City of Sedalia ex rel. Taylor v. Abell

ELLISON, J.

— This action is to recover the amount of a special taxbill issued for street work in the city of Sedalia. The plaintiff recovered in the trial court.

The city of Sedalia is a city of the third class, and at the time of the proceedings' in controversy was governed by the laws of 1893, p. 90, secs. 108 and 109, wherein it is provided that the cost of bringing a street to grade may be paid out of the general revenue, or that such cost may be paid by a general assessment on taxable property within the city. It is also provided in said law, that the cost of paving, guttering and curbing, and for doing ‘ ‘ all excavating and grading necessary for the same (after said streets . . . have been first brought to grade) shall be levied as special assessments upon the lots on either side of the street. ” It is further provided that the city council may by ordinance include in such special assessment against the lots on either side of the street, also include the cost of bringing the street to £ £ the established grade;” provided, such council is of opinion that the general revenue fund of the city is not in condition to warrant an expenditure therefrom of bringing the same to the established grade. It was also provided that there should be a preliminary resolution declaring it necessary to pave. The grade on the street in question had theretofore been established by the city council.

In pursuance of such charter powers the city council passed the following resolution:

“That we deem and declare it necessary that Fourth street be brought to the established grade and paved from the west line of Thomson avenue to the east line of Park avenue, and that this resolution be published in the paper doing the city printing for two consecutive weeks by fourteen consecutive insertions. ’ ’

Afterwards, the council passed an ordinance providing :

“ Section 1. That all that part of Fourth street between the west line of Thomson avenue and the east line *435of Park avenue be brought to the established grade and paved according to the specifications herein contained. ’ ’ etc., etc.

Still section 1 of said ordinance has this provision:

“All the earth and materials taken shall be removed and either used for filling where the same may be necessary, or entirely taken away, and said street to be thoroughly rolled before any paving material is put thereon and the grading shall always be at least one square in advance of the paving. ’ ’

The estimate for the work prepared hy the city engineer was as follows:

“Estimate for bringing to grade and paving Fourth street from the west line of Thomson avenue, to the east line of Park avenue:
“Grading and excavating, per square yard, $ .10
Concrete base, per square yard.............70
Asphalt, per square yard.................. 1.00
Profit, per square yard...................20
$2.00”

The notice for bids was as follows:

“Notice is hereby given, that the city council of the city of Sedalia, Missouri, will receive and consider bids or proposals for the grading and paving of Fourth street, from the west line of Thomson avenue to the east line of Park avenue, as provided by an ordinance of said city, entitled: ‘An ordinance providing for the grading and paving of Fourth street, from the west line of Thomson avenue to the east line of Park avenue’ passed July 1,1895, and approved July 2,1895. All bids shall be based on the specifications, and conform to the provisions and requirements of said ordinance, and shall be filed in the office of the city clerk not later than five o’clock p. m. on the fifteenth day of July, 1895, and shall be sealed.”

The written bid of the plaintiff was as follows:

*436“To the mayor and city council, Sedalia, Mo.:
“I hereby propose to bring to the established grade and pave Fourth street from the west line of Thomson avenue, to the east line of Park avenue, according to the specifications applying to said work, fox the sum of one (1) dollar and sixty-five (65) cents per square yard, and I propose to use the following materials in said paving: Trinidad asphalt and Louisville or Milwaukee cement. ’ ’

Plaintiff’s contract contained, among others, the following provisions:

“Whereas, the said S. H. Taylor was and is the lowest and best bidder for the grading and paving of Fourth street, in said city of Sedalia, under and in pursuance of the ordinance passed by the council of said city and approved by the mayor thereof on the second day of July, 1895, entitled ‘An ordinance providing for the grading and paving of Fourth street from the west line of Thomson avenue to the east line of Park avenue, ’ and the contract to do all the work provided for in said ordinance has been duly awarded to said S. H. Taylor, by the council of said city; . . . That the said S. H. Taylor shall well and truly do all the grading and paving required and provided for in the above named ordinance and furnish all material for the same, and in the doing thereof will abide by that ordinance and all ordinances of said city pertaining to and regulating such work and the doing thereof, . . . It is further agreed that the above mentioned ordinance of July 2, 1895, and all other ordinances of said city regulating and affecting the matter of doing said work and guarding from accidents while so doing, and providing indemnity, etc., shall form a part of this contract as though the same were set out herein. ’ ’

It will be noticed that there was no ordinance declaring that in the opinion of the council the general revenue fund of the city was not in condition to pay the cost *437of 'bringing the street to established grade. It is conceded that the council has no power to- let work bringing a street to the established grade without first adopting such an ordinance, and that if it does, the taxbills issued in payment are void. It has been frequently so ruled. Wheeler v. Poplar Bluff, 149 Mo. 36; Kolkmeyer & Co. v. City of Jefferson, 75 Mo. App. 678; Poplar Bluff v. Hoag, 62 Mo. App. 672.

But plaintiff insists, in support of the judgment, that in point of fact the street was not brought to the es: tablished grade, and that the only grading done was in excavating eight inches to make space for the depth of paving. He states that the grade as established by the council as aforesaid “conformed practically” to the natural surface. This contention involves a flat contradiction of the entire proceedings leading up to the letting of the contract, including, not only the ordinance, but the plaintiff’s bid and his contract thereunder. To allow this in one instance would authorize its allowance in all instances. It would work a complete destruction to the safeguards the law has thrown around the citizen in proceedings instituted to take his property from him without his consent. It would set aside every principle of law which requires certain specified steps of record to be taken in order that proceedings like special taxation may be validated.

But allowing plaintiff the privilege of proving that in point of fact the street was not brought to grade, it would still- leave him without any legal support. He would then be in the condition of having done work not provided for in the proceedings of the council. The work provided for was to grade the street, or as expressed, to bring the street to the established grade, and to pave it. Manifestly, he can not be allowed a taxbill for doing only one of the two things, when both were included in the ordinance, the notice of letting of bids and the bid itself. On this general subject see Gralbreath *438v. Newton, 30 Mo. App. 380. The judgment was for the wrong party and will he reversed with directions to enter judgment for defendant.

All concur.

The foregoing opinion is modified so as to remand cause.