122 P. 742 | Mont. | 1912
delivered the opinion of the court.
Some time prior to the commencement of this action, the city council of Ealispell, by ordinances duly passed and approved, created three special improvement districts, the first for constructing sewers, and the other two for building sidewalks. These districts included property belonging to and used by School
Under constitutional and statutory provisions similar 'to our own, like questions have been before the courts for many years, and it seems somewhat strange that at this late day the statutes should be found in the same chaotic condition as they were thirty years ago, when the extreme difficulty of properly solving the question propounded above was first called to public attention. These special assessments, though a species of taxation,
Some of the leading eases holding that property devoted
It is insisted that the authority of the trustees of the school district is limited; that the law does not authorize the expenditure of the school moneys for such purposes, except upon a vote of the qualified electors; but with this we do not agree. There' are many expressions to be found in the school law, notably in section 881, Revised Codes, giving the school board ample authority to meet an expense of this character. Furthermore, section 1482, Revised Codes, gives to the state board of health supervision over the sanitation of school property, and section 1488 gives the same board power to condemn school property, if found in such unsanitary condition as to endanger the health of those who may frequent the same. If, then, the state board of health should find that in a thickly settled community like Kalispell, the school buildings are not provided with toilets connected with sewers, but that the several hundred school children are compelled to use vault outhouses, thereby endangering the health of the entire community, and should order the school board to provide sanitary means by installing proper toilets and connecting the same with public sewers, or with a private sewer system, the authority of the board of health to enforce such regulation could not be questioned; and ample authority is to be found under which the school board could provide the necessary funds to meet such expenses.
The mere fact that the statute under which these special assessments are made provides that the assessment shall be a lien upon the property is not a valid objection to the assessment. The state may, if it so elects, permit a lien to be imposed upon
Our statute authorizing these special assessments provides in general terms that they shall be paid by the entire improvement district; each lot or parcel of land within the district to be assessed for that part of the whole cost which its area bears to the area of the entire improvement district, exclusive of streets, alleys, and public places. (Sec. 3396, above.) This language is general. It includes all the property within the improvement district; and we are not at liberty to ingraft upon the statute exceptions which are not there. But it is suggested that the concluding clause in section 3396, “exclusive
We hold that these improvements are specially beneficial to the school property — in fact, considering the surrounding circumstances, they might well be held to be absolute necessities; that good faith, fair dealing, and justice require that the school district should pay for the benefits which its property receives, and not impose its burdens upon the other property owners who happen to be within these particular improvement districts.
Reversed and remanded.