79 Miss. 754 | Miss. | 1901
Lead Opinion
delivered the opinion of the court.
Tt appears from the record in this case that appellee, a citizen of Greenville, owned a lot in said city, namely, lot 15, on the west side of Walnut street, between Main street and Central avenue; that on the lOth day of October, 1895, the city council of Greenville, in pursuance of § 3011, aim. code 1892, by ■resolution declared that “the hereinafter mentioned and described improvements and repairs of sidewalks in said city are necessary, and to this end notice is hereby given that the city council will cause to be constructed or repaired the sidewalks of said city, and that said improvements or repairs shall be made on Walnut street, on west side, from Main street to Central, of brick or concrete, nine feet wide.” In February, Í897, the street supervisor of said city notified Mrs. TIarvie to build said sidewalk. Thereafter, in 1898, Mrs. TIarvie having declined to make said sidewall!;, the city constructed the same at a cost of $120.25. Thereafter, in August, 1899, the city council of Greenville ordained that said lot 15 be assessed for said $120.25, and declared a lien on said lot to exist in • favor of said city for said sum of money, and directed the city attorney to enforce said lien for the collection of said debt.
The objection we find to the proceeding of the city of Green-ville is," that the city council did not specify, in advance of the work being done, that the owners of the lots abutting on Walnut street should bear the whole expense of building said sidewalk. In fact, to our apprehension of the matter, the city, by its ordinance, indicated its purpose to construct this sidewalk at the sole expense of the city. In Nugent v. City of Jackon, 72 Miss., 1040 (18 So. Rep., 493), the ordinance there upheld expressly declared that the owners of the property abutting on the street should bear the entire expense of building the sidewalk. No such purpose, as we think, was inferable from the ordinance in this case. On the contrary, we think the fair inference is that the city of Greenville will make the sidewalk upon its sole credit. If the terms “special improvements” of themselves import that the owners of abutting lots shall bear the whole expense of building.sidewalks, then the question is settled. We know of no dictionary or book of definitions of any sort that defines the phrase “special improvements” as meaning that the entire expense of making sidewalks shall be borne by the proprietors of lots along which they are constructed. The contrary is manifest from 2 Dill, Mun. Oorp., sec. 752 et seq.; Cooley, Tax’n (2d ed.), 637 ei seq. If the tax is to be levied upon abutting lot owners, we think that it should be so determined at the very beginning of the proceeding, so that the property owners may have opportunity to protest against the improvement, and so protect themselves against the expense. They would have no occasion, or at least reason, to protest if the cost was to be borne only in part by themselves. Nor these reasons Mr. Justice Calhoon and I are of
Affirmed.
Concurrence Opinion
(specially concurring).
I cannot concur in the view that the ordinance of October 10, 1895, is fatally defective on the ground set forth in the opinion of the court. I think it is a valid ordinance, and, so far as the point before us is concerned, the same with the ordinance in Nugent v. City of Jackson, 72 Miss., 1040 (18 So. Rep., 493), set out at pages 1042, 1043, 72 Miss., and pages 493, 494, 18 So. Rep. The assessment here is the usual special assessment, as it was there. We said in that case, at page 1050, 72 Miss., and page 494, 18 So. Rep.: “The phrase ‘special assessment’ has a well-ascertained meaning in legislation on this subject-matter, and means, as shown by the context in which it stands, ‘assessment specially’ imposed for the construction and maintenance of sidewalks” — the usual local assessment for such purposes. The argument that the Jackson “special assessment” did not have this meaning was made and disallowed in that case. See page 1047, 72 Miss., and page 493, 18 So. Rep. The objection my brethren find to the validity of the ordinance rests, as I understand their view, on the grounds that this ordinance shows on its face that the expense of repairing these sidewalks was to be borne by the city, and not by the abutting owners; and that the term “special assessment,” as used in these sections and this ordinance, does not import, ex vi termini, that the expense was to be borne by the abutting property owners whose property was benefited. I think, when used in this connection, the term “special assessment” does always so import, ex vi termini, and has always in this connection that meaning, thoroughly established in the law. 2 Elliott,