West v. Burke

228 S.W. 775, 286 Mo. 358, 1921 Mo. LEXIS 111
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 5, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 228 S.W. 775 (West v. Burke) 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
West v. Burke, 228 S.W. 775, 286 Mo. 358, 1921 Mo. LEXIS 111 (Mo. 1921).

Opinion

JAMES T. BLAIR, P. J.

This is an appeal from a judgment for defendant in a suit on a tax bill issued in part payment of the cost of the work of grading Ewing avenue from Fifteenth to Seventeenth street in Kansas City.

*364 The answer contains (1) an admission of ownership of the parcel of ground against which the tax bill was issued; (2) a general denial of other allegations; (3) averments of facts said to show such delay in prosecuting this action as to establish that it was not commenced or prosecuted in good faith and that the lien has expired; (4) a plea of laches on the same facts; (5) averments that the assessment was void because the parcel assessed was not in the assessment district, and (6) that the assessment and the tax bill are invalid and in violation of designated provisions of the State and Federal constitutions. A reply was filed.

Appellant offered the tax bill. Respondents offered ordinances, orders and publication of notice, certain plats and some oral evidence — all of which appear, so far as necessary, in connection with the discussion of questions to which they are relevant. The case was tried to the court.

I. ' The trial court gave a declaration of law for respondents, as follows:

Grading Benefits: Legislative Question. “The court declares the law to be that it must consider and regard the evidence offered by the defendants tending to prove that the assessment against the land of defendants shown by the tax ^ sued on is grossly in excess of any special benefits resulting to said land from the grading for which said tax bill was issued; and that if the court finds that said assessment is in excess of said special benefits, its finding against defendants cannot exceed the amount of said special benefits.”

Appellant assigns this for error. Respondents do not seem to defend this declaration. The instruction is general; whereas, the question whether the parcel “would or would not be benefited” by the improvement “is a legislative and not a judicial question,” and the judgment of the legislative department is conclusive unless it be an exceptional case. [Prior v. Construction Co., 170 Mo. l. c. 451; Meier v. St. Louis, 180 Mo. l. c. 408; L. & N. R. R. Co. v. Barber Asphalt Co., 197 *365 U. S. l. c. 433; Wagner v. Baltimore, 239 U. S. l. c. 218, et seq.]

Kansas City Charter: Gradings Proceedings: Lots or Blocks. II. Respondents contend there are reasons requiring the affirmance of the judgment whether or no instruction 4 was erroneous. The first of these, it is argued. is that the land was unplatted land and legally could not be assessed as platted land, as wag &one. The charter provides that property along the street or avenue graded “laid off in lots or blocks . . . from the line of the street, avenue or public highway” shall be charged “hack to the center line of the block or blocks; ” but if the property is not “laid off into lots or blocks” such property, “back one hundred and fifty feet, shall be so charged.”

The part of Ewing avenue graded runs betwéen what appears on the map as “Subdivision of Thomas J. Hughes,” lying east of the avenue, and West Manchester Addition, lying on the west of it. West Manchester Addition consists, from north to south, of blocks 1, 2, 3 and 4. These blocks extend westward from Ewing avenue to Bennington avenue, an average of 570.7 feet. From north to south they are of an average width of 272.56 feet. Each of these blocks is divided into twenty-two lots, eleven facing north and eleven facing south. The streets between are fifty feet in width. East of Ewing avenue, between Fifteenth and Seventeenth streets, opposite the addition just described, lies the Hughes Subdivision, consisting of two parcels marked as block 4 and block 5; the latter is that to the north and is owned by respondents. It extends 630.25 feet east along Fifteenth street from Ewing avenue and is 591.23 feet from north to south along that avenue. South of it is a street or road which articulates with the central street of West Manchester Addition. South of this highway lies a parcel approximately equal in size to that of respondents. Winchester avenue runs north and south along the east side of blocks 4 and 5 of *366 tlie Hughes Subdivision. Fifteenth street is north of it and Seventeenth street is south. These two last named streets form the north and south boundaries of West Manchester Addition, also. It will appear from this that there is no great discrepancy between the total area of West Manchester Addition and that of the Hughes Subdivision. The benefit district, as assessed, extended from Fifteenth street on the north to Seventeenth street on the south and from Ewing avenue west one-half the distance to Bennington avenue, the next parallel street on the west, an average distance' of 287.35 feet; and extended east from Ewing avenue an average" distance of 315.18 feet. The varations implied fin the word “average” as used here did not exceed three inches and are given no attention by counsel, neither do they deserve any. The blocks in the additions to the north, to the west and to the northwest of the Hughes Subdivision are of about the same general width or length, from east to west, as the parcels in the Hughes Subdivision and the blocks in West Manchester Addition. The property to the northeast is evidently laid out in smaller blocks because of the presence nearby of two railroad lines which angle past it. The addition to the east conforms its blocks, from 'east to west, with those north of it, and also is bounded on the east and northeast by the railroads. The plat does not include lots and blocks on the south of the Hughes Subdivision, though a broken line indicates there may be streets platted south from Seventeenth at a distance from each other of about three hundred feet.

(a) It is obvious from this description and from the plat that there is no gross disparity in width between that part of the benefit district east of Ewing avenue and that part west of it. The difference is not at all comparable to that which existed in Commerce Trust Co. v. Blakely, 274 Mo. l. c. 57. As was said in that case (l. c. 59) “A liberal view must be taken of inequalities resulting from the application of any rule of apportionment. Exact equality is humanly impossible.” It was *367 held there, also, that when the foregoing had been given its proper weight “a rule of apportionment cannot be upheld in a particular case like this if it results in gross inequality and arbitrarily distributes the burden without regard ‘to special considerations applicable to the parcels taxed.’ ” The disparity, merely, between the east and west parts of'the district, does not bring this case within the influence of the rule quoted.

(b) It is argued that the ordinary block in Kansas City has an east and west length of 275 to 300 feet, and that this takes the parcel involved out of the meaning of the word “block” as used in the charter. There is no prescribed length and breadth of blocks in Kansas City. Doubtless the testimony that in many sections of the city, as a rule, blocks were of the width mentioned, is, true. It appears not to be true in other sections.

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Bluebook (online)
228 S.W. 775, 286 Mo. 358, 1921 Mo. LEXIS 111, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/west-v-burke-mo-1921.