City of Brunswick Ex Rel. Barkwell v. Beneke

233 S.W. 169, 289 Mo. 307, 1921 Mo. LEXIS 19
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 19, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 233 S.W. 169 (City of Brunswick Ex Rel. Barkwell v. Beneke) 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
City of Brunswick Ex Rel. Barkwell v. Beneke, 233 S.W. 169, 289 Mo. 307, 1921 Mo. LEXIS 19 (Mo. 1921).

Opinion

HIG-BEE, P. J.

This case was transferred to this court by the Kansas City Court of Appeals for the reason that one of the judges believed the decision of that court was in conflict with the decision «of the Springfield Court of Appeals in Webb v. Strobach, 143 Mo. App. 459, 470. Under the Constitution it is our duty to hear and determine the cause as in case of jurisdiction obtained by ordinary appellate process; in other words, the question of conflict drops out of the case. [Section 6 of Amendment of 1884-to the Constitution; Epstein v. Railroad, 250 Mo. 1, 156 S. W. 699.]

The action is to enforce the lien of a special tax bill issued by the city of Brunswick, a city of the fourth class, for grading and paving a part of a public street, against the property of the appellant abutting on said street and liable to taxation therefor. On May 3, 1915/ the board of aldermen of the city adopted a resolution under the provisions of Section 9411, Revised Statutes 1909, declaring it necessary to bring to the established grade a designated portion of Broadway Street by fills or excavations, as may be necessary, and to pave the same with vertical fiber paving blocks and asphalt filler, *313 all upon a concrete base, four inches thick, according to specifications therefor filed by the proper officer with the city clerk of said city. It directed that the resolution be published for two consecutive insertions in the “Brunswicker,” a weekly newspaper published in said city. The resolution was published on May 7th and 14th in said newspaper.'

On May 25th, an ordinance was adopted requiring the designated portion of said street to be brought to the established grade and paved with three inch vertical vitrified paving blocks upon a four-inch Portland cement concrete base, with an asphalt filler and a oie- and-a-one'-half inch sand cushion, “and said improvement shall be commenced within one week from the delivery by the board of aldermen to the contractor of written notice to commence, and shall be fully completed within sixty days after the date of such notice, provided that for good cause shown the board of said city may extend the time for completing said improvement ’upon the application of the contractor made as soon as the necessity therefor appears and before the expiration of the time herein fixed for the completion of the same.”

The relator, Barkwell, was the successful bidder, and on June 22nd, entered into a written contract with the city to do the work. It provided that no additional time for the completion of the work should be allowed except for reasons that should appear sufficient to the board; working days lost on account of injunction, court proceedings, bad weather, strikes, etc., shall not be held to be-working days and shall be added to the number of days specified within which the work shall be completed; in consideration of the completion of the contract in accordance with the specifications, the contractor shall receive $1.74 per square yard.

No notice was given the contractor to begin the work, but he did so on June 28th, and completed it November 10th. No extension of time was asked or given. The tax bill was issued November 19th. The cause was *314 tried to the court, and judgment rendered for the relator, Barkwell, from which the defendant appealed to the Kansas City Court of Appeals.

I. Section 9411, Revised Statutes 1909, authorizing the improvement of streets in cities of the fourth class, reads:

“When the board of aldermen shall deem it necessary to pave . . . any street . . . the board of aldermen shall, by resolution, declare such work or improvement necessary to be done, and cause such resolution to be published in some newspaper published in the city, for two consecutive weeks; and if a majority of the resident owners of the property liable to taxation therefor shall not, within ten days from the date of the last insertion of said resolution, file with the city clerk their protest against such improvement, then the board of aldermen shall have power to cause such improvements to be made and contract therefor.”

The appellant contends that three insertions are necessary to constitute a publication of the resolution for two consecutive weeks within the meaning of this section of the statute, and that resident owners of property liable to taxation for the contemplated improvements were entitled to file their protest within ten days from the date of the last insertion, which would have been June 1st. It is clear that the publication required is for full two weeks or fourteen days.

In Haywood v. Russell, 44 Mo. 252, 254, Bliss, J., said: “The objection to the time of publication is not well taken. The statute requires that notice should be published for four weeks, and that the last insertion should be at least four weeks before the commencement of the term. If the first publication is for one week, surely the other three are for one week each, and it is only necessary that ‘the last insertion’ — not the last week — should be four weeks before the term. The notice objected to was published in a weekly paper, in four consecutive numbers, which makes four weeks. The ob *315 jection assumes that the commencement of the publication should be eight weeks before the term, which is not required, nor is it required that the four weeks should end four weeks before the term. It is sufficient if it be for four weeks, and if the last insertion, which is the commencement of the fourth week, be four weeks before the commencement of the term.” Wagner and Currier, JJ., concurred.

In Cruzen v. Stephens, 123 Mo. 337, the defendant contended that a judgment for delinquent taxes was void because the notice of publication to the defendant was not published for four consecutive weeks. It appeared in the issues of the newspaper designated on March 7, 14, 21 and 28, 1889. In the opinion of Barclay, J., concurred in by all the members of Division One, it is said:

“Defendants argue that publication four times, at these intervals, is not publication for ‘four weeks’; and cite the argument of the Court of Appeals in State ex rel. v. Tucker (1888), 32 Mo. App. 620, claiming that the 'latter demonstrates that the ruling on this subject in, Haywood v. Russell (1869), 44 Mo. 252 (where such a publication was held good), is unsound, and should not be followed.

■ “Whatever we might think of the ruling in the forty-fourth report as an original proposition, it has been acquiesced in so fully, and been treated as a settled point of practice in making publications in all sorts of proceedings, for so many years, that we decline to re-examine it. We consider that the rule it declares has become a rule of property, on the faith of which great numbers of titles, founded on judicial sales, depend.”

Ratliff v. Magee, 165 Mo. 461, is in point. Syllabus 1 reads: “The statute required that the notice for the final settlement of an estate should be ‘published for four weeks’ prior to the term. Held, that this statute required a notice .to be published for four weeks or twenty-eight days prior to the beginning of the term, but did not require that four weeks should intervene between *316

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Bluebook (online)
233 S.W. 169, 289 Mo. 307, 1921 Mo. LEXIS 19, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-brunswick-ex-rel-barkwell-v-beneke-mo-1921.