Home Builders Ass'n of Greater Kansas City v. Kansas City

464 S.W.2d 5, 1971 Mo. LEXIS 1099
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 8, 1971
DocketNo. 54944
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 464 S.W.2d 5 (Home Builders Ass'n of Greater Kansas City v. Kansas City) 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
Home Builders Ass'n of Greater Kansas City v. Kansas City, 464 S.W.2d 5, 1971 Mo. LEXIS 1099 (Mo. 1971).

Opinion

BARDGETT, Judge.

This is the second appeal in this suit for declaratory judgment. Plaintiffs-respondents are the assignees of 89 water-main extension contracts entered into between various contractors and builders, plaintiffs-assignors, and the City of Kansas City through its Director of Water Department. These contracts are the subject matter of Counts II and III of plaintiffs’ petition and the question of their validity was the issue on a prior appeal at which time this court held the subject contracts to be valid. Homebuilders Ass’n of Greater Kansas [7]*7City v. Kansas City, Mo., 431 S.W.2d 111 (hereafter referred to as Home Builders I).

Counts II and III were remanded to permit the trial court to amend its judgment with reference to reimbursement in accordance with the views expressed therein and to permit the trial court to determine the status of refunds on said contracts and the additional sums, if any, to which plaintiffs were entitled from defendant’s water fund.

On retrial the circuit court found in favor of plaintiffs and against defendant on both counts and rendered judgment against defendant in the total sum of $391,909.05. Defendant Kansas City appeals. This court has jurisdiction. The parties will be referred to in accordance with their positions in the court below.

In rendering judgment in the amount stated, the trial court found as fact “That there are sufficient funds available in defendant’s water fund to pay the refunds due to plaintiffs”; “That the refunds due to plaintiffs are to be paid from the net revenue available in the City’s Water Fund for enlargements, extensions and better-ments of the City’s water plant as determined and required by Section 48 of the City’s Charter”; and that “the issue of the method of computing refunds was not in issue, or raised by either party on appeal of this cause to the Supreme Court of Missouri,” referring to Home Builders I.

The first question now is whether this court in Home Builders I resolved the question of whether or not the contractors (Home Builders) may look to the water fund as a whole less priority items provided for in Sec. 48 of the charter or whether the fund available for refunds is restricted to the revenues produced by customers connected to the particular extensions less the priority items mentioned.

The parties stipulated and the trial court found that “the issue of the method of computing refunds was not in issue, or raised by either party on appeal of this cause to the Supreme Court of Missouri,” referring to Home Builders I. Nevertheless, the city here contends that the opinion in Home Builders I limited the fund for payment of refunds to the net revenue derived from customers connected to the particular water main extensions, and the trial court erred in not limiting refunds to such a fund.

In Home Builders I, loc. cit. 115[4], this court held: “Accordingly, the trial court should amend its judgment with reference to Counts II and III to make clear that the reimbursements to which plaintiffs are entitled under their contracts is to be from net revenue from customers connected to the particular extension in accordance with their contracts and the requirements of Sec. 48 of the charter. The judgment should provide that payments from the water fund to plaintiffs are to be made only on that basis.”

The issue in Home Builders I was whether or not the contracts were valid since they did not contain the certification required by Sec. 82 of the charter. Home Builders in the prior appeal argued they were valid in the absence of such a certification because they were contingent obligations.

Home Builders’ brief in the prior appeal, page 31, in referring to the type of obligation the contracts involved in Counts II and III imposed, argued:

“In neither case did the City contract to make a payment which would be charged to an appropriation, for any refunds or reimbursements were dependent solely upon revenues from the extensions, and conditions under which the deposits were to be refunded or reimbursements were to be made inured solely to the benefit of the City because, if the revenue derived from the water main extensions was not sufficient under the formula established, after a ten year period the City had no further obligation to respondents with respect to deposit or property.” (Emphasis theirs.)

[8]*8Kansas City in its brief on the prior appeal, page 21, asserted:

“Theoretically the refunds therein called for were to be made from revenues from sales of water to customers serviced by the particular main extension.”

Home Builders’ contention was that these contracts were not under Sec. 82 of the charter because they were contingent. The city’s position was that the contracts were under Sec. 82 of the charter regardless of whether they were contingent or not.

This court, on the issue of whether the contracts required the certification provided for in Sec. 82 of the charter, held the contracts did not fall within Sec. 82 of the charter because they conferred only contingent rights on Home Builders. It, therefore, became necessary to identify and define that upon which the decision is premised — contingent rights. In so doing, this court held that the total fund out of which refunds could be paid to any particular contractor was limited to the total revenue derived from customers connected to the particular extension covered in the contracts as reduced by charges against that fund of the priority items set forth in Sec. 48 of the city’s charter. Whether or not there would be any money left over after payment of the Sec. 48 expenses was the contingency without which the contracts would be invalid. Home Builders I, loc.cit. 115[4].

The question of what constituted the fund from which the refunds could be paid was necessary to the determination of the validity of the contracts themselves and this court’s decision on that matter constitutes the law of this case. This is so whether the question is put with reference to the validity of the contracts or with reference to a construction of the contracts.

A decision of the Supreme Court of Missouri upon a point becomes the law of the case upon that point and is controlling upon further proceedings in that case in the lower court. Jenkins v. Wabash Ry. Co., 232 Mo.App. 438, 107 S.W.2d 204, 211, State ex rel. Curtis v. Broaddus, 238 Mo. 189, 142 S.W. 340.

We hold that the decision of this court in the prior appeal of this case finally determined the issue pertaining to the fund from which refunds could be paid, and the trial court erred in utilizing the method set forth in paragraph A of Part II of the stipulation in computing refunds. Reimbursements of refunds on the contracts which is the subject matter of Counts II and III must be governed by the directions set forth by this court in Home Builders I, loc.cit. 115 [4].

Home Builders argue that since the city and the plaintiffs, prior to the first appeal in this case, interpreted ordinance 22809 and ordinance 27276 and the contracts executed thereunder in the manner urged by Home Builders, that we should accede to that interpretation.

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Bluebook (online)
464 S.W.2d 5, 1971 Mo. LEXIS 1099, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/home-builders-assn-of-greater-kansas-city-v-kansas-city-mo-1971.