Williams v. Ettenson

170 S.W. 370, 178 Mo. App. 178, 1914 Mo. App. LEXIS 106
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 2, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 170 S.W. 370 (Williams v. Ettenson) 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
Williams v. Ettenson, 170 S.W. 370, 178 Mo. App. 178, 1914 Mo. App. LEXIS 106 (Mo. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

ELLISON, P. J.

Plaintiff’s action is based on special tax bills for building district sewers in Excelsior Springs. Tbe judgment in tbe trial court sustained tbe bills and defendants appeal.

The bills named Henry Ettenson as owner and he is not a party defendant. The question was therefore made extensively briefed and argued here, whether the bills, when introduced in evidence, made a prima-facie case under sections 9385 and 9408, Revised Statutes 1909, against these defendants who were not named therein as owners. After the case had been submitted for decision for several months, and an opinion partly prepared, defendants withdrew that point. We have therefore been compelled to abandon parts of our conclusions and to again consider the case with that point eliminated.

Several other objections were made to the validity of the bills, but with the exception of that as to notice of letting the contract, we think them more technical than real.

We do not think the objection as to the course of the sewer not being named in the contract and the omission to call for a distance was anything more than a formal error which did not mislead any one. The contract referred specifically to the ordinance which contained the description.

Nor do we think the objection that the material, and dimension of manholes is well taken. [City of St. [180]*180Joseph v. Owen, 110 Mo. 445; Joplin v. Hollingshead, 123 Mo. App. 602.]

So objection was made that the contracts fixed the time for completion of the work different from the ordinance. There is an argument based on this point and deductions made that we think are not justified by the facts. There was no difference in time. The contract refers to the ordinance fixing the time. The fact that the contract imposed a penalty for delay did not affect the matter.' The contractor asked no delay and the question raised is not supported by facts sufficient to give it significance.

Nor do we regard the objection as to the kind of pipe (iron or vitrified earthern ware) as of vital importance. Defendant asserts that the ordinance calls for iron pipe and the contract for vitrified pipe. The contract calls for the material provided for in the ordinance.

We are thus brought to the question referred to above as to the notice of a public letting, or bids on the work. This concerns the bills for constructing sewer number fourteen. The ordinance requiring notice reads as follows:

“Section 5. A proper advertisement for bids for the construction of said sewer shall be inserted in the Daily Call, a newspaper published in the city of Excelsior Springs, Missouri, and published therein for not less than one week.”
The notice as published reads as follows:
“Notice to Contractors.”
“Excelsior Springs, December 20, 1907. Sealed proposals will be received by the board of aldermen of the city of Excelsior Springs, until 9 o’clock a. m. on the 27th day of December, 1907, at which time bids will be opened for furnishing all the material, etc.”

The Daily Call was an evening newspaper published at 5 o ’clock in the afternoon. The first publication of the notice was at 5 p. m. of December 20th and [181]*181each evening thereafter np to and including December 27 th.

The notice was to be published for not less than one week before the time for making bids expired; and, according to the express terms of the notice, the time for bids expired at 9 o’clock a. m. of December 27th, for then they were to be opened. Now a publication for one week means for seven days, State ex rel. v. Tucker, 32 Mo. App. 620; Young v. Downey, 150 Mo. 317, 324, 330; Russell v. Croy, 164 Mo. 69; Bean v. County Court, 33 Mo. App. 635; State ex rel. v. Dobbins, 116 Mo. App. 29, and seven days had not expired from 5 o’clock p. m. on December 20th to 9 o’clock a. m. December 27th. It lacked eight hours of a week, which was, practically, a business day. The first of the seven days required, expired at 5 p. m. December 21st and the last of the seven expired at that hour December 27th, and though the publication was had on the evening of the 27th, it was a useless publishing, for bids had been closed since 9 o ’clock that morning. The publication here was continuous from the first insertion and therefore, cases involving instances where the first publication was the requisite length of time before the act of which notice, was given, but which were not continuous in each paper between the two periods, are not applicable. The fatal point against the validity of this notice is, that one week, or seven days, of time had not expired between the time of the first publication and the time of opening the bids; there were only six days and until 9 o’clock of the following day.

Our attention has been called to the rule that the law does not regard fractions of a day. [Shaffer v. Detie, 191 Mo. 377, 387; St. Joseph v. Landis, 54 Mo. App. 315, 324; Kimm v. Osgood, 19 Mo. 60.] That is true ordinarily. But when the law stating the requirement to be performed, itself makes the hour of the day an essential part of its command, then regard must be had to that hour. If the law commands a certain thing [182]*182to be done at a certain bonr of the day that, of course, cannot be ignored as it would be if tbe whole of the day is taken. In the case last cited the Supreme Court said:- “But in such computations the rule is, to exclude fractions of a day, except in those cases where justice requires an examination into the precise time of the day at which an act was performed. The fiction that a day is an indivisible point of time, will not be allowed to work a wrong.” So in 38 Cyc. 315, 316, it is stated that ‘ ‘ The rule that a day is an indivisible period of time is a mere legal fiction and subject to numerous exceptions.” [Brady v. Gilman, 96 Minn. 234.]

In Peebles v. Charleston & W. C. Ry. Co., 7 Ga. App. 279, 66 S. E. Rep. 953, an administrator attempted to renew a suit of his intestate, by amending what purported to be the petition of such intestate. This petition was filed at 4:30 p. m. of the 12th of June, 1908, but the intestate had died that afternoon, three hours before, viz., at 1:30. It was insisted that the law did not know a fraction of a day and therefore the suit should be considered to have been instituted from the first moment of the day on which the petition was filed, and thus, though in point of fact, the intestate had been dead three hours when the petition was filed it was claimed that, in point of law, it was filed from the previous midnight ahead of the time he died. But the court said: “It is true as a general rule that a day in legal consideration is punctum temporis, and the law knows no fraction of time, but considers a day as a continuous period of twenty-four hours, commencing at midnight, as the unit of measure. But this legal fiction that a day is an indivisible point of time is not always adhered to and is never adhered to if to do so would work injustice. And where the precise hour when an act is done becomes material in ascertaining and determining the relative rights of, persons, this legal fiction would not prevail as against the truth. [183]*183When rights attach from the doing of acts or the failure to do acts, the event must he regarded, and the time of the event is the controlling fact.”

If we must not recognize the fraction of a day and must say that the publication at 5 o ’clock p. m.

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Related

State Ex Rel. Brines v. Franklin
283 S.W. 712 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1926)
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274 S.W. 802 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1925)

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Bluebook (online)
170 S.W. 370, 178 Mo. App. 178, 1914 Mo. App. LEXIS 106, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-ettenson-moctapp-1914.