87 Wash. 218 | Wash. | 1915
In March, 1911, the city of Seattle, by ordinance, provided for the establishment of a new street and the widening of an existing street over and through certain enumerated tracts of land lying within the city’s boundaries, known as the Somerville tracts. Condemnation proceedings were instituted by the city to acquire the necessary rights of way, and resulted in judgments in favor of the several owners of the tracts in the aggregate sum of $4,843.25. The ordinance provided that the awards to the owners of the property taken and the expenses of the condemnation proceedings should be paid for by special assessment upon property lying within described limits. On the entry of the judgments, the superior court, on the petition of the city, referred the matter of making the assessment to the board of eminent domain commissioners appointed pursuant to § 7788 of Rem. & Bal. Code (P. C. 171 § 71), who thereafter duly made an assessment roll and returned the same into court. At the time appointed for a hearing thereon, objections were made thereto by property owners affected, whereupon the court set the roll aside, and resubmitted the matter to the commissioners for another assessment. A new roll was thereafter returned, in which the commissioners found that the compensation awarded the owners of the property taken, the interest on the awards, the accrued expenses, and expenses thereafter to accrue, made a total sum of $7,198.32. Of this sum, they assessed to the city of Seattle $719.83, on account of benefit to the public, and the remainder, $6,478.49, to the property within the limits of the described assessment district. Protests on the ground of excessiveness and unequal
It is first assigned that the court erred in refusing to grant the motion for a new trial. From the affidavits filed in support of the motion, it is gathered that the obj ectors early retained counsel to represent them at the hearing on the assessment roll, and that the counsel so employed made due preparation for the trial, but that when the matter was called for hearing, the counsel regularly employed was unavoidably out of the city on other business, and the appellants were compelled to substitute counsel, who, owing to their unfamiliarity with the proceedings, “did not bring out all of the evidence at hand for his client, and limited the scope of what was produced.” But we are clear that this presents no reason for a rehearing of a matter of this character. Conceding that the proceedings presented a cause where the ordinary rules relating to new trials of actions apply, it is manifest that the objectors' did not act with due diligence. They substituted counsel and proceeded with the hearing without obj ection of any kind, while the rule requires that obj ections of this sort precede, and not follow, the trial. If a litigant is not ready for trial, he must make it known, and take the ruling of the court thereon, before the trial commences. He cannot consent, either expressly or impliedly, to a trial of an issue and then afterwards be heard to complain that he was not ready. The necessity of preventing trifling
It is next objected that the assessment on the appellants’ property is grossly unfair and excessive as compared with the assessment on like property similarly situated. The appellants offered witnesses to sustain this contention; but, as we have often said, the courts cannot interfere with an assessment roll on any mere difference of opinion between the eminent domain commissioners and the objectors as to the manner in which the assessment is spread over the benefited property; that it must appear that the commissioners acted arbitrarily, or proceeded upon a fundamentally wrong basis in making the assessment, before interference by the courts is permissible. The record in this instance, while it shows a somewhat wide difference of opinion between the eminent domain commissioners and the appellants’ witnesses as to the share of the cost of the improvement that should be borne by the appellants’ property, it shows no arbitrary action on the part of the commissioners, nor does it show that they proceeded in making up the assessment roll other than in the manner required by the statutes.
So with the objection that the commissioners failed to assess certain land embraced within the district defined by the ordinance. By the rule permitting the assessment of property to pay the cost of a public improvement, and by the terms of the statute itself (Rem. & Bal. Code, § 7790; P. C. 171 § 75), the commissioners were limited in making the assessment to property actually benefited by the improvement. If, therefore, the district created by the ordinance included property which could not be benefited by the improvement, the commissioners were without power to place an assessment thereon for any part of the cost of the improvement. Of this question they are the sole judges, and their conclusions are not to be reversed unless it be shown that they proceeded arbitrarily or upon a fundamentally wrong basis, of which there is no showing in this record.
The rule of these cases preclude questioning into much to which the appellants object, but it is claimed that certain items of expenditure are charged to the property holders which cannot be justified even under a most liberal construction of the statute. It seems that, prior to the trial of the condemnation proceedings, the city counsel’s office hired experts in land values to go over the proposed route of the highway and make estimates of the amount of damages which, in their judgment, were properly to be awarded to owners whose property would be taken or damaged by the opening of the highway. Although the proposed highway was but 3,600
Finally, it is objected that the proceedings which resulted in an assessment on the appellants’ property violated the due process of law clause in both the state and Federal constitutions. This claim is founded on the fact that the city council,
The judgment is affirmed.
Morris, C. J., Main, and Ellis, JJ., concur.