Stoltman v. City of Clayton

226 S.W. 315, 205 Mo. App. 568, 1920 Mo. App. LEXIS 134
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 7, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 226 S.W. 315 (Stoltman v. City of Clayton) 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
Stoltman v. City of Clayton, 226 S.W. 315, 205 Mo. App. 568, 1920 Mo. App. LEXIS 134 (Mo. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinions

This suit in equity was filed on the 25th day of July, 1917, in the Circuit Court of St. Louis County, Missouri. Plaintiff seeks to have declared unreasonable and void an extension of the city limits of Clayton, consummated on the 12th of September, 1916, and defendant restrained and enjoined from exercising municipal authority and levying and assessing taxes over the territory thereby annexed, and the residents thereof.

In plaintiff's petition it is alleged: that the defendant is a city of the fourth class; that plaintiff owns some ten acres of land upon which he erected a dwelling house, in which he resides, and that his ten acre tract is within the area included in the extension of the city's limits; that the Board of Aldermen of the City of Clayton passed an ordinance to change and extend the corporate limits of the city, which was approved by the Mayor, submitted to the voters of the City of Clayton, and an election held thereon; that by ordinance approved by the Mayor, the result of said election was ordained and declared to be in favor of such extension, and extended the limits of said city in accordance therewith; that by said extension his real estate is now included within the limits of said city, and that plaintiff has now become a resident of said city.

The grounds upon which the petition avers the ordinance is unreasonable, are: that said ordinance undertook to extend the corporate limits of the City of Clayton, westwardly, over a strip of territory approximately one and one-fourth miles east and west and of a like width north and south, covering some ten hundred and twenty-five acres; that there had been no growth or increase in the population of the city sufficient to necessitate such extension for any proper municipal purposes; and avers, that there had been no substantial increase in the population of said city, except an increase in area of population occasioned by a previous extension of the city limits eastwardly, made in the year 1913; that the land of plaintiff, included in such extension, is *Page 573 used as a site for plaintiff's residence, a portion thereof is under cultivation, and that it is distant from the inhabited part of said city; that practically the entire land included within the limits of said extension is kept and used for farming and gardening purposes, and none of the ground has been platted or held for sale as town lots, or divided into lots for said purposes, and none of said real estate is held to be brought on the market and sold as town property when it reaches a value corresponding with the views of the owners; that none of said real estate furnishes an abode for a densely settled community, or represents the actual growth of the town beyond its former legal boundary; that none of the real estate is needed for any proper city purpose, as extension of its streets or sewers, gas or water system, or to supply space for the abode or business of its residents, or for the extension of needed police regulation; that none of said real estate is valuable by reason of its adaptability for prospective town uses, and that whatever value his real estate possesses is for farming or gardening purposes, or for the purpose of country residences for those desiring to live in the country within close proximity to the city of St. Louis; that the value of the land has not been increased by being taken into the corporate limits of Clayton, but on the contrary has been diminished thereby; that neither the land nor those residing thereon need the police protection, nor has either the land or residents thereof received any police protection since being taken into the limits of the city, nor have they received any other benefits from said city government; that none of the lands in the area covered by the extension can be used as city property, nor demanded for that purpose, and it has no value based upon its adaptation for residences or business: that the city settlement has not reached the annexed territory, but is far distant; and that the annexed territory is not laid out for city uses; and that there is no settlement upon it, on the contrary the annexed territory is sparsely settled, not more than forty houses on the ten hundred and twenty-five acres. *Page 574

The petition further alleges; that the city of Clayton has no municipal water or light plant, and that the water, light and gas are furnished to the inhabitants of the city by private corporations, which are and for a long time have been fully prepared and equipped to supply the annexed territory with their products, and had in fact supplied and are still supplying such of the residents of the annexed territory as require their products. That the annexed territory is traversed by only one through road running north and south, and by one through road running east and west; and that the roads bounding the annexed territory on the west and south are excluded from the corporate limits of the city by said ordinance; by reason whereof, the larger amount of annexed territory adjoining the said roads, while subject to municipal taxes, would be deprived of the benefit of said streets; that plaintiff's land fronts on the north line of the Clayton Road, which line is the southern boundary of the limits as extended; that no street lights, sewers, police protection or city conveniences have been furnished in the annexed territory, or any work done, by the city of Clayton upon the two roads in the annexed territory; and that the effect of annexation is to work a fraud upon the rights of plaintiff and others; and that the sole purpose for annexing the territory was to subject the real estate and the residents of said annexed territory to city taxation, and that no possible benefit can enure to plaintiff or others similarly situated.

The petition further charges, that for the reasons therein alleged, the ordinance extending the limits of the city of Clayton westwardly is unconscionable, oppressive, unreasonable and unjust, and its effect is to work a fraud upon the residents of the district; that said ordinance of extension is against the wishes of the majority of the property owners in the district included, and against their interests, and that the result of said ordinance will be to impose upon said plaintiff, and all other residents of the annexed territory, the burden of municipal taxes without their deriving any benefit therefrom; that by reason of said extension the land and personal property of the *Page 575 plaintiff, and other residents of such annexed territory, has become subject to assessment and levying of taxes by the defendant for such and every municipal purpose by which the plaintiff and his land are in nowise benefited.

The petition further avers, that in February, 1916, prior to the passage of the ordinance of extension complained of, a bond issue was authorized by the voters of St.

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Bluebook (online)
226 S.W. 315, 205 Mo. App. 568, 1920 Mo. App. LEXIS 134, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stoltman-v-city-of-clayton-moctapp-1920.