City of Kirkwood v. Martin

282 S.W. 542, 219 Mo. App. 490, 1926 Mo. App. LEXIS 11
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 2, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 282 S.W. 542 (City of Kirkwood v. Martin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Kirkwood v. Martin, 282 S.W. 542, 219 Mo. App. 490, 1926 Mo. App. LEXIS 11 (Mo. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

*496 DAUES, P. J.

The above oases, by agreement of counsel, were consolidated, sáme being identical except as to the names of the respondents, and are treated as one case, to-wit No. 19351.

This is an action on special tax bills for the improvement of a roadway in the city of Kirkwood, Missouri, the cause having been heard in Division No. 2 of the circuit court of St. Louis county, where judgment was rendered in favor of defendants, and plaintiff has appealed.

The facts are not in dispute and the pleadings may be summarized as follows:

Plaintiff’s verified petition alleges that the city of Kirkwood is a city of the fourth class, and that the defendants owned the real estate described in the petition; that the Board of Aldermen of said city adopted a resolution declaring it necessary to improve, according to plans and specifications, a certain roadway known as Monroe avenue in said city and upon which defendants’ property abutted. ' The resolution provided that the work should be done at the cost of the property owners. By subsequent ordinance the improvement was provided for and special tax bills were ordered issued against the abutting property to pay for the improvement when same was to be completed. It is then alleged that notices to contractors were published asking for bids on the engineer’s estimate of the work; that no bids were received, whereupon the city passed another ordinance authorizing and directing the City Engineer to grade macadamize and otherwise improve said road; that the City Engineer did the work under the ordinance, keeping an accurate account of the cost, which was reported to the Board of Aldermen and which body duly passed an ordinance levying a special assessment for this improvement and authorizing the tax bills to be issued. The tax *497 bills were duly issued, made out to tbe City Engineer for the use of the city of Kirkwood. The tax bills are incorporated in the petition, and judgment is asked for the amount of the tax bills, together with interest and costs.

The answer is, first, a general denial, and sets up further defenses which we fain would summarize but which because of the character of this defense, we find it necessary to set same out, as such contains a complete history of the proceeding and cites %e many statutory provisions applicable for determination of this case. Such answer is as follows:

“ Defendants allege that at all the times mentioned in said petition, that certain Act of the General Assembly of the State of Missouri . ... approved April 17, 1911, was in full force and effect in St. Louis County, Missouri, and all the roads and streets within the limits of the plaintiff city of Kirkwood, were for the purposes of the said act, general public county roads, including the roadway of Monroe avenue, mentioned in said petition; that St. Louis County, Missouri, long before, and at all the times mentioned in said petition, had an assessed valuation of fifty million dollars, or more, of taxable property, within said county, and said county adjoined the city of St. Louis, Missouri, which city had a population of 300,000, or more; that said St. Louis County Court did levy at said times mentioned in said petition and long prior thereto, a road and bridge tax, as described in section 3 of the Act, aforesaid, and had established the Special Road Fund in said section described, for the benefit of each municipal corporation in said county, within which such tax was levied, to be expended in the construction, or reconstruction of the roads and streets declared by said act to be general public roads within such municipal corporation; that said plaintiff, city of Kirkwood, was at all the times mentioned aforesaid, a municipal corporation within the meaning of said Act, .in said county; that shortly after the passage of said *498 Act, the Collectors of the Revenue of said St. Lonis county had in compliance with said Act, separately accounted for sixty-five per cent of such collection, made in the city of Kirkwood, and the County Treasurers of said county had likewise kept such sixty-five per cent of such collections of said road and bridge tax in a separate road fund for the benefit of the said city of Kirk-wood; that the relator herein, J. N. Wilson, acting under the authority of the city of Kirkwood, as its duly appointed, qualified and acting engineer, in or about November, 1917, and thereafter caused the roadway, aforesaid, to be graded, macadamized, and otherwise improved, in accordance with plans, specifications and estimates prepared by him, keeping an accurate account of the cost of labor and material therefor; that said Wilson, on behalf of the city of Kirkwood, and under its authority, on or abont May 10, 1918, submitted a written report showing an itemized account of the expenditures by said city of Kirkwood for teaming, labor and material used by him, in the above-mentioned construction of said roadway, on Monroe avenue, from North Railroad street to Woodlawn avenue, in said city, amounting in the aggregate to $965.44 to the County Highway Engineer of said county and demanded payment therefor to said city of county, then acting on behalf of the county court of said Kirkwood out of the Special Road Fund, aforesaid, standing to its credit, with the County Treasurer; that thereupon said County Highway Engineer investigated the said account submitted, approved the same and certified it for presentation to the said county court for allowance and the issuance of a warrant on the County Treasurer, drawn against said Road Fund, in favor of said city of Kirkwood, which certified account was filed on May 20,1918, with the clerk of said court, of said city, and on the same day presented to said court for allowance, was duly allowed by it and ordered paid to, and charged to the city of Kirkwood, against said Special Road Fund, and thereupon- a warrant duly signed by the *499 presiding judge of the county court, in favor of said city of Kirkwood on the said County Treasurer, against said fund, was duly drawn on and delivered to the said City Treasurer, who thereupon issued his check to the city of Kirkwood, which was collected by the Treasurer of said city and the moneys paid into the treasury of the city, for said sum of $965.44, thus paying said city of Kirkwood out of said Road Fund for its expenditures aforesaid on the said roadway.
“Thereafter, on or about July 1, 1918, Joseph N.

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Bluebook (online)
282 S.W. 542, 219 Mo. App. 490, 1926 Mo. App. LEXIS 11, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-kirkwood-v-martin-moctapp-1926.