City of University City Ex Rel. Schulz v. Amos

156 S.W.2d 65, 236 Mo. App. 428, 1941 Mo. App. LEXIS 111
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 2, 1941
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 156 S.W.2d 65 (City of University City Ex Rel. Schulz v. Amos) 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 University City Ex Rel. Schulz v. Amos, 156 S.W.2d 65, 236 Mo. App. 428, 1941 Mo. App. LEXIS 111 (Mo. Ct. App. 1941).

Opinions

This is an action on a special tax bill for public improvement issued by University City against Trinity Avenue, a private street in University Heights Subdivision of said city. Plaintiff Schulz is the assignee of the special tax bill. Defendants, as trustees of University Heights Subdivision, have title to said private street. The trial resulted in a judgment for defendants and plaintiff appeals.

The case went to the Supreme Court on the theory that a constitutional question was involved. That court, having found no constitutional question involved, transferred the case here. [See City of University City v. Amos (Mo.), 141 S.W.2d 777.] *Page 431

University Heights Realty and Development Company owned 84.81 acres of land. It subdivided the land into blocks and lots. In doing so it provided for the subdivision only private streets, among them Trinity Avenue. It named the development University Heights Subdivision, and recorded a plat of the same in the office of the Recorder of Deeds.

Under a declaration of trust executed by the owners of the land at the time the subdivision was platted, the three defendant trustees have title to the private streets. The declaration of trust sets forth the duties of the trustees with reference to said streets, and among other things requires them to pay all general and special taxes levied against the private streets, and, under a frontage rule, assess the cost of said items as a lien against the lots of the subdivision.

Trinity Avenue, the private street under consideration, meanders southward through the subdivision to Delmar Boulevard, a public street, and the southern boundary of the subdivision. The special tax bill was issued under the "front foot" rule against Trinity Avenue as its part of the cost of repaving Delmar Boulevard. Trinity Avenue is fifty feet in width. However, at a point near the intersection of Trinity Avenue and Delmar Boulevard, Trinity Avenue widens by curving to the east, which gives it a frontage of 183.29 feet on Delmar Boulevard. "As a result of the curve, the depth of Trinity Avenue at the intersection varies from nothing at the east point connection of Trinity Avenue with Delmar Boulevard to sixty feet more or less at the west side connection of Trinity Avenue with Delmar Boulevard, whereas the depth of the lots along the north side of Delmar Boulevard average two hundred feet." [See City of University City v. Amos (Mo.), 141 S.W.2d 777.]

Plaintiff urges here that the special tax bill sued on isprima facie evidence entitling him to a judgment against the property described in the bill, whereas defendants contend that the description in the bill of the property affected is fatally defective. The bill was issued pursuant to an ordinance, describing the property and the frontage, as follows: "Trinity Avenue, a private street, frontage 183.29." The property and frontage is described in the bill as issued as follows: "Trinity Avenue, a private street, north of Delmar Block 5 ____ Subdivision said ground having an aggregate front of 183.29 feet, on the north side of said improvement by a depth of ____ feet, bounded: North by ____, east by Block 4, South by Delmar Boulevard and West by Lot 1." Five years after its issuance, the bill, pursuant to a resolution of the Board of Aldermen, was amended as evidenced by an endorsement on the reverse side of the bill, describing the property and frontage, as follows: "Trinity Avenue, a private street of University Heights Subdivision, said ground having an aggregate front of 183.29 feet on the north side of said improvement." Lot 1 is in block 5. It extends north from Delmar *Page 432 Boulevard. Its east line runs northwesterly along the west side of Trinity Avenue 158.92 feet. Block 4 extends north from Delmar Boulevard a distance of approximately 600 feet to Cornell Avenue. Its greatest width is approximately 300 feet. Its east boundary is a straight line along Harvard Avenue. Its west boundary is a convex line along Trinity Avenue. It has a frontage on Delmar of 36.52 feet. It is not divided into lots. It belongs to the city. It is the site of the City Hall. The east part of Lot 1 also belongs to the city, which maintains a parkway on it.

The amount of the cost of the improvement charged against Block 4 is $272.64. The amount charged against Trinity Avenue is $1368.34.

University City is a city of the fourth class.

Section 7051, Revised Statutes 1929, Missouri Statutes Annotated, section 7051, page 3768, provides that the cost of paving, macadamizing, guttering and curbing all streets, avenues, alleys and other highways, or any part thereof, or any connection therewith, and repairing the same, "shall be levied as a special assessment upon all lots and pieces of ground upon either side of such street, avenue, alley or other highway, or part thereof or connection therewith, abutting thereon, along the distance improved, in proportion to the front foot."

Section 7054 provides that the assessments made shall be known as special assessments for improvements, and shall be levied and collected as a special tax, and a special tax bill shall issue therefor, and shall be paid in the manner provided by ordinance, and that "every such special tax bill shall be a lien against the lot or piece of ground described in the same until the same is paid."

Section 7055 provides that "the city clerk shall keep a record of all special tax bills issued by the city in a special book provided for that purpose, which record shall show the date and amount of each tax bill, the rate of interest it bears, and the description of the land against which it is issued, the name of the party to whom it was issued, the street or part of street, or alley improved and the kind of improvement."

It is obvious that the tax bill in suit here is fatally defective for want of a proper description of the "piece of ground" lawfully chargeable with the cost of the improvement. Both the tax bill and the ordinance authorizing it charge the cost against the whole of Trinity Avenue, which meanders northerly, a distance of 1700 feet, through five blocks, from Delmar Boulevard to Dartmouth Avenue, whereas the "piece of ground" abutting on Delmar Boulevard and lawfully chargeable with the cost of the improvement, has a frontage on Delmar Boulevard of 183.29 feet and a depth varying from nothing at the east point connection of Trinity Avenue with Delmar Boulevard to sixty feet more or less at the west side connection of Trinity Avenue with Delmar Boulevard. While, of course, the "piece of ground" lawfully chargeable with a lien is included within the *Page 433 description, which calls for the whole of Trinity Avenue, there is no separate description of the "piece of ground" lawfully chargeable with a lien, but the bill undertakes to charge the whole avenue with a lien. For this reason obviously the bill is void.

It is a firmly established rule that any statutory requirement as to the description of property sought to be assessed with the cost of an improvement is mandatory and jurisdictional, and must be complied with, also the assessment will be void. Moreover, aside from any statutory provision, a proper description of the property is essential to the validity of the assessment. [44 C.J. 672.]

Assessments under the front foot rule often result in gross inequalities, or even in confiscation. It is not too much to require a compliance with the law with respect to the description of the property sought to be charged with a lien.

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156 S.W.2d 65, 236 Mo. App. 428, 1941 Mo. App. LEXIS 111, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-university-city-ex-rel-schulz-v-amos-moctapp-1941.