Stiers v. Vrooman

115 S.W.2d 84, 234 Mo. App. 161, 1938 Mo. App. LEXIS 64
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 5, 1938
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 115 S.W.2d 84 (Stiers v. Vrooman) 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
Stiers v. Vrooman, 115 S.W.2d 84, 234 Mo. App. 161, 1938 Mo. App. LEXIS 64 (Mo. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinions

This is a suit to enforce the lien of a special tax bill which was issued by defendant City of St. Louis, in favor of plaintiff, Frank A. Stiers, a contractor. Defendants Claude E. Vrooman and Lydia Vrooman are the owners of the property against which the special tax was assessed as the proportionate share of the cost of certain public improvements for which such proerty was chargeable.

The special tax bill, which was for the sum of $72.10, was issued by the city on September 3, 1926. There is no question but that it was lawfully issued and delivered to plaintiff; that it became a lien on the property from and after the date of its issuance; and that the owners of the property defaulted in the payment of the same.

The city was made a part defendant to plaintiff's suit to enforce the lien of the special tax bill because of an interest the city was claiming in the property under and by virtue of a benefit judgment for $28.50 which had been rendered in its favor by the Circuit Court of the City of St. Louis in a certain condemnation proceeding involving a street widening project. Said judgment had been rendered on November 6, 1931, and, as in the case of the special tax bill, was also a lien upon the property.

The controversy in the case, which was wholly between plaintiff and the city, was whether plaintiff's lien under his special tax bill should be adjudged to be a first lien, prior, superior, and paramount to the lien of the city under its benefit, judgment, or whether, to the contrary, the two liens should be accorded parity, with both plaintiff and the city to share in the proceeds of the sale of the property in the proportion that the lien of each bore to the total amount of their combined liens.

The court found that as to priority the two liens were on a parity with each other, and adjudged that if, upon a sale of the property, the amount realized from the sale, after the payment of costs, should be insufficient to discharge both liens in full, then plaintiff and the city should share in the proceeds of the sale in the proportion that the amount due each of them bore to the aggregate of their combined liens.

From such judgment plaintiff prayed for and was allowed an appeal to the Supreme Court, and while the appeal was pending in that court the Sterling National Bank Trust Company, which alleged that it was the owner and holder of special tax bills issued by the city in an amount in excess of $18,000, was allowed to intervene in the cause. Subsequently the Supreme Court held that it was without jurisdiction to hear and determine the cause, and consequently ordered that the same be transferred to this court for our determination. *Page 164

The uncertainty in this case is due to the apparently conflicting language of two provisions of the Charter of the City of St. Louis, the one being Article XXI, Section 8, and the other Article XXIII, Section 5.

Article XXI, which has to do with the subject of condemnation, outlines the procedure which is to be followed whenever the city undertakes to condemn private property for public use. It provides, among other things, that the city shall file its petition in the circuit court, whereupon commissioners shall be appointed, who, after viewing the property and assessing the damages and benefits, shall file their report with the court. Section 8 then provides that the court, upon approving the report, shall render final judgment thereon, and "that so much of the report as is a judgment for benefits against specific property be a lien on such property for ten years from entry of the judgment, and prior to all other liens thereon." (Italics ours.)

Article XXIII deals with the subject of special tax bills, and provides that special tax bills shall be prepared and issued for all special assessments for public work or improvements undertaken under the charter. Section 5 then provides that "all special tax bills shall be a first lien on the property charged therewith from the day of issuance thereof; provided, there shall be no priority between special tax bills issued under this Charter, regardless of the date of such bills." (Italics ours.)

Thus it is to be seen that if each of such provisions of the charter is considered separate and apart from the other and is given a purely literal construction without regard to any question of the intent expressed in the charter as a whole, the two are indeed in conflict as contemplating a result which, in the very nature of things, would be impossible of attainment. In other words, if the lien of a benefit judgment is to be "prior to all other liens" on the property as Article XXI, Section 8, provides that it shall be, then it would obviously take priorty over the lien of a special tax bill, while, on the other hand, if the lien of a special tax bill is to be a "first lien" against the property as Article XXIII, Section 5, provides that it shall be, then of necessity it would be superior to the lien of the benefit judgment.

But though these two provisions of the charter are literally in conflict with one another in the respect that has been pointed out, we must approach the case with the idea that no such result was intended by those who drew the charter, and, if it is possible to do so, we must harmonize and reconcile the two provisions so as to give effect to both in the light of the intent which has been expressed in the charter as a whole. Both provisions are therefore to be read and construed together as component parts of but a single instrument and with a definite purpose attributed to each, and neither is to be destroyed or taken as meaningless unless the situation is such that there is no escape to be had from that conclusion. *Page 165

Our task of reconciling the apparently inharmonious provisions of the charter will be simplified if we keep in mind that this case presents but a single issue, which is the question of priority or parity as between the liens of special tax bills on the one hand and of benefit judgments on the other. There is happily no question involved of priority as between the liens of special assessments and of general city taxes, and we shall therefore undertake to determine the meaning and effect of the charter only in so far as it relates to and controls the specific question now before us for decision.

In seeking to arrive at the motives that undoubtedly prompted the authors of the charter to write into it the two provisions purporting to accord priority to the liens both of benefit judgments and of special tax bills, it is of importance that we first consider certain underlying principles which have to do with the subjects of the fundamental character of special assessments for local improvements and of the priority which obtains between tax liens in the absence of statutory or charter provision serving to alter the usual order.

To begin with, the authority of a municipality to levy special assessments is strictly referable to and sustainable under the State's taxing power, which, in the case of the taxing of particular property for the cost of public improvements, is delegated to municipalities to be exercised by them as agencies of the State. The theory is that while each and every improvement is necessarily made for the public welfare, yet as an incident to the improvement the adjoining property derives a special benefit over and above that which accrues to property generally, so that in consequence of the benefit to it there is assessed against such adjoining property a tax or assessment which is supposed to represent the amount in which it has been enhanced in value by reason of the improvement. [Jaicks v. Oppenheimer, 264 Mo. 693, 175 S.W. 972; Morey Engineering Construction Co. v. St.

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Bluebook (online)
115 S.W.2d 84, 234 Mo. App. 161, 1938 Mo. App. LEXIS 64, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stiers-v-vrooman-moctapp-1938.