201 Mo. 91 | Mo. | 1906
This is an action on special taxbills for macadamizing Benton boulevard from Independence boulevard to Fifteenth street in Kansas City, Missouri, under an ordinance of said city numbered 9440, approved March 14, 1898, said special taxbills being numbered 9 and 12, and issued in installments. The improvement for which these taxbills were issued was conducted by the Park Board of Kansas City, for the changing of Walrond avenue, a street in Kansas City, into Benton boulevard. The case came on for hearing at the April term, 1903, of the circuit court, before Judge Teasdale, one of the judges of said court, and the jury was waived, and after1 the hearing’ of the evidence the court rendered judgment for the plaintiff, awarding the plaintiff a lien upon the adjoining lots of the defendant. In due time a motion for a new trial was filed, heard and overruled, and the defendant appealed to this court. Inasmuch as the defendant challenged the constitutionality of section 31 of article 9 of the Kansas City Charter, the appeal is properly in this court.
The evidence tended to prove that on the 18th of June, 1899, the Board of Park Commissioners of Kansas City advertised for bids for building the roadway and macadamizing Benton boulevard, for which work the taxbills in suit were issued. On the 3rd day of August, 1899, the contract for this work was awarded to the plaintiff. After the contract was let to him, the Board of Park Commissioners sent an ordinance to the Common Council asking that said contract be confirmed. This ordinance was referred by the Council to the Public Improvement Committee, and was passed
I. It is insisted that the special taxbills sued on are not shown to have been made out and executed by the officials of the city as provided by the city charter. The charter of Kansas City was adopted and became operative May 9, 1889, pursuant to the power conferred by section 16, article 9, of the Constitution of Missouri, upon cities having a population of more than one hundred thousand inhabitants. By section 31 of article 10 of the charter it is provided: ‘ ‘ The Board of Park Commissioners shall have power to cause any road, parkway, boulevard, or avenue, or part thereof, which may be under its control or management, to be. graded, regraded, paved, repaved, guttered, reguttered or otherwise improved or repaired, including the construction and repair of bridges, viaducts and side
It is insisted first that the taxbills in this case were not made out and issued as provided in the Kansas
The contention of counsel for the defendant that these taxbills are void because the signature of the president of the Board of Public Works was signed by Mr. Silkwood, we think is untenable. The charter itself, section 15, article 9, provides the special taxbills should be made out and signed by the president of the board, or in his name by any person by the board specially authorized by resolution in writing, to do so-. The resolution of the board authorized Mr. Silkwood, the chief clerk in the Engineer’s Department, to stamp the name of the president on all special taxbills. The taxbill is certified by the Board of Public Works in the name of its president by Mr. Silkwood, and this is a substantial compliance with the charter provision. A reasonable construction of the charter, we think, does not require the president of the Board of Public Works, with his own hand, to do all the clerical work of making out these special taxbills, but when they were issued as
The decision of this court in City of Nevada to use v. Eddy, 123 Mo. l. c. 563, 564, in no sense conflicts with the conclusion herein reached. In that case the council never did determine whether the work should be done with one character of material or another as the law required, but attempted to delegate its duty to the clerk to make the assessments without the sanction of law. In this case the Common Council of the city, upon the recommendation of the Park Board, determined the material and provided the specifications, and the contract was let to the lowest bidder and the work was performed in strict conformity to the contract and accepted by the board and the city, and the mere arithmetical work of the apportionment of the total cost to the several lots abutting on the improvement, by the clerks in the City Engineer’s office, was in no sense a delegation of the authority of the board and council to those clerks.
II. As to the second proposition advanced, that the third and fourth installments of the taxbills sued on were not due and payable when the suit was commenced, to-wit, May 31, 1903: The charter provides in section 23 of article 9, “If any installment of any.such taxbills or interest thereon, be not paid when due, then all the remaining installments shall immediately become due and collectible.”
It is conceded by the defendant that in the first count of the petition, which, is the suit on the fourth installment of taxbill number 12, it is alleged, “that default had been made on the first installment by reason of which the same had become due and that the same is now due and unpaid, ’ ’ and that the fifth count of the petition on the fourth installment of taxbill num
As to the proposition advanced by the learned counsel that there was no evidence tending to prove that there had been a default in the payment of the first and second installments, we are moved to say that it is no easy task to dig out exactly what issues, were tendered by the answer of the defendant outside of the assault on the constitutionality of section 31, article 10, and the attack upon ordinance 9440', because of the failure of any recommendation of the Board of Public Works indorsed thereon, but it is clear that there is no plea of payment of either of the installments in the two taxbills, and the taxbills themselves on their face show that the first and second installments were due when the suit was filed. When the plaintiff had established the genuineness of the taxbills and the receipt therefor by the plaintiff, he had established a prima-facie case under the charter and the bringing of his action was sufficient demand therefor. By this prima-facie case he had established not only the validity of the bill and the doing of the work and the furnishing of the material charged for, but that the same was still due and unpaid, and his evidence had estab
We think the court properly denied the declaration of law number 2, requested by the defendant, not only upon the general principle of pleading already adverted to, but because of the frame of the answer and the issues tendered therein, which in effect amount to a plea of confession and avoidance, to-wit, that the plaintiff had done the work under and by virtue of an ordinance and contract with the city, but that the ordinance was void and the city authorities had no power to issue the taxbills and make them a lien upon defendant’s property, and not that the plaintiff was not the owner of the taxbills, nor that they were not due and unpaid.
III. We are thus brought to one of the principal, if not the most important, contention of the defendant, to-wit, that section 31 of aricle 10 of the Kansas City charter is in conflict with sections 16 and 17 of article 9 of the Constitution of this State. This section 31 has already been set out in full hereinbefore.
Section 31, supra, provides in short that the Board of Park Commissioners shall have the power to grade, pave and otherwise improve and repair any parkway or boulevard under its control and pay for the same out of funds belonging to the park district in which such work or improvement is made, and then provides that if the Board of Park Commissioners shall recommend to the Common Council that such work be done and the payment made in such taxbills, it shall be the duty of the Common Council by ordinance to order such work to be done, in which ease the Board of Public Works of the city shall apportion the cost of said work and
In Albright v. Fisher, 164 Mo. 56, it was held by this court that -when the Municipal Assembly of the city of St. Louis is engaged in the performance of its legislative functions, it is beyond the power of the courts to interferé with the exercise of those functions in any manner whatever, whether by enjoining the passage of an ordinance or by mandatorily compelling the presiding officer of either house to make that an ordinance which was not an ordinance theretofore by appending his signature thereto, and this is based upon the fundamental law of the State creating the two houses of the Municipal Assembly legislative bodies. By reference to section 31 of article 10 of the Kansas City charter again it will be observed that it only authorizes the Park Board to recommend to the Common Council that a boulevard or other improvement shall be made and the payment made by issuing special tax-bills, and it then devolves upon the Council by ordinance to provide for the doing of such work and the payment for the same in taxbills as in cases where the Council itself provides for the improvement of streets not under the control of the park board. In this case it appears that the Council acquiesced in the recom
IV. It is next insisted, however, that the city ordinance number 9440, under which the work for which the taxbills in this case have been issued, was done, is void, because no recommendation of the Board of Public Works was indorsed thereon, and this contention is predicated upon section 2 of article 9 of the charter, which provides “that the city shall have power to cause to be graded, constructed, paved, etc., streets and alleys, sidewalks and public highways and pay there
In Ruschenberg v. Railroad Company, 161 Mo. 70, where there was an apparent conflict between two articles of the St. Louis charter in regard to the speed of street railways, it was said: “Where two' charter provisions, one of which is special and particular and certainly includes the matter in question, and the other
When it is considered in this case that there is absolutely no conflict whatever between section 31 of article 10 and section 2 of article 9 in regard to the power of the Common Council to cause the street or boulevard to be improved and paid for in special tax-bills, save and except that in the one case the Council has a recommendation from a Board of Park Commissioners and in the other the recommendation of the Board of Public Works, there is no sound reason why both of the provisions may not stand and the special provision as to the park boulevards, and highways be treated as an exception to the more general provisions of section 2 of article 9.
V. The fifth assignment of error is that the tax-bills are void because the finished surface of the street improvement in question as completed by the plaintiff, was not established by or according to any lawful ordinance of the city. To authorize this provision, we are referred to section 36 of article 17 of the charter, which provides that, “no ordinance establishing or re-establishing the grade of any street, avenue or alley, shall be passed by the Common Council, unless there is indorsed thereon a certificate in writing of the Board of Public Works that the grade purposed to be established or re-established by such ordinance conforms to the system of grades established by said board.” It appears from the evidence that the Benton boulevard grade was established in conformity to ordinance 8881.
The learned counsel for the defendant says that if section 36 of article 17 applies to boulevard improvements it renders ordinance 8881 void. The ordinance under which this work was done, 9940, was an ordinance simply to pave this street; that street had been previously graded by an ordinance of the city in strict conformity with section 31 of article 101 of the charter, and that provision of the charter is not in conflict with section 36 of article 17. It would work a gross injustice .to a contractor to permit him to furnish material and labor and construct a street pavement on a street graded by the city authorities, far which grade no objection had ever been taken by any property-owner along the street, or the validity ever questioned in any manner, and then defeat his taxbill on that ground. We can And no merit whatever in this contention of the learned counsel.
VI and VII. Treating these two propositions as one, as the counsel have, it is sufficient to say that he assails the contract as void because its provisions and specifications were too vague and indefinite in the description of the materials, manner and extent of the work to admit of a competitive bidding required by the Kansas City charter. As to this objection, it is sufficient to say that the defendant in her answer admits that this work was done by the plaintiff under and pursuant to the ordinance 9440, and the standard specifiea
After a patient examination of all the propositions advanced for the reversal of this case, we are of the opinion that none of them are tenable, and that the judgment of the circuit court was for the right party, and it is accordingly affirmed.