City of Sedalia ex rel. Gilsonite Construction Co. v. Montgomery

127 S.W. 50, 227 Mo. 1, 1910 Mo. LEXIS 88
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 30, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 127 S.W. 50 (City of Sedalia ex rel. Gilsonite Construction Co. v. Montgomery) 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 Sedalia ex rel. Gilsonite Construction Co. v. Montgomery, 127 S.W. 50, 227 Mo. 1, 1910 Mo. LEXIS 88 (Mo. 1910).

Opinion

FOX, J.

This suit originated in January, 1992, and was brought by the plaintiff in the circuit court of Pettis county, in which it was sought to recover the respective amounts due upon special taxbills which were issued by the city of Sedalia in payment for paving west Sixth street in said city.

The record discloses that during the progress of this controversy, by proper orders, other parties were made defendants, either by substitution or by being permitted to enter their appearance in the cause.

[9]*9The record also discloses that there was a stipulation filed by the parties interested changing the venue of said cause from the county of Pettis to the county of Franklin, and in pursuance of such stipulation all the record and proceedings in the cause were transmitted to the circuit court of Franklin county. The cause came on for trial before the Franklin Circuit Court; a jury being waived, the cause was submitted to the court. After a hearing of the evidence there was a finding by the court sitting as a jury, for the defendants, and judgment was entered in accordance with such finding. From this judgment the plaintiff prosecuted an appeal to the St. Louis Court of Appeals, and that court, upon hearing, reached the conclusion that the judgment of the circuit court of Franklin county was erroneous and should be.reversed; however, the learned and esteemed judge who wrote the opinion very frankly stated that the conclusions as reached in the opinion, in which his associates concurred, were in conflict with the opinion of the Kansas City Court of Appeals, as expressed in Knopfi v. Gilsonite Roofing & Paving Co., 92 Mo. App. 279, and the City of Sedalia ex rel. v. Scott, 104 Mo. App. 595; hence it followed that an order was made certifying this ease to the Supreme Court, and it is now before us for consideration.

As was said by the St. Louis Court of Appeals, the opinion and conclusions reached in the case at bar are directly in conflict with the opinion announced by the Kansas City Court of Appeals in the cases referred to. The leading and controlling propositions in these cases, to which reference is made, are substantially the same, and the respective Courts of Appeal in the solution of the propositions involved, gave them very careful attention and consideration. The authorities are collated and reviewed, and very little, if anything, can be added to the views of those courts, as expressed in the opinions. It is simply a difference between those [10]*10courts as to the proper interpretation and' application of the law applicable to the legal propositions disclosed by the records in the cases before them.

We have, with great care, examined and analyzed in detail the facts disclosed by the record, as developed upon the trial of this cause. We have read and re-read the opinions by the learned and esteemed judges of the respective Courts of Appeal, that is, the Kansas City Court of Appeals and the St. Louis Court of Appeals, wherein the propositions involved in those proceedings are fully discussed. It is sufficient to say that the opinion and conclusions reached by the St. Louis Court of Appeals are in harmony with the views of this court. The opinion of the St. Louis Court of Appeals, of which we have signified our approval, is as follows:

“This, an action on special taxbills, part of the issue in payment for paving west Sixth street, in the city of Sedalia, originated January, 1902, in the circuit court of Pettis county, primarily against John Montgomery, Jr., and Rollingsford Savings Bank, as joint defendants.
“The petition was subdivided into three counts upon a like number of taxbills, each count (with appropriate modification and passing by the formal statements) averring that on the tenth of February, 1898, the authorized officers as officials of the city of Sedalia, issued the bill, under the ordinance referred to against the realty described, to the Gilsonite Roofing and Paving Company, assignor of the relator, describing the interests of defendants in the realty and asking judgment. The defendants entered their appearances to the action on the day it was brought, and filed a stipulation signed by them for judgment at the ensuing December term, if prior payment of the bills had not been made, and in event of payment before such December term, the case was to be dismissed. In April, 1902, by consent, the stipulation was withdrawn and defendants, by attorney, filed a joint answer admitting the usual [11]*11conventional affirmations of the petition, hut averred that "within the period provided by law a majority of the resident owners of property on the street liable for taxation for the proposed improvement, duly filed their remonstrance against it, whereby the city council of Sedalia had no power to cause such improvement to be made; that notwithstanding such protest and want of authority, the council unlawfully passed an ordinance, No. 207, July 19, 1897, providing for the pavement of the street; the contract was awarded to relator and the work completed by it at the contract price and accepted by the city council, which passed an ordinance directing the issuance of special taxbills in payment and against the parcels of realty abutting on the street improved. The answer proceeded to set out the respective interests of defendants severally as owner and mortgagor and mortgagee of the realty, and terminated "with apt allegations of the invalidity of the taxbills and prayer for their cancellation.
“The reply of plaintiff specifically denied the remonstrance by a majority of the resident owners of property on Sixth street liable for taxation and for the improvement against such improvement, and the consequent absence of power in the city council to cause the improvement, and averred that the pretended remonstrance was not signed by such majority; that many of the signers were not owners of abutting property, at the time of signing such remonstrance or when it was filed; that within the period legally fixed and before the remonstrance was filed, after the remonstrance was filed and before the expiration of the "time appointed, six of the parties signing, by writing filed with the city clerk, withdrew their names and petitioned to have the street improved as provided by the resolution of the council. At the same time there was filed a stipulation for change of venue to the circuit court of Franklin county, and also by the attorney of various other owners of parcels of realty fronting on the reconstruct[12]*12ed1 street, against which similar taxbills had issued, a verified suggestion and motion as amicus curiae} averring and charging that there were no adverse interests involved in such action, but the interests of the opposite parties were identical and the plaintiff and defendants had conspired to impose upon the court a pretended controversy, that the action was a fictitious proceeding in which the parties collusively sought, by medium of removal of the cause to a county within the jurisdiction of the St. Louis Court of Appeals, to obtain a decision of the latter court, overturning the decision of the Kansas City Court of Appeals adjudging the same special taxbills invalid and thereby ultimately secure a certification of the case to the Supreme Court, wherein defendants would seek to insure judgments against themselves, thus defeating defendants in other cases affecting the validity of like bills.

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Bluebook (online)
127 S.W. 50, 227 Mo. 1, 1910 Mo. LEXIS 88, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-sedalia-ex-rel-gilsonite-construction-co-v-montgomery-mo-1910.