Thornton v. City of Clinton

50 S.W. 295, 148 Mo. 648, 1899 Mo. LEXIS 178
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 21, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 50 S.W. 295 (Thornton v. City of Clinton) 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
Thornton v. City of Clinton, 50 S.W. 295, 148 Mo. 648, 1899 Mo. LEXIS 178 (Mo. 1899).

Opinion

YALLIANT, J.

In this suit plaintiffs seek to recover of defendant, which is a city of the third class, a general [653]*653judgment for a balance due them on contracts for macadamizing, curbing and guttering certain streets which bound the' courthouse square in that city. The contracts were entered into in December, 1888, and the wdrk was competed in August, 1889.

Upon the completion of the work the defendant city passed ordinances making special assessments against the abutting property to pay for the same, and issued to the plaintiffs special tax bills against the various lots and pieces of land fronting on the streets so improved, and included in the. land so assessed and against which special tax bills issued, the courthouse square, which is the property of Henry county. These ordinances making the assessments and directing the issuance of the special tax bills, purported to thus provide for payment of the work in pursuance of the contracts, and authorized the plaintiffs to collect the bills by action in the name of the city to the use of plaintiffs. All of these special tax bills were paid to plaintiffs except those against the courthouse square, which the county refused to pay.

Plaintiffs in .the name of the city of Clinton to their use brought suit against the county on these special tax bills to enforce them against the courthouse square; the cause came to this court on appeal, and it was here decided that property owned by the county for that purpose was not subject to the special assessments, and the tax bills were not chargeable against it. [City of Clinton to use v. Henry Co., 115 Mo. 557.] That decision was rendered in this court May 8, 1898. On June 30 following plaintiffs petitioned the mayor and common council to make a reassessment, and to make such assessment for each block separately on all lots or pieces of ground on either side of the streets bounding the public square, except the public square itself. On September 5 next the mayor and council not having taken the action requested, plaintiffs filed a petition in this court stating their case substantially as above, praying a writ of mandamus to compel [654]*654the mayor and council to mate the reassessment as they, plaintiffs, had prayed in their petition above mentioned of June 30, that is, assessing the whole contract cost of the improvements against the private property, exempting from the burden the public square. Upon filing this petition an alternative writ of mandamus issued upon order of the chief justice in chambers. This alternative writ being served, the mayor and common council yielded obedience to it, and made the reassessment as required, and upon their return showing such obedience, the suit ended with a judgment against them for costs. In complying with the exigencies of that writ the common council passed ordinances November 7, 1893, in due form, making the reassessments and issued special tax bills •delivered to the plaintiffs for the whole contract price of the work, crediting upon the tax bill against each lot, the amount that the owner had paid on the former assessment and tax bill; so that the balance for which this reassessment was made and new tax bills issued, was the sum of the former assessments and tax bills against the public square, and amounts to $8,022.32 of principal, which money has never been paid. In none of the ordinances passed was any provision made for the collection of the assessments, except declaring them a lien on the lots respectively named in the several assessments and tax bills and authorizing plaintiffs to collect them by action in the name of the city to their use.

"When the first set of tax bills were issued to plaintiffs, they presented them for payment to the owners of the lots respectively and the same were paid and surrendered to the lot owners with payment in full indorsed on them, and certificate of such payment to the city clerk, who thereafter ■entered satisfaction of the liens on the register of liens which the ordinance required to be kept, and gave certificates accordingly. After this, and before the reassessment in November, 1893, there were numerous sales of lots embraced in the reassessment. These sales were by warranty deeds and [655]*655tbe parties bad at tbe time no notice of any unsatisfied claim for improvements. ,-

These last special tax bills have never been paid, and before the commencement of this suit tbe plaintiffs tendered them back to tbe mayor and common council and demanded of them payment of tbe balance of tbe unpaid contract price.

Upon tbe trial the original contracts under which the-work was done were not produced, having been lost, but what, purported to be copies were in evidence, offered by plaintiffs. There was testimony on the part of defendant tending to show that in each of the original contracts there was a clause in these words: “In no event is the city to be held liable for any sum whatever for work done under this contract.” There was also testimony on the same part tending to show that the question of the liability of the county, or the power-to tax the courthouse square, was discussed between the contractors and the city officials before the contracts were finally signed, and that the contractors took legal advice on the subject, and became satisfied that the county was liable and the public square subject to the assessment, and agreed to take-the risk involved in that question, and to look to the private property on the other side of the street for its half only of the improvement, and that this fact became of public notice and was the cause of no remonstrance on the part of the property owners being filed, as might have been done under the ordinance, and the project defeated. But none of that testimony was weighed or entered into the finding of the trial court sitting as a jury; that court before deciding the case sustained plaintiffs’ objection and excluded that evidence.

The written opinion of the learned judge who tried the case shows that in his mind it did not turn on those questions of fact, but on his construction of the statutes relating to the powers of the common council to bind the city by contract.

The ordinance under which the city moved in the matter is shaped under the provisions of section 31 of the Act of [656]*656March 30, 1887 (Laws 1887, p. 70), relating to cities of the third class, and directs assessments for payment of the work as in that act required, and in addition requires that the special tax bills shall issue to the contractors on the assessments, which should be a lien on the property covered, and as a penalty if not paid within thirty days of presentment and demand, should bear interest at ten per cent per annum, and if not paid in sixty days, might be collected in action in name of the city to the use of the contractors.

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Bluebook (online)
50 S.W. 295, 148 Mo. 648, 1899 Mo. LEXIS 178, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thornton-v-city-of-clinton-mo-1899.