133 Ala. 587 | Ala. | 1901
Authority in the city council of Montgomery to malve a special assessment against property to defray expenses of sidewalk and street paving is found alone in sections 12 and 34 of the act “To establish a new charter for the city of Montgomery,” approved February 10, 1893. — Acts, 1892-93, p. 428. In the first part of section 12 is a provision relative to keeping sidewalks clean and in repair at the expense of property owners and for subjecting property to such expense, but that clause of the statute is not to be here considered since no item for such cleaning or repairing is involved in this case. The next clause purports to confer power “to require pavements to be iaid, and prescribe the kind of pavements to be laid, and to compel the laying of the kind of pavements prescribed in the streets, sidewalks, alleys, and public places of said city, at the expense of the property owner except as herein provided.” The subject is next pursued in section 34, as follows:
“Be it further enacted, That it shall be lawful for said city council from time to time, and in such manner as it may be determined to pave, gravel or macadamize any street, avenue, square, public place or alley, in whole or in part, within the corporate limits of said city, whenever said city council may deem it necessary or expedient to do so, and for that purpose said city council is hereby authorized and empowered to adopt and provide the means therefor, and to pass all such by-laws and ordinances as may be required for assessing the property to be benefited thereby for such amounts as may be fair and reasonable, not to exceed one-half of the construction thereof, and of the expense of laying down the same, and also to collect and enforce such assessments as in the case of . city taxation, such assessments to be made on property on both sides of the street, or parts of the
In City Council of Montgomery v. Birdsong, 126 Ala. 632, it was held that sidewalk paving though not specifically mentioned in section 34 as a subject of the powers and limitations there expressed, was included therein bv what is said as to street paving. The correctness of that decision has been questioned, but the construction there given the charter is adhered to. By authoritative definition as well as common usage, the term street applies to the whole public thoroughfare including sidewalks, the latter constituting parts of the street reserved to pedestrians. — Bouv. Dict. Tit. Sidewalk; Burmeister’s case, 76 N. Y. 174; City v. Mahan, 100 Ind. 242. The term, however, may be employed to designate the way between sidewalks, and how it should be understood in a given case, may depend on che connection in .which it is used. If section 12 bounded the city’s power in respect of sidewalk paving, it is at least questionable whether it could by any rule assess property to pay for such paving since in general such power is not implied and can only arise from express legislative grant. — Burrows on Taxation, § 126; Endlich Int. of Stat. § 352. The fact that express provisions for levying and collecting paving assessments are made in section 34, indicates that section 12 was not intended to supply assessing powers, and no good reason is apparent why sidewalk paving should be excluded from those express provisions and left to be compelled by penalties or by doubtfully implied powers of taxation. The direction in section 34 for assessing property on both sides of the street for not
As appeal's from the statement filed in the city court the assessment here in question is for “sidewalk and street paving.” So much of it as comes from sidewalk paving is based on an ordinance which deviates from the city’s charter in that it directs the whole cost of paving an adjoining property without reference to' the extent of benefit to the property. The ordinance relied on as authorizing street graveling charged for likewise ignores the question of benefit, and in that -particular is obnoxious to the charter.
Municipal corporations derive their powers from the State and cannot legislate in excess of them.. — Birmingham, etc. Co. v. Birmingham, etc. St. R’y. Co., 89 Ala. 465; Dillon Mun. Corp. §§ 317, 319, 329. This principle is applied strictly to ordinances proposing to assess taxes on property for local improvements. — 'Cooley on
Judgment affirmed.