Scales v. Butler

323 S.W.2d 25, 1959 Mo. App. LEXIS 558
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 2, 1959
Docket7708
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 323 S.W.2d 25 (Scales v. Butler) 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
Scales v. Butler, 323 S.W.2d 25, 1959 Mo. App. LEXIS 558 (Mo. Ct. App. 1959).

Opinion

RUARK, Judge.

This is a suit by an assignee of a tax bill to enforce the lien and, judgment having been given for the plaintiff, the defendant property owners have appealed. The improvement was the rolling and oiling of streets in Sikeston, Missouri, a third-class city, under the procedure set forth in Section 88.643 RSMo 1949, V.A.M.S. This section provides that the city council shall have power, by ordinance, when the cost does not exceed 60 cents per front foot, to cause the streets to be oiled and repaired and to defray the cost by a special tax assessed in favor of the city or contractor on adjoining property in the proportion of linear feet. The work may be done by the city or contracted under such terms as may be provided by ordinance.

In this instance the tax bill was issued in favor of the city and thereafter assigned to the contractor. The appellants’ first contention is that the tax bill was improperly admitted into evidence because Sikeston has no authority to assign a tax bill. In this we think appellants are wrong. Section 88.643 provides that the work may be done by either the city or the contractor and that the tax bill may be collected in the name of and by the city or contractor. Section 88.500 provides that third class cities may issue and sell tax bills. And it is so held. 1

Invalidity is also suggested because the engineer’s report of cost and apportionment, adopted by and incorporated into the ordinance which apportioned the cost and directed issuance of tax bills, was not signed by any person. The statute (Section 88.643) does not make the lien dependent upon the making or filing of any engineer’s report, and none is required. 2 The work of making the apportionment and assessment was the prerogative and the obligation of the city council, and there is no contention that the apportionment was inaccurate. The city council had the right to rely upon any report or calculations, signed or unsigned, which it chose. The action was that of the council, not the engineer. While it is said that proceedings for improvements such as this are in in- *27 vitum, nevertheless the courts have adopted a rather liberal instead of a “frosty” attitude, and they do not search “as with a lighted candle” for technicalities, inad-vertences, and minor defects, because they recognize that the more hazards of street contracting are enhanced “competition is stifled, and the price bid is swollen to the extent that the extra hazard is met with extra pay,” and so the property owner suffers. Gist v. Rackliffe-Gibson Construction Co., 224 Mo. 369, 123 S.W. 921, 924. 3

The second contention is that the tax bill is void because the city council was not legally in session at the adoption of Ordinance 1909 (April 24, 1950), which created the district for the purpose of street improvement and directed the preparation of specifications and estimates, and at the adoption of Ordinance 1913 (April 28, 1950), which adopted specifications and provided for the contract and issuance of tax bills. The evidence seems directed principally at the meeting of April 24.

Ordinance 82 of the City of Sikeston provides that regular meetings shall be held on the first Monday in each month, and that special meetings may be called by the mayor or council president, and in event of special meetings six-hour notice shall be given by oral or written notice, such notice to be served by the chief of police or assistant.

In this respect the minutes of the city council for April 3, 4, and 10 were identified by the city clerk, and from these minutes the witness read (only) the last sentences in respect to adjournment, viz.: “There being no further business, the council adjourned until Wednesday, April 4, 1950, at 10 a. m.” “There being no further business, the council adjourned until Monday, April 10,1950, at 7:30 p. m.” “There being no further business, the city council adjourned until Monday April 24, 1950, at 4:30 p. m.” (Here Note: The minutes, other than the sentences above so read, are not set forth in the transcript, neither do the originals or copies accompany it, so we are completely in the dark as to what such minutes show except as above.) Counsel for defendants-appellants, in offering such minute exhibits, stated the minutes showed the council was in regular session on April 3 and showed an adjournment order until April 5 (4?), and that in the minutes of April 10, 1950, the adjournment “until Monday, April 24, 1950, at 4:30 p. m.” was written with “another typewriter obviously of pica type.” Counsel asked the city clerk witness if “the language that I have read at the end of your adjournment order [was] written in the record with a different typewriter.” Objection was made on the ground the record itself was the best evidence. After some colloquy and further objection, witness was asked why the record was written in that manner, and he responded that “when the -meetings adjourned most of the time we had no idea of when we were going to call another meeting. The stenographer * * * left that blank and put in ‘there being no further business, the council adjourned’ and left that blank. If we called another meeting during the next two or three days, that was filled in * *. That was the usual procedure, Mr. Bailey.”

“Q. Now, after the meeting of April 24 there was no notice of meeting? Was there a notice of meeting served by the city marshal or the chief of police? A. Ordinarily no.
“Q. Was any notice served of this meeting, Mr. Barrett, of April 24? A. Nothing more than notice by telephone. That was the ordinary procedure.”

But on cross-examination the witness stated that he could not say as “a positive, definite fact” that the council on April 10 did not adjourn to April 24; that in respect to what happened five years ago- he did not *28 want to make a positive statement; that “the young lady” (stenographer) made the record, and as far as he knew the council did adjourn until April 24 as stated by the record.

Appellants contend there is no statutory or ordinance authority for adjourned meetings. We think such was not necessary. Under the general rule the adjourned meeting becomes and is an extension of the regular meeting. 4 As to whether the April 24 meeting was a proper adjourned meeting: We commence with the proposition that the tax bill made a prima facie case in favor of the respondent.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
323 S.W.2d 25, 1959 Mo. App. LEXIS 558, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scales-v-butler-moctapp-1959.