and acted as one of the commissioners to superintend the work, sell the city bonds, expend the proceeds on the street, and make the assessment, including his own. It was held he
In the case of State ex rel. v. Mitchell, 31 Ohio St. 592, where abutting property-owners caused a street to' be improved by initiatory steps of their own, and the bonds of the city to be negotiated to pay for the improvement, they, that is, those causing these things to be done, were held to be estopped from denying the validity of an assessment to pay such bonds, though all was done' under a law that was unconstitutional. And so it was held in Tone v. Columbus, 39 Ohio St. 281, that active participation in causing an improvement to be made will estop the party engaged therein from denying the validity of the assessment; but that to estop him from mere silence, it must be shown, among other things, that he had knowledge of the infirmity or defect in the proceedings which he is to be estopped from asserting.
If the infirmity in the case before us went to the original power of the board of aldermen to make improvements, such as that the law under which they acted was unconstitutional, as in the Ohio cases, we-might have to consider whether silence merely would work an estoppel, under the ruling in State v. Railroad, 74 Mo. 163, where nothing is said of knowledge or notice. But as the infirmity in this case arises, not from
But while I recognize the legal proposition that, though the contract in this case was invalid, the defend.ant may be estopped from denying its validity, I do not ■ concede that he has been shown to be in a position, or to lave done anything precluding him from attacking the legality of the proceedings. He has taken no part in •the movement whatever. He initiated no proceedings. He did not petition for the passage of the ordinance nor the improvement of the street. He took no part in ■making the contract, nor did he ask that it be changed from the terms of the ordinance. Though he knew the work was being done, he, knowing the law authorized .such improvements under certain restraints and conditions, might well have assumed or supposed those conditions had been complied with and those restraints provided. He had a right to rely upon the authorities doing their duty .under the law. Tone v. Columbus, supra.
I am, therefore, of the opinion that if it can be .shown on retrial that defendant, by himself, or in connection with others, procured the substitution of tlié contract made for the one contemplated by the ordinance, he will be estopped to deny the validity of this assessment. So he will likewise be estopped if it can be shown that, though'taking no part in the change of the contract himself, he had actual knowledge of the •change or substitution having been procured by others,’ and knowingly acquiesced in the work done thereunder. In either of these cases he has by his own act induced .and caused Anderson to.-alter his position to his prejudice, and brings himself under the correct principle of ■estoppel. It may be said that defendant will be pre.sumed to have had knowledge of the ordinance and of
V. At the request of plaintiff the court gave instruction number five, set out in the statement. The effect of this instruction is, that, notwithstanding the work was not done in accordance with the terms of the ordinance, notwithstanding it was done under the contract substituted for that contemplated by the ordinance, and notwithstanding there may be no estoppel, yet plaintiff may enforce a statutory special tax lien against defendant’s property on a quantum meruit. I think this •cannot be done. A tax lien of this nature is, in all cases, to be enforced by virtue of valid proceedings authorizing the assessment; for though these proceedings in some cases may, in actual fact, be infirm, improper, and invalid, the tax is yet enforced, by estoppel, on the theory that they are sound ; that is, they are asserted to be legal upon the one side, and the other is not permitted to deny it. He is not allowed to say the truth, when by reason of his own conduct it would work a fraud upon the other party. These are not cases for quantum memit or quantum valebat. They are not cases of voluntary contract between individuals, but are statutory proceedings in inmtum where the party mhst respond, nolens volens. Plaintiff must enforce his lien •on the actual validity -of .the contract, or by estoppel,
VI. Other objections urged by defendant are not thought to be well founded. By the terms of section four of this ordinance, if the property-owner desired to do the work himself, he should have given written notice to the chairman of the street and alley committee of his desire to do so within ten day s after the passage of the ordinance. He was presumed to know of this ordinance (Palmyra v. Morton, 25 Mo. 593); and if he wished to avail himself of its terms, he should have done as it is therein directed. The ordinance in Leach v. Cargill, 60 Mo. 316, is unlike this. That ordinance called for affirmative action by the city engineer.
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.