72 Wash. 571 | Wash. | 1913
This is an appeal by certain property owners from a judgment confirming an assessment roll. The assessment was made for the purpose of paying damages awarded to the defendants Miles and wife, caused by a change of grade of Main avenue between the west line of Lincoln street and a point twenty-five feet east of the east line of Wright street, in the city of Spokane. The assessment roll is assailed upon two grounds: (1) It is said that the commission did not include all property benefited by the improvement, and (2) that a part of the cost of the improvement should have been assessed to the city.
In support of the first contention, the objectors introduced four witnesses, each of whom expressed the opinion that a greater area should have been included in the assessment district. Three of these witnesses said that the district contained only a small part of the property benefited. One of them said that the district should have been extended west to the lower end of Peaceful Valley, or about four thousand feet west of the west line fixed by the commissioners. While the other witnesses did not agree that the district should have been extended so far to the west, they were unanimous in the view that it should have extended east to Howard street, three blocks beyond the point fixed by the commissioners, and that it should have included certain property north of Main avenue immediately west of Monroe street. Main avenue lies south of the Spokane river and runs east and west. Prior to the regrade, it passed under the approach to Monroe street bridge, and travelers from the west desiring to cross the bridge to the north side of the river were required to go to Lincoln street one block east of Monroe street and loop back to the
Assessment districts must have a point of beginning and a point of termination. The fixing of these extremes often presents many perplexing questions upon which there would be a never ending variety of opinion. It is, therefore, of the first importance that some definite rule be laid down for the guidance of trial courts. The best rule that has been announced, and the only practicable working rule, is that the courts should not change the district established by the commissioners, except where the commissioners have acted arbitrarily or fraudulently or have proceeded upon a fundamentally wrong basis. Spokane v. Kraft, 67 Wash. 245, 121 Pac. 830; In re Seattle, 50 Wash. 402, 97 Pac. 444; In re Jackson Street, 62 Wash. 432, 113 Pac. 1112; In re Seattle, 46 Wash. 63, 89 Pac. 156; In re Harvard Avenue North, 47 Wash. 535, 92 Pac. 410. Measured by this rule, the evidence is not sufficient to overcome the probative force of the report.
In respect to the second contention, the evidence does not show that any especial benefit accrued to the city at large in consequence of the improvement. “The city, like a private owner, can only be assessed for an improvement where it is especially benefited.” Spokane v. Curtiss, 66 Wash. 555, 120 Pac. 70. To the same effect: In re Fifth Avenue etc., 66 Wash. 327, 119 Pac. 852.
The ordinance (A-5956) directing the institution of a suit
The judgment is affirmed.
Crow, C. J., Mount, Parker, and Chadwick, JJ., concur.