130 Mo. App. 483 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1908
This is a suit in equity brought to set aside and cancel certain special taxbills issued by Kansas City for the paving of Howard street from Grove street to Brooklyn avenue. The objection to the taxbill is that the ordinance and contract for the work required the use of Diamond vitrified paving
At the beginning of the trial the defendant objected to the introduction of any evidence on the ground that no objection to the taxbills had been filed with the board of public works within sixty days of their issue, as required by section 28, article 9, of the charter of Kansas City. The court overruled the objection on the ground that said provision was unconstitutional.
The court fouqd the issues for the plaintiff and ordered the cancellation of the taxbills. The defendant appealed. The appeal was to this court. Upon motion the case Was transferred to the Supreme Court because the issues involved a construction of the constitutionality of said ordinance. A motion was made by the plaintiff in the Supreme Court to dismiss the appeal because that court had no jurisdiction. That court, however, ordered the cause transferred to this court. The defendant renews its motion to transfer the case to the Supreme Court again on the ground that it involves the constitutionality of said section.
The Supreme Court in the case of Dickey v. Holmes, 208 Mo. 664, which was certified from this court on the ground that it involved said section of article 9, of the charter of Kansas City certified it back to this court, not because there was not a constitutional question involved but because the question had so often been determined. We quote from the opinion as fol
On the merits of the controversy the defendants endeavor to draw a distinction between this and the case of Schoenburg v. Field, 95 Mo. App. 421. The two are practically identical. In .each the ordinance provides that the work and improvement shall consist of the wearing surface of Diamond vitrified paving brick. The opinion of this court by Ellison, J., was to the effect that the Board of Public Works in selecting material for the improvement of a street cannot select a material manufactured by a single firm and thus cut off competition. The question came before this court in Curtice v. Schmidt, the opinion in which is incorporated in that of Marshall, J., who delivered the opinion in State ex rel. v. Smith, 177 Mo. 69, wherein this court approved of the holding in Schoenburg v. Field, supra.
The opinion on the merits of the case of Curtice v. Schmidt is reported in 202 Mo. 703. It is there said: “Defendants claim that the designation made by the board of public works, and incorporated in the contract, were such as encouraged monopoly, stifled and restricted bidding and restricted competition and that for this reason the contract was void. In the contention of defendants we concur.” The case of Schoenburg v. Field
The defendants claim that this case comes within this rule. Blut this is a misapprehension of the facts in proof. That there was some difference in the material .of the different paving bricks on the market in Kansas City, Missouri, was shown by the evidence. But the difference was slight and they were all of the same general character and practically equal in all the qualities requisite for such street irnprovements. Besides these different kind of bricks complied with the test established by the board of public work for paving bricks in Kansas City. Under the authority of the case last referred to, in order to justify the selection of any article not patented for paving streets it must appear that there are no other material of the same general character which can be brought into competition.
The decision in Schoenburg v. Field has been the subject of much discussion but as it has been reaffirmed by this court and met with the approval of the supreme court it does not seem to be an open question now as to