75 Mo. App. 678 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1898
The council of the defendant, a city of the third class, deeming it necessary to macadamize two of its streets between certain designated
The contract was then performed and tax bills issued by the defendant to the plaintiffs for the cost of the entire improvement. The amount claimed for bringing the said streets to grade was added to the cost of the authorized improvement and thus apportioned among the abutting lots liable for the latter. The abutting lot owners declined to recognize the validity of such tax bills so issued, as well they might. Carthage v. Badgeley, 73 Mo. App. 123. The plaintiffs bring this suit to recover of the defendant for the macadam placed on said streets in excess of that required by the said estimate of the city engineer.
A bill passed by the council could not become an ordinance though passed by the council and signed by the president thereof unless the mayor signed or refused to sign the same in the manner prescribed by section 1537, Revised Statutes. The mayor being a part of the law making power, his concurrence in legislative action is essential to its validity. Eichenlaub
When special powers are conferred or where special method is prescribed for the exercise and execution of a power this. brings the exercise of such power within the provision .of the maxim expressio unius, etc., and by necessary implication forbids and renders nugatory the doing of the thing specified, except in the particular way pointed out. Heidelberg v. St. Francois Co., 100 Mo. 74; McKissock v. Mt. Pleasant Twp., 48 Mo. App. 416. The defendant’s charter confers upon it no power to open, widen and bring to grade streets and avenues, or to build bridges, culverts and sewers, or to make an assessment on the taxable property within its limits, except by ordinance duly passed and in. which the mayor shall have concurred. Until the passage of such an ordinance the council can take no steps in that direction. If the council could not itself direct the grading of the street, in question, how could it ratify the joint act of its street committee and the street commissioner in doing so? The council, in the absence of an- ordinance lawfully passed, is impliedly forbidden to exercise such power.
It may be further suggested that the extra work contemplated by the contract between plaintiffs and defendant related to macadamizing of the said streets, and not to the grading of them, and that in it is found no semblance of authority for the performance of the
Were it not for the fact that the plaintiffs must be presumed to have known of the want of authority in the defendant’s said officers to direct them to bring the said streets to grade and thus bind the defendant, the case might be regarded as one. of great hardship. Keating v. Kansas City, 84 Mo. 415.
In no view of the case which we are able to take do we think the plaintiffs are entitled to recover, and it therefore follows that the judgment must be reversed.