30 Wis. 236 | Wis. | 1872
This is one of the never-ending Madison Nicholson pavement cases, a litigation which bids fair to long outlast the being and usefulness of the pavement itself, which has been the unfortunate source of it. The case comes up on demurrer to the complaint, which was sustained in the court below, and from which the plaintiff appeals. The action springs in part from the same state of facts presented in Dean v. Charlton, 23 Wis., 590, and a sufficient history of the past litigation and of the decisions of this court made in it, will be obtained from a reading of that case and of the still more recent one of Mills v. Charlton, 29 Wis., decided at the last term of this court. The property known as the King street property, or parts of lots 1 and 2 in block 104, is that in controversy in Dean v. Charlton, whilst the property on Pinckney street, described as lot 8, block 101, was at the same time (in 1868) the subject of a separate suit, not brought to this court by appeal, but which by stipulation was to abide the result of the suit which was appealed. Both pieces of property, or the taxes assessed against them are included in this action, which is instituted to restrain the county clerk from executing and delivering tax deeds in pursuance of sales of the lots, made on the 10th day of May, 1870, by the county treasurer of the county of Dane. The sales so made were in pursuance of a re-assessment and re-levy of the taxes to pay for the pavement, made by the common council of the city of Madison in the months of September and November, 1869, under special authority for that purpose, conferred by the act of the legislature, approved March 9, 1869, being chapter 316, Pr. and Local Laws, 1869. The proceedings for the re-assessment and re-levy of the taxes, the return to. the
It appears from the statements so made and admitted by the demurrer, that the taxes assessed in the aggregate were made up of items for different parts of the work described in the proceedings, as follows: that is, the grading, the sand filling, the paving (which included the furnishing of the materials and laying down of the pavement), and the curbing. Separate assessments for these different kinds of work, except the curbing, were made against the King street property, and the like assessments were made upon the property on Pinckney street, except that in the assessment for the paving, there was included also a tax of $15.84 for curbing done in front of that lot. It appears from the proceedings originally taken by the common council in ordering the pavement, that the streets were to be graded to the established grade, and to be paved with the wooden block pavement, known as the “ Nicholson pavement,” and to be properly curbed according to the plans and specifications furnished by the city surveyor, and in the advertisement for bids, signed by the mayor, it was specified that the whole was to be curbed at the sidewalk line with curbstone curbing, five inches thick and of the requisite depth; that bids for grading, paving and curbing might be received separately, and that each must be accompanied by a guaranty signed by two sureties, who should justify their responsibility on oath,” etc. It also appears that bids were received and accepted, and contracts let separately to different persons for the grading, the sand filling, and the paving. It does not appear that 'any bid for curbing was ever made, or any contract let. It does not appear that any curbing was, in fact, done in front of the King street property, or. at least that any tax or assessment for that purpose was levied or made. In the certificate made and
The bid of Burnham & Harrison for' the paving'was $3 per square yard, or $2.50 in cash, payable as- soon as laid.- The contract entered into by the city with them was $3 per yard, chargeable to the lots fronting on the improvement, and to be paid by special assessment on those lots, andjnot otherwise, but for work done at the expense of the city, and to be paid for in cash out of the treasury, $2.50 per-yard was-the-price agreed. The contract did not, in accordance with the terms of the bid, reserve to lot owners the right to pay $2.50 per: yard in cash as soon as the pavement- was laid and accepted.
The resolutions of'the common council, passed- in pursuance of the authority conferred, or supposed to be, by the aot- of 1869, are three in number, and refer to the work according to the above classification of “ the paving',” “the sand filling,” and “the grading,” and each by itself adopts, as a valuable improvement, one particular kind of the work, and authorizes and directs a reassessment of the special taxes to pay- for it, namely, the first resolution, the paving; the second; the sand filling; and the third, the grading. “ The' curbing” is not mentioned in any resolution, and no re-assessment for that-'appears to have been authorized or directed.
The contract for the grading' was let to • one' Collins, for' the sum of thirty-nine cents per cubic yard,- upon a bid received from him at that price. The complaint alleges that' “ the bid of said Collins so as aforesaid accepted, vtas not' the’ lowest and be'st bid for doing said grading, but that'á-bid-was made and
Tbe contract to furnish and deliver the sand, necessary for the bedding of the pavement, was awarded to one Gill for the sum of eighty-five cents per cubic yard, tbat being the amount of bis bid, but the complaint avers “ tbat no notice of proposals for furnishing sand for Nicholson pavement was made and published in any manner or form whatever, prior to the time of receiving and opening said bid, and tbat no contract was, in fact, made with said Gill for doing said work, further than by the acceptance of bis bid as aforesaid.” Tbe charter of the city, at tbat time required all work of the kind to be let to the lowest bidder, after publication of notice for at least the period of ten days in the official paper of the city.
Such, in brief, are tbe leading and most material facts, necessary to a proper understanding of tbe questions of law, presented in this case.
Tbe complaint appears, also, to have been drawn with a view to contesting the constitutionality of the act of 1869, under which the re-assessments were made, and also the power of the legislature to authorize re-assessments in cases where proceedings for tbat purpose have been enjoined and the same declared invalid by the final judgment of a court of competent juris diction. These questions, save one which will hereafter be noticed, were adjudged adversely to the plaintiff in Mills v. Charlton, supra, and Evans v. Sharp, 29 Wis., and further remark upon them is unnecessary.
The first point made by the counsel for the plaintiff, is that
It is said that the act violates the provisions of section 3, article XII of the constitution, which makes it the “ duty of the legislature in providing for the organization of cities and incorporated villages, to restrict their power of taxation, assessment, borrowing money, contracting debts, and loaning their credit; so as to- prevent abuses in assessments and taxation, and in contracting debts by such municipal corporations.” This is
Another objection is that the grading tax was fraudulent in the first instance, because the contract for doing that part of the work was not let to the lowest bidder. It is insisted that a tax wrong in substance and in principle, — inherently unjust and vicious, cannot be legalized or made valid as a whole, or without correction, by subsequent legislative enactment. The correctness of this proposition will not be disputed, and nothing in conflict with it has ever been asserted or maintained by this
A still further answer to tbe same-objection may perhaps be found in tbe finding and -judgment of tbe court in tbe former suit, set out -in the present complaint, from wbicb it appears that it was there determined that the bid upon wbicb tbe contract was awarded, was tbe lowest bid received by tbe common council for tbe grading. Tbis may be and probably is res adju-dkata and conclusive against tbe plaintiff in tbe present and all future actions. *
Tbe objection that tbe sand-filling tax could not be rectified or re-assessed because the contract for that purpose -was let without publication of notice and without receiving bids in tbe manner prescribed by the charter, is answered by tbe remarks wbicb have already been made. It was .competent for-the legislature to ratify and for the common .council, in pursuance of tbe authority so giyen, to re-assess that tax. ■ No charge of fraud is made or that the contract was corruptly let, and doubtless none could be proved.
We come now to an objection upon wbicb we think tbe plaintiff must prevail, .and that is as to tbe invalidity of the curbing tax. It will be -seen, from tbe statement of facts, that no contract was ever let for doing tbe curbing, and that tbe amount therefor was -illegally included in tbe .certificate for -pay
An objection omitted in its order, and which should be noticed, is upon the failure of the common council in the contract with Burnham and Harrison for the paving, to reserve to lot-owners the right to pay for the same in cash at $2.50 per square yard, according to the terms made with the city and contained in the proposal of the contractors. The results of this litigation demonstrate the propriety of the discrimination made by the contractors between a cash payment and a payment to be realized by an assessment and sale of the property to be charged with the expense. No good business man would probably have done otherwise than Burnham and Harrison did, and we see no impropriety in the common council having accepted the proposal as made. It was, doubtless, a well known fact, that collection of the taxes would be resisted and that litigation, delay and expense would follow, the results of which were uncertain. It was proper, therefore, for the common council to sanction the discrimination, but it should no doubt at the same time have given lot-owners the option to pay $2.50
By the Court. — Order reversed and cause remanded for further proceedings according to law. '