Ruckels v. Pryor

174 S.W.2d 185, 351 Mo. 819, 1943 Mo. LEXIS 473
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 6, 1943
DocketNo. 38159.
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 174 S.W.2d 185 (Ruckels v. Pryor) 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
Ruckels v. Pryor, 174 S.W.2d 185, 351 Mo. 819, 1943 Mo. LEXIS 473 (Mo. 1943).

Opinions

*826 BRADLEY, C.

This is an action by property owners affected to cancel the contract for the construction of the second section of the Brookside sewer in Kansas City, and to cancel the tax bills, $132,015.60, issued to the contractor for the construction of said sewer. The trial. chancellor refused to cancel, dismissed the petition, and plaintiffs appealed.

The cause was commenced August 14, 1939, by plaintiff Ruckels, a resident of Illinois, but the owner of two parcels of property in the sewer district. Ruckels commenced the cause for himself and all others similarly - affected. Thereafter, 208 other property owners in the sewer district were, on their petition, made parties plaintiff. John J. Pryor (same person as J. J. Pryor), Boyle-Pryor Construction Company, a corporation, J. J. Pryor Construction Company, a corporation, Kansas City, the Mayor, Director of Public Works, and other city officers are defendants.

Defendant J.' J. Pryor Construction Company was awarded the sewer contract on March 14, 1939, and completed construction July 14, 1939. The work was approved and accepted July 19, 1939. September 25, 1939, the tax bills were issued to the contractor, and were delivered September 28, 1939.

*827 Matthew S. Murray, in April, 1926, 'was appointed Director of Public Works, Kansas City, by H. F. McElroy, City Manager, and remainded such officer until June, 1939. In June, 1935, Murray was appointed WPA Administrator in Missouri, and remained such until June, 1939. June 17, 1935, about the time Murray was appointed WPA Administrator in Missouri, the City Council of Kansas City enacted ordinance No. 3856 purporting to establish the office of Assistant Director of Public Works. The ordinance provided that the Assistant Director “shall assist the Director and perform such duties of the Director of Public Works as the Director shall prescribe and designate.” And the ordinance further provides:

“If for any reason the Director of Public Works is temporarily absent or unable to attend to the performance or cannot personally perform all of his official duties, the Assistant Director of Public Works shall have the power and is hereby authorized to, under his own name, perform all of the duties of the Director of Public Works during his absence or inability to perform such duties as aforesaid.”

After Murray became WPA Administrator in Missouri, he spent only about two and one-half days per week in Kansas City, and one of these days was Sunday. The remainder of the week was, for the most part, spent in Jefferson City. N. W. Hyland was appointed, by Manager McElroy, Assistant Director of Public Works June 17, 1935, on the same day ordinance No. 3856 was passed, and functioned as such in all matters pertaining to the sewer, the contract, the tax bills, etc., where, by Charter provisions, the Director was to function.

It is alleged that the contract and the tax bills are void because of an alleged illegal and fraudulent combination and conspiracy between the city officials of Kansas City on the one. hand, and the defendant contractors and others on the other hand, which said combination and conspiracy, it is alleged, was designed and intended to monopolize and control the letting of all [187] contracts for public works and public improvements in Kansas City, and it is alleged that the contract and tax bills are void because all proceedings in regard to the establishment and construction of the sewer in question were had before and conducted by N. W. Hyland, assuming to act and acting in his own name as Assistant Director of Public Works, when the City Charter requires that all such acts be performed by the Director of Public Works.

The answer of Kansas City and its officers was a general denial, except it was admitted that the officers named were such officers as alleged. John J. Pryor, and the corporate defendants, in their answer, denied generally, and specifically denied the charges of fraud and conspiracy, and denied that Hyland was without authority to act in connection with the sewer. And these defendants pleaded said ordinance No. 3856, purporting to create the office of Assistant Director of Public Works and the appointment of Hyland as such Assistant *828 Director,.and.alleged that Hyland’s acts in connection with the sewer, the. contract, and the tax bills were lawful; that the contract for the construction of the-sewer was approved, confirmed, and ratified by ordinance No. 5245, passed March 18, 1939; that plaintiffs are estopped to complain because they failed to make objection to the execution of tbe contract, its performance, issuance and delivery of the tax bills until after the sewer was constructed and accepted, and the tax bills issued and delivered to the contractor. In effect, defendants say that plaintiffs should not be heard to complain because of their laches and lack of equity.

The reply alleged that ordinance No. 3856, purporting to create the office of Assistant Director of Public Works was void because contrary to the City Charter, which, it is alleged, “neither contemplates nor provides for an Assistant Director of Public Works, nor authorizes and empowers the City Council to create the office of Assistant Director of Public Works.” Also, it is alleged in the reply that ordinance No. 5245, purporting to approve, confirm and ratify the sewer construction contract was enacted “with the fraudulent intent and for the wrongful purpose of furthering and effectuating all of the wrongful, fraudulent and illegal acts referred to and alleged in plaintiff’s second amended bill in equity and leading to and culminating in the confirmation of the contract aforesaid and the issuance of tax bills thereunder to the said J. J. Pryor Construction Company, by reason whereof said ordinance was and is wholly illegal, void and of no force and effect.”

At the threshold of the merits we are confronted with the contention of the defendants that the appeal should be dismissed, and that plaintiffs should not be heard to complain.

Should the appeal be dismissed? It is argued that plaintiffs are hot parties in interest within the purview of Sec. 849, R. S. 1939, Mo. R. S. A., See. 849, and are not parties aggrieved within the purview of Sec. 1184, R. S. 1939, Mo. R. S. A., Sec. 1184.

As stated, plaintiff Ruckels had two parcels of property in the sewer district, and the tax bills against these parcels were Nos. 647 and 648, and for $26.48 and $53.04 respectively. Ruckels did not appear at the trial which began June 23, 1941, and finally ended September 20, 1941. It developed at the trial that at some time prior to July 20, 1940, some one, not identified, paid the tax bills against the Ruckels property. The money “was paid into the city treasurer” and by the treasurer “paid to the holder of the tax bills.” Defendants argue that upon the payment of the tax bills against the Ruckels property the lien and alleged cloud upon his property were removed and that Ruckels’ case collapsed and could not thereafter be maintained by him,.since the tax bills against his property were paid. Plaintiffs, other than Ruckels, were made parties after the Ruckels tax bills were paid, and these plaintiffs adopted the Ruckels petition. In the sitúa *829

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Bluebook (online)
174 S.W.2d 185, 351 Mo. 819, 1943 Mo. LEXIS 473, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ruckels-v-pryor-mo-1943.