Forbis v. Bradbury
Forbis v. Bradbury
Opinion of the Court
Plaintiff brought this suit in equity to set aside certain special tax bills issued by the city authorities of Independence, and thereby relieve his real estate from an apparent cloud on the title. The gist of his complaint is, that the ordinance providing for the street improvement, as well as the contract and tax bills issued thereon, were illegal and void, because said ordinance was passed in the face of a written remonstrance signed by a majority of the resident owners of property fronting on the street improved.
The defendants being the contractors who macadamized the street take issue on this allegation, and assert that the remonstrants did not compose a majority of the resident property owners. On this main issue the trial judge found for the plaintiff, gave judgment as prayed in the petition, and defendants appealed.
Independence is a city of the third class and the section of its charter pertinent to this controversy, reads as follows: “When the council shall deem it necessary to * * * macadamize * * * any street or part thereof within the limits of the city, for which a special tax is to be levied * * * the council shall by resolution, declare such work or improvements necessary to be done, and cause such resolution to be published in the newspaper doing the city printing for two consecutive weeks, and if a majority of the resident owners of the property liable to taxation therefor shall not, within ten days thereafter, file with the clerk of said city their protest against such improvements, then the council shall have power to cause such improvements to be made and to contract therefor and to levy the tax as herein provided * * * Sec. 1498, R. S. 1889.
Under authority of this statute the city council of Independence on July 20, 1891, passed a resolution
The circuit court held that these alleged grantees of Lewis and Wilson were not such “resident owners of the property .liable to taxation”'for said improvement as ought to be considered in settling the sufficiency of said remonstrance. And the court thereupon declared the ordinance and tax bills void for the reason that the council had passed the ordinance and directed the improvement, although there . was then filed with the city clerk a protest and remonstrance signed by a majority of the bona fide resident owners of the property fronting on the street, or portion thereof about to be improved.
In this we think the trial judge'was clearly right. 'The manifest purpose of the law is to permit the majority of the actual resident owners, whose property is to be charged with such street improvements, to control in such matters. The council may by its published resolution propose work on the street, but if a majority •of the bona fide resident owners, who are to pay therefor, shall interpose by remonstrance, then the council can not proceed in violation of such protest. In the presence of such an objection, timely made as the statute provides, the city council loses its power to prosecute the work.
The pretended grantees created by the deeds from Lewis and Wilson were in no just sense owners of property to be charged, and the trial court very properly excluded them from the count. To permit such schemes to succeed would be a fraud on the law andthe rights of the real owners. It seems, too, without question, that before defendants undertook the work of grading and macadamizing the street, they were informed of the fraud practiced on the protesting owners, and were warned of this vice in the tax bills to
But to counteract the foregoing, defendants say, that even to admit that the Lewis and Wilson grantees were fraudulently created and ought not to be counted, and yet the attack on the tax bills must fail, because, they allege, plaintiff and Ott and Sauerbier, three of the protesting owners, themselves made fraudulent deeds to members of their respective families, and for the purpose of defeating the proceedings of July 20. We have carefully read and considered the evidence, and find this charge is not sustained.
It seems that just two months before the city council adopted resolution number 43 providing for the improvement of Blue avenue from Delaware street to the western city limits, the council had inaugurated proceedings to grade and macadamize a portion of Blue avenue along with a portion of Union street, and to that end resolution number 37 was adopted on May 19, 1891. Within a few days after the adoption of this resolution Forbis, Ott and Sauerbier made several deeds to different parties who were members of their respective families. These conveyances are attacked, and it is charged that they were made for the sole purpose of increasing the number of remonstrants and defeating the proposed improvement. As to the Sauerbier deeds it is sufficient to say that there was not a scintilla of evidence tending to impeach their good faith. But as to the conveyances from Ott and from Forbis the testimony tends to prove that these parties were induced to make the deeds to their children for the purpose, largely, of securing the defeat of the improvement contemplated by the resolution of May 19. It is only fair to add, however, that other motives
But admitting that Forbis and Ott, in making the deeds in May, intended thereby to defeat the proceeding of May 19, and even then does it follow that those grantees should not be heard as to the propriety of another and different improvement suggested by the resolution of July 20, 1891? The resolution of May 19 declared it necessary to macadamize portions of Blue and Union avenue, but this resolution was, on May 26, repealed, and that improvement abandoned. The Forbis and Ott deeds were made with reference to the abandoned improvement', and not to that proposed two months thereafter, and which was a substantially different work from that proposed by resolution of May 19. It is sufficient answer to all this to say, that when the proceeding of July 20 was begun the Forbis and Ott grantees were real owners of certain property to be taxed for that improvement, and they had, as incident to that ownership, the right to be heard in opposition thereto. And so they were regarded by the city- council ; they were counted as genuine objectors; but in
We hold then, with the trial court, that at the time of the passage of the ordinance directing this work to be done at the expense of certain property owners, there was on file in the office of the city clerk a protest and remonstrance signed by “a majority of the resident owners of the property liable to taxation therefor;” that the existence of such protest deprived the council of all authority to prosecute such improvement; that, the ordinance so passed and tax bills thereon issued,, were and are null and void.
The judgment, then, will be affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.