Court Opinion

ID: 6620488
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-20 20:29:09.276071+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:58:41.454105
License: Public Domain

ELLISON, J.
This action is to enforce a lien of a special taxbill, issued for paving a street in front of the defendant’s property in Kansas City, as a “business street.” The judgment in the trial court was for the plaintiff.
Provision is made in section 2 of article 4, of the-charter of Kansas City, for paving the streets by the city council passing a resolution declaring it to be necessary, and, if no remonstrance from a majority of property-owners was thereafter presented 'in a designated time, by passing an ordinance directing a contract for the work.' The last proviso in said section, authorizing the paving of a street as a business street, reads as follows:
“Provided further, however, that if the board of public works shall unanimously recommend to the *245common council that any business street or part thereof be paved . . . and the payment therefor is to be made in special taxbills, and the common council shall, by ordinance, order such work to be done by a vote of two-thirds of the members elect of each house of the common council, then such work may be done without any resolution, as herein before provided, and regardless of such remonstrance. When the work shall be so recommended by the board of public works and so ordered by the common council as last above mentioned, the resident owners of the city who own a majority in front feet of the lands belonging to such residents and fronting on such street ... or part thereof to be improved, shall have the right to select the material with which such street ... or part thereof shall be paved, from not less than two kinds of materials, to be designated by the board of public works, such selection to be made by them within ten days after such ordinance shall have taken effect,- and been published for ten days in the newspaper at the time doing the city printing, which selection shall be by petition, addressed and delivered to the board of public works. If such selection be not made within such time, then the board of public works shall designate the material with which such street . . . -or part thereof shall be improved.”
The board of public works, as thus authorized to do, unanimously recommended that the street in controversy be paved as a business street, and the council duly passed an ordinance to that effect. -The board of public works designated the material, in words following, to-wit: “Trinidad Lake asphalt on concrete to be laid according to detail four of asphalt pavement, approved by said board August 11, 1896, and on file in the office of said board.
“Bermuda, California, Trinidad or any other asphalt equally as good as those designated, on concrete, to be laid according to detail F, of asphalt pave*246ment, approved by said board October 18, 1892, and on file in the office of said board.
“American bituminous rock on concrete to be laid according to detail I, of asphalt pavement, approved by said board August 11, 1896, and on file in the office of said board.
“Vitrified brick, as manufactured by the Diamond Brick & Tile Company, on concrete, to be laid according to detail I, of brick pavement, approved by said board November 26, 1895, and on file in the office of said board.
“Vitrified brick, as manufactured by the Kansas-City Vitrified Brickjdompany, the Pittsburg (Kansas) Vitrified Brick Company, or any other vitrified brick equally as good as those designated, on concrete to be laid accordingly to detail four of brick pavement, approved by said board August 11, 1896, and on file in the office of said board.
“Granite or sandstone blocks on concrete, to be laid according to detail C of stone block pavement, approved by said board July 9, 1892, and on file in the office of said board.”
Publication was duly made as required by the-charter, and the property-owners owning a majority of the front feet on the street undertook to select the-material from that ^designated by the board of public-works, by presenting a petition signed by them naming “Vitrified brick on concrete to be laid in accordance-with detail I, of brick pavements, approved by the board of public works, November- 26, 1895.” This, according to the ordinances and proofs in the case, meant a certain vitrified brick manufactured by 'a certain company known as ‘ ‘ The Diamond Brick and Tile Company. ’ ’ But this petition was not presented until one or more days after the ten days, limited by the charter for its presentation, had expired. The board of public works thereupon took and recorded the following action:
*247“The city engineer reported all the proceedings necessary for the pavement of Main street from Nineteenth street to Twentieth street, as a business street, have been complied with, and as the property-owners have, by petition representing a majority of front feet of real estate owned by residents of Kansas City and fronting on said part of Main street, selected vitrified brick according to detail I, approved by the board of public works, November 26, 1895, as the material with which said part of Main street shall be paved, the board of public works in addition to such selection of material by petition of property-owners, hereby selects and designates vitrified brick on concrete according to detail I, approved by the board of public works November 26, 1895, as the material with which said Main street, from Nineteenth to Twentieth street, shall be paved as a business street. The work to be done according to plan and specifications on file in the office of said board.”
1. The property-owners had a right to select the material from that designated by the board of public works, provided they made the selection in the time limited by the charter. This was not done, and the duty and responsibility thereupon devolved upon the board of public works to make the particular selection from the material they had theretofore designated. This was a duty that body could not delegate to the property-owners. Rich Hill v. Donnan, 82 Mo. App. 386. And it seems not to have delegated the duty, for by -the proceeding above set out, after reciting the fact that the property-owners had made selection by petition, the board, independently of the petition, itself selected the same material. The wording of the order discloses that the board passed its own judgment on the proposition. This was perhaps done in the knowledge that the property-holders were too late in making known their selection.
2. The question thus presented is this: had the *248board of public works the power under the charter to arbitrarily select a paving material that was manufactured by one company to the exclusion of the same material manufáctured by other companies? The case shows that vitrified brick, as manufactured by the Diamond Brick & Tile Co., was not a patented article and was not thus a monopoly by reason of being patented. On the contrary, several other companies, in and near Kansas City, manufactured such brick for paving which had passed the standard tests for street paving. The general policy in Kansas City is that in letting public work, opportunity must be given for competition. The very fact that the work is let on public notice at public bidding discloses this. Sec. 12, art. 17, Charter; Galbreath v. Newton, 30 Mo. App. 380; McQuiddy v. Brannock, 70 Mo. App. 535, 548. What possible opportunity can there be for competition when there can be but one bidder? What possible benefit can result to the property-holder for a public letting of the contract when the contractor has already been selected? The board of public works had the right to designate and select vitrified brick as the paving material, but it had no right to stifle competition and thereby violate the provisions of the city charter, by cutting out, in advance, all competitors. The precise question has been lately presented to the New York Court of Appeals and decided as we here decide, that a taxbill-resulting from such proceeding is void. The syllabus to that case succinctly states the facts and the decision thereon. It is as follows:
“A petition for the pavement of a street in the city of Syracuse, with vitrified paving brick, manufactured by the New York Brick and Paving Company, of Syracuse, N. Y., and all the proceedings had thereon by the common council, are in violation of the provisions of the city charter requiring the work to be let to the lowest bidder, and are void, when it appears that the company referred to has a complete *249monopoly, upon the disposal of such brick, and that there are other persons or corporations' who manufacture and sell vitrified brick for paving purposes, equal in quality to the particular kind specified.” Smith v. Syracuse Improvement Company, 161 N. Y. 484.
3. Estoppel was pleaded in that the'defendants (there were two sued as owners of the real estate, but only the present defendant appealed) signed the petition aforesaid making the same selection of the material which the board of public works thereafter itself selected. We do not gather from the record that this appealing defendant signed the petition, though his co-defendant did. But however that may be, there can be no estoppel in the case, and it was so declared by the trial court. The petition, by being presented out of time, was an unauthorized paper and could bind no one. It could not be the basis of an estoppel. In order to work an estoppel it must have caused the board to make the selection it asked. But plaintiff can not take that position without destroying his case, since, if the petition was the cause of the board’s order, the order would be void, as the petition was a mere nullity, not being presented within the time prescribed by law. The only way to uphold the board’s order is to do as we have done here, construe it to be an order on the judgment of the board independent of the petition.
4. It has been a subject of much discussion in many of the courts whether, under a charter requiring a public letting to the lowest bidder, there could be a valid contract based on an ordinance requiring the use of a certain material which, on account of being patented, or held in monopoly, could only be furnished by one party. One of the points urged in behalf of the power of the city to make such contracts is that to disallow such power would cut off the use of many of the most, valuable articles of material. The subject *250has been discussed in our Supreme Court in Virden v. City of St. Louis, 131 Mo. 26, and Barber Asphalt Co. v. Hunt, 100 Mo. 22. But we need not go into that question in this case. The material here specified was not a patented material or held in monopoly, and no reason existed why the restriction to material which could be furnished by but one party should have been made.
The charter aforesaid (sec. 12, art. 17) provides: “All city improvements of whatever kind or character, including the erection of all public buildings, made or to be erected at the expense of the city, and including all work to be paid for in special taxbills, except as in this charter otherwise provided, shall be let by contract to the lowest and best bidder as shall be prescribed by ordinance; provided, however, that nothing in this section shall be so construed as to. prevent repair by day’s work of streets, alleys and other public places, curbing, sewers, culverts, buildings or other city property, so far as may be necessary, under the direction of the board of public works.”
It has not been suggested that these provisions-shall in no case be respected. On the contrary, it has been held that they are to be disregarded only “on account of their inherent inapplicability to the nature and circumstances of the case. Baird v. Mayer, 96 N. Y. 582. In this case there was full room for application of such provisions. Vitrified brick for paving purposes were a common article of manufacture and sale. The monopoly in this case was not a monopoly made by the exceptional character of the material, or the fact that the material was held by one party, but it was a monopoly made and brought into existence by the board of public works. If this can be done in the face of the charter, then, as said in Larned v. City of Syracuse, 17 App. Div. Supreme Court New York 27, bids could be restricted to lime or cement made by one favored party, and to rock broken or crushed by some *251other favored party. Thus would all protection be withdrawn from tbe property-owner and fnll play be given to fraud, favoritism and corruption.
Tbe judgment, with tbe concurrence of tbe other judges, is reversed.