Fowler v. City of St. Joseph

37 Mo. 228
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedFebruary 15, 1866
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 37 Mo. 228 (Fowler v. City of St. Joseph) 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
Fowler v. City of St. Joseph, 37 Mo. 228 (Mo. 1866).

Opinion

Wagner, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court.

By the amended charter of the City of St. Joseph, approved November 21,1857, power was given to the mayor and councilmen of said city to macadamize, pave, and otherwise improve and keep in repair, the streets, alleys and avenues in the city limits ; and it was provided that the cost of all macadamizing, paving and repairing, done in any street, alley or avenue by order of the mayor and city council, should be borne by the owners of the adjoining property, and should be apportioned and charged on the adjoining lots in proportion to their front, in manner to be described in ordinance, and should be paid by the owners of such lots respectively ; and the city engineer should make out and hand to the city collector for collection, on the first Monday in May and November in each year, the account of such apportioned costs of the improvements made during the six months preceding, and the owners of lots charged therewith should be bound to pay said costs charged like liabilities contracted by themselves, and might be sued therefor accordingly; and the lots or lands charged should also be held by a lien for the respective apportioned share of such cost, until the same, with all the costs attending the collection, be fully paid. And it was further provided, that such lien might be enforced by a special tax, levy and sale, as also by proceedings at law, all according to such proceedings and in such manner ás might be prescribed by ordinance; and any share of such costs which should not be paid at the time the same was made payable by ordinance, should until paid bear and be charge; able with such rate of interest as the city council might ordain, not exceeding twenty per centum per annum.

In pursuance of this power, the city authorities by an ordinance approved February 4, 1858, provided that whenever [235]*235they should order any street, alley or avenue to be improved, the city engineer should let out the contract for the same, and the cost of such improvement should be assessed against the owners of the property fronting thereon, and the cost of the improvement provided for should be borne by the owners of property adjoining such improvements, and should be apportioned and charged to the adjoining property by the city engineer áccording to the front feet of each owner.

By section 3d, the city engineer, in each year, on the first Monday of May and November, was authorized to make an apportionment of the cost of such improvement amongst the owners according to the number of front feet fronting thereon, and make out and certify to the bills against each person charged, and deliver the same to the city collector and take his receipt therefor ; and the city collector was to present said bills for payment to the person or persons charged, or to his or their agents, within five days after receiving the same. And by section 4, it was declared that if said bills be not paid within ten days after demand made by the collector, as provided in the third section of the ordinance, the collector should deliver the same to the city attorney, who should commence suit thereon; and said bills should, until paid, bear interest at the rate of twenty per cent, per annum from the time they were payable.

By an ordinance amendatory of the foregoing ordinance, approved Oct. 2T, 1859, it was provided that such improvements should be apportioned and charged to the adjoining property, by the city engineer, according to the front feet of each owner, and that the amount so apportioned should constitute a special tax on the property, and be paid by the owner ; and if the said bill or special tax was not paid within ten days after demand, interest was to be paid at the rate of twenty per cent., and the collector was to proceed to collect the same as in the case of other unpaid and delinquent taxes on real estate which authorized a levy and sale without suit. And it was made to apply to all macadamizing, guttering, paving, and other improvements of the streets, alleys and [236]*236avenues of the city, done by order of the mayor and city councilmen after the first day of January, 1858, and for the costs of which suit had not been brought, as well as that which should be done thereafter.

The ordinance establishing and regulating the engineer’s department, approved December 10, 1857, provided, among other things, that all public works ordered by the city should be let out by the city engineer to the lowest and best bidder, and that notice of such letting should be given for two weeks in some newspaper employed by the city, in which the nature of the work, the place where the specifications might be seen, and the time when the bids would be received, were to be stated. The performance of all contracts was to be secured by at least two sufficient securities, and all contracts, after being drawn up, were to be submitted to the city attorney for his approval of the form thereof, which approval he was to endorse on the contract, and it was then to be filed with the city register; the city engineer was to certify to the account of the contractor who had finished and completed his work according to contract, but was not to certify when he had failed to perform his contract.

The contract for the work in controversy was made in pursuance of the ordinance of February 4, 1858, and the work and labor performed under the operation of that ordinance ; but the proceeding for coercing the payment for the labor is attempted under the amendatory ordinance of. October 27, 1859.

The petition charges that the work done upon the street and charged to plaintiff is for the payment of the assessment, or costs, of which his lots were advertised for sale, was not let to contract as required by law ; that it was not let to the lowest and best bidder, nor was notice of it published in a paper as required by law ; that the performance of the contract, secured by two sufficient securities, was not approved by the mayor; that it was not submitted to the city attorney for his approval of the form, nor was his approval endorsed thereon; that it was not filed with the city regis[237]*237ter, nor was its correctness certified to by the city engineer. And the petition also charges that, when the work was done, the city was not authorized by any ordinance or law to advertise and sell property to pay for improvements made upon the streets adjoining or otherwise; and that at the time the work was done, and plaintiff refused to pay for the same, the costs of such work were not a special tax upon the lots advertised for sale.

The answer admits that the right to sell the lots by the city collector is claimed alone under the amendatory ordinance ; and it is further admitted by the defendant that all the requirements of the ordinances were not strictly complied with, but it is claimed that these were mere formalities, and that the plaintiff was not injured by the noncompliance.*'

The law we regard as settled in this State, that a substantial compliance must be shown with the ordinances or by-laws to authorize a municipal corporation to recover for assessments or improvements ; but a strict observance of all the formalities prescribed by the ordinances, which are merely directory in their character, will not be required.

If the power or authority has been pursued substantially,, and the neglect is of matter which is only formal, and could not work injury to the other party, it will not vitiate or defeat the proceedings.

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Bluebook (online)
37 Mo. 228, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fowler-v-city-of-st-joseph-mo-1866.