88 Neb. 828 | Neb. | 1911
The district court for Douglas county, upon an appeal of several property owners from an order of the board of equalization of the city of Omaha, and an ordinance re-levying a special assessment levied in 1888 to pay the cost of constructing a sewer, adjudged the relevy valid, The property owners appeal.
It is unnecessary to say just how far the legislature may proceed within constitutional limits in devising and providing a procedure • for the collection of special assessments to reimburse the state, or any of its subdivisions, for money expended in the construction of public improvements which specially benefit the property assessed. Where, however, that authority is delegated to a municipality, it should act with some reasonable degree of promptness, or the defense of ladies may be interposed by a property owner who purchased his holdings subsequent to the original levy and under such circumstances that he is not estopped to set up the defense of laches. If the city having the authority to act fails to do so for ten years after a special assessment has been declared void, or for ten years after the invalidity of all special assessments levied for a particular improvement has been demonstrated by a judgment in a suit maintained or defended by the owner of one or more lots in the district, it should not be permitted, over the objection of an individual who acquired title subsequent to the original levy, to exercise that authority.
The defense of laches is recognized in Hamilton, Law of Special Assessments, sec. 828, and in State v. District Court, 68 Minn. 242, and was applied to defeat a reassessment in City of Olympia v. Knox, 49 Wash. 537. The legislature by the enactment of chapter 15, laws 1903, recognized the principle, and, while that act does not control this case, it is important in determining the latitude
We do not desire to be understood as holding or suggesting that a relevy made by the taxing officers of a metropolitan city more than ten years after the original levy was made should be held void if collaterally attacked.
The proof is not so clear that we should definitely dispose of this case, nor is it specific enough to sustain the judgment appealed from. If, upon a retrial of the case, it shall appear that the special assessments levied in 1888 to pay for constructing the sewer in district No. 79 were adjudged invalid more than ten years preceding the date, in 1905, when the council by resolution initiated the proceedings for a relevy of the contested assessments, and that the appellants did not own their holdings when the original assessment was made, there will be proof of such laches as should defeat the relevy, unless there is proof of some facts or circumstances sufficient to avoid the defense of laches.
The city charter contemplates that, on appeals to the district court from orders entered in cases of special assessments, pleadings will be filed and issues joined as on appeals from judgments of justices of the peace. In the case at bar a petition, but no answer, was filed. We do not flunk the city intended to confess the allegations in the petition, but it should have answered. The case was
We have not overlooked the other subjects discussed in the briefs, but it is not thought necessary to discuss or determine them upon the evidence before us.
The judgment of the district court is reversed and the cause remanded for further proceedings.
Reversed.