This is an appeal from an order of the superior court of Spokane county, setting aside an assessment roll made by the board of eminent domain commissioners to pay the cost of opening Denver street between Fifth and Celesta avenues. It is the third roll returned, the two previous rolls having been set aside and new assessments ordered by the court.
Liberty Park is a public park, located in the southeast part of the city of Spokane. It is bounded by Third avenue on the north, the Spokane & Inland
The limits of the district, as shown by the testimony of the commissioners, were fixed upon the theory that the property included therein was within walking distance of the park and that the inhabitants of the district were placed in a more accessible situation for the enjoyment of the park. The contestants are the owners of various properties lying south of the southerly end of Denver street. The parties may be designated as appellant and respondents.
The other objections to the roll go to the limits of the district, the inclusion therein of property which it is claimed was not benefited, the exclusion therefrom of property which it is claimed was in any event equally benefited with the property included, and the claim that the assessments were arbitrary. We have frequently held that the action of the commissioners in fixing the limits of the district and in determining what property is in fact benefited in apportioning the cost of improvement, in the absence of fraud or action clearly arbitrary, will not be disturbed by the court. The commissioners being appointed for the very purpose of doing these things, their action is entitled to the same presumption which attends official action in other cases, and is conclusive in the absence of mistake, fraud or arbitrary discrimination amounting to an abuse of discretion. In re Westlake Avenue, 40 Wash. 144, 82 Pac. 279; In re Seattle, and In re Harvard Avenue North, supra; In re Seattle, 50 Wash. 402, 97 Pac. 444; In re Pine Street, 57 Wash. 178, 106 Pac. 755; In re Jackson Street, 62 Wash. 432, 113 Pac. 1112; In re Fifth Avenue etc., 66 Wash. 327, 119 Pac. 852; Spokane v. Curtiss, supra. With this general principle in view, we will examine the specific objections.
I. It is first claimed that the commissioners arbitrarily refused to assess any part of the cost of the improvement
H. It is next claimed that lots abutting on Denver street were assessed only $25 a lot, without regard to the actual special benefits which they received from the improvement. The assessment roll places an assessment of $25 a lot on all’ of the lots abutting on Denver street. From the south end of Denver street to the south end of the district the assessment is distributed uniformly at the rate of $10.75 for each fifty-foot lot. The evidence tended to show' that the lots abutting on Denver street received a much greater benefit than the other lots. The question of benefits, like that of value, is one resting largely' in' opinion. Though the evidence tends to show that the lots on Denver street were some
III. It is claimed that no lots except those abutting on Denver street were benefited by the assessment, and that no other lots should have been included in the district. The evidence shows that the park is made by the improvement more accessible to all of the lots included in the district. Just to what distance from the park such a benefit should be considered sufficient basis for an assessment, is peculiarly a question of opinion. There was much evidence tending to show that the lots south of Denver street are not benefited at all. There was, however, a unanimity of opinion that their access to this park was facilitated by the improvement.' There was no such showing in the evidence as should be permitted to overcome the prima facie correctness which must be accorded to the limits of the district as fixed by the commissioners.
IV. The contention is made that, if any property south of Denver street is to be included in the district, then the assessment is unjust and arbitrary in that all property south of Denver street within the district is assessed at the rate of $10.75 for each 50-foot lot, without regard to its distance from the park. The only benefit to any of the lots is obviously that derived from an easier access to Liberty Park. As
V. The commissioners excluded from the district the Grant school property, owned by school district No. 81, and the Bowers Play Ground, owned by the city of Spokane for play ground and amusement purposes. These properties were excluded for the sole reason that the use to which they
The appellant offered in evidence petitions to the city council signed by certain of the respondents requesting the improvement. These were excluded, improperly as we think, but their admission could not have changed the result. They would go only to establish an estoppel to deny some benefit. They could not operate as an estoppel to assert that the assessments were arbitrary in amount.
Summarizing, we conclude that the special benefits conferred by access to the park are sufficient to sustain the assessment against all property so especially benefited to pay for the improvement; that no arbitrary action or abuse of discretion in refusing to assess any part of the cost of improvement to the city was shown; that the limits of the district were not shown to he so arbitrary either as to inclusion or exclusion of property as to require a modification except so as to include the school property and play ground; but that the assessment of all property south of Denver street at the same amount for each 50-foot lot without reference
Crow, C. J., Main, and Fullerton, JJ., concur.