City of Kirkwood Ex Rel. Baptiste v. Handlan

225 S.W. 692, 285 Mo. 92, 1920 Mo. LEXIS 154
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 2, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 225 S.W. 692 (City of Kirkwood Ex Rel. Baptiste v. Handlan) 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 Kirkwood Ex Rel. Baptiste v. Handlan, 225 S.W. 692, 285 Mo. 92, 1920 Mo. LEXIS 154 (Mo. 1920).

Opinion

GOODE, J.

This is an action on a special tax bill for $254.69 and interest, issued by the officials of the City of Kirkwood, Missouri, which is a city of the fourth class, to pay, in part, for improvements made on a portion of Dickson Street. The improvements included the grading of the street, putting in curbing and guttering, and spreading and rolling macadam and gravel. The work was done by E. J.-Welseh, to whom the tax bill in controversy was issued, but the action was instituted at the relation of George Baptiste, as the assignee of Weffich. The defendant resided in the City of St. Louis, but owned the lot in Kirkwood affected by the tax bill; a lot lying in Block, D, East Kirkwood, having a. frontage of 127.65 feet on the north side of Main Street and a death along the east side of Dickson Street (which is its *96 west boundary), back to Harris Street on the north, of 566 feet and 6 inches. The improvements were made in 1910, and the bill in suit was issued August 21, 1911.

One of the points raised against the judgment for plaintiff is that the tax bill was not put in evidence, nor the assignment of it by Welsch to Baptiste proved. Two judgments by default had been taken against the defendant and set aside over the protest of the plaintiff, which filed a motion to have vacated the order to set aside the second default judgment. The court overruled this motion on the ground that until a term ended a court could set aside orders or judgments it had entered during the term, and among others, default entries, if it was thought a hearing on the merits should be granted’. In connection with a remark of the above purport, the court told the plaintiff’s attorney to offer the tax bill, and thereupon the attorney said: “I now offer in evidence the tar bill, marked ‘Plaintiff’s Exhibit A’;” and it was admitted upon proof of the signatures of the mayor and clerk of Kirkwood.

On the back of the bill was the following assignment:

“City of Kirkwood, Aug. 28, 1911. I hereby assign the within bill for value received to George Baptiste and he is authorized to sign my name to the receipt.
“E. J. Welsch.”

No proof was made of the genuineness of the signature of Welsch to the assignment, but it was proved by E. W. Handlan, a son of the defendant, and who attended to his father’s business when the father was away from. St. Louis, that a collector for Baptiste had demanded payment of the bill and, that after looking into some correspondence, he (E. W. Handlan) refused to pay it for the reason that he found a letter written to his father by the city clerk of Kirkwood, under date of March 25, 1907, and a notation on the letter made by his father, which showed there was a dispute between the city and his father about whether his father owned thirty feet of the width of the improved street or had dedicated it to *97 the city; further, that he (E. W. Handlan) afterward had a conversation with Baptiste himself and refused to pay the bill for the same reason-—namely, that his father’s lot occupied thirty feet, or one-half the width of the property improved as Dickson Street where it bounded his lot,' and hence the improvement was' made on private property. These conversations and refusals to pay Baptiste occurred long subsequent to the issuance of the tax bill and conduced, along' with the written assignment on the back of it, to prove Baptiste was the owner and holder of it—a fact not really disputed; for the contention urged at the trial against the liability of the defendant related entirely to others matters.

Grading Street: Special Tax Bill. I. A minor defense is that part of the cost of bringing Dickson Street to the established grade was included in the tax bill, and that the board of aldermen could not impose this cost on the lots' abutting on the street unless, in the judgment of said' board, the general revenue fund of the city was not in a condition to warrant expenditure from it for bringing the street to grade. [R. S. 1899, sec. 5988; R. S. 1909, sec. 9410.] The ordinance, No. 877, approved May 16, 1910, providing for the work, declared: “ That it is the judgment and opinion of the board that the general revenue fund of' the city is not in condition to warrant expenditure therefrom for bringing street to established grade and that same shall be included in special assessment for the improvement.” Another section of the statutes required the board of aldermen to spread on their records semi-annually, in January and July, a detailed statement of the receipts and expenditures of the city and its indebtedness for the half year ending the preceding thirty-first of December and the thirtieth of June. [R. S. 1899, sec. 5912; R. S. 1909, sec. 9318.] No statement of the kind was recorded by the board of aldermen prior to the year 1911, and from this fact the counsel for defendant draws the conclusion that the board could not know whether or not *98 the condition of the city treasury warranted paying for the grading out of it; hence, their declaration to that, effect in the ordinance for. the work, was a nullity and afforded no basis for assessing the abutting property to -pay for the grading. This proposition hardly" deserves discussion. Though no. statement of the city’s receipts and expenditures, or of the state of its finances was made matter of record, it does not follow that the aldermen were ignorant of those matters and, therefore, unable to form an opinon as to whether the city was able to pay for the grading; nor does it appear their declaration against the ability of the city to pay was false in fact. The argument is pressed to the point of insisting that the owners of property along the graded street had the right to be informed by recorded semiannual statements of the state of the city’s finances, and if they were not thus informed, the tax bills issued against their lots for grading were void. This reasoning is strained. Obviously the Legislature contemplated no consequence of the kind, but intended only to provide a means to keep the city officials and the citizens posted regarding how much money was collected for public purposes and how it was expended. The two cited sections of the statutes deal with different matters, and the recording of the city’s receipts and expenditures is not a condition precedent to the right of the board of aldermen to find the city’s finances are not in a'condition to enable the city to pay for street grading.

PrivatIeproper°ty. II. The principal defense was the alleged ownership by the defendant of the east one-half or thirty feet of the strip sixty feet wide which was improved. If defendant owned the east half of the street the improvements were made on private property and the tax bill issued against defendant is void. The position that defendant owned the strip is based upon the supposed invalidity of a proceeding to open, widen and extend Dickson Street from Jefferson Avenue to main Street, and for *99 that purpose to condemn private property. This proceeding was commenced by an ordinance approved December 12, 1907, and the defendant was named as a party, the intention being to condemn a strip thirty feet wide off the west side of his lot and extending northward 566 feet and 6 inches, thereby bringing the strip into the street.

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Bluebook (online)
225 S.W. 692, 285 Mo. 92, 1920 Mo. LEXIS 154, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-kirkwood-ex-rel-baptiste-v-handlan-mo-1920.