State Ex Rel. Van Hafften v. Ellison

226 S.W. 559, 285 Mo. 301, 12 A.L.R. 1157, 1920 Mo. LEXIS 168
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 13, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 226 S.W. 559 (State Ex Rel. Van Hafften v. Ellison) 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. Van Hafften v. Ellison, 226 S.W. 559, 285 Mo. 301, 12 A.L.R. 1157, 1920 Mo. LEXIS 168 (Mo. 1920).

Opinion

GOODE, J.

The record in this case was brought up from the Kansas City Court of Appeals pursuant to a writ of certiorari issued "out of this court to the respondents, the judges of said Court of Appeals. The writ was issued upon the petition of the relator, wherein he alleged that the decision of the Court of Appeals in the case of Willis Williams, Respondent, v. R. W. VanDeusen et al., Appellants, 219 S. W. 395. was in conflict with prior decisions of this, court. Gathering the facts from the opinion of the Kansas City Court of Appeals, we learn the said suit of Williams v. VanDeusen was in equity and was filed to have cancelled a series of five installment tax bills issued against a lot, in the City of St. Joseph, owed by Williams, to pay for paving’ the street in front of the lot. The tax bills were cancelled by the decree of the court of first instance as casting a cloud on the title to the lot, and on the appeal of A. W. VanHafften, who is the owner of the bills, and of VanDeusen, the two defendants in the case, the decree was affirmed.

The reason for which the tax bills were cancelled was, that the work of improving the street was not completed by the contractor, in the time prescribed by the ordinance which authorized the improvement. The con *306 tract was awarded to VanDeusen September 24, 1914, signed September 30, 1914, and it allowed one hundred and thirty days for the completion of the improvement. Work was begun October 3rd of said year, but on October 7th was stopped and not resumed until sometime in May or June, 1915, the improvement being finished about November 1, 1915. The cause of the suspension of work was the filing of a suit by Lizzie McQueen against VanDeusen and the City of St. Joseph to enjoin the paving of the street, mainly for the alleged reason that, contrary to the controlling statute,' the ordinance to authorize the improvement had extended it over streets having different names, running in different directions, and not parts of a continuous highway. In that suit a temporary restraining order was issued by the circuit court, which was continued in force by an order of said court pending an appeal taken by lizzie McQueen, from the judgment given against her by the circuit court, to the Kansas City Court of Appeals. The Court of Appeals affirmed the judgment, holding the ordinance in question provided for an improvement along a continuous thoroughfare of the city, not running in a direct line throughout its course nor bearing the same name over its entire length, but, in fact and in law, a single highway, so that the improvements ordered was a- single improvement, instead of being separate improvements of different streets.

After the final disposition of the McQueen case (McQueen v. VanDeusen, 189 Mo. App. 492), VanDeusen again went to work and, as stated, completed the performance of his contract about the first of November, 1915, but not within the number of days allowed for completion in his contract with the city. Tax bills were issued to pay the cost of the improvement, five of them constituting an apparent lien against the lot of Wilks Williams and casting a cloud upon his title, Williams acquired this lot by gift from the Bowen Investment Company, the lot being of little value because “of a hole *307 in it.” The deed to Williams was executed and delivered by the Bowen Investment Company the day before Williams filed the suit to cancel the tax bills, but both Williams and the Investment Company said the conveyance was absolute, and that Williams was the sole owner of the lot when he sued.

Williams asked to have the tax bills cancelled because VanDeusen did not finish the work within the time stipulated, to-wit, 130 days after the date of the contract between him and the city. In defense, VanDeusen and his co-defendant, Van Ilafften, to whom the tax bills had been assigned for value, alleged the completion of the work within the period provided in the ordinance was prevented by the injunction issued in the McQueen case, and that by virtue of a section of the statutes (R. S. 1909, sec: 8840), and of the ordinance passed pursuant to the section, the time fixed for completion was extended for such a period as the contractor might “be actually and necessarily prevented from pursuing said work by bad weather, a general strike of his employees, or an injunction against him.” In reply to that answer Williams alleged the said injunction was procured at the instance and through the instrumentality of the contractor, and for the purpose of stopping the work, and that an injunction so procured did not operate to extend the time beyond the iJeriod provided in the contract. The circuit court found VanDeusen, the contracto!*, had instigated the suit of Lizzie McQueen to enjoin the improvement, had maintained said suit through all its stages, and that his sole purpose in doing so was to obtain a judicial determination of the validity of the ordinance for the improvement; that but for the instigation and maintenance of it by the contractor, the injunction suit would not have been brought. Therefore the circuit court held the time stipulated in the contract for the completion of the work was not extended by the writ of injunction issued in the McQueen case. •

*308 The Kansas City Court of Appeals said, in its- opinion in the Williams case, there was no question that VanDeusen did instigate and maintain the McQueen suit, but not from any fraudulent or corrupt motive, or for the purpose of securing delay; that it-was the widespread opinion in legal circles the ordinance in question was void because it authorized the improvement of several different streets under different names, and the purpose of the' McQueen suit, which was brought in a friendly spirit against the contractor and the city, was to determine the validity of the ordinance, the question being a public one, which the city and contractors generally were interested in having settled, as other ordinances of the same kind had been passed and contractors had refused to bid for work authorized by them because of a doubt about whether-they were legal. The Court of Appeals said also the city, by its counsellor, defended the McQueen suit through the courts; that ap honest and bona-fide effort was made to have the ordinance declared invalid, and the suit was pressed earnestly and faithfully; that no extension of the time for completion of the improvement was formally applied for by VanDeusen, during the pendency of the injunetion.suit, or granted by the legislative authorities of the city. Said court held, as the circuit court had, that as VanDeusen was the real party in interest in the McQueen suit, and had caused it to be instituted and a restrainipg order to be issued against himself, he was entitled to no extension of time to finish the work while the temporary writ of injunction was in force. The relator in the present proceeding, VanHafften, insists this ruling of the Court of Appeals permitted a collateral attack on the judgment in the McQueen case by Williams, and therein is in conflict with the decision of this court in these cases: Wilson v. Rainey, 74 Mo. 229; Lovitt v. Russell, 138 Mo. 474, 482; Vrana v. City of St. Louis, 164 Mo. 146, 150; Lieber v. Lieber, 239 Mo. l. c. 54; Harter v. Petty, 181 S. W. 39, 40.

The relator also argues that the decision of the Court of Appeals was erroneous for a different reason, in al *309

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
226 S.W. 559, 285 Mo. 301, 12 A.L.R. 1157, 1920 Mo. LEXIS 168, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-van-hafften-v-ellison-mo-1920.