164 Iowa 82 | Iowa | 1914
Lot 1 in Shepard’s addition to the city of Des Moines fronts to the east on East Second street, and is bounded on its north side by Maple street. Lot 18 lies immediately south of said lot 1, fronting also upon East Second street, and is bounded on the south side by Shepard street. The plaintiff owns the east one-half of the lots so designated, and has no interest in or title to the west half thereof. In the year 1907 the city caused East Second street at this point to be curbed, and for the expense thus created a special assessment of $32.45 was laid upon each tract. In the following year, 1908, the city caused East Second street to be paved, and of the cost of this improvement the sum of $266.38 was assessed upon each of said half lots. During the next succeeding year, 1909, the city caused Maple street to be paved along the north side of said lot 1, and of this expense the sum of $192.27 was assessed upon the east half of said lot. This last or third item is the only one in controversy in this action; but a statement of the first and second items is necessary to an understanding of the grounds upon which the
In his petition in the present action the plaintiff recites the facts relating to the several special assessments mentioned above, and seeks to have the one which was made in 1909 on the east half of lot 1 for the expense of curbing and paving Maple street declared void and unenforceable, upon the theory that, the two prior assessments upon the same property for curbing and paving Bast Second street having aggregated more than 25 per cent, of its assessed value, it could not lawfully be charged with any additional liability for the work done on Maple street. In other words, it is the theory of the petition that the curbing of East Second street in 1907, the paving of East Second street in 1908, and the curbing and paving of Maple street in 1909 constituted in law and in fact but a single improvement, for which, under the provisions of Code Supplement, see. 792-a, the property in^ question could be made liable to no greater amount than 25 per cent, of its assessed value, and that, such limit having been reached in the two earlier • levies, the present special assessment for the paving on Maple street is void for want of authority in the city council to make it.
In a second count of the petition the plaintiff makes the further claim that, even if it be conceded that under the statute it was competent for the council to find the actual value of the property to be in excess of the estimate shown by the general assessment roll, and to make special assessments, thereon up to the limit of 25 per cent, of such actual value, yet this could lawfully be done only upon notice given to plaintiff and opportunity afforded him to contest such question of actual value. He alleges that no such notice or opportunity was given, and because of such omission the act of the council in treating the property as of a value greater than was shown by the general assessment roll was unau
I. The questions thus raised are not altogether new, though perhaps not before presented to us in a form quite so concrete or definite, and they have been argued with the painstaking care and thoroughness which are characteristic of the learned counsel who bring them to our attention. The law prescribing and limiting the power of municipalities to make street improvements, and moré particularly improvements the expense of which is to be laid upon abutting property, is a prolific source of litigation, and it is to be confessed that the courts, in their anxiety on the one hand to preserve the rights of the individual property owner against confiscation or undue aggression, and to avoid on the other hand such narrowness of statutory construction as will hamper or defeat the progress of authorized municipal improvements, have found it very difficult to so plainly define the jurisdiction of a city council and the necessary incidents thereto as to remove that question from the field of debate. A more or less successful attempt to accomplish that end has been made by the Legislature in framing our present Code and its amendments.
It is necessary consequence of the cited statutes and the decisions of this court relating thereto that, if the plaintiff herein has any standing in a court of equity as an applicant for relief from the special assessment complained of, it must be because such assessment is for some reason absolutely null and void. No complaint is made, nor is any fact stated, tending to show any failure or omission to publish the statutory notice of the preliminary resolution or notice of the time and place where the matter of special assessments was to be considered. On the contrary, the allegations of the petition are such that upon demurrer thereto we must presume the giving of the proper statutory notices, and, there having been no appeal from the assessments, their sufficiency must be taken as unimpeachable, unless it shall appear from the facts alleged by the plaintiff that, no matter how regular and technically perfect the proceedings of the city council in ordering and constructing the improvement, it was clearly and distinctly
The property in the present case admittedly abuts upon the improvement. There is, as already said, no showing or claim that the statutory notices required in such cases were not duly published, and such service has always been held
East Second street was first improved, and for the purposes of this case we may concede that for this improvement the corner lot was subjected to a special assessment to the full one-fourth of its actual value. Later Maple street was also ordered paved. On what theory can it be said that the old paving on the one street and the new paving on the other street constitute a single item or unit of improvement? It is true they intersect at this corner, and they each improve the ease and means of access to the same lot, and facilitate public use of an adjacent highway. But likeness of improvement is not identity of improvement. Suppose, for instance, that a party owns an entire tract surrounded by four several streets, and the city following the commonly observed custom, extends its paving gradually to accommodate its growth in population and business, improving perhaps one street at a time at intervals of a year or several years; may such owner properly insist that the entire paving which surrounds his lot, though it includes parts of the improvement of four distinct streets constructed at different times and pursuant to different ordinances, is yet a single improvement as to his property? It would be a most unwarrantable perversion
It has been held that assessments upon the same corner lot for similar improvements made upon two streets bordering its front and side lines are not double taxation (City v. Dorr, 31 Iowa, 89; Morrison v. Hershire, 32 Iowa, 271) — a rule which involves to some extent the principle which we here affirm. And indeed, the fact that the paving of different and distinct streets constitutes different and distinct items or units of public improvement even where the same lot is affected is so evident from the mere statement that it is somewhat difficult to make it clearer by interpretation or illustration.. It is only when we import into or extract from the words of the statute something more than is there plainly- expressed that any room for doubt is found.
Now, as we have already said, the matter of apportioning the cost of the improvement to the several tracts of property was a duty expressly committed to the city council. It was an essential part of the proceedings which had been regularly instituted for the improvement of Maple street. Notice of the assessment and of the time and place for hearing of objections thereto was given as the statute provides, and this, we think, was due process of law within the constitutional meaning of that phrase. Ross v. Supervisors, 128 Iowa, 438; King v. Portland, 184 U. S. 61 (22 Sup. Ct. 290, 46 L. Ed. 431) ; Hagar v. District, 111 U. S. 701 (4 Sup. Ct. 663, 28 L. Ed. 569); Bank v. Pennsylvania, 167 U. S. 461 (17 Sup. Ct. 829, 42 L. Ed. 236); Railroad Co. v. Backus, 154 U. S. 421 (14 Sup. Ct. 1114, 38 L. Ed. 1031); Paulsen v. Portland, 149 U. S. 30 (13 Sup. Ct. 750, 37 L. Ed. 637); Railroad Co. v. Minnesota, 159 U. S. 526 (16 Sup. Ct. 83, 40 L. Ed. 247); Hibben v. Smith, 191 U. S. 310 (24 Sup. Ct. 88, 48 L. Ed. 195); Spencer v. Merchant, 125 U. S. 345 (8 Sup. Ct. 921, 31 L. Ed. 763); Ballard v. Hunter, 204 U. S. 241 (27 Sup. Ct. 261, 51 L. Ed. 461).
The substance of these holdings is to the effect that, if provision is made for notice to and hearing of the property owner at some stage of the proceedings upon the question as to what proportion of the cost of the improvement shall be assessed upon his land, there is no taking of property without due process of law. The statute authorizing the paving of city streets does provide such an opportunity and for notice thereof by a prescribed manner of publication before the
We do not undertake any review of the many authorities called to our attention. We have examined them with care, and find them not inconsistent with the views here expressed or the conclusions here reached.
For the. reasons stated, the decree of the district court is Affirmed.