State ex rel. Hahn v. Westport

36 S.W. 663, 135 Mo. 120, 1896 Mo. LEXIS 239
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 23, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 36 S.W. 663 (State ex rel. Hahn v. Westport) 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
State ex rel. Hahn v. Westport, 36 S.W. 663, 135 Mo. 120, 1896 Mo. LEXIS 239 (Mo. 1896).

Opinion

Robinson, J.

This is a proceeding by mandamus instituted at the relation of August Hahn and John C. Fielding and directed against the city, the mayor, board of aldermen, and engineer of the city of West-port as defendants, to compel the issuance of certain tax bills against certain tracts of land in said city for the- amount chargeable against them to pay for the grading of Thirty-ninth and McGlee streets in said city.

The work of grading the streets was completed in 1893, and tax bills were then issued and delivered to the contractor Fielding, one of the relators herein, to pay the price of the work which amounted to something over $9,000, which at the time of their issuance were sold and assigned by Fielding to his co-relator Hahn. All the bills thus issued, except those described in the alternative writ, amounting to $2,579.08, have been paid.

The alternative writ, after reciting all the ordinances of the city authorizing the doing of the work in [124]*124question and the contents of the tax bill heretofore issued to pay therefor, declares the ordinance as passed by the city to be insufficient to warrant the issuance of the tax bills above named, and closed with this command to the defendant:

“By ordinance levy and collect special taxes on the owner or occupier of all lots or tracts of land described in each of the tax bills hereinbefore enumerated and described, to which said tax bills and the record thereof reference is had for a description of such lands, for the purpose of paying the cost of the grading aforesaid, or that part of such cost which is under the law chargeable against the said lots or tracts of land, and that you issue and deliver to the petitioners valid special tax bills in lieu of the bills hereinbefore enumerated and described, or that you show cause to this court at its session in the city of Independence, at 9:30 a. m. , on the ninth day of September, 1895, why you have not done so.”

During the progress of the proceedings and before the issues were finally made up, upon which the court acted, the personnel of several of the defendant office holders changed, by resignation and otherwise, and we give the following as a history of the different pleadings filed by the different defendants and the different dates thereof:

September 13, 1895, F. W. Griffin, as attorney for the city of Westport and also as attorney for aldermen Tobin and Merriwether filed demurrers to the alternative writ. And on the same day aldermen McMillan, Banta, Knepp, Wheeler, and Balcolm and engineer Robertson filed by their attorney a like demurrer.

September 17, 1895, R. J. Ingraham, as city attorney, filed a written withdrawal of demurrer filed by F. W. Griffin for the city. On the same day Slavens as mayor on his own behalf and on behalf of D. D. Drake [125]*125as alderman filed a motion to dismiss the case on the ground that the writ was collusive and fraudulent,- and on same day B. P. Jones amicus curiae, filed suggestion that the suit was collusive and -fraudulent.

October 18, 1895, the city of Westport, R. J. Ingraham, mayor, and D. D. Drake, as alderman, by their attorney, filed their joint return, admitting most of the facts, but claiming as independent defenses: u First. That since the issuance of the alternative writ J. W. Slavens as mayor and F. T. Robertson as engineer, original defendants, had resigned their offices, and R. J. Ingraham had been appointed mayor, and H. B. Abercrombie city engineer. Second. No good faith demand was ever made for new tax bills, but any demand made was pursuant to a fraudulent scheme to have instituted a collusive suit of the character hereinafter described. Third. This is a collusive and fraudulent suit in which no adverse interests are at stake, and in which the interests of the parties are identical, certain of the defendants conspiring with relators to impose upon the court a pretended controversy for the sole purpose of obtaining a decision as to the validity of certain tax bills against third persons who are not parties to the action. The active conspirators in the fraudulent scheme are defendants, aldermen McMillan, Banta, and Tobin. Fourth. The alternative writ joins two separate and distinct pieces of work, and there is therefore an improper joinder.”

On the same day, October 18, defendants McMillan, Banta, Knepp, Wheeler, andBalcolm, and Robertson, the former engineer of the city, by their attorney, filed what they call their separate return to the alternative writ, admitting the fact stated in such writ to be true, but denying the conclusion of law set out in the 'writ (a demurrer in effect), and then proceeding with a denial of the allegations of fraud and conspiracy [126]*126charged to them by the suggestion filed by B. F. Jones as a friend of the court, and the like charges made against themselves in the return of the city of West-port, Ingraham, as mayor, and Drake, alderman. Upon the demurrer filed by aldermen Tobin and Mer-riwether no action was ever taken and no return was ever made.

On the above pleadings, the court proceeded to hear the testimony as offered by all parties pleading on the different issues as raised by each, and at the conclusion thereof entered its judgment dismissing plaintiff’s wi’it, and the entire proceedings, and for its refusal to set aside its finding and judgment, and award to the relators a new hearing, they have prosecuted their appeal to this court.

Just what was the moving consideration with the court, which resulted in its denial of the writ and dismissal of the proceedings, can not be accurately determined from declarations of law given on the different issues of facts raised, as defendants asked none, and all the declarations of law, as well as the instructions in the nature of finding of facts, tendered by relators, were refused. But in their tender and refusal two pertinent facts in this inquiry are made quite manifest:

First, by what relators term their refused instruction numbered 2, which reads as follows: “2. The court declares that there is no evidence of any fraud, either on the part of relators, or on the part of any of the respondents,” we know that the trial judge, who had all the parties before him, heard the testimony and witnessed their demeanor while upon the stand, discovered some evidence of fraud on part of the relators and a part of the defendants, in the manner of getting up this as a fictitious suit, in order to get a ruling from this court upon a question that was not a real substan[127]*127tial controversy between those who appeared as adverse parties to the litigation on the face of the papers.

Second, by a reading of relators’ refused .instructions 4 and 5, as follows: “4. Unless the tax bills sought to be compelled to be issued will be valid, then this writ must be denied.” “5. The tax bills sought to be compelled to be issued will be valid,” it is equally as apparent that relators’ real effort was more to secure a ruling of the court, as to the validity or invalidity of the tax bills heretofore issued than they were to secure absolutely the issuance to them of new tax bills.

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Bluebook (online)
36 S.W. 663, 135 Mo. 120, 1896 Mo. LEXIS 239, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-hahn-v-westport-mo-1896.