Brougham v. Kansas City

263 F. 115, 1920 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1234
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Missouri
DecidedFebruary 24, 1920
DocketNo. 221
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 263 F. 115 (Brougham v. Kansas City) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brougham v. Kansas City, 263 F. 115, 1920 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1234 (W.D. Mo. 1920).

Opinion

VAN VALKENBURGH, District Judge.

This court acquires jurisdiction of this case by reason of diversity of citizenship; the complainant being a citizen and resident of the state of New Mexico, and the owner of certain land within the corporate limits of Kansas City, the same being a part of the northwest quarter of the southeast quarter of section 22, township 49, range 33, in Jackson county, Mo., having a frontage of 1,162.55 feet on the south side of Thirty-Ninth street, between Indiana avenue and Jackson avenue, and a depth of 150 feet therefrom.

On or about March 7, 1919, the board of public works of the respondent Kansas City adopted a certain resolution, No. 8486, stating that said Thirty-Ninth street, between said Indiana and Jackson avenues, was used and occupied for business purposes, and unanimously recommended that the same be improved as a business street, and be paved as a business street to the full width thereof, exclusive of sidewalks, with a pavement consisting of a wearing surface of asphaltic concrete not less than 2 inches in thickness, laid upon a Portland cement concrete foundation 6 inches in thickness, except that the center 18 feet of the roadway should consist of a Portland cement concrete pavement 6 inches in thickness, and that the whole of the contract cost of said pavement should be paid in' special tax bills, to be issued and charged against the lands abutting on the said part of said street according to the frontage thereof. The usual notice of such a proceeding required by the city charter, was published for 10 days, and in that notice a time and place were fixed for hearing property owners relative to the proposed paving. This hearing was held, and no property owners appeared to oppose the same, nor to make suggestions relative thereto, with the possible. exception of complainant herein. The secretary of the board testified that Mr. Brougham appeared and made some suggestion with respect to the laying of gas or water mains, but made no objection to the paving as a whole. This is denied by the complainant, who says he did not hear of the proposed improvement until it was in process of construction.

[117]*117On April 11, 1919, a contract was awarded to the Gray Paving & Material Company, as contractor, providing for the paving specified at a contract price of $3.64 per square yard for the asphaltic cement concrete pavement, and $2.85 per square yard for the Portland cement concrete pavement; and subsequently, as provided by law, the common council passed Ordinance No. 35491, authorizing the improvement, and ratifying and confirming the contract therefor, and finding and declaring by a vote of more than two-thirds of the members-elect of each house, to wit, by 30 out of 32 members of both houses, that the street, or part thereof in which proposed improvement was to be made, was used or occupied for business purposes, and that the improvement had been unanimously recommended by the board of public works.

The pavement was laid and the work accepted by the city as having been completed according to the terms of the contract, and on or about July 31, 1919, the respondent city issued, in favor of the said contractor, its tax bill No. 26 of that date, assessing and charging against complainant’s said land, as its pro rata share of the cost of said work, the sum of $8,374.92, which said tax bill was duly recorded and evidences a first and paramount lien on said property, and was thereafter sold and assigned in due course to the respondent Commerce Trust Company, which now owns and holds the same.

Complainant asks that this tax bill be declared illegal, null, and void; that the same be surrendered up and canceled, and the lien thereof be satisfied in full, and the cloud on his title be thereby removed, upon the grounds:

(1) That the said part of Thirty-Ninth street was not, at the times referred to, in fact used or occupied for business purposes, and that the declaration to that effect of the board of public works and common council was fraudulent in law and contrary to the rights of the plaintiff.

(2) As corollary to this, that under the procedure provided in such specific cases no rigid of remonstrance was accorded to residence property owners by which a majority might have stayed and deferred the contemplated proceeding.

(3) Because the said resolution, ordinance, contract, and the said tax bill founded thereon, whereby the said roadway was paved at a contract cost of approximately $7.20 per front foot,' are unreasonable, confiscatory, illegal, and void, and constitute an unlawful taking of complainant’s said property without due process of law, and deprive him of the equal protection of the law, contrary to the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States.

This proceeding was instituted under the provisions of section 3a of article 8 of the City Charter of 1908, as amended July 19, 1910. This section, omitting immaterial parts, provides as follows:

"Tn case the proposed improvement consists of paving * * * tile roadway of a street * * * or part thereof, as specified in section 3, article VIII, of this charter and it is proposed to improve said street * * * or part thereof, as a basintss street, * * * the procedure therefor shall be as follows: The resolution of the board of public works providing for said work, in addition to the matters required to be stated therein by section 3, article VIII, of this charter, may contain a statement that the street [118]*118* * * or part thereof in which the proposed improvement is to be made is used or occupied for business purposes, and that the improvement is unanimously recommended by the board of public works, then in such case the improvement may proceed regardless of any remonstrance: Provided, each house of the commin council shall in the ordinance authorizing the improvement and ratifying, approving and confirming the contract therefor, find and declare by a vote of two-thirds of the members-elect of each house that the street, avenue, alley, public highway, or part thereof in which the proposed improvement is to be made is used or occupied for business purposes and that the improvement has been unanimously recommended by the board of public works, and such finding and declaration shall be final and conclusive for all purposes and no special tax bills that may be issued to pay for the work shall be held invalid or affected for the reason that the work for which they may have been issued was not unanimously recommended by the board of public works or that such street, avenue, alley, public highway, or part thereof was not, in fact, used or occupied for business purposes. Except as provided in this section the proceedings for paving the class of streets herein specified shall be the same as provided in article VIII of this charter for paving streets not found and declared to be used for business purposes.”

Section 3 in the charter of 1908 makes this further provision:

“After the adoption of any such resolution the board of public works shall, by order, fix a day upon which a hearing in respect to such improvement shall be had, * * * and shall cause to be published for ten days in the newspaper * * * a notice directed to the property owners interested in the improvement without naming them, which notice shall recite the substance of the resolution and that a hearing will be had by the said board at their office concerning the proposed improvement, and the date upon which the hearing shall be had.

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Related

City Trust Co. v. Crockett
274 S.W. 802 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1925)
Bass v. City of Casper
205 P. 1008 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1922)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
263 F. 115, 1920 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1234, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brougham-v-kansas-city-mowd-1920.