Eyermann v. City of St. Louis

178 S.W. 98, 265 Mo. 529, 1915 Mo. LEXIS 32
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 30, 1915
StatusPublished

This text of 178 S.W. 98 (Eyermann v. City of St. Louis) 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
Eyermann v. City of St. Louis, 178 S.W. 98, 265 Mo. 529, 1915 Mo. LEXIS 32 (Mo. 1915).

Opinion

BROWN, C.

We adopt substantially the statement of appellants as follows:

[532]*532This is an action for damages for breach of contract.

The averments of the petition, essential to an understanding of the case, are that plaintiffs composed a partnership engaged in business as contractors; that in 1905 plaintiffs entered into two contracts with defendant for the reconstruction with paving blocks of certain portions of Branch street between the wharf and Ninth street, and that plaintiffs did the work as required under these contracts. Under these contracts plaintiffs not only guaranteed their original work for a period of ten years from its completion, but in addition thereto- were required, on demand of the city, and they had the right, with certain exceptions only, to do the repair work becoming necessary in the event the paving as laid by them should become disturbed during the period of the contract.

The pertinent portion of the contracts contains a guaranty to maintain the street in good order, for the given term, guaranteeing’ against imperfection in the work or material. If there should be any deteriorations during or at the end of the term, the contractor shall, at the direction of the street commissioner, repair or wholly reconstruct the street.' The contract then provides:

■ “And it is further agreed that whenever any repairs of the street are made necessary from the construction of sewers, the laying of pipes or telegraph wires, or from any other disturbance of the pavement by parties acting under permits issued by the city, the contractor shall, upon notification of the street commissioner, in all cases, except where the party causing the disturbance is required to restore the street, at once make all necessary repairs in conformity with the specifications under which the pavement was constructed. The cost of all such repairs when done by the contractor, exclusive of trenching and back filling, which shall be done by the parties which hold the permits, and [533]*533in the same manner as now required by existing ordinances, shall be paid for at the full contract price for a superficial square of new pavement, as fixed in the contract let under provisions of Ordinance Number . . ., and the measurement thereof, together with the amount due the contractor therefor, shall be certified by the street commissioner and shall be paid out of the fund ‘Street Repairs — Reconstructed Streets,’ and the amount shall be certified by the street commissioner to the auditor, who shall reimburse by transfer the aforesaid fund from the funds of the proper department, if the repairs were made necessary by the construction of any public improvement; and out of the funds to be deposited by persons taking permits for opening the street and before such permits are granted, if the repairs were made necessary by work done thereunder. And it is agreed that the contractor shall have the right to make all repairs which become necessary by the construction of any public improvement or work done by private parties under permits issued and granted by the city upon the basis of compensation aforesaid; provided, however, that it is furthermore covenanted and agreed that this contract shall not be affected, impaired or avoided, and that no claim for compensation • or damage shall be presented by or allowed to the contractor for or on account of a disturbance or the tearing up of the street by the city of St. Louis or by any contractor employed by it, or by the grantee of any franchise now or hereafter given or granted by the city of St. Louis for laying conduits, street railway tracks, gas pipes or wires of any character, upon, in or under said street.”

The work was to be paid for by the issue of special tax bills as provided by the charter.

The petition further alleges that in 1908 defendant took up the paving in Branch street for the purpose of putting a sewer in said street and for the doing of other public improvements therein, and that defendant [534]*534refused and failed, to permit plaintiffs to repair the street, which they were able and willing and offered to do, but that defendant, throug’h other parties, or throug'h its own servants and employees undertook to-do said work and deprived plaintiffs of their right to-do so. The petition further avers that if plaintiffs had been permitted to do said work aforesaid at the contract prices they would have earned $4392.10, for which they prayed judgment.

The defendant’s answer set up the claim that the work done by it was not contemplated by the contracts-referred to, but was made necessary by a cave-in of the Rocky Branch sewer, located under Branch street.

A further contention of the defendant was that the-clause of the contracts sued upon is invalid and of no-effect and contrary to the charter of the city of St.. Louis, in violation of article 6, sections 14, 15, 25, and 27 of the charter.

Evidence was introduced tending to prove the allegations of plaintiff’s petition, the portions of which,, material here, are that the repairs in question were-rendered necessary by a provision of the city for the enlargement of the sewer under Branch street, and because at certain points the old sewer had caved in, necessitating a reconstruction of that part of the sewer.

Upon submission, the court found in favor of defendant, on the theory, as shown by his memorandum of findings, that the relaying of the pavement was not. contemplated by the terms of the contract covering “repairs made necessary from the construction of sewers.”

Other facts will be referred to as necessary.

[535]*535 Pavement: subsequentr Repairs.

[534]*534The first and most important question in this record is whether the city of St. Louis might, under its charter, make the covenant sued on in its contract for the construction of a pavement, whereby it undertakes. [535]*535to' bind itself to employ the same contractor to make all repairs upon it which maL during ten years succeeding its completion, become necessary from causes having no connection with the sufficiency, character or durability of the completed work, and to pay therefor the same price per unit which, by the terms of the contract, was to be paid in special tax bills for the construction.

We cannot pretend to be judicially ignorant of matters of public knowledge founded alike in common sense and common experience. We know that the fact that the contractor for street construction must receive payment in special tax bills to be collected by him at his own expense and risk, is an important element in the cost of such work. Methods for the avoidance of this burden upon the urban-property owner have been the subject of much public discussion in the field of municipal reform, and we cannot assume that the Legislature would permit this burden to be extended to the cash expenditure of the city for the maintenance of its streets, except upon the clear expression of its intention to do so. The question is, does the charter then in force give the city that power?

All the charter provisions to which we shall have occasion to refer are included in article 6 of that instrument. Section 14 provides for the recommendation of the Board of Public Improvements, and the preparation and passage of all ordinances for the construction and reconstruction of streets, and expressly authorizes the inclusion in such ordinances of a provision that the work and material

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Bluebook (online)
178 S.W. 98, 265 Mo. 529, 1915 Mo. LEXIS 32, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eyermann-v-city-of-st-louis-mo-1915.