Kansas City v. Jones Store Co.

28 S.W.2d 1008, 325 Mo. 226
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 3, 1930
DocketNos. 29710, 30205.
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 28 S.W.2d 1008 (Kansas City v. Jones Store Co.) 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
Kansas City v. Jones Store Co., 28 S.W.2d 1008, 325 Mo. 226 (Mo. 1930).

Opinion

*239 WHTTE, J.

These two cases were argued and submitted together.

The first was a proceeding under Article VI of the Charter of Kansas City for the purpose of widening Fifteenth Street from Campbell Street on the east to Baltimore Avenue on the west. Fifteenth Street was already one hundred feet wide from the eastern city limits to Campbell Street. From Campbell Street west to Grand Avenue, about seven blocks, it was seventy feet wide; along that part of the street 29^ feet were taken off the property on'the south side. From Grand Avenue to Baltimore Avenue, three blocks, the street was fifty feet wide, and for that distance 49J feet were taken off the property along the south side of Fifteenth Street.

Beginning about seven blocks east of Campbell Street a benefit district was laid out embracing a territory of one-half block on each side of Fifteenth Street from that point to the middle of the block between Oak and McGee streets, the latter being the first street east of Grand Avenue. Then the benefit district extended north more than five blocks, west from that point five or six blocks, and south about a block and a half, embracing apparently a large part of the business district of the city.

Ordinance No. 55188 was passed, describing the property taken and the property to be benefited, under Section 129, Article VI of the Charter, and the proceeding was begun in the Circuit Court of Jackson County. A jury was impaneled under Section 142, Article VI, of the Charter, and the trial proceeded. Several of the parties whose property was condemned appeared. One of them, Levy Brothers, a corporation, elected to have damages assessed by common law jury. This was accordingly done. The others whose property was taken appeared and contested the proceeding. *240 Some of those within the benefit district entered their appearance under Section 140, Article VI. Damages were assessed to the owners of the property taken, and benefits assessed to those in the benefit district according to the valuation of the land, exclusive of improvements. Judgment was entered accordingly. Three of the owners of property taken appealed in due form. Several of those within the benefit district, affected only by the benefits assessed, also appealed'. That is case No. 29710.

After that case was appealed to this court, and after the briefs of some of the appellants had been served upon the city, the city, October 16, 1929, filed a motion to amend the bill of exceptions by incorporating' in the bill the voir dire examination of the jury impaneled to assess damages and benefits. On the same day the city filed also a motion to correct the record so as to show that the jurors impaneled were six disinterested freeholders of Kansas City, the record proper having failed to show it. Some defendants filed motions to strike out those motions. These were overruled October 26, 1929, and the two motions filed by the city sustained. Motions were filed by several of the defendants asking the court to set aside the orders sustaining the two motions to amend the bill of exceptions and correct the record, and praying for a rehearing on such motions. The court overruled each and all of said motions and those defendants duly appealed from the order. That is Case No. 30205.

Of those appealing were Kansas City Public Service Company, Ida E. "Waddell and Leonard Everett, whose property was condemned to widen Fifteenth Street, while Jones Store Company, Albert L. Gustin, John W. Foyle, Kansas City Soeialer Turnverein, George A. Jakobe, et al., were in the benefit district and appealed on account of the alleged excessive benefits assessed to their property.

I. It is first claimed by several appellants that the trial court was without jurisdiction to condemn the property or assess benefits and damages because the ordinance, order empaneling the jury, an(^ n°tice publication failed to describe the property to be taken as required by law. It is further claimed that it failed to describe the property included within the benefit district as required by law.

Article VI of the Kansas City charter authorizes the city to exercise the power of eminent domain and determine the damage caused to private property by any public work, improvement, use or restriction.

Section 129 of the Article requires that whenever any ordinance shall' provide for the purchase, taking or damaging of any private property, etc., “the city shall by ordinance describe the private property to be so taken, purchased, damaged or restricted” and *241 “tbe council shall also by ordinance prescribe the limits of the district within which the private property shall be deemed to be benefited by the proposed improvement, and be assessed and charged to pay compensation therefor,” and, “in any such ordinance separate description of each piece or parcel of property affected. shall not be required; but it shall be a sufficient description of the property to be purchased, taken or damaged, to give a description by metes and bounds of the entire tract or tracts so to be purchased, taken or damaged, whether the same be composed of one or more than one piece or parcel.”

Kespondents claim Ordinance No. 55188 was passed in accordance with that section, and in accordance with Section 130, Article VI, of the Charter, the engineer and his assistant prepared a plat containing a correct description of their several lots or parcels of private property taken or damaged, etc.

Then the city, in accordance with Section 131, Article VI, filed in the Circuit Court of Jackson County a' duly certified copy of the ordinance, together with said plat or map, as required, when the proceeding was begun.

The objection of the appellants to the description of the property condemned is that it does not set out by metes and bounds nor by lot number, each particular tract of land, but is a blanket description and includes property of the city, north and south streets and alleys. It begins with Campbell Street on the east and describes the land by a line running around that part of the private property to be condemned on the south side of Fifteenth Street, from Baltimore Avenue to Campbell Street, and includes the cross streets and alleys in the strip described. The same objection is urged to the benefit district. It is described by a boundary around all the land included in the benefit district, with streets and alleys that run through it in different directions. The section of the Ordinance No. 55188 describing the property taken, ends with this sentence:

“All private property within the said boundary lines is hereby taken and condemned for public use as a part of Fifteenth Street so opened, widened, extended and established.”

The description of the benefit district in the same ordinance begins thus:

“The council hereby determines and prescribes the limits within which private property shall be deemed benefited by the improvement herein proposed and be assessed and charged to pay compensation therefor, as follows: ’ ’

Thus the objection that streets and alleys are included within the boundaries of the property condemned to widen Fifteenth Street and within the boundaries of the benefit district is met- by the terms of the ordinance itself which includes only the

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Bluebook (online)
28 S.W.2d 1008, 325 Mo. 226, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kansas-city-v-jones-store-co-mo-1930.