125 Mo. App. 623 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1907
This is a suit in equity to set aside as a cloud upon plaintiff’s title to lot one, Marine’s Second Addition to Kansas City, Missouri, a tax-bill for $862.25, dated January 29, 1902, payable in four annual installments, issued by the board of public works of said city, to the Barber Asphalt Company, for the paving of Broadway, a public street, from the south line of Thirty-fifth street west of Broadway to the north line of Thirty-sixth street west of Broadway. In the petition the taxbill was alleged to be void for various reasons, but only one of them is in issue on this appeal.
Judge Shannon C. D.ouglass, before whom the case was tried, without passing upon the other grounds relied on by plaintiff, held that the taxbill was void for the reason; “That the time of beginning of the work for which said taxbill was issued was an essential condition of the contract, and that said work was not commenced within the time specified and the contract thereby became forfeited, and defendant had no authority to begin the work after the expiration of the time so specified which was made an essential provision in the contract.” The defendant filed a motion for a new trial which was not heard during Judge Douglass’ term of office. Judge McCune, his successor, in office, sustained said motion and granted defendant a new trial and the plaintiff appealed. The only issue before us is whether the time within which the work of the defendant was to commence was an essential provision of the contract.
And the contract further provides: “The days work on this contract lost in consequence of injunction or court proceedings, bad weather, grading, curbing, trenching, by other contractors, corporations or individuals over whom the party of the first part has no control . . . shall be added to the number of days specified in this contract within which the work shall be completed. No allowances will be made for addition
An ordinance of the city was passed on September 23, 1901, approving said contract. On November 8, 1901, the time for the completion of the work under the contract was extended by ordinance of the city to December 23, of that year. Section 2 of this ordinance provides that, “All ordinances or parts of ordinances are, insomuch as they are in conflict with this ordinance hereby repealed.” It was admitted at the trial that the work was completed within the time fixed by the ordinance in question extending the time to December 23. The evidence was that the work was not commenced until October 16, 1901, about ten days after the time required by the specifications which were made a part of the contract. The defendant’s excuse for not beginning the work within the time provided by the contract was, that there was a street railway track in the street below grade and for that reason it could not pave up to said tracks, its contract only requiring the paving up to said tracks, and that its agent within the time provided went to the engineering department of the city in reference to the matter, when he was told that that
It is very generally held that where time is of the essence of a contract in cases of this character a failure of the contractor to comply with the contract in that respect renders the taxbill void. [Rose v. Trestrail, 62 Mo. App. 352; McQuiddy v. Brannock, 70 Mo. App. 535; Whittemore v. Sills, 76 Mo. App. 248; Safe Deposit & Trust Co. v. James, 77 Mo. App. 616; City of Springfield to use v. Davis, 80 Mo. App. 574; Neill v. Gates, 152 Mo. 585; Ayres v. Schmohl, 86 Mo. App. 349; Winfrey v. Linger, 89 Mo. App. 159; Schoenberg v. Heyer, 91 Mo. App. 389; Asphalt Paving Co. v. Ridge, 169 Mo. 376; Childers v. Holmes, 95 Mo. App. 154.] All these cases have been reviewed in a recent case of the Supreme Court by Brace, Judge, Heman v. Gilliam, 171 Mo. 258. We will not attempt to review the opinion of the learned judge, .bnt only refer to the language used that has special application to this case. In speaking of one of the decisions referred to the opinion reads: “With the reasoning of the opinion in that case we have no fault to find. The fault is in the application of the reasoning to the facts of the case. If the contract in that case had fixed a certain and definite time within which the work must have' been completed at all events, then the conclusion reached that the taxbills were invalid would follow. But the argument leaves entirely out of view the qualifying provision as to time in that contract, similar to the one in the contract of the case at bar, by which the time within which the work was to be completed was rendered indefinite, as we have seen. It is true a time within which the work was to be completed was specified in the contract, but in im
This case falls within the rule of the cases last cited without it be that the failure of the defendant to commence the work within the time provided by the contract renders the taxbills void. The contract provides for a penalty, as we have seen, if the work is not completed within the time therein fixed, but does not in so many words provide for such penalty in the event the work is not commenced within the time so fixed. But if the time for the completion of the work be indefinite as held in the cases cited, there is no good reason to be assigned why the time of the beginning of ■ the work is not also indefinite. If the construction placed on the contract that the time for the completion of the work was a reasonable time, it would necessarily follow that the time of its beginning would also be a reasonable