City of Moundsville v. Brown

34 S.E.2d 321, 127 W. Va. 602, 1945 W. Va. LEXIS 25
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedApril 24, 1945
Docket9682
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 34 S.E.2d 321 (City of Moundsville v. Brown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Moundsville v. Brown, 34 S.E.2d 321, 127 W. Va. 602, 1945 W. Va. LEXIS 25 (W. Va. 1945).

Opinion

Rose, Judge:

This suit was instituted by The City of Moundsville, a municipal corporation, to recover of “Martin Brown and W. Foss Curtis, Trustees for the Waiving Depositors of Marshall County Bank”, certain assessments for the years 1940, 1941, 1942 and 1943, to be applied to the payment of “revenue bonds” issued by the municipality for the purpose of raising funds with which to pay fifty-five per cent of the expense of constructing a “municipal public works” consisting of the pavement of thirty-seven streets, or parts of streets, on some of which four lots belonging to the defendants abut, forty-five per cent of which expense was furnished by the federal “Public Works Administration”.

The defendants filed a demurrer, a “plea in bar” and an answer to the bill of complaint. The plaintiff in turn filed a written demurrer to the “plea in bar” and to the answer of the defendants. Upon argument the court overruled the demurrer of the defendants and sustained the plaintiff’s demurrer to the “plea in bar’.’ and to the answer of the defendants; and, the defendants declining to make further defense, the court entered a decree against the defendants for the amounts claimed, decreed that, upon default in payment by the defendants, the lots should be sold. This appeal was awarded the defendants.

The bill of complaint alleges that all the requirements of chapter 68 of the Acts of the Legislature, 1935, relating to the construction of “municipal public works” as therein defined, and the establishment of rates and charges for *605 the use of and services rendered by such works, were complied with, and filed as exhibits certified copies of the records of the city in support thereof; and further alleges that: “During the course of operations necessary to the completion of said project, certain persons, owning property within the sphere thereof, instituted a suit in chancery in this court, praying that the completion thereof be restrained, injoined and inhibited”; and that: “The bill filed in said cause challenged and denied the validity of said ordinances, resolution, and the proceedings had thereunder”; that a demurrer to said bill was sustained and the bill dismissed, and that an appeal from the action of the court was refused by this Court, but exhibited only the final order of the trial court and the order of this Court refusing an appeal. The bill then alleges that: “The validity of the ordinances and resolution mentioned herein, as well as the proceedings had thereunder, were thereby determined in favor of the plaintiff”; and the adjudication of that cause “determined and settled ‘the law of this case’ which is final and conclusive as to all persons and property affected by said street paving improvements.” The defendants, by their “plea in bar” and by their answer, in general terms, but comprehensively, allege that in a former suit by the plaintiff against them the same facts were alleged, the same relief sought, and that a demurrer thereto was sustained and an appeal therefrom refused by this Court; but they exhibit and quote nothing but the prayer of the bill and the final decree dismissing the bill.

In Corrothers v. Sargent, 20 W. Va. 351, this Court held that: “A decision upon a general demurrer to a bill, which has clearly gone to the merits of the case, is an effectual bar to further litigation; and where no formal defects appear upon the face of the bill the court will presume that the demurrer has gone to the merits.”

But, the benefit of an alleged former adjudication cannot be pleaded informally or in general terms, nor as a mere conclusion of the pleader. To avail a party in later litigation he must show by his pleadings in the form of quotations or exhibits the complete and exact character of the *606 pleadings in the former suit or action, so that the Court, not the pleader, can say with complete certainty that the issues in the former case and later one are precisely the same, and that the exact issues sought to be determined in the later' case have been, in fact, decided in the former suit or action. Rigg v. Canterbury, 116 W. Va. 303, 180 S. E. 182; Bell v. Bell, 84 W. Va. 307, 99 S. E. 450; Riley v. Jarvis, 43 W. Va. 43, 26 S. E. 366; The Western M. & M. Co. v. The Virginia Cannel Coal Co., 10 W. Va. 250.

It is, therefore, clear that there is not a sufficient showing in the record, in either of the cases attempted to be pleaded by the plaintiff and the defendants respectively, to enable the Court, in the present case, to say whether the action of the court therein determined finally any issue now before the Court. We, therefore, cannot give either of these former cases further consideration.

Another simple principle must eliminate a considerable number of attempted defenses by the defendants. By section 6, chapter 68 of the Acts of the Legislature of 1935, under which this street paving was done, an ordinance providing for the construction of a “municipal public works” thereunder shall be “published once each week for two successive weeks in two newspapers of opposite political faith”, together with a notice fixing a time and place at which “all parties and interests may appear before the municipal authorities, and may be heard as to whether or not said ordinance shall be put into effect.” Section 17 of that chapter provides further that: “No such rates or charges shall be established until after a public hearing at which all the users of the works and/or owners of the property served, or to be served thereby, and others interested, shall have an opportunity to be heard concerning the proposed rates or charges”; and requiring publication of notice of such hearing to be made once each week for two successive weeks in two newspapers of opposite political faith. The exhibits filed with the bill show that these notices were published and that such hearings were held. The defendants there had an opportunity to raise their objections either to the under *607 taking of the work or to the rates and charges to he established. Further, appropriate proceedings in court at that time on sufficient grounds would have been entertained to test the validity of the ordinance authorizing the work or that fixing the rates and charges. Instances of equitable relief awarded under such circumstances are too familiar to require citation. But the defendants appear to have done nothing whatever. They have stood by and permitted the bonds to be issued and sold, the improvements to be made, the proceeds of the bonds to be expended in payment therefor, and the rates for service to their lands to be established, all without protest or objection of any character. They can now be heard only on matters which, if established, would render the proceedings, either those having to do with the construction of the works or those establishing the rates, absolutely void. Irregularities and errors, and other like defenses, in the actions of the city council, connected with the authorization of the project, the construction thereof and the establishment of rates or charges thereunder, cannot now be resorted to by the defendants for relief against these assessments. In City of Mannington v. Hamilton, 104 W. Va. 656, 141 S. E. 527, we said, speaking by Judge Woods:

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Bluebook (online)
34 S.E.2d 321, 127 W. Va. 602, 1945 W. Va. LEXIS 25, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-moundsville-v-brown-wva-1945.