delivered the opinion of the court.
This is an appeal from a judgment rendered in favor of the defendant, upon a demurrer to the plaintiff’s petition. The petition states in substance, that in December, 1882, the plaintiff and the defendant entered into a written contract of lease, whereby the defendant as lessee, covenanted, among other things, with the plaintiff, as lessor, to pay all taxes, including taxéfe for 1883, both general and special, which might be assessed or levied against the property let, during the term of said lease, the last tax to be paid being in 1892. That the city of St. Louis, under authority of its charter and ordinances, and during the term of the lease, caused the street in front of the property let to be reconstructed with granite blocks, the cost of which work was, under the provisions of said charter and ordinances, chargeable upon the adjoining property as a special tax. That the special tax thus assessed against the property let was $521.05. That this amount the plaintiff was Compelled to pay for the protection of his own property, and thereupon demanded from the defendant a repayment of the same as due by the terms of the lease. That the defendant refused to repay said amount to the plaintiff.
Thus the only question presented is, whether the words “ taxes both general and special,” as used in this contract between the parties, include an assessment made for the reconstruction of the street. The trial court held that, as a matter of law, the term did not cover an assessment made for such purpose.
The respondent contends that this view is correct. That this assessment is neither a general nor special tax. *10That the term special tax can, in the nature of things, mean only one thing and can not have different meanings-when used in different connections. That the supreme-court in the case of Farrar v. St. Louis (80 Mo. 379), decided that an assessment of this character was not a special tax within the' purview of section six, article ten, of the constitution, and, therefore, it could not be a special tax for any purpose.
The vice of this argument is apparent. The laws of this state, and the charters of the city of St. Louis, have-expressly designated assessments of this character as special taxes, both before and after the adoption of the-constitution. Laws 1867, p. 74, sect. 11; Laws 1870, p. 457, sect. 11 ; Rev. Stat. 1879, sects. 4528, 4782, 4887, 4942; 2 Rev. Stat. 1879, p. 1608, sects. 18, 24, 25, 26. The supreme court and this court have frequently designated similar local assessments as special taxes, and their assessment as an exercise of the .taxing power.. Newby v. Platte Co., 25 Mo. 258; Garrett v. St. Louis, 25 Mo. 505, 509; Uhrig v. St. Louis, 44 Mo. 458, 463; Neenan v. Smith, 50 Mo. 525, 529; Adams v. Lindell, 5 Mo. App. 197, 212.
These facts, of themselves, would indicate that. the-term special taxes may properly include assessments of this character. Nor does the case of Farrar v. St. Louis,, supra, purport to decide that these assessments are not a legitimate exercise of the taxing power, or that such assessments are not special taxes, but simply that they are not taxes within the purview and meaning of the-constitutional limitation.
The argument, therefore, that the term “special-taxes” in this lease can not receive a meaning, other than that assigned by the supreme court to the same-term in the constitution, must fail, in view of the fact, that such different meaning of the term when used in other connections has been sanctioned by the legislature and by the courts alike. It is, in fact, an argument that. *11a certain thing can not be done, with propriety, where-the facts demonstrate that it has frequently been done, with propriety, heretofore.
' In what sense the parties to this instrument used the. term, must be determined as a matter of fact. The covenant is that of the defendant, and he is prima facieliable, because the term can and has frequently been, used, with propriety, to include assessments of this-character. If these words, when inserted in instruments of this nature, have, by common usage, or the interpretation put upon them generally by parties entering into-similar contracts, received another and different meaning than the meaning contended for by the plaintiff, it is-incumbent upon the defendant to show that fact by answer.
All the judges concurring, the judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.