Paul v. Burress

132 S.W. 330, 152 Mo. App. 39, 1910 Mo. App. LEXIS 964
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 5, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 132 S.W. 330 (Paul v. Burress) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Paul v. Burress, 132 S.W. 330, 152 Mo. App. 39, 1910 Mo. App. LEXIS 964 (Mo. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinion

NIXON, P. J.

This was an action in equity to obtain the cancellation of a special taxbill for $51.48, issued by the city of Joplin for the construction of a sewer which was laid along an alley back of appellant’s property, the grounds alleged for relief being that said taxbill was void and constituted a cloud on appellant’s title. Defendant, the owner of the taxbill, prevailed before the chancellor, and the case is be[42]*42fore us on the appeal of the plaintiff, the owner of the property assessed. The ordinance authorizing the improvement is not set forth at any place in the abstract and we have no knowledge of its provisions. The contract for the construction of the sewer, dated February 7, 1907, provided as follows:

“11. The first party shall not be entitled to any claim for damages for any hindrance or delay, from any cause whatever, in the progress of the work, or any portion thereof, but such hindrance may entitle such first party to an extension of time for completing this contract sufficient to compensate for this detention, the same to be determined by the city engineer, provided he shall have immediate notice in writing of the cause of the detention.
‘ ‘ 12. The work embraced in this contract shall be begun within one week after written notice so to do shall have been given to the contractor by the city engineer, and carried on regularly and uninterruptedly thereafter (unless the said engineer shall otherwise in writing specially direct) with such a force as to secure its full completion by July 25, 1907, thereafter, the time of beginning, rate of progress, and time of completion being essential conditions of this contract. And if the contractor shall fail to complete the work by the time above specified, the sum of five dollars per day for each and every day thereafter until such completion, shall be deducted from the moneys payable under the contract. ’ ’

The record furnished us does not show when the city engineer gave the written notice to the contractor to commence work or when work was actually begun. The work was not completed on July 25, 1907. The evidence shows that on August 20, 1907, a request for an extension of sixty days was filed by the defendant with the city council, reciting that on account of delay caused by failure of pipe to arrive in time and scarcity of men, it had been impossible to complete the’ [43]*43work, and- the extension was granted. Defendant testified (without contradiction) that the work was completed on September 5, 1907. On October 1, 1907, the report of the committee on sewers was made to the council in which the committee stated that the work was found to be completed “according to the plans, specifications and contract and within the contract time as extended by the city council August 20 to October 20, 1907,” and the city council accepted the work. Defendant testified that the reason this report was so long delayed was because Pat Hennessey, the chairman of the sewer committee, was ill, and insisted on seeing the sewer himself before it was accepted; that the sewer had been completed about three weeks when Hennessey inspected it. Defendant admitted that no deduction of five dollars a day after July 25, 1907, was made, and the taxbills were issued for the full amount.

Ajjpellant contends that time is of the essence of the contract in question, and that the city council could not extend the time for completing the work after the original time mentioned in the contract had expired.

This case stands on the border-ground of a number of decisions in this state concerning the branch of taxbill law which has to do with the timely completion of public improvements according to the provisions of the several ordinances and contracts. The general principles have been iterated and reiterated in the following cases: Heman v. Gilliam, 171 Mo. 258, 71 S. W. 163, and cases cited; Allen v. Labsap, 188 Mo. l. c. 695, 87 S. W. 926; Gilsonite Construction Co. v. Coal Co., 206 Mo. l. c. 75, 103 S. W. 98; Brigham v. Hickman, 136 Mo. App. 216, 116 S. W. 449.

In this case, as in that of Allen v. Labsap, supra, no special or general ordinance of the city authorizing the improvement was put in evidence making time of the essence of the transaction or requiring the work to be commenced by a day certain or completed by a [44]*44given date. The contract provisions in that ease were very similar to those of the contract under consideration. Judge Lamm, speaking for the court, said: “So that, in the absence of a city ordinance requiring the work to be completed within a definite time and in the presence, as here, of a contract provision specifying a definite time for the completion of the work, followed by other provisions, to which effect must be given, providing for deductions from the money due the contractor on a failure to complete the work within that time, the views of this court on full consideration have come to be that if the work is completed within a reasonable time the taxbills are not void.” So, in the case of Heman v. Gilliam, supra, the ordinance did not require the work to be completed within any specified time, and this language is used in the opinion: “It is true a time within which the work was to be completed was specified in the contract, but in immediate connection therewith it was also specified that if not completed within that time, the contractor should suffer a forfeiture) not of all his pay under the contract, as would have been the case but for that provision, but only of a certain proportion thereof. The contract contemplated that the work might not be completed within the time stated, and made provision for such a contingency, and upon its happening, for an extension of such time upon terms. . . . Although the contractor may not have completed the work within the time stated in the contract, yet if he completed the work within a reasonable time the ordinance was complied with, and if the deductions required by the contract are made from the taxbills, the contract is complied with, and when the requirements of both ordinance and contract are fully satisfied, surely neither the city, the property owner, nor anybody else has any ground of complaint against the contractor; and in such case he would be entitled to have taxbills against the property owner for his pro[45]*45portionate share of the contract price, less the amount of such deductions, and to that extent the taxbills would be good. Hence, in this case we do not think the'court committed error in refusing’ to declare the taxbill void from the mere fact that the work may not have been completed .within the specified time stated in the contract.” . . . This reasoning is clearly applicable to the ease under consideration. “And the rule is well settled that where the time of completion is specified in the contract but not in the ordinance authorizing the improvement, time is not of the essence of the contract.” [Brigham v. Hickman, 136 Mo. App. l. c. 218, 116 S. W. 449.]

The question whether the council could, after the time specified in the contract had expired, in the absence of an ordinance provision fixing a time for completion, lawfully extend the time, was considered by the Supreme Court in the case of Gilsonite Construction Co. v. Coal Co., supra, where the following appears : “ . .

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
132 S.W. 330, 152 Mo. App. 39, 1910 Mo. App. LEXIS 964, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/paul-v-burress-moctapp-1910.