Court Opinion

ID: 6620086
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-20 20:28:41.351311+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:58:32.444502
License: Public Domain

SMITH, P. J.
The plaintiff was the owner of certain lots on Moniteau street in the defendant, a city of the third class, on which was situate his residence and greenhouse, in the latter of which were many rare and valuable shrubs and plants. In the said street in front of the plaintiff’s lots there was a low place or natural channel through and along which the water, falling north and east for some distance, passed on its way to a point where it was discharged into a larger stream. In 1896, the street commissioner, under the direction of the defendant’s city council, graded said street in front of plaintiff’s lots. The natural waterway referred to was filled and a drainpipe two feet in diameter was inserted therein to carry off the water falling on the higher lots to the north and east. Some time after the said improvement was made there was a heavy rainfall, and owing to the fact that the said drainpipe was not of sufficient capacity to carry off the water, as a consequence it collected and increased in volume until it finally broke away and flooded plaintiff’s premises, doing the injury complained of. It is conceded that there was no ordinance whatever passed authorizing the improvement which caused the overflow and consequent damage to plaintiff.
The defendant, as a city of the third class, was authorized by- its charter (Session Acts 1893, p. 90, section 108) to enact ordinances to grade its streets, build culverts, bridges *652and sewers, and otherwise improve its streets. Thomson v. Boonville, 61 Mo. 282, was where the grade of a street was established by an ordinance. No action was taken under the ordinance. Two years later the city council appointed three of its members to determine the grade of said street. The grading was accordingly done under their direction. This grade was different from that fixed by said ordinance. The street was cut down deeper than said ordinance warranted. The action was by an abutting lotowner to recover damages resulting from the alteration of the grade. In the course of the opinion it was said that the defendant, by its charter, was empowered by ordinance to improve its streets, etc., and that this was the method pointed out by its charter and the only legal mode by which the subject could be acted upon. The charter was its power of attorney granting the authority, and the manner prescribed by it must be carried out. It required the passage of an ordinance — the legislative act of the mayor and council — to accomplish the object, and that was a power that could not be delegated or committed to other hands. The grading, therefore, under assumed authority of the committee, was done without legal justification; but that the defendant was not thereby bound. It could only be bound when it attempted, in its legal capacity, to exercise an authority not warranted. Here was no such attempt by its lawmaking power. The council, without the concurrence of its co-ordinate branch, attempted to give power by the appointment of a committee to do what could only be done by an ordinance passed in regular form. No authority 'was granted and no liability rested on the city, in consequence of the action of the committee. There was no principal standing behind the committee to shield them. They might be liable as wrongdoers, but the city was not.
And the doctrine of this case has been reiterated and its *653application illustrated in a number of other cases. Werth v. Springfield, 78 Mo. 107; Stewart v. Clinton, 79 Mo. 603; Rowland v. Gallatin, 75 Mo. 134; Hilsdorf v. St. Louis, 45 Mo. 94; Keating v. Kansas City, 84 Mo. 415; Gehling v. St. Joseph, 49 Mo. App. 431; Werth v. Springfield, 22 Mo. App. 12; Imler v. Springfield, 30 Mo. App. 669 ; Maudlin v. Trenton, 67 Mo. App. 453; Beatty v. St. Joseph, 57 Mo. App. 251; Kolkmeyer v. Jefferson, 75 Mo. App. 678; Rives v. Columbia, 80 Mo. App. 173; Hall v. Trenton, 86 Mo. App. 326. The facts of the present ease, we think, are so nearly analogous to those in Thomson v. Boonville, supra, as to justify the application of the governing principles of the latter in the decision of the former. The defendant’s demurrer to the evidence should have been sustained. The plaintiff did not show himself entitled to recover as against the defendant.
Judgment reversed.
All concur.