Barber Asphalt Paving Co. v. Field

86 S.W. 860, 188 Mo. 182, 1905 Mo. LEXIS 13
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 25, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 86 S.W. 860 (Barber Asphalt Paving Co. v. Field) 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
Barber Asphalt Paving Co. v. Field, 86 S.W. 860, 188 Mo. 182, 1905 Mo. LEXIS 13 (Mo. 1905).

Opinion

FOX, J.

This is an action begun in the circuit court of Jackson county, Missouri, to enforce the collection of a special taxbill issued by Kansas City in part payment of the contract price of paving Washington street in that city from Ninth street to Tenth street, with an asphalt pavement.

[188]*188The plaintiff introduced in evidence the taxbill sued on and so made its case. The plaintiff thereupon objected to the introduction of any evidence on the part of the defendants on the ground that the answer, which admitted the execution and delivery of the tax-bill sued on, did not allege facts sufficient to constitute a defense to the taxbill. This objection was sustained by the court and its ruling was excepted to by the defendants. The correctness of that ruling presents the sole question now before this court.

The answer of defendants consists of seven counts, and while we deem it unnecessary to reproduce all of them, to fully appreciate this controversy, it is essential, at least, to quote the first count in full. It is as follows:

“Defendants for their answer and defenses to the plaintiff’s petition and -the special taxbills sued on, submit the following:

“For their defense they state:

“1. That Kansas City, Missouri, is, and at all times named in plaintiff’s petition was, a municipal corporation organized and existing by virtue of the special charter framed by it for its own government under section 16 of article 9 of the Constitution of the State of Missouri.

“2. That the special taxbill dated December 20, 1898, sued on and consisting of the four installments thereof copied in plaintiff’s petition, was is'sued to plaintiff in part payment for the paving of Washington street from the north line of Tenth street to the center line of Ninth street in said city, under and pursuant to the proceedings hereinafter recited.

“3. On June 17, 1898, the board of public works of said city unanimously recommended to the common council of said city that Washington street in said city from the ndrth line of Tenth street to the center line of Ninth street be paved as a business street and that payment therefor be made in special taxbills, and in [189]*189said recommendation said board designated materials for said paving, from wbicb the resident owners of land fronting on said street pavement were given the right to select, as follows:

í c c Trinidad Lake asphalt on concrete to be laid according to detail “3” of asphalt pavement approved by said board August 11, 1896, and on file in the office of said board.

“ ‘Bermudez, California, Trinidad, or any other asphalt equally as good as those designated, on concrete to be laid according to detail “F” of asphalt pavement approved by said board October 18,1892, and on file in the office of said board, so modified, as to allow the use of one and one-half inches of wearing surface and one and one-half inches of binder course.

“ ‘American bituminous rock on concrete to be laid according to detail “I” of asphalt pavement approved by said board August 11, 1896, and on file in the office of said board.

‘ ‘ ‘ Vitrified brick, as manufactured by the Diamond Brick & Tile Company, on concrete, to be laid according to detail “I” of brick pavement approved by said board November 26, 1895, and on file in the office of said board, so modified as to allow the usé of the Portland cement grout instead of Murphy grout filler as therein specified.

“ ‘Vitrified brick, as manufactured by the Kansas City Vitrified Brick Company, the Pittsburg, Kansas, Vitrified Brick Company, or any other vitrified brick equally as goqd as those designated, on concrete to be laid according to detail “4” of brick pavement approved by said board August 11, 1896, and on file in the office of said board.

“ ‘Granite or sandstone blocks on concrete to be laid according to detail “C” of stone block pavement approved by said board July 19,1892, and on file in the office of said board.’

[190]*190“4. Following said recommendation of the hoard of public works of Kansas City, Missouri, the common council of said city passed, and the mayor of said city on July 23, 1898, approved, ordinance No. 10074, alleged in plaintiff’s petition, and therein ordered the paving of Washington street from the north line of Tenth street to the center line of Ninth street, exclusive of all sidewalks of legally established width and of the spaces legally required to be paved by the street railway company operating street railways upon and across said part of Washington street, as a business street in said city, and that the same be paid for by special taxbills, and setting forth in section 3 thereof the designation of the materials and the manner for doing the work for said street pavement as made by the board of public works in said recommendation of said board; from which designation of materials, said ordinance provided that the residents of said city who owned the majority in front feet of the lands fronting on said part of such street were to have the right to select one kind of the materials so specified for said street pavement, by petition in writing addressed and delivered to the board of public works, and upon their failure to make such selection within ten days after the ordinance No. 10074 had been .published for ten days in the newspaper then doing the city printing, that then the board of public works of 'said city were required to designate the material with which said part of said street should be paved.

“5. It was further provided and required in said ordinance that, the contract for the work herein authorized shall guarantee that the same shall be constructed with such materials and in such manner that the same shall endure without the need of any repairs for a period of five years from and after its completion and acceptance without further compensation than that provided for in .the contract for the first cost of such work and for which the said special taxbills are issued.

[191]*191“6. Said city ordinance No. 10074 was published in the Kansas City Journal, the newspaper then doing the city printing, on July 30th and 31st and on August 1st, 2d, 3d, 4th, 5th, 6th, 7th, 8th, 9th, and 10th, 1898,but none of the ‘detail’ specifications referred to in the designation of materials aforesaid as approved and on file in the office of the board of public works, were printed in or with any newspaper publication of said city ordinance.

“7. The record of proceedings of the board of public works of August 19, 1898, states that a ‘petition selecting Trinidad Lake asphalt as the material with which Washington street from Ninth street to Tenth street shall be paved as a business street, as provided by ordinance No. 10074, was filed.’ And among the files of said board is a petition marked filed by or with said board August 19, 1898, and which petition purports to be a selection of Trinidad Lake asphalt as the material with which said part of said street at a cost of hot to exceed $2.25 per squane yard shall be paved, with the following clause: ‘maintenance ten years,’ also added thereto, and the persons whose names are signed thereto are declared by the certificate of the members of the board of public works endorsed thereon, to be owners of a majority in front feet of the lands fronting on Washington street from the north line of Tenth street to the center line of Ninth street owned by residents of said city.

“8.

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Bluebook (online)
86 S.W. 860, 188 Mo. 182, 1905 Mo. LEXIS 13, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barber-asphalt-paving-co-v-field-mo-1905.