City of Maryville v. Cox

167 S.W. 1166, 181 Mo. App. 254, 1914 Mo. App. LEXIS 331
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 13, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 167 S.W. 1166 (City of Maryville v. Cox) 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 Maryville v. Cox, 167 S.W. 1166, 181 Mo. App. 254, 1914 Mo. App. LEXIS 331 (Mo. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

ELLISON, P. J.

Plaintiff's action is to enforce the lien of six special tax bills issued by the city of Maryville, a city of tbe third class, for grading, paving and curbing one of its streets about one mile in length; the paving to be with vitrified brick, laid down on four inches of sand. Plaintiff is the assignee of the bills. The work was accepted by the city and tax bills issued. The judgment in the circuit court was for the defendant.

At the trial plaintiff introduced the tax bills and thereby made a prima-facie case. Defendant then took up the burden of defence on these grounds as set out in his brief.

First: That resolution “ D, ” the preliminary resolution declarifig the work of improvement necessary, did not include and describe the work of grading or reducing said street to the established grade as required by statute.

Second: That there was no estimate of the cost of the improvement prepared and filed by the city engineer with the board of aldermen, and that if the paper filed by him be considered an estimate, that the contract price at which the work was let was above and in excess of said estimate.

Third: That there was not a substantial compliance by the contractor, with the provisions of paving ordinance No. 85, the specifications therein contained and the contract for the improvement, in the following:

[257]*257A: That the paving improvement was not placed on the grade established therefor by ordinance No. 85, as required, by the specifications and contract.

B: That the sand foundation for the pavement was not constructed four inches thick after rolling, in compliance with the paving ordinance, specifications and contract.

C: That the parkways were not filled and finished level with the curbing in compliance with the paving ordinance, specifications and contract.

D: That the sand bed or foundation was not prepared and smoothed off to a true and even surface with the templet stretching from curb to curb, as required by the paving ordinance, specifications and contract.

E: That the curbing was not finished with a coat of neat cement, troweled and finished to a uniform surface and color throughout, as required by the paving ordinance, specifications, and contract.

The court properly found against defendant on the first ground. The resolution was sufficient under all the decisions on that subject. It meets the requirements stated in City of Kirksville v. Coleman, 103- Mo. App. 215. The reference to another ordinance for the grade was sufficient. It was not necessary that the plaintiff should introduce the latter in evidence.

As-to the second gound; when defendant states there was no estimate filed he evidently does not wish to be understood literally, but rather that the paper filed was not a proper estimate. His position is that if it be considered a proper estimate the contract price was in excess of it, and thereby the tax bills were invalidated. The estimate was made by the city engineer that being one of his duties under the statute, section 9407, Revised Statutes 1909. It stated approximately the number of feet or yards, in each of the following divisions of the work, placed in a horizontal- column, viz., paving brick-, curbing, sand, excavation and oak [258]*258headers; and estimated the number of yards or feet in each and the cost per yard or foot. These figures were cast up and the sum placed in a right hand ‘ ‘ total” column. In addition to this, and as part of it, was an item of $600 for superintending and engineering. The whole, when cast up, was set down at $19,391.13. But when this is examined it is found that by multiplying the number of yards or feet of the separate items by. the estimated price of each, it will only make $16002.44. This discrepancy of more than $3000 was explained by the engineer to the council as arising from the fact that he included in the estimate and in the total an item of twenty per cent on the estimated cost of each division of the work. He omitted to state that item on the face of the paper. But the fact is there was no intention to deceive, conceal or mislead and the city council understood it. In truth, an estimate had been stated to the council several days before the one in controversy was filed and the members had called his attention to the fact that he had only estimated the bare cost without putting in anything for labor, waste, breakage and the contractors costs for superintendence, etc. It was for this very necessary purpose that the addition was made. This addition was made to an item of $600, but instead of putting it down as $720, the figures “120” were placed above the main figures “600” and the total of the whole matter was carried out properly to the total column; except in a small matter of calculation which we will notice. The engineer testified he had made a mistake of $36.31 in adding, to the cost of “oak headers” and of $151.89 in.adding to the cost of the excavation, which should reduce the total from $19,391.13 to $19,202.93. We do not attach enough importance to an honest error of calculation, amounting, comparatively, to a small sum, perhaps not appreciable at all, divided over the whole work, to annul the whole proceeding. Barring this, which we consider trivial, the estimate stated in the total was [259]*259what the engineer intended it to be and was thoroughly understood by the council for whose benefit and consideration the estimate is made. [City of Boonville v. Stephens, 238 Mo. 339; Webb City v. Aylor, 163 Mo. App. 155.] By the terms of the statute itself it is a paper to be “submitted to the board of aldermen.”

The next point of defence is, that the grading was not done as established and required by the ordinance. The proposition defendant undertook to establish under this objection was that the grade of the street as paved by the contractor varies from the ordinance from one to twenty-four inches. These variations were at different points named in the evidence. The maximum was at a point midway between two streets. At this point the abutting lots set above the grade named in the ordinance, between six and seven feet; but as actually graded only between four and five feet.. The contractor was paid by the yard and by lessening the depth of the cut the abutting property was benefited and the owners have less to pay. The ordinance contained these provisions: “All work shall be done under the supervision and to the satisfaction of the City Engineer.” ■ “The Engineer shall furnish all lines and grades and mark same on the ground as needed. The-contractor shall carefully preserve all such marks and. if reasonable care is not exercised in preserving same-the contractor will be charged up with the cost of re-setting the same.”

The engineer set the grade stakes at this point (Johnson v. Duer, 115 Mo. l. c. 377),, and the contractor did the work in accordance with them, without, knowing they made any change. So therefore, with no-harm to the property owner, with no profit to the contractor, or bad faith in him, and with a finished work as serviceable as if the variation had not occurred, we-find no reason either within the bounds of the strict, rules of law which properly govern cases of this character, or of fairness to the contractor who is not shown [260]*260to have either intended to harm, or have actually harmed, the property owner. Nor was there any intention to harm the general public, nor has it in fact, been harmed by the result produced. We regard the case of Trimble v. Stewart, 168 Mo. App.

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167 S.W. 1166, 181 Mo. App. 254, 1914 Mo. App. LEXIS 331, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-maryville-v-cox-moctapp-1914.