86 Wash. 4 | Wash. | 1915
Sixth avenue, in the city of Spokane, had been improved and maintained at grade for many years. In June, 1910, the city council passed ordinance No. A-5,256, calling for paving and curbing the street in accordance with plans and specifications then adopted. At the same time the council, by ordinance No. A-5,288, re-established the grade of Sixth avenue as shown by the plats, plans and profiles attached to ordinance No. A-5,356. The improvement ordinance provided that the cost of the improvement should be assessed and levied against the property benefited according to the benefit sustained. The cost and expense of the improvement was to be assessed by the city council. The street was improved. An assessment roll Was prepared and confirmed by the council in August, 1910. Some of the protesting owners paid the amount of their assessment. In November, 1911, it appearing that no account had been taken of the damages which might have been suffered by property owners, and that numerous suits for damages were pending against the city, the city commissioners passed an ordinance directing the corporation counsel to begin an action to condemn the property abutting on Sixth avenue between Monroe street and Cannon street. Section two of the ordinance provided that “the cost and expense of said improvement shall be paid wholly or in part by special assessment upon the property benefited,” and that such assessments should be collected in the manner provided by the act of March 13, 1907, granting cities the power of
The record is confused, and it is apparent that counsel do not agree as to what occurred, or as to the nature and character of this proceeding. Our understanding of the several contentions of the appellants will be stated as we proceed.
First: It seems to be understood by the appellants that the assessment to pay the judgment in the eminent domain case is so interwoven with the improvement of the street as to be a nonseverable part thereof; that damages to property owners as for a change of grade is in fact a part of the cost of the improvement, and the city, having made and confirmed an assessment for the improvement, cannot, by a later proceeding, make an assessment to pay the resultant damages. We have no doubt that the city might have so proceeded, but it did not. The measure of the city’s authority is found in the statute, but that measure must be gauged by the object and purpose of the law. When so considered we are not disposed to hold that the city exhausted its power to cure an omission in the proceeding. Indeed, the fact that it might, and, as appellants contend, should have done so in the first instance, is an argument in favor of the present proceeding. While the result is two assessments, it is not a double assessment. A double assessment results where two assessments are made for the same benefit. Here the improvement of the street was one benefit and the change of the grade was another benefit.
Second: It is claimed that there is a lack of jurisdiction, in that the benefits should have been assessed by the council. To sustain this contention we must treat this proceeding as one depending upon ordinances No. A-5,256 and No. A-5,288, in which it was so provided. Having held that the eminent domain proceeding is a separate proceeding depending upon the statute and not upon the ordinance of the city, it follows that this contention is not well sustained. The statute provides :
“If any city has heretofore taken or shall hereafter take possession of any land or other property, or has damaged or shall hereafter damage the same for any of the public purposes mentioned in this act, . . . without having made just compensation therefor, such city or town may cause such compensation to be ascertained and paid to the persons entitled thereto by proceedings taken in accordance with the provisions of this act.” Laws of 1907, p. 339, § 53 (Rem. & Bal. Code, § 7820). ■
Irrespective of these considerations, but without so deciding, it would seem that the logic of several of our decisions would lead us to the holding that the city might submit itself to an action for damages in such cases and still invoke the act of 1907 in aid of an assessment to meet the judgment.
Third-: It is contended that the act of 1907, Laws of 1907, p. 316, ch. 153 (Rem. & Bal. Code, § 7768 et seq.), did not give the eminent domain commissioners the power' to assess benefits in such cases, but only to ascertain the compensation due those entitled thereto by reason of the property taken or damaged. Appellants rely upon § 53 of the act, but manifestly their contention is not a fair reading of the statute or of that section of the statute. Section 53 (Id., § 7820) also provides that, where the compensation for damaged property has not been ascertained prior to the time the improvement is
Fourth: It is contended that it was error to allow damages to those made defendants in the eminent domain proceedings, because the change in the grade was no more than a change in the former paper grade; that until an actual improvement of the street had been made to conform to an established grade, no damages should have been allowed under the rule, now well established in this state, that an original grade may be made without meeting any consequential damages to abutting property. We take it from the record, because we do not find it disputed, that the property affected had been improved with reference to the paper grade. Under Spokane v. Ladies’ Benevolent Society, 83 Wash. 382, 145 Pac. 443, such owners were entitled to compensation as for a change of grade. Other reasons suggest themselves to the writer, but this is enough to sustain the judgment in this respect.
Fifth: It is asserted that all property owners were not made parties to the condemnation suit. It was not incumbent upon the city to begin an action against any other than those it believed were damaged. If any property owner rested-under contrary belief, he might have intervened or brought' an original action in his own behalf. Kincaid v. Seattle, 74 Wash. 617, 134 Pac. 504, 135 Pac. 820.
Seventh: Some of these ‘appellants who believe their property was damaged by the regrade, if the law be as we have declared it to be, sought to offset their damages at the hearing upon the assessment roll against the amount that had been assessed by the eminent domain commission. Counsel for the city objected upon the theory that such claims should have been filed under the statute and city ordinance within thirty days after the damage or right of action had accrued. The court rejected this offer, apparently upon that ground. This was error under the case of Kincaid v. Seattle and the cases following it. But it does not follow that the error was prejudicial. As we have frequently said, we will not concern ourselves with the manner in which a trial judge reaches his conclusion. We think, clearly, that the testimony was incompetent to serve any purpose upon the hearing. The only question the court could try was whether there was an equable and ratable assessment upon the property benefited. Neither the court nor the eminent domain commission had any power to take into consideration any damage that the property might have suffered by reason of the change of grade. The law has provided that such damages shall be assessed by jury. Appellants should have brought an action against the city,
Finding no reversible error, the case is affirmed without prejudice to those property owners who maintain that their property has been damaged to bring an action to ascertain the amount thereof.
Main, Ellis, and Crow, JJ., concur.