This action is based on a tax bill issued for the improvement of certain property, in the grading for sidewalks on streets in the city of West-port. The judgment below was for plaintiff and sustained the validity of the bill. Defendant attacks the validity of the bill on the ground that, under the charter of the city of Westport, a tax bill can not be enforced until a special tax has been levied by the board of aldermen, by ordinance duly enacted, and that, in this case, no levy was made. The proceedings of the city authorities of the city of Westport, prior to the issuing of the tax bill in suit, were these: First. An ordinance was passed, requiring the grading to be done for sidewalks on South Main street in said city, prescribing how it should be done and when it should be completed, and that the work should “be paid for in special tax bills against, and upon, the lands that may be charged with the cost thereof, according to law, which work the board of aldermen deems necessary to have done.” Second. A written contract for the grading, in due form, was made by the city engineer, on behalf of the city, with Wheeler & Elmore, contractors. Third. The approval of this contract by ordinance passed by the board of aldermen. Fourth. The city engineer reported to the board of aldermen, in session, the completion of the work; whereupon, the board, by a resolution, ordered the tax bills to be issued. Fifth. An apportionment by the city engineer of the whole cost of the work among the several lots and parcels of land to be charged therewith, charging each lot with its proper share of the whole cost. And then tax bills, including the one in suit, were made out, in due form, and the one in suit assigned by the contractors to this plaintiff.
It will be noticed that there were two ordinances and one resolution by the board of aldermen. The first ordinance provided for grading the sidewalks, and *654recited that the work was to be paid for in tax bills. The second ordinance merely approved of the contract as let to the contractors by the city engineer. The resolutions passed after the work was completed, directed the issuing of the tax bills.
The authority upon which the whole proceeding is based is found in section 1592, Revised Statutes, 1889, of the charter of cities of the fourth class, to which class the city of Westport belongs. That section will be found set out in full at another place. It provides, among other things: “The board of aldermen shall have power, by ordinance, to levy and collect a special tax on the owner or occupier of the property, lot orlots, on aDy street,” for the purpose of grading in front of such property. That the work shall be done, “at the owner or occupier’s expense, and collected by special tax bills, which shall be a lien on the property, and shall be collected as provided by ordinance.” This charter limits the power of the board of aldermen and prescribes the mode of its exercise. It is at this point that the difference between the parties to this controversy appears. It is practically conceded that the special tax must be levied by the board of aldermen by ordinance, and the question made is, has it been so levied within the meaning of the charter. A charter granting .such power to the governing board of a municipality, being the only warrant whereby such board exerts such authority, must be strictly construed; and the mode of its exercise must, when prescribed by the charter, be strictly followed in all essential or substantial particulars. 2 Dillon on Municipal Corporations, sec. 769; Nevada v. Eddy, 123 Mo. 546; Kiley v. Oppenheimer, 55 Mo. 374. In the case last cited it was said: “The ability of the city to create a lien on the property of one of its citizens, in the manner pointed out in the ordinance referred to, is founded not in any abso*655lute or pre-existent right, but rests exclusively in an adherence to the method prescribed by ordinance, in pursuance of the authority contained in the charter.”
That the board of aldermen did, in this case, attempt to exercise the power of special taxation, granted by the foregoing charter, is undoubted; but we are satisfied they have not exercised it in the mode, or under the conditions prescribed for its exercise. And, in passing on what has been done by the city authorities of Westport, we can attach no consequence to the resolution of the board ordering the engineer to issue the tax bills, since the charter directs the power to be exercised by ordinance, and a resolution, as is well understood, does not meet such requirement; a resolution lacking essential elements necessary to the validity of an ordinance. Town of Trenton v. Coyle, 107 Mo. 193.
The charter, above quoted, grants the power to impose a special tax by a levy which is to be made by ordinance. Conceding, as * is contended by plaintiff, that no special words are necessary to be used by the municipal legislature in order to constitute a levy, within the meaning of the word as used in the charter, yet it is manifest that, by the word levy, as here used, is meant, to charge upon the person or the property which must respond to the tax, the amount thereof. And, when the word is used as here, it means to charge a sum of money, already ascertained, against the person or property subject to the charge. The charter specifies that the tax is to be collected in proportion to the number of front feet the property may contain, and authorizes the levy of a special tax in certain amounts, which amounts are to be ascertained in a prescribed mode. It, of necessity, follows that a levy of such character must be made by ordinance, after the amount for which the levy is to be made has been ascertained. Other*656wise, it is a blind levy of an unascertained sum. This being true, it is idle to assert that the ordinance passed before the work was done, authorizing it to be done, was a levy of the special tax. That ordinance, it is true, specifies that the work was to be paid for b yspecial tax bills, issued against the property to be charged. But that is no more than the charter itself specifies. The ordinance could not have said otherwise, if it mentioned the mode of payment at all. It would have been equally as effective without that clause. That clause inserted in the ordinance was no more a levy of the special tax in the manner, form and .amount required, than do those words, as they stand in the charter, constitute a levy.
But it would appear from arguments in behalf of plaintiff, that the work of the- city engineer in apportioning the cost of the work, connected with an ordinance authorizing the work, was, in effect, a levy. We think not. The levy must be made by the legislative department of the city government, composed of the alderman and mayor. It can not be delegated in whole, or in part, to the city engineer. The ordinance ordering the work, a contract for the performance of the work, and the apportionment of the cost by the city engineer, are all matter preceding the levy and upon which a levy is based, but they are not, collectively, or separately, a levy. The engineer’s share in the proceeding is necessary to the levy, but no more so than the contractor’s, and neither constitutes the levy. A levy, in the sense used in this charter, which, as before stated, contemplates a charge of certain amounts on certain properties of certain locations,- after certain prerequisites have teen performed, belongs to the legislature of the municipality. A call for such levy might be made under conditions and circumstances, when, in justice, it should not be ordained. Such a levy *657may frequently call for legislative discretion, as distinguished from ministerial acts, and largely differing therefrom. It is of such a nature that it can not be delegated in advance to the act and conduct of others.
The foregoing, under the peculiar provisions of the charter aforesaid, is not the only reason why the tax bill in suit should be declared to be invalid. The charter not only provides that the board of aldermen shall make the levy by ordinance, but the levy must be made “on the owner or occupier of the property, lot or lots.” The proceedings of the board of aldermen utterly fail to show a levy against, or on, any individual owner or occupier of the property sought to be charged. • Considering that this is a proceeding whereby the owner is to be divested of his property, nolens volens, the justice in at least giving ear to his demand that the mode of divestiture shall be complied with, is apparent. In Abbot v. Lindenbower, the following is quoted with approval from Dillon, J., in Allen v. Armstrong, 16 Iowa, 508, viz.: “We state the.principles, which must be legally and logically true, in this wise: If any given step or matter in the exercise of the power to tax (as, for' example, the fact of the levy by the proper authority), is so indispensable, that without its performance no tax can be raised, then that step or matter, whatever it may be, can not be dispensed with, and with respect to that, the owner can not be excluded from showing the truth by a mere legislative declaration to that effect. ” This principle was stated by this court in City of Sedalia v. Gallie, 49 Mo. App. 392. But since the tax is not a personal claim and must be realized out of the property charged, it may be suggested that it is of no practical importance for the levying power to specify the owner or occupier of the property. But the question of its practical import*658anee is not for judicial determination. Such question belongs to the lawmaking power. In the ease last cited this court, through G-ill, J., said: “It matters not that personal judgment can not be had against the owner for these local assessments; the statute must be obeyed. If it is provided thereby that in making such assessments it shall be charged against one as the owner of the land, then no lien is created, unless such provision is followed.”
We have but to give application to the expression of the legislative will and should not attempt to construe, where such construction is in the face of the clear statement of the will of the-legislature. “Equitable constructions are never given to mere arbitrary regulations of public policy.” Sedgwick’s Oonstr. Stat., 251. “The rule is, as we shall constantly see, cardinal and universal, that, if the statute is plain and unambiguous, there is no room for construction or interpretation. The legislature has spoken; their intention is free from doubt, and their will must be obeyed.” Ib., 194. The supreme court of the United States <said in Fisher v. Blight, 2 cranch, 358, 399: “Where a law is plain and unambiguous, whether it be expressed in general or limited terms, the legislature should be intended to mean what they have plainly expressed, and, consequently, no room is left for construction.” Endlich on Interpretation of Statutes, section 4, expresses in clear terms, and apt quotations from Yattel, the same views as to the province of the courts in the application of statutes. Prom these considerations also, we are constrained to hold the tax bill to be. invalid. The judgment, therefore, must be reversed.
All concur.