32 Mo. App. 601 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1888
— I. The first special defense was properly stricken out. It was based upon the theory that the power of the common council of Kansas City to pave the streets of said city is not a continuing power. That theory is erroneous; the power is a continuing power, under the provisions of the charter. Laws of 1875, art. 3, sec. 1, sub. 7, p. 204, and art. 8, sec. 1, p. 250; McCormick v. Patchin, 53 Mo. 33; Farrar v. St. Louis, 80 Mo. 379, 392; Estes v. Owen, 90 Mo. 113.
II. The second special defense was based upon certain provisions of the charter of Kansas City. By the charter it is provided : Section 1: “That no street, avenue, alley, or public highway, or any part thereof, shall be graded, constructed, reconstructed, paved, or macadamized at the expense of property-holders owning the property fronting on such street, avenue, alley, or public highway, unless a majority of the real estate owners, in front feet, of such street, avenue, alley, or public highway, or part thereof proposed to be graded,
The other provisions of the charter material to the second special defense are as follows : Sec. 8 : “ When it is proposed to grade, construct, reconstruct, pave, * * * any street, sidewalk, * * * and pay therefor in special tax bills, and under existing laws, a petition therefor is required. A petition shall be sufficient if signed by property-holders owning a majority of the front feet of property owned by residents of the city and fronting on the street, sidewalk, alley, avenue, or public highway, or part thereof proposed to be improved. When a petition has been signed the same may be published for five days in some newspaper printed in the city, and thereafter the common council shall hear and decide on all objections thereto, if any. If the common council shall, in the ordinance cause to be done the work petitioned for, find and declare that the work has been- petitioned for, and the petition published according to law, such finding and declaration shall be conclusive for all purposes ; and no special tax bills shall be invalid or be affected by any defect in or objection to the petition.” Laws of 1875, art. 8, sec. 8, p. 254.
It is conceded that the legislature could have lawfully conferred upon the common council of the city the power to improve the streets at the cost of the abutting property-holders without any petition ; but since a petition is required, what effect, if any, have defects in or Objections to such petition, upon the tax bills in an action upon them % Improvements of the streets can be made at the expense of the property-holders only in the mode prescribed in the charter. But since the legislature could have dispensed entirely with a petition of the property-holders, if the charter provides, what effect, defects in and objections to the petition shall
The question going to the bottom of the second special defense is, what does the concluding clause of section 8, of the charter, as above quoted, mean % That clause reads : ‘ ‘ And no special tax bills shall be invalid or be affected by any defect in or objection to the petition.” If these words are to be considered as standing alone and are to be construed by themselves, their meaning is clear and is not open to discussion ; it is what the words import and the second special defense is not maintainable, since that defense seeks to invalidate the special tax bills in suit by reason of certain defects in the petition of the property-holders. The second special defense is based upon a construction that so connects the concluding clause with the preceding words of the sentence, of which it is a part, as to make it depend for its force and effect upon the finding and declaration by the common council. This defense is, in other words, based upon a construction which not only makes the said finding and declaration conclusive for all purposes of the fact that the work has been petitioned for, and the petition published, according to law, but also causes said finding and declaration to protect the special tax bills from attack on account of defects in, and objections to, the petition. But we do not so understand the meaning or effect of said clause. The section first declares what shall be a sufficient petition ; it then provides that the petition shall be published for five days in some newspaper printed m the city ; it then provides that the common council shall hear and decide all objections to the petition, if there be any ; it then provides that if the council find and declare in the ordinance, ordering the work to be done, that the work has been petitioned for, and the petition published, according to law, such finding and declaration shall be conclusive for all purposes. Then follows the concluding clause. That clause has to do, not with a petition free from defects and objections, and conclusively presumed to have been made according to law, but with a petition
III. The third special defense was properly stricken out. It was based upon the appeal by the defendant from the judgment of the circuit court refusing an injunction in a suit to which the plaintiffs here were parties defendant. The judgment of the circuit court denied the injunction, and the appeal from the judgment did not have the effect to change the character, of the judgment from the denial to the granting of the injunction.' The injunction was denied and the fact that an application had been made for the injunction in no wise affected the rights of the plaintiffs in this case. This case is to be determined as if there had been no such application.
IN. There remains for consideration that portion of the second special defense attacking the validity of the ordinance ordering the work to be done, on the v
Judgment affirmed.