Perkinson v. Weber

157 S.W. 961, 251 Mo. 186, 1913 Mo. LEXIS 199
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 17, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 157 S.W. 961 (Perkinson v. Weber) 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
Perkinson v. Weber, 157 S.W. 961, 251 Mo. 186, 1913 Mo. LEXIS 199 (Mo. 1913).

Opinion

BROWN, P. J.

Action to collect special tax bills against defendant’s real estate in the city of St. Louis. From a judgment for plaintiff in the circuit court of that city, defendants appeal.

Plaintiff’s tax bills'were issued against some unplatted land between Twentieth street and Florissant avenue in St. Louis City, to cover part of the expense of improving Twentieth street. Said Twentieth street runs north and south through said city.

Under section 14, article 6, of the charter of St. Louis, street improvements may be paid for by special, assessments against the property fronting or adjoining the improvements; one-fourth of such special taxes being levied upon the frontage of the street to be improved, and the remaining three-fourths upon the area of land included in a benefit district formed by drawing a line midway between the street to be improved [189]*189and the next parallel or converging street on each side of the street to be improved.

The benefit district formed for the improvement of Twentieth street included a strip of Hyde Park, which, as its name indicates, is a public park of the city not subject to taxation; so that the legislative department of the city in the ordinance which provided for the improvement of said Twentieth street, appropriated $6200 out of the city treasury to cover that part of the expense of the proposed improvement which it was estimated would have been levied upon Hyde Park if such park had been private property.

. Defendants in their answer to plaintiff’s petition allege that the tax bills sued on are excessive and invalid for the following reasons:

(1) That only $5180.92 of the money appropriated from the city treasury was applied towards paying for the improvement of said Twentieth street, and the remainder of the cost of said improvement was wrongfully taxed against the property of defendants and other persons owning lands in the benefit district.

(2) That in creating and prescribing the boundaries of the benefit district for improving Twentieth street, the city, through its officers, wrongfully ignored a public street known as Twenty-first street lying between Twentieth street and Florissant avenue, and included too much of defendants’ lands in the benefit district, thereby unlawfully increasing the size of the tax bills assessed against defendants’ property.

Defendants in their said answer demand the cancellation of the tax bills on the ground that they are invalid and a cloud upon the title of defendants. .

For the reason that defendants’ answer and prayer are for affirmative equitable relief, the circuit court tried the case as an action in equity.

The existence or non-existence of Twenty-first street as. a public thoroughfare of St. Louis at the time the benefit district was formed for the purpose of im[190]*190proving Twentieth street is' the chief .bone of contention between plaintiff and defendants. For the purpose of making the opinion as brief as propriety will admit, we will consider the evidence regarding Twenty-first street in our opinion.

Appropriation. I. The insistence of defendants that the officers of St. Louis City committed error in failing to apply all of the $6200 appropriation towards . . ,. jv^ ,A , , „ improving Twentieth street before prorating- and assessing any part of the expense of improving said street against the property of defendants cannot be sustained.

By section 28,' article 6, of the charter of St. Louis when any ordinance is enacted by the municipal assembly of that city calling for work to be paid for by the city, such ordinance must appropriate a specific sum of money out of the city treasury to cover the liability incurred by the city in carrying out the provisions of such ordinance. Subdivision 4, section 14, of article 6 of said charter further provides that when any lands are located - in a benefit district which are not liable to special assessments, the city must pay whatever special assessments would have been assessed against said non-assessable lands if the same had been private property.

The non-taxable lands in the benefit district established to improve Twentieth street are a part of Hyde Park, and the appropriation before referred to was made to cover the city’s share of the expense of improving said street in front of the park.

■The appropriation mentioned turned out to be more than a thousand dollars larger than was necessary to cover the city’s part of improving Twentieth street, but that did not harm defendants in any way.

Section 27, article 6, of the charter of St. Louis provides that all contracts for public improvements shall be advertised and let to the lowest responsible [191]*191bidder, so that it is. perfectly apparent that the legislative department of said city conld not foresee what the bids of the contractors would be, nor in any way ascertain the precise cost of improving Twentieth street.

Because the municipal assembly acted with abundant caution in appropriating a larger sum than was necessary would constitute no warrant for spending the surplus of that appropriation in paying special taxes on property of defendants or other private persons.

All of the costs of improving Twentieth street which were legally chargeable against the city of St. Louis were paid out of the appropriation, and the contention of defendants that the remainder of said appropriation should have been applied on said improvements must be disallowed.

Twenty-first street. II. The contention of defendants that Twenty-first street was ignored by the officers of St. Louis City in establishing the boundaries of the benefit district for improving Twentieth street, in which benefit district part of defendant’s lands were placed, calls for a consideration of the evidence tending to show the establishment of Twenty-first street.

It is not denied that Twenty-first street has been duly established as a public thoroughfare from Salisbury street up to the south boundary of defendants’ land for a long time — perhaps as long as twenty-five years. The place where said Twenty-first street would pass through the lands of defendants, if it had continued in a straight northwardly course parallel with Twentieth street, had been a stone quarry. It had not for more than twenty years been fenced or otherwise used by defendants; in fact, it was merely a large excavation between forty and fifty feet deep through which pedestrians could and did pass at pleasure, but [192]*192through which vehicles could not pass on account of the unevenness of the surface.

The evidence shows that defendants permitted the •city, and perhaps others, to dump dirt into this abandoned stone quarry until it was filled up about half way across defendants’ lands. After that, and during about the seven or eight years next before the improvement of Twentieth street was begun, wagons going north on Twenty-first street could pass over that part of the aforesaid excavation which had been filled by the dumping of dirt therein, and then pass westward over defendants’ land lying between the excavation and Florissant avenue. The great preponderance of evidence is that the quarry or excavation had not been filled up sufficiently to permit wagons to pass •entirely across that part of defendants’ land, which they now contend was a street, prior to the improvement of Twentieth street.

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Bluebook (online)
157 S.W. 961, 251 Mo. 186, 1913 Mo. LEXIS 199, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/perkinson-v-weber-mo-1913.