Asel v. City of Jefferson

229 S.W. 1046, 287 Mo. 195, 1921 Mo. LEXIS 149
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 1, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 229 S.W. 1046 (Asel v. City of Jefferson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Asel v. City of Jefferson, 229 S.W. 1046, 287 Mo. 195, 1921 Mo. LEXIS 149 (Mo. 1921).

Opinion

ELDER, J.

This is an equitable action wherein plaintiff (appellant herein) seeks to enjoin defendants from contracting for the sprinkling, oiling, repairing, surfacing and re-surfacing of certain streets in Jefferson City, Missouri.

Respondent having agreed to appellant’s statement of the facts, we adopt the same, with some slight modifications.

On February 9, 1920, the city council of the said City of Jefferson passed an 'ordinance dividing the city *201 into six sprinkling, oiling, repairing, surfacing and resurfacing* districts, one of which is known as District No. 4, and established the boundaries thereof.

Plaintiff is a citizen and resident of the City of Jefferson, owning real estate in said District No. 4, fronting 48 feet on Madison Street and 98 feet on Ashley Street.

On May 7, 1920, the city council of said city passed an ordinance providing for the sprinkling, oiling, repairing, surfacing and re-surfacing of certain streets within the limits of District No. 4, by the terms of which the streets upon which plaintiff’s property abuts, were proposed to be improved. The city engineer was instructed to prepare plans and file the same with the city clerk and advertisements for bids for the work were authorized. It was provided in said ordinance that the costs of sprinkling, oiling, repairing, surfacing and resurfacing should be defrayed by special tax to be assessed in favor of the City of Jefferson on the property fronting on or abutting the streets improved, in proportion that the lineal feet of each lot fronting or bordering on the improvement bears to the total number of lineal feet of all property chargeable with the tax aforesaid, in the territory embraced by the contract for which advertisement was directed to be made.

Two specifications were made by the city engineer, one for re-surfacing the streets as an entirety, and the other for patching holes and depressions. The city engineer testified that under Specification No. 1, they proposed to scarify the streets and give them surface treatment, where they' were too far gone to be retreaded under Specification No. 2, and that under Specification No. 2 they proposed to fill the holes with a bituminous concrete mixed.

After the specifications were filed, due notice was given to contractors, which was duly published according to law. The Pope Construction Company, a partnership composed of Joseph Pope and E. J. Kersting, submitted the lowest bid for the work proposed to be done, *202 108,133 square yards, at $0,321 per .square yard, amounting in all to $34,724.80, which sum the city engineer testified would not exceed sixty cents per front foot on the streets proposed to be improved.

The bid of the Pope Construction Company was accepted by the city council, by resolution adopted July 6, 1920, and the mayor of the city was authorized by the council to enter into a contract with the Pope Construction Company for the faithful performance of the contemplated work.

Before the contract was entered into the plaintiff herein gave notice to defendants of his - intention to file an application for an injunction on the 13th day of July, 1920, and on said 13th day of July he filed his petition and exhibits and a temporary injunction was granted, enjoining the defendants from proceeding further in any way from entering into the contract for sprinkling, oiling, repairing, surfacing and re-surfacing the streets within District No. 4, as provided in the city ordinances.

The petition for injunction recites that the city council of the City of Jefferson in attempting to establish the sprinkling, oiling, repairing, surfacing and re-surfacing district and providing for the improvement thereof, was acting under the provision of an act of the Missouri Legislature, approved May 29, 1919, entitled, “An Act to repeal ‘An act to amend chapter 84, article 4, of the Revised Statutes of the State of Missouri, 1909,’ in relation to municipal corporations as it appears in the Laws of Missouri 1915, at page 359, and approved March 24, 1915, and to en^ct a new section in lieu thereof to be known as Section 9237a;” that said act is unconstitutional and void and in violation of Section 28, Article 4 of the Missouri Constitution; that it is in conflict with and contrary to Sections 9254, 9255 and 9256, Revised Statutes 1909, as amended by Laws of Missouri, 1911, pp. 337-341; that the City of Jefferson, its officers an' agents, were acting without authority of law and will east a cloud upon the title to plaintiff’s real estate, with *203 a pretended lien for street improvement, nnder and by virtue of illegal acts, and deprive plaintiff and those similiarly situated of their property without due process of law, contrary to Section 30 of Article 2 of the Constitution of Missouri; and that said city proposes to create a lien for the work and improvements in favor of the City of Jefferson, instead of the contractor, who does the work.

The defendants answered, admitting that plaintiff was the owner of property in District No. 4, and a citizen of the City of Jefferson, and admitting the existence of all the ordinances and proceedings of the council, but denied that the provisions thereof would cast a cloud upon plaintiff’s title to his real estate and denied that they were illegal, or would deprive plaintiff of his property without due process of law, and denied that said act of the General Assembly of 1919 is contrary to other pre-existing laws of the State of Missouri. The answer practically admits all the facts stated in plaintiff’s petition, but denies the legal effect thereof.

After the filing of the answer, defendants filed a motion to dissolve. The case was tried on July 24, 1920, and the court dissolved the temporary injunction theretofore granted. On the same day plaintiff filed a motion for rehearing and review and a motion in arrest of judgment, both of which were overruled, to which plaintiff excepted, and an appeal was granted to this court.

Title of Act. I. Plaintiff’s first contention is that the act upon which the establishment and proposed improvement of the district in question is based, being Section 9237a, Laws of Missouri 1919, pages 572, 573, approved May 29, 1919, (now Section 8301, R. S. 1919), is violative of Section 28, Article 4 of the Constitution of Missouri, in that the subject of the act is not clearly expressed in the title thereof. Learned counsel for plaintiff argue that this act repealed all act aproved March 24, 1915, Laws of Missouri 1915, pages 359, 300, providing for the sprinkling and oiling of streets, and enacted a new section in lieu thereof; that the said Act *204 of 1919, in addition to providing for the sprinkling and oiling of streets, also provides that the same may he repaired, surfaced and re-surfaced, but that “ no mention of the repairing, surfacing and re-surfacing thereof appears in the title,” and that therefore so far as the act relates to repairing, surfacing and re-surfacing it is unconstitutional.

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Bluebook (online)
229 S.W. 1046, 287 Mo. 195, 1921 Mo. LEXIS 149, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/asel-v-city-of-jefferson-mo-1921.