114 Ark. 23 | Ark. | 1914
Appellants were the owners of real property in the incorporated town of Hoxie, Arkansas, and this is an action instituted against them by the board of improvement of a district formed for the purpose of constructing sidewalks. The property of appellants is situated within the district and has been assessed, and the purpose of this action is to enforce the payment of the first assessment.
A similar suit between these parties was -formerly here on appeal, and we held that the improvement district had been legally formed, but that the ordinance levying the assessments on the property was void on account of not having been published in accordance with the terms of the statute. Gibson v. Incorporated Town of Hoxie, 110 Ark. 544.
After that decision a new ordinance was-passed levying the assessments, and it was published in accordance with the act approved March 3,1913, which provides that “where improvement districts are organized in any city or town in which no newspaper is regularly published,, all notices required may be published in any newspaper that is published and has a bona fide circulation in the county.” Act 125 of Acts of 1913, § 5, pi 527.
An earlier statute, approved January 30, 1913, contained a provision that “where no newspaper is published in such town or city, such publication may be made in some newspaper published in the same county and having a circulation in such town.” Act 5 of 1913, p. 27.
The fact that the work of the assessors was done prior to the passage of the ordinance which was held invalid in the former case and prior to the passage of the new act referred to herein does not affect the validity of the new ordinance and publication thereunder. The whole proceedings, so far as this record shows, were valid up to the publication of the former ordinance, and it was only the ordinance itself levying the assessment which was invalidated, by reason of the failure to publish the same in accordance with the statute. The ordinance was merely void, and it did not affect the power of the city council to pass a new ordinance and cause it to be published in accordance with the statute in force at the time of its passage. It is shown by the affidavit of the editor that there was publication of the present ordinance in accordance with the terms of the new statute.
That question, however, is ruled by the case of McDonnell v. Improvement District, 97 Ark. 334. In that case we said:
“It is time enough for the property owners to complain when the work is .about to be done, without reference to the establishment of a grade by the city. ’ ’
(4) The property owners -have the right to prevent construction of the improvement in violation of law and may seek injunctive relief from the chancery court where the commissioners are about to violate the law on that subject; but the mere fact that the grade has not been established does not afford any defense against the payment of assessments validly laid.
The other questions argued are not of sufficient importance to discuss.
The decree is affirmed.