Kitchen v. City of Clinton

8 S.W.2d 602, 320 Mo. 569, 1928 Mo. LEXIS 799
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 3, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 8 S.W.2d 602 (Kitchen v. City of Clinton) 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
Kitchen v. City of Clinton, 8 S.W.2d 602, 320 Mo. 569, 1928 Mo. LEXIS 799 (Mo. 1928).

Opinions

The above entitled and numbered causes were consolidated by order of this court, and were argued, briefed and submitted by the respective parties as a consolidated cause. Both causes involve the same facts and questions of law, and consequently the separate appeals in both causes may properly be ruled by one opinion. For brevity, we will refer to the first cause as the Kitchen case, and to the other as the Barrie case.

The Kitchen case is an action in equity, in which the plaintiff, Georgia Kitchen, an owner of real property abutting on Third Street in the city of Clinton, sought to permanently enjoin said city from letting a contract for the grading, curbing and paving of said Third Street between Wilson and Elm streets. A temporary restraining order or injunction was not asked by plaintiff or granted by the circuit court, nor was an injunction bond filed in the cause, whereupon the city proceeded to let the contract for said street improvement, and the improvement provided for by the contract was in due time completed by the contractor, accepted by the municipal officials, the several tracts of land liable for the cost of the improvement were *Page 572 assessed therefor, and special tax bills, evidencing such assessments, were issued by the city and delivered to the contractor. Thereafter, plaintiff amended her petition and sought to have the tax bill, evidencing the local or special assessment against her real property, declared invalid and void, and that the city, and all persons into whose hands said tax bills may fall, be enjoined from attempting to collect or enforce the same as a lien against plaintiff's real property.

The plaintiff in the Barrie case is the assignee and owner of the special tax bills issued by the city of Clinton for the grading, curbing and paving of Third Street in said city between Wilson and Elm streets, as provided by the contract aforesaid. As assignee and owner of said tax bills, plaintiff commenced seventeen separate suits in the Circuit Court of Henry County to enforce the liens and payment of certain of said tax bills against the respective owners of the real property respectively described in said tax bills. By order of the Circuit Court of Henry County, the seventeen separate suits were consolidated and tried as one consolidated cause, under the title, Robert Barrie, plaintiff, v. Tina Toller et al., defendants.

Both the Kitchen and Barrie cases were tried to the court without the aid of a jury, resulting in separate judgments against the several property owners, and in favor of Barrie, the assignee of the tax bills, and the city of Clinton. After unsuccessful motions for new trial and in arrest of judgment, the respective parties against whom such judgments were entered were allowed appeals to this court. The aggregate amount of the special tax bills involved in said consolidated causes exceeds the sum of $7500, exclusive of court costs, and we retain jurisdiction of the appeals therein for the reason that the amount in dispute, exclusive of costs, in the consolidated causes exceeds the minimum of our pecuniary jurisdiction. [Art. 6, sec. 12. Const. Mo.; Aufderheide v. Polar Wave lce Fuel Co. (Mo. Sup., En Banc), 319 Mo. 337, 4 S.W.2d 776, l.c. 801.]

It is contended by appellants that the city of Clinton was ousted of jurisdiction to proceed with the improvement of Third Street in question, and to let a contract therefor, because of the filing by a majority in number, and in frontage of abutting property, of the resident property owners interested in the improvement of said Third Street between the intersecting streets aforesaid. Respondents insist that the remonstrance so filed was insufficient and ineffective in that it was not signed by a majority in number of the resident owners of property abutting on said street, and therefore that the city of Clinton was not ousted of jurisdiction to proceed with the improvement in question; and, furthermore, that the council of said city, by ordinance duly enacted by the council and approved by the mayor of said city, made the specific finding of fact that "a majority of the resident owners owning a majority of the abutting front feet of property liable *Page 573 to taxation for said work did not file with the city clerk any protest against said improvements." which finding and determination by the city council is final, conclusive and binding upon the courts of this State. The appellants make no other attack herein upon the form, substance or regularity of the proceedings of the city council under which the improvement in controversy was made, or respecting the manner of letting and the manner of performance of the contract for said improvement, the acceptance of said work by the municipal officials, the amounts of the several special assessments levied against the respective tracts of real property abutting upon the street improved, or the form and sufficiency of the special tax bills evidencing such assessments. Therefore, the sole and single legal question to be ruled and determined herein is whether or not the remonstrance filed with the city clerk was sufficient in the number of signers, or protesters, to halt and arrest the making of the improvement, and to oust the council of jurisdiction thereover.

The city of Clinton is a city of the third class, and the statute respecting the making of street improvements applicable to said city (R.S. 1919. sec. 8324, as re-enacted by the 51st General Assembly, Laws 1921, 1st Ex. Sess., p. 117) is as follows: "Before the city council shall be authorized . . . to grade, pave or gutter the roadway part of any street when the improvement is to be paid for with special tax bills, they shall, by resolution, declare that they deem such improvement necessary to be made, and shall cause such resolution to be published in some newspaper printed and published in the city, for two consecutive insertions in a weekly paper, or seven consecutive insertions in a daily paper, and if a majority of the residentowners of the lands that would be liable for the cost of theimprovement, at the date of the passage of the resolution, whoshall own a majority of the front feet owned by residents of thecity abutting on the street or part of street proposed to beimproved, shall not within ten days after the date of the last publication file with the city clerk their protest against such improvement then the council shall have the power to cause the improvement to be made; and if the council shall find anddeclare by ordinance that no such majority have so filed suchprotest, such finding and declaration shall be conclusive, after the execution of the contract for the making of the improvement, and thereafter no special tax bill shall be held invalid for the reason that a protest sufficiently signed was filed with the clerk." (Italics are ours.)

It is conceded by the parties herein that the requisite resolution for the proposed improvement was duly adopted by the city council and duly published pursuant to the aforesaid statute, and that the remonstrance in question was filed with the city clerk within the time specified by said statute. It will be noted, from the italicized language *Page 574

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Niehaus v. Mitchell
417 S.W.2d 509 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1967)
Flanigan v. City of Springfield
360 S.W.2d 700 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1962)
Darrah v. Foster
355 S.W.2d 24 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1962)
Marks v. Bettendorf's, Inc.
337 S.W.2d 585 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1960)
Sheets v. Thomann
336 S.W.2d 701 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1960)
Bonner v. City of Imperial
32 N.W.2d 267 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1948)
Dawson v. Scott
49 S.W.2d 87 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1932)
Blackwell v. City of Lee's Summit
32 S.W.2d 63 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1930)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
8 S.W.2d 602, 320 Mo. 569, 1928 Mo. LEXIS 799, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kitchen-v-city-of-clinton-mo-1928.