Hafner Manufacturing Co. v. City of St. Louis

172 S.W. 28, 262 Mo. 621, 1914 Mo. LEXIS 189
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 19, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 172 S.W. 28 (Hafner Manufacturing Co. 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
Hafner Manufacturing Co. v. City of St. Louis, 172 S.W. 28, 262 Mo. 621, 1914 Mo. LEXIS 189 (Mo. 1914).

Opinion

LAMM, J.

Forcible entry and detainer. Plaintiff, cast below on a trial to the merits, appeals. Plaintiff corporation owned a block of ground on Dock street abutting on the public wharf in North St. Louis. On said block was situate its manufacturing plant. If a certain two of the parallel lines of that block were produced to the Mississippi River, they include a part of said wharf. On a part of the land lying between said lines so produced, plaintiff had for some time piled lumber for use in its manufacturing business. It seems this lumber, of the value of, say, $40,000, was piled there by leave of the Hafner heirs, who, in turn, as owners of the stock in plaintiff corporation, controlled the latter.

At a certain time in the late summer and fall of 1910, defendant city, acting through its mayor, its harbor and wharf commissioner and its law department, served notice on plaintiff to remove said lumber — this by virtue of certain ordinances. On failure of plaintiff to do so (which happened) the city marshal was ordered to remove the same. Thereupon that officer, in a writing aptly referring by description to the part of the wharf so obstructed, to the municipal code and pertinent ordinances, gave plaintiff notice to remove the lumber piles within ten days, or in default that he (the marshal) would remove them. It seems this notice had been preceded by negotiations, for, say, two months, looking to the clearing away of the alleged obstructions and that when the marshal finally served notice, plaintiff asked to be further notified of the exact day the officer would appear on the scene and began removing the lumber — this evidently for the purpose of entering a verbal protest, and thereby laying a supposed foundation for projected litigation. Accordingly the marshal, by word of mouth, gave plaintiff notice [629]*629when he appeared with his men and teams, and then and there plaintiff protested against his contemplated action.

Going hack a little, it will do to say that in the prior negotiations between the city officers and plaintiff, the latter asserted “color of title” and the right to possession. Moreover, as the ordinance of the city provided for the seizure and sale of material wrongfully stored on wharf property and constituting an obstruction, plaintiff, having a large amount of lumber in jeopardy, concluded not to put all its eggs in one basket. Accordingly, immediately before the marshal came on the scene to remove the lumber it seized time by the forelock and removed substantially all of any value. It left a few ‘ ‘ top boards ’ ’ and some stakes used in piling, and we get the impression these were left for the very purpose of testing plaintiff’s rights without, at the selfsame stroke, putting too much at hazard. The marshal removed the lumber so left and after due notice sold it for the rise of $50 on due advertisement at public auction. One of plaintiff’s officers estimated the real value of the lumber so sold at the rise of $300. Having cleared off the wharf, the marshal left the premises vacant and so. they are to this day. On the same day the marshal began remov-' ing the lumber, or presently and while it was in the course of being removed, plaintiff began this action in forcible entry and detainer before a justice of the peace, alleging -it was “lawfully possessed” of the premises, describing them, and that on the 21st day of November, 1910, while it was so “in lawful possession thereof, defendant city forcibly entered into the possession of the premises and forcibly detains possession from plaintiff to its damage,” etc., wherefore plaintiff prays “judgment of restitution” and for its damag-es including the value of the monthly rents and profits, etc.

[630]*630The cause was taken by certiorari to the circuit court, and there defendant filed an answer admitting it was a municipal corporation, denying every other allegation in the complaint and its guilt in the manner and form, charged. Defendant then, by affirmative allegations, asserted its charter power to establish, open and regulate public wharfs; that in pursuance of that power', by proper ordinances, it had established such wharfs and was in control and possession of them; that the property described in the complaint was part and parcel of the property established by defendant as a public wharf and of which defendant had had possession for fifty years prior to the suit as part of its said wharf. The answer next went on in detail to set up the power of defendant city to prevent and abate nuisances by ordinances, to remove all obstructions and encumbrances from public property and specially pleaded certain ordinances making persons guilty of a misdemeanor who place upon any wharf any nuisance, encumbrance or impediment, requiring the same to be removed by such parties and providing that if they are not removed within the time designated by a named officer, to-wit, the harbor and wharf commissioner, such parties shall, as said, be guilty of a misdemeanor. Pleading also another ordinance leveled against the occupancy of and encroachment upon or obstruction of public wharfs, and providing for the removal of such obstructions, averring that plaintiff unlawfully placed upon a certain part of defendant’s public wharf, to-wit, the premises described in the complaint, obstructions consisting of piles of lumber and thereby creating a nuisance upon such public wharf, to the hindrance and detriment of the public in its use of the same. The answer went on to justify the removal of the lumber by averring that defendant acted in strict compliance with the methods prescribed in the last-mentioned ordinance, number 25363, averring that complainant could not have any lawful right or use of said public wharf [631]*631or any lawful possession thereof as against defendant, but that it had, in so obstructing and encumbering said public wharf, become and was a wrongdoer and as such was subject to prosecution and conviction as a misdemeanant.

On pleadings thus outlined, the cause was tried without a jury. Sufficiently more of the record to understandingly dispose of points we deem material, will appear in connection with rulings on such points.

We state questions in our own-way.

I. O.f rulings on evidence.

(a) In making its case, plaintiff introduced a deed dated in 1881 from Branch and Gartside to Joseph Hafner (said Joseph being the ancestor of the Hafner heirs hereinbefore referred to) to the locus in quo and other land; and another from one Butler, trustee, to said Hafner, dated in 1879. This latter deed evidenced the foreclosure of a deed of trust given by two persons named Glasgow. It conveyed property (we take to be the block on which plaintiff’s plant is situate) described as running to the wharf, together with “all accretions to the same belonging, east thereof,” which quoted clause covers the locus in quo. These deeds were offered and admitted to show what plaintiff’s counsel called at the time “possession” and “color of title,” “not the right to this property.” Said deeds with plats, notices referred to hereinbefore, and oral evidence relating to the permission given by the Hafner heirs to plaintiff corporation to pile lumber on the premises, and the actual piling of such lumber thereon and the removal of the same — all as hereinbefore set forth — in a nutshell constitute the facts upon which plaintiff relied for recovery. It will be of interest to note, as presently shown, that defendant itself holds under the Glasgows and others.

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Bluebook (online)
172 S.W. 28, 262 Mo. 621, 1914 Mo. LEXIS 189, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hafner-manufacturing-co-v-city-of-st-louis-mo-1914.