Whitsett v. City of Carthage

193 S.W. 21, 270 Mo. 269, 1917 Mo. LEXIS 24
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 12, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 193 S.W. 21 (Whitsett v. City of Carthage) 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
Whitsett v. City of Carthage, 193 S.W. 21, 270 Mo. 269, 1917 Mo. LEXIS 24 (Mo. 1917).

Opinion

WOODSON, J.

— This suit was instituted in the circuit court of Jasper County by the plaintiff to enjoin the city of Carthage from constructing a main sewer therein in conformity to certain ordinances duly enacted by said city.

The trial resulted in a decree in favor of the defendant, denying the injunction, and after taking proper steps the plaintiffs duly appealed the cause to the Springfield Court of Appeals. Upon motion the cause was properly transferred by that court to this.

The construction of the sewer is resisted principally upon the grounds that the ordinances ordering it are unreasonable and oppressive. This calls for a statement of the substance of the evidence.

The facts of the case are briefly these:

[275]*275On the first Tuesday in April, 1912, the defendant held an election for the purpose of adopting the provisions of sections 9281 to 9298, inclusive, Revised Statutes 1909, relating to the construction of sewers in cities of the third class, and by virtue of said election, said sections were adopted.

On the 11th day of August, 1913, the defendant passed Ordinance No. 102, dividing the territory of said •city into sewer districts, as contemplated by the provisions of said sections 9281 to 9298, inclusive.

On the same day, namely, August 11, 1913, the defendant passed Ordinance No. 103, providing for the construction of a main trunk sewer, to be paid for by special tax bills on the lands belonging to plaintiffs and other lands. •

Pursuant thereto, the defendant was about to advertise for bids for the construction of said sewer, when this suit was commenced, June 23, 1915.

The plaintiffs are owners of about 160 acres of land against which the defendant proposes to issue special tax bills to pay for the construction of said sewer. .

The plaintiffs’ evidence tended to prove that the lands belonging to plaintiffs are occupied and used exclusively as farm lands and for truck gardening, etc.; that they are not held for the purpose of being platted and sold as town lots; that they are not in demand for urban purposes; that the growth of the city in the past twenty-five years has not been such as to indicate that they will, within any reasonable length of time, be in demand for urban uses.

The lands of all the plaintiffs, except the Block forty-acre tract, are in the southwest quarter of section Nine, Township Twenty-eight, Range Thirty-one. The Block forty is the northwest quarter of the northwest quarter of said Section- Nine.

The southwest quarter of Section Nine is the extreme southwest' portion of the city. While one ten-acre tract in the north-central portion thereof was, many years ago, platted into town lots, it was a failure as a [276]*276city addition. No streets or alleys have ever been opened or improved therein, and it is occupied as acreage property. None of the remainder of said quarter section has ever been platted.

The city owns the municipal light plant and waterworks. No portion of the lands belonging to the plaintiffs is provided with electric light or water service. The nearest light is located at the northeast corner of the southwest quarter of said Section Nine. The nearest water plug is located at the corner of Centennial Avenue and Forest Street, about four hundred feet east of the northeast corner of said quarter section. The policy of the city with reference to the extension of its water mains is that no extensions will he made unless the prospective consumption of water will produce an annual income of five per cent of the cost of the extension.

There are only twelve families, living on said quarter section, and it would cost several thousand dollars to extend the water mains to all parts of the same, so that the sewers, if constructed, could not he used by any of the plaintiffs.

In 1890, the population of the city was 7,981; in 1900, it was 9,416; in 1910, it was 9,483, and at the time of the trial of the case it was 9,211. About one-half of the unoccupied land within the city limits which is available for and adaptable to residence purposes, is within the proposed sewer district.

The lands belonging to plaintiffs, in the southwest quarter of Section Nine, lie south of Centennial Avenue, and are one-fourth of a mile west of Garrison. The southwest quarter of Section Nine, in which all the lands of plaintiffs lie, except the Block forty, is one-fourth of a mile west of Garrison Avenue. A good portion of the eighty-acre tract extending from Garrison Avenue on the west to Grand Avenue on the east, and from Centennial Avenue on the north to Fairview Avenue on the south, has been platted and offered for sale for the last twenty-five years. The street car track, on which cars are run each way every half hour, runs through this tract, on Main Street from north to south, and along the [277]*277south side thereof on Fairview Avenue. A large portion of this territory was settled up twenty-five years ago. At the present time there are only thirty-sis dwelling houses on the north forty acres of that eighty-acre tract, and only nine dwellings on the south forty acres of said eighty-acre tract. On the north half of the eighty-acre tract immediately west of Garrison Avenue and south of Centennial Avenue there are only seventeen dwellings, and on the south half of the same -there are only nine dwelling houses.

■ There are only seventeen dwellings on the 160-acre tract immediately east of Grand Avenue and south of. Centennial Avenue.

All of the above described tracts embracing one-half section of land are well adapted to urban purposes, and each and every one of them is closer to the center of population of Carthage than any portion of the. southwest quarter of said Section Nine.

The evidence also tended to show that some- years ago the forty-acre tract immediately south of Fair-view Avenue and west of Hazel Avenue was platted into lots and sold at auction, both additions being on the street-car line, and that both additions have been abandoned as urban property, and divided up into acre property and used for farming purposes.

That the system of sewer districts attached and made tributary to the main sewer in controversy contains about 826 acres, and that only about 26 acres the same have close water connection, and that the water mains would have to he extended before the remaining 800 acres could he benefited by the construction . of said sewer or by the construction of district sewers to connect therewith; and there is no intimation in the defendant’s evidence, or elsewhere in the record, that the city proposes or contemplates the construction of the necessary extension of its mains.

In District 44 there are 87 acres and 5 houses, in District 35 there 68% acres.and 9 dwelling houses. In District 24 there are 140 acres and 24 residences. The [278]*278cost of the construction of the main sewer would be $36.60 per acre.

The evidence shows that the lands belonging to plaintiffs are worth about $200 per acre, without improvements, in five-acre tracts.

The evidence tending to show the facts regarding the lands in the southwest quarter of Section 9 is also applicable to the Block forty-acre tract,

Carthage was incorporated under a special charter in 1873. At that time.the southwest quarter of Section Nine was not included within its limits.

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Bluebook (online)
193 S.W. 21, 270 Mo. 269, 1917 Mo. LEXIS 24, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/whitsett-v-city-of-carthage-mo-1917.