Troost Avenue Cemetery Co. v. Kansas City, Lowenthal Securities Co.

154 S.W.2d 90, 348 Mo. 561, 1941 Mo. LEXIS 445
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedSeptember 25, 1941
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 154 S.W.2d 90 (Troost Avenue Cemetery Co. v. Kansas City, Lowenthal Securities Co.) 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
Troost Avenue Cemetery Co. v. Kansas City, Lowenthal Securities Co., 154 S.W.2d 90, 348 Mo. 561, 1941 Mo. LEXIS 445 (Mo. 1941).

Opinions

Throughout this opinion we abbreviate the names of the parties, but a glance at the caption now will make the designations obvious. Both sides appeal from a decree in an equity suit originally brought by the Cemetery Company in June, 1938, to cancel pro tanto two special benefit assessments totaling $8000 and a former special judgment establishing the same over eleven years earlier, in May, 1927, under Art. XIII of the Kansas City Charter of 1908, then in force, against twenty-eight acres of land in Forest Hill Cemetery in Kansas City, said acreage having been included in a special benefit district ordained in financing the cost of condemning right-of-way for a park boulevard. The equity suit also sought a proportionate abatement from said assessments for 61.36% of said twenty-eight acres, already conveyed by recorded deeds to private owners for grave lots, and for 23% of said acreage occupied by roads and paths serving said graves, thereby leaving only a little over 15% not appropriated directly or indirectly to actual sepulchral uses; and offered to pay the latter percentage of said assessments less a credit for $800 already paid.

And though no injunction bond was given (Sec. 1671, R.S. 1939, Sec. 1507, Mo. Stat. Ann., p. 1663), the bill in the equity suit further prayed a temporary and perpetual injunction against an impending sale of the twenty-eight acres under special execution to satisfy said special assessment judgment; also that the title be quieted to such part of said land as should be adjudged exempt from said special assessments, execution and judgment. The defendant Securities Company was the owner of the park fund certificates issued and sold by the City representing said special benefit assessments against the Cemetery Company.

The Cemetery Company brought the equity suit for itself and in behalf of the grantees of said grave lots. It had appeared and defended in the prior special benefit assessment proceedings, but an appeal taken by other landowners represented by other counsel was dismissed and the judgment became final on May 21, 1927. The grave lot owners were not named as parties in said proceedings, nor were their several lots individually described. Hence the Cemetery Company claims said proceedings were null and void as to it and also as to them, so far as concerned said grave lots and appurtenant land; and that in no event could said land be sold at special execution under said judgment. This latter contention also was *Page 566 founded on alleged public policy with respect to land used for interments, as declared by our decisions, and on the further theory that where such public policy applied, Sec. 26, Art. VIII of the Kansas City Charter required the judgment to be personal against the owner of the land assessed and to be enforced only by a general execution against his property. The bill also invoked Secs. 8 and 30, Art. II and Sec. 6, Art. X, Constitution of Missouri, and Sec. 10, Art. I and the Fourteenth Amendment, Constitution of the United States.

The City by answer affirmed the validity of said prior special assessment proceedings against the whole twenty-eight acres and the impending sale thereof under the special execution based on said proceedings. Its contention was that the grave lot owners had only easements in the Cemetery tract; and that they were not necessary parties to the former proceedings. Further the City's answer invoked the doctrine of res judicata against the Cemetery Company's equity suit as a collateral attack on the former special assessment and condemnation proceedings; and set up an equitable counterclaim praying that if the court should determine the twenty-eight acres could not be sold under said special execution to enforce the lien of said benefit assessments, then the court ascertain the amount due thereunder and enforce said lien in equity.

No restraining order or temporary injunction having been issued, the sheriff proceeded to sell the twenty-eight acres under the special execution on July 7, 1938, and the respondent-appellant Richard J. Loewenthal was the purchaser. Thereafter, on April 24, 1939, the Cemetery Company filed a supplemental bill reciting the fact of said execution sale; alleging that same cast a cloud on its title to the twenty-eight acres; and praying that said sale be set aside and for damages. The next day the Cemetery Company filed a reply to the City's answer, averring that since the defendants had rejected its offer to do equity by paying its allocable part of said special benefit judgment, therefore it invoked the ten-year Statute of Limitations (Sec. 1038, R.S. [93] 1939, Sec. 886, Mo. Stat. Ann., p. 1168) against said special benefit assessments, judgment, park fund certificates and execution. This was on the theory that said special execution proceedings were wholly void, and that since more than ten years had elapsed, it was too late to obtain a general execution under Sec. 26, Art. VIII of the Charter.

The trial court decreed that the special assessments and judgment in the former special benefit and condemnation proceedings, as to the twenty-eight acres of Cemetery land, weregeneral judgments, to be enforced at law as such under the provisions of the Kansas City Charter; and that defendants at all times since said assessments and judgment became final, had had an adequate remedy at law for enforcement and collection thereof by a "proper" execution. On that theory the decree dismissed the City's equitable counterclaim. *Page 567

The decree further ruled that "cemetery lands set apart for and devoted to public burials and which are actually occupied by graves, together with such lands as are so necessarily incident thereto that they cannot be appropriated and taken without a disturbance of the graves themselves" cannot be sold at forced sale under execution or any judicial process, because public policy and Sec. 26, Art. VIII of the Kansas City Charter forbid it. On that ground the decree set aside the aforesaid July 7, 1938, execution sale of the twenty-eight acres and declared the defendant Loewenthal's purchase thereat null and void. On this appeal the City and the other defendants complain chiefly of the rulings summarized in this and the last paragraph.

Continuing, however, the decree held said special assessments and former judgment imposed a legal lien under the Kansas City Charter against such portion of the twenty-eight acres of cemetery land in said benefit district as had not been sold for grave lots, and that such parts of the twenty-eight acres "as were not actually occupied by graves and not necessarily used in connection with and as a part of such graves, were and are subject to levy and sale under a proper execution issuing in said condemnation case . . .; and that any other of plaintiff's property, real and personal, . . . are subject to levy and sale to satisfy said execution" (italics ours) — except its cemetery land outside the benefit district which was similarly used for graves. The decree did not specify further what was meant by the term "proper executions;" but obviously its theory was that Sec. 26, Art. VIII of the Charter applied, and that a general execution should have been issued and levied on the cemetery land other than occupied grave lots.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

State ex rel. Greene County v. Spradling
574 S.W.2d 692 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1978)
Lakewood Park Cemetery Ass'n v. Metropolitan St. Louis Sewer District
530 S.W.2d 240 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1975)
Billings v. Paine
319 S.W.2d 653 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1959)
Condemnation of Property in East Park District v. Dougherty
237 S.W.2d 118 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1951)
Giers Improvement Corp. v. Investment Service, Inc.
235 S.W.2d 355 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1950)
Munday v. Austin
218 S.W.2d 624 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1949)
Abrams v. Lakewood Park Cemetery Ass'n
196 S.W.2d 278 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1946)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
154 S.W.2d 90, 348 Mo. 561, 1941 Mo. LEXIS 445, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/troost-avenue-cemetery-co-v-kansas-city-lowenthal-securities-co-mo-1941.