Kansas City v. Woerishoeffer

155 S.W. 779, 249 Mo. 1, 1913 Mo. LEXIS 57
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 28, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 155 S.W. 779 (Kansas City v. Woerishoeffer) 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. Woerishoeffer, 155 S.W. 779, 249 Mo. 1, 1913 Mo. LEXIS 57 (Mo. 1913).

Opinion

LAMM, C. J.

These are appeals by lot-owners from the assessment of damages and benefits in a street improvement, known as the Twelth Street Trafficway. Three appeals came up and bore our serial docket numbers 16927, 17036, 17042. In the first Anna Woerishoeffer and another, in the second the Metropolitan Street Railway Company and three others, in the third C. II. Carson and Elizabeth Strope, are appellants. The proceeding involved a great many individuals, corporations and tracts of land in Kansas City, but there was one verdict and one judgment in the Jackson Circuit Court. So, the suit, though of omnibus character, was an entirety. In view of those facts, under the reasoning of State ex rel. v. Gill, 84 Mo. 248, those appeals were consolidated here into one cause on motion. The public interest being involved, the consolidated cause was advanced on motion, heard In Banc at the January call, 1913, and submitted on oral argument and a group of briefs.

Pending these appeals, two appellants, Elizabeth Strope and C. H. Carson, died testate. Thereat George W. Strope (executor and sole devisee under [15]*15the will of Elizabeth) and Frank F. Rozzelle (executor of the last will of C. H. Carson) and divers persons, heirs and devisees of Carson, enter their appearance as substituted parties and on leave granted file briefs.

The case, m outline, is this:

Topographically the lay of the land on which Kansas City is situate is unique, viz., bottoms and upland (hereinafter called uptown) — the line of demarkation between uptown and bottoms being a bold bluff. Speaking generally, in the bottoms are packing, whole-saleand manufacturing interests, together with freight depots, stockyards and allied businesses, while uptown are the retail and residence districts of a great and rapidly expanding city. Twelfth is an east-and-west street of some length and cuts the bluff at right angles. Twelfth at the bluff, left in a state of nature, is too precipitous for surface hauling or travel. Appellant railway company has long had one track, and maybe more, on Twelfth passing over the bluff on a viaduct. But this viaduct was. not for ordinary street travel or traffic. It was ■ confined to street cars. Twelfth street is the shortest distance between the heart of'the business district in the bottoms and the residence and retail districts uptown. If opened it would be the town’s main artery. Barring street-car passage, up to this time the immense surface hauling and travel, to and fro from the bottoms and uptown, is by circuitous routes to the north and south of Twelfth over heavy grades on Sixth and Twenty-fourth streets. In busy hours the stream of hauling and travel flows over a network of railroad tracks and was often dammed, to the delay and detriment of transportation, time being money in commerce and travel. The growth of the city’s population and traffic has been such that its commerce was more and more clogged and handicapped by those conditions and its future development menaced. Moreover, the rail[16]*16way company faced this situation: Its viaduct was old and needed reconstructing. Thereon it has used cable cars up to this time — a form of transportation (in this case) dangerous, antiquated and inadequate. The mutual welfare of company and city exciting and enlisting mutual interest, the establishing of a grade and building a viaduct on Twelfth suitable to the needs of both, so that the street-car line might be modernized and electrified and travel and traffic on Twelfth be opened over the bluff, had become a matter of crying public concern.

There is .a street crossing Twelfth in the bottoms known as Liberty. There is another uptown crossing Twelfth known as Broadway. The Trafficway, as the proposed plan will be called, starts at Liberty as its west terminus and ends at Broadway as its eastern. The distance between the two is more than a half mile. The proposed viaduct structure is the rise of two-fifth of a mile long. To solve the engineering problem of the Trafficway, the grade not only of Twelfth, but portions of some cross streets between the bluff and Broadway (viz., Washington, Pennsylvania, Jefferson and Summit) had to be changed. It was also necessary to widen Twelfth on the surface for a certain distance in the bottoms and to condemn land for that purpose, also to condemn an overhead easement on Twelfth for the viaduct. So, to save a great and unnecessary expense in the bottoms, at a certain point on Twelfth for a very little way on one side, it was necessary to widen the overhead right of way on Twelfth by condemning an overhead right of way over a little strip of land fifteen feet wide on which buildings stand. Approaches thereto and a double-deck viaduct built of reinforced concrete were component parts of the improvement, as said. The upper deck of this viaduct is for street cars, then a roadway for wheeled vehicles and horse travel, next a footway, ■all sixty feet wide from out-to-out. The lower deck, [17]*17on an easier grade, was necessary for the heaviest hauling and is thirty feet wide. Travel on this lower deck does not leave or enter the viaduct at the same level as on the upper deck. This necessitated a street approach or roadway known as Beardsley street to be constructed, and the heavy hauling flows in and out of the lower deck from the north and south on Beardsley. Heavy fills were necessary at the east end of the viaduct to he buttressed by retaining walls.

Such was the scheme as a whole, demanding this proceeding as a necessary step.

The first attempt to widen Twelfth, condemn an overhead easement, to build this viaduct and its approaches, to assess damages and benefits, and do the necessary grading on Twelfth and cross streets, was abortive. [Kansas City v. Railroad, 230 Mo. 369.] That proceeding, commenced under a former ordinance and charter, was an attempt to assess damages and benefits. Unfortunately it was apparent, under the record presented, that the benefits would be purely conjectural and speculative unless the viaduct was built. There was where the shoe pinched. There was no evidence (outside of oral testimony) that there was an existing concrete municipal plan, intent or ability to build the viaduct, or any official action heading thereto. However, the city was successful below in the first proceeding and, as said, the cause was appealed here. On the showing then made we reversed the judgment with directions to ‘dismiss the suit. [230 Mo. 369, supra.] The opinion in that case should be read with this, because in this case there is an elaborate and conscientious' effort on the part. of the city to meet the requirements outlined by this court in the former case, to which we will recur again.

The engineer’s estimate of the cost of the viaduct proper, as planned, is'$565,000. Absent countervailing evidence, that estimate may be assumed [18]*18throughout as true. At a bond election bonds to the amount of $475,000 were voted by the city for the purpose of aiding in the building of the viaduct and the grading of Twelfth street, the cost of the latter being, say, $15,000. By ordinance $325,000 of the proceeds of those bonds were pledged and devoted to the improvement. By another and later ordinance $75,000 more of the proceeds of the bonds were pledged and devoted to the same purpose. The Metropolitan Street Eailway Company is in the hands of two receivers appointed by the decree of the United States court.

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Bluebook (online)
155 S.W. 779, 249 Mo. 1, 1913 Mo. LEXIS 57, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kansas-city-v-woerishoeffer-mo-1913.