96 Mo. 497 | Mo. | 1888
This is an action on a special tax-bill for alleged benefits to defendant’s property, because of the widening of Eighteenth street at its intersection with Clark avenue in the city of St. Louis. The benefits were assessed in a condemnation proceeding in the St. Louis circuit court, in a case entitled City of St. Louis vs. Jacob B. Wall et al. The defendant was not by the petition in that proceeding made a party defendant, nor was there a summons issued to or served upon him, nor was any of his property sought to be condemned therein. The property assessed for benefits is on Clark avenue, one hundred and fifty-eight feet distant from the street improved.
The defendant, in his answer, denied all the allegations of the petition and set up two defenses to plaintiff ’s action: First, that he was not a party to said suit of the City of St. Louis vs. Wall et dl., had no notice of the proceedings alleged to have been had therein, and was in no way impleaded therein; second, that the property described in said petition was in no way and in no respect benefited by or in consequence of the matters and things alleged in the petition.
The plaintiff read in evidence the record of the condemnation proceedings, and it was admitted that the tax-bill was regularly issued and that all the ordinances referred to in the petition had been regularly passed. Plaintiff then introduced evidence tending to prove that the defendant’s property sought to be charged was specially benefited by the improvement, and rested. The defendant then introduced evidence tending to prove that his property was not specially benefited by the improvement, and this was all the evidence.
The court refused to instruct the jury as prayed for by the plaintiff, “that on the testimony in the case, the plaintiff is entitled to recover the amount of the special tax-bill sued upon,” and instructed them, “that the issue for them to determine in this case is whether defendant’s pr'operty as described in the petition was especially benefited by the widening of Eighteenth street, and the amount of such special benefits, if any.
It will thus be seen, the case was tried upon the theory that the defendant in this action for the collection of the amount assessed for benefits against his property, and the enforcement of the lien therefor given by law, had the right to show that his property had not been specially benefited, or had not been benefited to the amount assessed. In effect, holding either that the property had not been assessed at all, or allowing an appeal from that assessment, ■ practically converting the suit for the collection into an action for the assessment and collection of benefits, and this theory seems to have the support of the opinion in the case of City of St. Louis v. Richeson, 76 Mo. 470. The doctrine that the property of a citizen, especially benefited by a public improvement, may be made to contribute for such special benefit, to the expense thereof, an amount equal to such benefit over and above the amount to be contributed by his property in common with other citizens for the common benefit, though sometimes questioned, is now so universally accepted and well established, that it is unnecessary to cite authorities in support of it. It is also as well settled that the power of the government by which such contribution is enforced is the exercising of the taxing power of the government and not of the power of eminent domain. Such special benefit is a tax assessed against the particular property benefited. Suits for the collection of delinquent taxes are quite
The law governing this case is found in the scheme and charter of St. Louis, article 6, sections 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 9 and 10 (2 R. S. 1879, p. 1606), and in ordinances of the city of St. Louis numbers 11,695 and 12,121. The former is a general ordinance entitled : “ An ordinance governing proceedings in the condemnation of private property for pnblic use, and providing for the collection of benefits and the payment of damages,” etc., approved March 30, 1881. The latter is an ordinance for the widening of the particular street in question. The charter provisions contained in said sections, so far as applicable to this case, may be summarized as follows: Whenever the assembly shall provide by ordinance for widening any street, and it becomes necessary for that purpose to appropriate private property, a proceeding shall be instituted in the circuit court in the name of the city by petition, setting forth the general nature of the improvement proposed to be made, the names of the owners of the property to be appropriated, if known, and if not known a description of the property, and praying the appointment of three .disinterested commissioners to assess the damages which said owners may severally sustain by reason of the appropriation, to which petition the owners if known shall be made parties defendant by name, if unknown, by a description of the land. Upon filing the petition, a summons shall issue to the defendants giving them ten days notice of the time when the petition will be heard, and in case of non-resident or unknown owners, an order of publication. Notice having been served and shown, on the day appointed for the hearing, the court shall appoint three commissioners to assess the damages which the owners of the
When the commissioners have viewed the property and assessed the value, damages and benefits, they shall make return of such assessment in writing un der oath to the circuit court, in which the value and damages allowed each owner, and the benefits assessed against each individual shall be separately stated. The report of the commissioners may be reviewed by the circuit court on written exceptions filed by either party within ten days after filing of such report, and the court may order a new appraisement upon good cause shown, and the court shall not take final action thereon until the result has been reported to the assembly for its information and approval. If the assembly approves the result of the appraisement, and the city does not dismiss the proceeding, and no exceptions have been filed, or the exceptions filed have been disposed of, the court takes final action on the report. It then becomes the duty of the clerk of such court to make a certified copy of the report and the final action of the court thereon and deliver the same to the city comptroller,
The provisions of ordinance number 11695 applicable to this case are substantially as follows:
Sec. 1. Whenever the municipal assembly shall provide by ordinance for widening any street, and it is necessary to take private property for the same, the street commissioner shall furnish the city counsellor with all necessary plats showing the property to be affected by the proposed improvement, the metes and bounds, and the names of the owners thereof.
Sec. 2. It shall be the duty of the commissioners appointed in any such proceeding to ascertain the value and damages (as in the charter ) of the property taken, and for the payment of such value and damages, to assess against the city the amount of benefit to the public generally and the balance against all property within a district to be ascertained, defined, laid out and established by the commissioners as the district of the property benefited by the proposed improvement, and each lot in said district shall be assessed for the proportionate amount it is benefited in th e opinion of the commissioners, so that the aggregate amount assessed against the property in said district shall equal the amount of value and damages awarded for the property taken for the improvement less the amount assessed against the city for the benefit arising to the public generally for the improvement. The sum assessed as benefits against property within the district aforesaid
The remaining sections of the ordinance relate to the duties of the officers in making out special tax-bills for such benefits and collecting the same, by suit if necessary, after final action by the court and appropriation by the assembly for the payment by the city of the damages awarded for the property taken. ■
The charter (sec. 26, art. 3) expressly confers power upon the city by ordinance to assess, levy and collect all taxes for general and special purposes, and to establish, open, vacate, alter and widen its streets. The foregoing provisions of the charter confer upon the city the power to condemn private property for the purpose of widening a street, and prescribes the manner in which it shall be done, and how compensation shall be made to the owner. It also confers upon the commissioners, appointed in a proceeding for that purpose, the power, subject to review by the circuit court, to determine the amount of damages to be paid to the owners, and to apportion that amount between the city and the citizens whose property will be specially benefited, and also the power to determine what property will be so benefited
The determination of the question, what property of the citizens will be benefited by a public improvement, is the exercise of legislative power, whether exercised by the legislature directly or by municipal authorities to whom the power is delegated for that purpose, and “ due process of law is not essential to its legitimate exercise.” These authorities may determine directly the district in which property will be benefited and the amount of the benefit, and erect a uniform standard for its apportionment therein. When a tax is to be assessed in proportion to benefits, the apportionment is a gwcm-judicial proceeding in which, at some stage, the owner has the right to be heard upon the question of the amount to be assessed against his property, before a charge therefor finally attaches thereto for its payment, and to notice, not necessarily judicial in its character, but such as is appropriate' to the nature and character of the proceeding, of his right to be so heard, nor need such notice be personal. The legislative
It will be observed that the charter and ordinances governing in this case make provision for the erection of a taxing district, the assessment of especial benefits upon the property within that district in the proportion that the property of each owner is especially benefited by the public improvement, and for the apportionment of such special benefit among the several owners of such property, by the assessment against each separate piece of land of such owners of a tax equal to its proportionate share of such especial benefit, and provides for appropriate notice to such owners of the creation of such district by the commissioners charged with that duty, of its metes and bounds, of the time when, and the place where, the commissioners, also charged with that duty, will proceed to make the assessment against the property in such district, and advising them of their right to be heard by the commissioners and by the circuit court, upon the question of the amount of such
And when the circuit court has taken final action upon the report of the commissioners, and the assembly has appropriated the money to pay the damages for the property taken, such assessment becomes final and conclusive upon the question of benefit to such taxpayers, and the amount of that benefit, the lien attaches to the property, and these questions cannot be again raised in any subsequent suit that the city may find it necessary to bring to enforce that lien in order to collect the tax assessed. The only question that can be raised in such a suit is, as to the validity of the assessment and levy. The law does not make the tax-bill evidence, and if the defendant questions the validity of the assessment, before the plaintiff can recover, it must be shown that the tax was assessed in the manner required by law. As we have seen, the defendant under the law is entitled to notice and an opportunity to be heard upon the question of the amount of benefits that ought to be charged against his property. If such notice has not been given, or a hearing has been denied him, the assessment is void. If there is no assessment, there is no tax, no cause of action, and that is the end of the case. The
It is not charged in the petition, nor did the plaintiff undertake to show upon the trial, that a taxing district had been defined, that defendant’s property sought to be charged was within it, that notice of its boundaries, or of the time when, and the place where the commissioners would meet for the purpose of making the apportionment was published as required by the ordinance. There was, therefore, no error in refusing to instruct the jury that on the pleadings and evidence the verdict should be for the plaintiff (there was no cause of action sufficiently stated or proven), and there was error in instructing the jury that the issue for them to determine was whether defendant’s property was benefited by the improvement, and the amount of such benefit, if any. There was and could be no such issue in the case. And" while, on the record, it cannot be said the judgment is for the wrong party, yet having been rendered upon an issue not legitimately in the case, it was a mistake, and as for aught that appears in the record there may have been a legal assessment, and as the whole of the damages have been apportioned and paid on the faith of the validity of - such assessment, justice and right would seem to demand that the case should be remanded for a new trial, and that the plaintiff have permission to amend the petition, and to show, if such is the fact, that the assessment was made in accordance with requirements of the law.