Heman Construction Co. v. Lyon

211 S.W. 68, 277 Mo. 628, 1919 Mo. LEXIS 49
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 28, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 211 S.W. 68 (Heman Construction Co. v. Lyon) 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
Heman Construction Co. v. Lyon, 211 S.W. 68, 277 Mo. 628, 1919 Mo. LEXIS 49 (Mo. 1919).

Opinion

WALKER, J.

This appeal seeks the review of a suit tried in the circuit court of the City of St. Louis, which resulted in a judgment in favor of respondent, for the enforcement of the lien of six special tax bills against parcels of land owned by appellants. These bills had been issued by said city to the respondent, for the construction of what was designated as a Second Section of the North Harlem Joint District Sewer. Numerous special defenses were interposed. We will examine those to which the appellants call attention in their assignment of errors, which are as follows:

[634]*634That the trial court erred in not finding for appellants upon the whole record; that appellants’ declarations of law should have been given; that the tax bills violated rights guaranteed under Section 21 or Section 30, Article 2, of the Constitution of Missouri, and the Fourteenth Amendment of the Constitution of the United States.

Advertising for Bids. I. Appellants contend that the ordinance authorizing the work contained no provision requiring an ad- [’ vertising for bids, and that the tax bills issued thereunder were consequently invalid. This contention, more briefly put, is that the ordinance is void in not directing the Board of Public Improvements to advertise for bids in a particular manner.

"While the ordinance authorizing this work was silent as to the manner in which the advertisment for bids was to be made, the charter relative thereto, in force at the time of these proceedings, provided that: “The Board of Public Improvements shall prepare and submit to the Assembly an ordinance, with an estimate- of the cost endorsed thereon, by the president of the board, authorizing the doing of any proposed work, and under the direction of the ordinance authorizing the same, shall advertise for bids, in the papers doing the city printing, three times, the last publication to be at least ten days before the day appointed for the opening of the bids, stating the general nature of the work to be done and the time and place when the bids will be received, and shall let out said work by contract to the lowest responsible bidder. Any other mode of letting out or contracting for work shall be held as illegal and void. But when so provided in the ordinance authorizing or directing the work to be done, the advertising may be for a different period, and in other papers than those provided above.” [Part of Sec. 27, Art. 6, Charter of St. Louis, adopted Oct. 20, 1901.]

[635]*635The manner of the required advertisement is thus clearly and directly prescribed, and that it was pursued as thus directed, there is no controversy. If provision had been made in the ordinance as to the manner of the advertising, it would have accomplished no purpose, unless another mode than that authorized by the charter had been indicated.

In Bambrick v. Campbell, 37 Mo. App. l. c. 465, the St. Louis Court of Appeals, in an opinion by Eombatjbe, P. J., in discussing a provision of the city charter then in force, in relation to the purchasing of supplies, held, that “where the charter prescribed that the municipal assembly shall provide by ordinance for the purchase of all articles by the commissioner of supplies by advertising for proposals, and then stated in detail the manner of advertising and the opening of bids, and the awarding of contracts, that the object of the charter was to make advertisements and bids for public work conform to this 'provision, and that the ordinance referred .to,' in the charter provision above quoted, ‘under the direction of the ordinance,’ meant an- ordinance providing for advertising which conforms in details to the charter requirement in advertising for bids for supplies; and that the object of the provision was to secure to the public the same particularity and exactness in advertisements for public work as the charter requires in advertisements for supplies. No claim is made that the board did not advertise for this work, as required by the charter provision; the only claim being that the advertisement was not provided for in the ordinance providing for the improvement.” Under this state of facts, the court held that there was no merit in the assignment as to the insufficiency in the advertisement.

The purpose of advertising is to secure competitive bids. This can be as effectively accomplished under the power granted by the charter as if prescribed in an ordinance; that the latter might, under the authority of the charter, have provided for a ddifferent manner of publicity than is required by the former, it may be [636]*636admitted. Of this, however, appellants do not complain, hut simply of the absence of a provision from the ordinance directing the manner in which the. public was to be notified that bids for the work would be received. It is true that in the imposition of public burdens upon private property, the law' authorizing same should be strictly complied with, that no right the owner of the property is entitled to may be denied to him. As Ellison, J., aptly said in City of Kirksville v. Coleman, 103 Mo. App. l. c. 221: “It is well known and universally- recognized that there is nothing the law guards with more care and jealousy than it does the right, of man to demand that, before his money or property be taken from him without his consent, every provision of the law made for that purpose shall be strictly followed.” But, under the facts, that doctrine cannot be invoked here. The charter provision as to advertising was ample in itself to give notice to the public of the proceeding and as a consequence to afford an opportunity to contractors to bid for the work. Having been complied with, the appellants can not claim that its requirements were not observed, and hence no possibility of injury to them can be said to have arisen. Appellants’ complaint, therefore, must necessarily be limited to the contention that the absence of a requirement as to advertising from the ordinance rendered it invalid to the extent that the Board of Public Improvements were not authorized to proceed thereunder, through a lack of jurisdiction.

If the reasoning of Judge Rombattee, in the Barnbrick case, supra, concerning the construction to be given a charter provision in regard to advertising, almost indentical in its terms with that under consideration, is not' sufficient by parity of reasoning to settle this question adversely to appellants’ contention, then a reference to the elementary rules regulating the course to be pursued in a case of this character may with propriety be resorted to.

A municipal contract for public improvements is subject to the following general limitations and condi[637]*637tions: (1) the subject matter of the proposed contract must be included within the ordinance ordering the' improvement; (2) the contract must not surrender or abrogate any public function or duty; (3) it must be let and made in accordance with the method prescribed. As we have shown, a formal compliance with these general rules was observed in this proceeding, in that the ordinance possessed all of the jurisdictional features it was required to possess as to the nature and character of the improvements: [City of Poplar Bluff v. Bacon, 144 Mo. App. 476; Coulter v. Const. Co., 131 Mo. App. 267.] This being true, it cannot be reasonably App. 230; Barber Asphalt Co. v. O’Brien, 128 Mo. said that there was anything lacking to give the Board of Public Improvements full and complete jurisdiction in the premises. There is, therefore, no merit in this contention.

Delay II.

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Bluebook (online)
211 S.W. 68, 277 Mo. 628, 1919 Mo. LEXIS 49, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/heman-construction-co-v-lyon-mo-1919.