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

88 S.W. 1014, 109 Mo. App. 197, 1904 Mo. App. LEXIS 135
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 15, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 88 S.W. 1014 (City of Sedalia ex rel. Gilsonite Construction Co. v. Montgomery) 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 Sedalia ex rel. Gilsonite Construction Co. v. Montgomery, 88 S.W. 1014, 109 Mo. App. 197, 1904 Mo. App. LEXIS 135 (Mo. Ct. App. 1904).

Opinion

REYBURN, J.

(after stating tbe facts). — 1. At tbe portal of tbe cause, we are faced with a revival and reiteration of tbe charges of collusion between tbe parties confronting each other as plaintiff and defendants. While it is indisputable that legal tribunals are not created to bear and decide moot cases, and that lawsuits contemplate adverse parties and hostile interests, and courts will refuse to entertain proceedings inaugurated and designed to affect tbe rights of third parties, strangers thereto, whereby sucb actions cease to be antagonistic and are rendered collusive [Meeker v. Straas, Admr., 38 Mo. App. 239; State ex rel. v. Westport, 135 [209]*209Mo. 120, 36 S. W. 633], yet this record is devoid of any evidence sustaining such arraignment and being largely an issue of fact, the denial of the motion by the circuit court of Pettis county, where the action was commenced, will go far in controlling such question, and no reason has been exhibited to overthrow its discretionary action or requiring any disturbance of its ruling in this regard.

2. The contention of respondents, summarized in the language of their counsel, is that when the remonstrance was filed and thereafter certain withdrawals were made therefrom and the council referred the matter to a committee for investigation, which reported that it found sixty-one resident property-owners, of whom thirty-two had by remonstrance filed a protest against the proposed improvement but of the qualified parties signing the remonstrance, five had withdrawn, thus leaving but twenty-seven remonstrating; and further reporting that the committee had determined the qualification of those remonstrating upon the opinion of the city .counselor filed with the report, and which report of the committee was received and placed on file, that such report became part of the record, when the council contemporaneously passed an ordinance directing the improvement and the passage of such ordinance constituted in legal effect, the adoption of the report, and disclosed the theory of the council upon which the latter ascertained and determined the remonstrance insufficient, and constituted a conclusive declaration by the record, that it had acquired jurisdiction to enact the ordinance by reason of the withdrawals attempted after the protest had been filed; that the law made imperative and essential that the record should disclose lawful authority to make the improvement, and such record evinced, that the council had found that a majority filing the remonstrance had been converted into a minority by the withdrawals, and thereupon as the record itself displayed a want of power and jurisdic[210]*210tion, neither the city nor the owners of the taxbills conld contradict snch record, bnt the latter upon its face must disclose jurisdiction. Respondents further contended that a remonstrance, containing a majority of the resident property-owners, when filed with the city clerk conclusively ousted the jurisdiction of the city council to continue with the contemplated improvement, and the power could not be restored by withdrawal of names thereafter, and the council, therefore, was debarred from progressing except by proceedings anew. The situation, therefore, may be elucidated into the simple inquiries whether defendants established by competent proof, that a remonstrance over the signatures of the requisite majority of the qualified owners of property subject to assessment for the improvement was filed, and if such duly signed protest was presented, then whether plaintiff should have been accorded the right of impeaching or assailing the signatures thereto or was such protest thus executed and tendered final and conclusive. It is urged by appellant that the disposition of the report of the committee employed was ambiguous and indefinite and its mere reception did not constitute an adoption because not fixed upon by resolution. By putting the ordinance for the paving upon its passage after such action upon the report, the council adopted the latter in as effective a manner as if by formal resolution and motion, and if such action was not in strict accord with the sections of the parliamentary code adopted for guidance of the council’s deliberations, that body as every deliberative body reserved the discretionary right to exercise, formally or informally, at its pleasure the power of suspension, waiver or modification of such rules. [Holt v. City of Somerville, 127 Mass. 411; Bennett v. New Bedford, 110 Mass. 433.] The result of the action of the council was in effect a finding that under the law a majority of the qualified owners had not executed the remonstrance, and this con- . elusion of the council, illustrated by putting the ordi[211]*211nance upon its passage, was assailed not by proof that in fact a legal majority of snch qualified owners had remonstrated, but by endeavor to indicate a fatal infirmity and legal defect in the process by which snch conclusion was attained. To sustain such contention it was made essential for respondents to concede that the committee found that a legal majority did not protest, but arrogating the right to reject, as not conclusive, such decision of the committee, and affirm that the record itself attested that such majority did remonstrate and the council was shorn of power to proceed with the improvement.

The.inquiry whether the conclusion of the council upon the validity and sufficiency of a petition in favor of, or in protest against, the performance of such public work is a final adjudication, involving decision of a jurisdictional fact, has received opposing answers and has been solved at variance in different jurisdictions. The view expressed in an earlier case by this court appears to negative the conclusiveness of such decision in the absence of express legislative power. In Fruin-Bambrick Con. Co. v. Geist, 37 Mo. App. 509, an action upon a special taxbill issued for improvement of an alley in the city of St. Louis, the defendants resisted recovery upon the ground, among others, that a remonstrance against the proposed improvement of the alley had been signed by the owners of more than the requisite major part of the owners of the property in the block intersected by the alley, and the court pertinently says: “It appears inferentially from the record that the board of public improvements decided that the remonstrance was not signed by the owners of a major part of the block and the appellant contends that the finding of this fact by the board of public improvements was conclusive. We can not consent to this. This was a jurisdictional fact and the decision of the board in the absence of an express legislative provision to that effect would not be conclusive.” A like rule obtains in [212]*212the State of New York, announced in Miller v. City of Amsterdam, 149 N. Y. 288. [City of Bloomington v. Reeves, 177 Ill. 161; Cummings v. Comrs. 181 Ill. 136.]

An eminent commentator in his admirable treatise on the law of taxation,, in the chapter devoted to taxation by special assessment, under heading “Municipal Action” expressed the following view: “Municipalities having no inherent power in these cases, it is necessary to the validity of their action that they keep closely to the authority conferred. Their ordinances and resolutions must be adopted in due form of law and they must keep within them afterwards. They can bind the taxpayers only in the mode prescribed and can substitute no other.

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Bluebook (online)
88 S.W. 1014, 109 Mo. App. 197, 1904 Mo. App. LEXIS 135, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-sedalia-ex-rel-gilsonite-construction-co-v-montgomery-moctapp-1904.