145 So. 827 | Ala. | 1933
Lead Opinion
The appeal by the city is from a decree overruling a demurrer to the bill, a direct attack on an assessment for municipal paving done, and in rendering a decree for the complainant.
A phase of this case was before the court in Jasper Land Co. v. City of Jasper,
The statutory requirements are set forth in section 2176 of the Code, requiring an ordinance or resolution describing the improvement desired, and ordering the drawing of plans, specifications, etc. (Stovall v. City of *86
Jasper,
The statutory powers conferred on municipalities are discussed in Hood v. City of Bessemer,
The bill before us, which is similar to that construed in Jasper Land Co. v. City of Jasper,
It was declared in Jasper Land Co. v. City of Jasper, supra, that the required assessment roll made, filed, and open to inspection for the purpose of giving the parties in interest an opportunity to prepare proper objections for the hearing, is a part of the notice *87
itself; that "the published notice gives no advice as to the amount of the assessment, the description of the property, etc., but refers the owner to the source of information prescribed by statute," and to which that owner was entitled; that, "if the data referred to as a basis of notice" did not exist in fact, though recited, and if such assessments were not delivered so as to become available until March 7, 1927, the day of the final hearing and assessment, there was a failure of due notice, and the assessment without due notice is made void for want of jurisdiction to the end in question. Day v. City of Montgomery,
Application was duly made to the city council to reopen or vacate such assessment so made without authority of law and on stated grounds of lack of jurisdiction; and there was an effort on the part of the city council to do this, but on order of the court on mandamus was required to vacate same, though the city had reassessed the properties to be affected after jurisdictional facts had been supplied or obtained. Goodman v. City of Birmingham,
The fact that application was made to the city council for vacation and reassessment differentiated the case of Jasper Land Co. v. City of Jasper, supra, from that of Penton v. Brown-Crummer Inv. Co.,
The sworn answer of the city, filed in the mandamus case a short while after the making of the alleged assessment, and that of the reopening and reassessment of the properties abutting that improvement, and made a part of the evidence in this case, admitted the assessment was made without the roll or list of property owners showing the amount of the proposed assessment against each person and against each parcel of property; but was not made up and filed with the proper officer of the city of Jasper as required by law, "the same being filed with the clerk of the City of Jasper on to-wit, March 7th, 1927," and that the assessment exhibited as A does not show the amount of the assessment made against each property owner and parcel of land according to the records in the office of the city clerk of Jasper, Ala., "but that said assessment was voted by the city council of Jasper, Alabama, purely on the recommendation of the city engineer and without proper investigation by said council, and without the assessment roll having been filed with the city clerk prior to March 7th, 1927," the date on which the judgment of final assessment was sought to be made.
It was further admitted in section 7 of the answer filed in the mandamus proceeding under oath, in the absence of material and jurisdictional facts:
"That the report of the engineer as to the manner of making said first assessment, which has been set aside, showed that all the property as described in the Improvement Ordinance 'S' was charged on a front foot basis, which report was accepted and said assessment was made according to said front foot basis on the whole length of the project as included in said Improvement Ordinance; that the work or improvement work in fact did not include a part of the project as therein outlined; that for a distance of 550 feet from the North end of said project running South along said Third Avenue there was in fact no work or improvement of any kind done; that the work on this project actually began about 550 feet South of the North end of the project as outlined in the Ordinance; but that when the assessment was made by the officials of the City of Jasper on March 7th, 1927, relying on the report of its engineers and without investigating and checking the same, the said officials charged up the amount as shown by the report against this property when no work was done on an equal basis with that where the work was done; and that the officials of the city had no right to so charge said property on the named project where the same was not included within the limits of the project where the work was actually done.
"That when the first assessment was made no maps or other documents as required by law were on file in the office of the clerk of the City of Jasper, Alabama, or its engineer, and said assessment was inadvertently and improperly made, and was void." *88
It is undisputed that complainant was not a party to the mandamus proceeding. There is sharp conflict in the evidence as to the disputed facts; as to the agreement of the interested parties that the lands should be improved at the expense of interested property owners on that way; as to the fact that there was no assessment roll made up and filed when notice was given; as to whether the complainant had due and legal notice; and as to the fact that the assessments made and apportioned were according to the special benefits that accrued to the property so improved and by reason of said improvements. This sworn pleading was competent evidence. Richardson v. State,
It is sufficient to say the evidence has been examined, and we hold that complainant had no due and legal notice by reason of the delayed and improvident filing of the assessment roll or list, required by statute as a necessary condition entering into due notice, until the date on which the assessments were sought to be made final, March 7, 1927, and that the apportioned assessments were made against this and other properties according to the lineal and abutting footage, and not by reason of the special benefits that accrued to the specific abutting lot or parcel of land by reason of and derived from the said improvements. Ex parte Hill (In re City of Tuscaloosa v. Hill),
In view of the admissions in the answer to mandamus of the absence and nonexistence of jurisdictional facts not disclosed on the face of the municipal records of assessments, as we have indicated, the evidence of Mr. Britton, the engineer, to the effect that items of expense carried into the assessments against the lands and owners, as charges of fees or interest, that did not accrue or that were not so chargeable, and not severable and eliminable, are established on direct attack, relieved the rule of prima facie evidence, and generally declared to be inherent in the assessment made. Stovall v. City of Jasper,
This case is to be differentiated from Brock v. City of Decatur,
In City of Huntsville v. Pulley,
The effect of a decree in a proceeding to quiet title under the statute is stated in Grayson v. Muckleroy,
"This brings us to consider the scope and effect of a decree in a proceeding to quiet title under our statute. Code 1923, § 9905. In Adler et al. v. Sullivan,
"In a proceeding under the statute, if the averments of the bill and answer conform to the requirements of the statute, the issues involve everything necessary to a determination by the court as to whether the complainant or the defendant has the superior title to the property, and it is proper for the court under the issues thus found to determine in which of the parties the title resides. Collier v. Alexander,
A direct attack was made by the instant bill to remove the cloud in question from complainant's title. Jasper Land Co. v. City of Jasper,
No good purpose would be served by a detailed discussion of the evidence showing the lack of jurisdictional facts and notice required of due process in the premises, as virtually affecting complainant and his lands. The decree of the circuit court is therefore affirmed.
Affirmed.
ANDERSON, C. J., and GARDNER, BOULDIN, FOSTER, and KNIGHT, JJ., concur.
Concurrence Opinion
I concur in the conclusion and in the opinion in so far as it holds that a bill filed under the statute (section 9905, Code 1923) is a direct attack. The court in such proceeding is expressly empowered by the statute to "consider and determine such title, claim, interest, or incumbrance, and shall, upon the finding of the jury, or upon such consideration and determination, finally adjudge and decree whether the defendant has any right, title, or interest in, or incumbrance upon, such lands, or any part thereof, and what such right, title, interest, or incumbrance is, and in or upon what part of the lands, the same exists; and such decree is binding and conclusive upon all the parties to the suit." Section 9908, Code 1923; Reeder v. Cox,
The nature of the attack, whether direct or collateral, depends, not upon what is alleged in the pleadings of the particular case, but upon the character of the proceedings and the scope and extent of the jurisdiction conferred upon the court.
The majority opinion in the case at bar approves the holding in Jasper Land Co. v. City of Jasper,
So far as the nature of the attack is concerned, there is no difference or sound distinction between an original bill to quiet title brought by the landowner, and a cross-bill filed by such landowner in a proceeding to enforce the lien. If one is a direct attack, the other is also a direct attack.
The cross-bill in Penton v. Brown-Crummer Inv. Co.,