195 Ky. 143 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1922
Opinion op the Court by
Affirming.
Tompkinsville is a city of the fifth class, and its council adopted an ordinance providing" for the construction of a portion of Third street in that city. The portion of the street proposed to be constructed was that part of it from its intersection with Main street to the west side of its intersection with Jackson street, a distance of approximately 800 feet. The ordinance authorized the mayor to appoint a committee consisting of three members of the council, who were mentioned by name, and this committee was directed to prepare plans and specifications for the work of construction, and to advertise the letting of' a contract to perform the work to the lowest and best bidder, and was further authorized to reject any bid which seemed to it to be unreasonable. The ordinance further provided that the city should pay for the construction of any street crossings and one-third of the cost of constructing the designated portion of the street, while the abutting property owners were ordained to pay the remaining two-thirds of the cost which was to be apportioned among them by the council in accordance with the number, of front feet, owned by them, respectively, and the portion apportioned to the lands owned by any one of the abutting property owners should constitute a lien upon the property to secure its payment. The committee prepared plans and specifications for the improvement, and advertised that bids would be received for a contract to execute the work of improvement. No bids, however, were received, and thereafter the council adopted a resolution to the effect that the city would undertake the work and make the improvement, and to that end would employ the necessary teams, tools and labor, and would procure the materials necessary to accomplish the improvement as provided by the ordinance, which authorized the improvement to be made. The resolution contained authority for a designated person to hire teams and workmen and have the street graded and made ready
The issues appearing upon the record for decision are (1) whether the city has a lien upon the property of appellee to secure the payment of the portion of the costs of the improvement, which was apportioned to it, and (2) if the proceedings were sufficiently regular, as set out in the petition and the exhibits filed with it, to entitle the city to the lien which it seeks to enforce, was it estopped to assert it by the matters pleaded in the fourth paragraph of the answer?
If the facts, as averred in the petition upon which the alleged lien of the city is based, are not under the statute sufficient to create a lien upon the property of appellee, the action of the city failed and the demurrer to the petition should have been sustained, and the sufficiency of the petition to sustain the action will be first considered. That the necessity of a public improvement, which a council is authorized to make, its chartacter and extent, are matters, within the discretion of the council, may be conceded and the courts will not interfere, with such discretion, unless, it is abused. Trustees, etc. v. McNabb, 23 K. L. R. 811; Dumesnil v. Louisville, etc., 22 K. L. R. 503; Teager v. Flemingsburg, 22 K. L. R. 1442. Whether the proceedings of the council in the instant case, were invalid, because by the ordinance, which it adopted to authorize the improvement, it delegated to a committee to determine certain matters, relating to the materials to be
The appellee, by the fourth paragraph of his answer, averred that in the year, 1916, the city council caused Third street to be constructed from the corporate limits of the city to its intersection with Jackson street, a distance of one-half mile, and to the point, where the construction of 1920, for a part of the costs of which this action was instituted, begins, and paid for the construction out of the general fund of the city, and that appellee’s property bore its proportional share of the taxation necessary to create the funds to satisfy the costs, and that the city was now estopped to. construct the remainder of
There would be no difference in principle, between where a citizen is required to pay the entire costs of constructing the street in front of his property, and where he is required to pay two-thirds of it, and upon the s-ame
The demurrer to the fourth paragraph of the answer, was properly overruled and the one to the reply properly sustained, and the judgment is affirmed. -