28 Cal. 345 | Cal. | 1865
This is an action brought in pursuance of the Act of 1862, relating to the' City of San Francisco, to recover a sum of money assessed upon property fronting on a certain street in that city, in proportion to its frontage, to pay the expenses of grading said street. It presents some of the much vexed questions arising under statutes relating to this class of burdens imposed upon property holders in towns and cities. As usual in such cases, it is claimed, firstly, that the law under which the assessment is made is unconstitutional; secondly, if constitutional, that there are such irregularities in the proceedings as to vitiate the assessment. The recent case of Creighton v. Manson, decided by this Court (27 Cal. 614) is relied on by appellant as settling the principles that must govern this case. In that case, although all the Justices concurred in the judgment, there was not an entire concurrence in all the views expressed in the opinion, or in the grounds upon which the decision rested. Constitutional questions were discussed in the case, but the only points decided were—firstly, that the defendant was not personally liable, for the reason that no personal liability was imposed by the Act of 1859; and secondly, that there was no lien on the defendant’s lot, for the reason that the work had never been ordered by the Board of Supervisors in the mode prescribed by law. It is but just to the Court to say, that neither in that case, nor in this, nor in either of the other cases now before us involving the same questions, have we received any aid from counsel, whose interest it was to support the constitutionality of the law, and not only was there no argument upon this important point on that side, but there was no reference to more than one or two decisions bearing upon it. Since the decision of Creighton v. Manson, notwithstanding the pressure of the business of the Court, we have assumed the duties of counsel, as well as of the Court, and explored the numerous volumes of reports of decisions in our sister States for authorities upon the point, and as .the result of these labors have found many recent well considered
The improvement of a public street in a city, to be thereafter used and controlled by the public, is undoubtedly a public work. But it is equally clear, as a general proposition, that the improvement of a street is more beneficial to the local public, or the immediate district in which it is located, than to the whole city, as the improvement of the streets of a city is more beneficial to the city in which they are located than to the State at large. But this fact renders the work no less one of a public character. The work of improving streets being one of a public character, it is insisted by appellant, that the power of the Legislature to pass a law imposing the burden of paying the expenses of the improvement upon the property of the citizen, if it exists at all, must be deduced from one of two sources.
Firstly—The right of eminent domain under which private property may be taken for public use; or,
Secondly—The sovereign right of taxation. And in this he is undoubtedly correct. It is further insisted, that if the power is referable to the former—the right of eminent domain —the law in question directing the assessment to be made according to frontage—by the front foot—is repugnant to section eight of Article I of the Constitution, which contains the provision, “nor shall private property be taken for public use without just compensation.” If referable to the latter— the sovereign right of taxation—that the assessment is unequal, and not levied in proportion to the value of the property, and that the law, for this reason, is repugnant to the provisions of section thirteen, Article XI of the Constitution,
It is plain that a determination, at the threshold of the discussion, of the question, as to which of these sources of sovereign power, the authority of the Legislature over the subject must be referred, is essential to an intelligent consideration of the propositions submitted. Were it not for the fact, that, in some of the earlier cases, there are some loose expressions and dicta which give countenance to the opposite opinion, it would seem to be clear, that assessments for improvements, upon whatever principle distributed, are not taking private property for public use, within the meaning of these terms as used in the Constitution. In these cases money, and money only, is taken. In a certain sense money is property. ' But it might just as well be said, that money taken by general taxation for the ordinary purposes of State revenue is property within the meaning of the Constitution, and cannot be taken without compensation. The theory of all taxation is, doubtless, in a general sense, that there is compensation for the taxes taken in the protection and security to life, liberty and property afforded by the Government supported by the money raised. But this, manifestly, is not the compensation to be made for property taken for public use, within the meaning of the terms as used in the section of the Constitution cited. The property referred to in the Constitution for which special compensation must be made, is something other than money, as Where land is taken to be used as a street, and the like, and the compensation referred to, doubtless, means a compensation in money, the only medium by which special compensation can be accurately measured and adjusted; and to make such compensation in the case of assessments to raise money for the purpose of paying for grading streets, would be to take the money from the property holder with one hand and return it with the other; and this would leave nothing for the purposes required.
The difference in the operation of these two sovereign powers
“ It may be proper here, although not strictly necessary, to express the opinion that money cannot be exacted by the Government by the right of eminent domain, excepting, perhaps, for the direct use of the State at large, and when the State at large is to make the compensation. The exigencies of "a State Government can seldom require the taking of money by virtue of this power, even in time of war, and never in time of peace. The framers of the Constitution could not have intended to delegate to municipal corporations the right of taking money under this power, because it is entirely unnecessary. Money can always be had by taxation; lands cannot; and therefore lands may be taken by right of eminent domain, but money may not. . The seventh section of Article I of the Constitution confirms this construction of the power. It directs the compensation for private property so taken to be ascertained by a jury or by commissioners. This is an appro
Whatever uncertainty there may have been found in the prior decisions as to the true source of the power of the Legislature to impose this class of burdens upon the citizen, there has been no doubt upon that point expressed since the promulgation of the decision in People v. Mayor of Brooklyn. In every decision we have met with in our researches rendered since that time, the opinion in that case has been recognized as a correct exposition of the law upon this point. (Brewster v. City of Syracuse, 19 N. Y. 118; Scoville v. City of Cleveland, 1 Ohio St. R. 135; Hill v. Higdon, 5 Ohio St. R. 245 ; N. I. R. R. Co. v. Connelly, 10 Ohio St. R. 162; Malony v. City of Marietta, 11 Ohio St. R. 638; Reeves v. Treasurer of Wood County, 8 Ohio St. R. 335 ; Weeks v. Milwaukie, 10 Wis. 256 ; Garrett v. City of St. Louis, 25 Mo. 508; Newby v. Platte County, Ib. 259 ; Williams v. Cammack, 27 Miss. 222 ; Williams v. Mayor of Detroit, 2 Mich. 279 ; Municipality No. 2 v. White, 9 Lou. Ann. 452 ; Mayor of Baltimore v. Green Mount Cemetery Co. 7 Md. 536; Nichols v. Bridgeport, 23 Conn. 206; State v. City of Newark, 3 Dutcher, 191, 193.) This point was so ruled by the late Supreme Court in Burnett v. Mayor of Sacramento, 12 Cal. 82, and Hart v. Gaven, Ib. 477. And were it not for the fact that this question has been much discussed, and that it is continually raised and pressed upon our notice, whenever there is a flight variation of circumstances or a change in the principle of apportionment, we should not have thought it necessary to do more than refer to the last two cases as settling the question in this State. Some confusion of ideas may formerly have arisen from a supposition that an apportionment according to benefits involved the principle of specific compensation for property taken, and still more from not separating and keeping distinctly in view
The assessment in this case was made upon the front foot, and, as we have seen, was an attempt to exercise the sovereign right of taxation, and not to appropriate private property to public use under the right of eminent domain.
“ ‘The power of legislation, and consequently of taxation, operates on all the persons and property belonging to the body politic. This is an original principle, which has its foundation in society itself. It is granted by all for the benefit of all. It resides in the Government as part of itself, and need- not be reserved where property of any description or the right to use it in any manner is granted to individuals or corporate bodies. However absolute the right of an individual may be, it is still in the nature of that right that it must bear a portion of the public burdens; and that portion must be determined-by the Legislature. This vital power may be abused, but the interest, wisdom and justice of the representative body, and its relations with its constituents, furnish the only security against .unjust and excessive taxation, as well as against unwise legislation.’ And again, in McCullock v. Maryland, 4 Wheat. 428, the following observations are found, coming from the same high authority: ‘ It is admitted that the power of taxing the people and their property is essential to the very existence of government, and may be legitimately exercised on the object to which it is applicable, to the utmost extent to which the Government may choose to carry it. The
“ Assuming this, as we safely may, to be sound doctrine, it must be conceded that the power of taxation, and of apportioning taxation, or of assigning to each individual his share of the burden, is vested exclusively in the Legislature, unless this power is limited or restrained by some constitutional provision. The power of taxing and the power of apportioning taxation are identical and inseparable. Taxes cannot be laid without apportionment; and the power of apportionment is therefore unlimited, unless it be restrained as a part of the power of taxation.”
This doctrine is sustained by a uniform line of decisions in our own and our sister States. (See People ex rel. Attorney-General v. Pacheco, 27 Cal. 209, and cases cited.)
Is the principle upon which this assessment is made repugnant to the provisions of section thirteen of Article XI? If not, then, there is no provision that limits the power of the Legislature with respect to the principle upon which the apportionment of such burdens shall be made. The section reads:
“ Taxation shall be equal and uniform throughout the State. All property shall be taxed in proportion to its value, to be ascertained as directed by law; but Assessors and Collectors*356 of town, county and State taxes shall be elected by the qualified electors of the district, county or town in which the property taxed for State, county or town purposes is situated.”
If the term taxation is here used in a sense co-extensive with the sovereign power under which the right is exercised, or, if it is to be considered abstractly, without reference to the long and well established meaning of the words taxes and assessments, as used in the statutes and ordinary language of the several States, to indicate different classes of public burdens—the one imposed for general revenue for the purposes of the ordinary expenses of the State, county and town government, and the other to raise a special fund to defray the expenses of public improvements mainly locally beneficial— then, the term is broad enough to embrace assessments of the kind in question. But terms often, by general use, acquire, when employed in certain relations, a more limited signification. And this is true with reference to the signification in' which words are used in statutes and Constitutions, as well as in common parlance. The use of the terms taxes, taxation and assessments affords, perhaps, as striking illustrations of this principle as any to be found in the language. The term taxation, both in common parlance and in the laws of the several States, has been ordinarily used, not to express the idea of the sovereign power which is exercised, but the exercise of that power for a particular purpose, viz: to raise a revenue for the general and ordinary expenses of the government, whether it be the State, county, town or city government. But there is another class of expenses, also of a public nature, necessary to be provided for, peculiar to the local governments of counties,' cities, towns and even smaller subdivisions, such as opening, grading, improving in various ways, and repairing highways and streets, and constructing sewers in cities, and canals and ditches for the purpose of drainage in the country. They are generally of peculiar local benefit. These burdens have always, in every State, from its, first settlement, been charged upon the localities benefited, and have
“A property tax (we will add, according to value) for the general purposes of the government, either of the State at large or of a county, city or other district, is regarded as a just and equitable tax. The reason is obvious. It apportions the burdens according to the benefit more nearly than any other inflexible rule of general taxation. A rich man derives more benefit from taxation in the protection and improvement of his property than a poor man, and ought, therefore, to pay more. But the amount of each man’s benefit in general taxation cannot be ascertained and estimated with any degree of certainty, and for that reason a property tax is adopted instead of an estimate of benefits. In local taxation, however, for special purposes, the local benefits may in many cases be seen, traced and estimated to a reasonable certainty. At least, this has been supposed and assumed to be true by the Legislature, whose duty it is to prescribe the rules on which taxation is to be apportioned, and whose determination of this matter, being within the scope of its lawful power, is conclusive.”
The different significations of the terms taxes and assessments, before referred to, will be found, upon examination, to be well established in the legal language of the several States, and to run through the statutes, and to have been recognized and enforced by the various judicial tribunals of the country; and, as we shall see, have found their way into the Constitu
We will now consider the signification of these terms as used in the various State Constitutions, including our own, and in doing so, it .must be borne in mind that these terms, also, as used in the several Constitutions, have reference to the exercise of the power. Constitutions are only laws of superior and paramount authority. And when the statesmen who frame, and the people who adopt them, employ terms in relation to any particular subject, which have, in that relation, in the legislative, judicial and general language of the country, acquired an established, well known and more limited signification than the word in other relations might indicate, it must be presumed that they intend to use those terms in such established, more limited sense, unless it clearly ajopears to the contrary by the context. And in Section 13, of Article XI we think the words “ taxation” and “taxed” were used in the same sense as in the various statutes of the States before referred to, and others of a similar character, to signify such general taxation upon all property as is in use in all the States to raise a general revenue for the purposes of defraying the ordinary expenses of State, county and municipal governments. In the language of Mr. Justice Bennett, in People v. Naglee, 1 Cal. 252: “Our Constitution was framed by intelligent and practical men, who were well acquainted with the organiza
The construction thus given finds further support from an examination of other clauses of the Constitution. The same section further provides: “But Assessors and Collectors of town, county and State taxes shall be elected by the qualified electors of the district, county or town in which the property taxed for State, county or town purposes is situated.” This form of expression would seem to have reference only to taxes for general revenue purposes. The State, county and town are coupled together without any reference to minor subdivisions for local improvements, etc. By no reasonable construction can the clause be regarded as pointing to anything other than revenue for general ordinary purposes of governmental expenses; and this clause undoubtedly refers to the same taxes mentioned in the preceding clause, wherein uniform and ad valorem taxation are provided for.
Again, there is another material provision of the Constitution, not hitherto noticed in the discussions in this State, relating especially to the local governments, in which the different forms of exercising the taxing power under different names and circumstances, is expressly recognized. Section thirty-seven of Article TV provides as follows: “It shall be the duty of the Legislature to provide for the organization of cities and incorporated villages, and to restrict their power of taxation, assessments, borrowing money, contracting debts and loaning their credit, so .as to prevent abuses in assessments and in contracting debts by such municipal corporations.”
Taxation and assessments are here spoken of and recognized as legitimate modes of exercising power. The framers of the
Besides, we are not without authority upon this question in our sister States, having similar constitutional provisions, where the subject has been examined and illustrated by eminent Judges with signal ability. We shall now refer to some of the decisions; and, as we propose to discuss the question in this case for the last time, we shall not hesitate to quote largely from some of the first of these opinions, that the grounds upon which they rest may be fully appreciated.
The case of Scoville v. City of Cleveland, 1 Ohio St. R. 134, arose- under the Constitution of 1802, which contained no provision similar to ours. There being no restriction in the Constitution upon the subject an assessment according to benefits was held to be constitutional. The new Constitution of Ohio contained provisions similar to those in the Constitution of California upon the same subject, but not couched in precisely the same language. Under those provisions an assessment per front foot was levied upon property bordering upon a public street to pay the expenses of re-grading and paving the same. The case was, therefore, precisely like the .one now under con
“It is our duty to give such a construction to the Constitution as will make it consistent with itself, and will harmonize and give effect to all its various provisions. To do this, we have only to suppose that the Convention used language with reference to its popular and received signification ; and applied it as it had been practically applied for a long series of years. That where taxation is spoken of in the second section of the twelfth Article, reference is made to the general burdens imposed for the purpose of supporting the Government, and the revenue raised expended for the equal benefit of the public
'“The language of this section furnishes very strong evidence that the Convention carefully discriminated between taxation and assessment, and regarded them as distinct modes of raising money for different purposes, and upon different principles, from the fact that both terms are employed, and both are required to be restricted when used by cities and villages. The origin and history of the section lead to the same conclusion. It is almost a literal copy of the ninth section of the eighth Article of the Constitution of New York. From the case-of The People v. The Mayor, etc., of Brooklyn, 4 Com. 440, it appears that this mode of taxation had been much complained of in that State, and that an attempt was made in the Convention of 1846 to effect its abolition. To this end the subject was referred to a committee, who reported a section for that purpose. But the Convention refused to adopt it, and finally incorporated the provision as it now stands in
“It cannot be supposed that those who borrowed this provision from the ¡New York Constitution were ignorant of the objects and purposes for which it was there adopted; and it is but fair to presume that it was intended to effect the same purposes and objects here. In our present Constitution, as well as in the former, the general grant of legislative authority includes the power of taxation in all its forms. Bestrictions upon its exercise are to be looked for in other parts of the instrument. The second section of the twelfth Article has established the principle upon which all taxes for general revenue purposes must be levied; but it does not extend to what was then and is still well known as special assessments, because the sixth section of the thirteenth Article shows that they were not intended to be included. Dealing with them under the name of ‘ assessments,’ the people have contented themselves with enjoining upon the Legislature the duty of preventing abuses by restricting the power of the cities and villages to impose them.”
This decision was affirmed in Reeves v. Treasurer of Wood County, 8 Ohio St. R. 337, in a case arising out of assessments made for the purpose of draining farming lands in the lowlands of northwestern Ohio. The assessment in this case was according to benefits. Again, in Northern Indiana R. R. Co. v. Connelly, 10 Ohio St. R. 162, the constitutionality of a similar Act relating to street improvements was upheld. And
The Constitution of .Wisconsin contains provisions similar to our own upon-the subject under consideration. And the section corresponding to Section thirty-seven of Article IY is in nearly the same language. Notwithstanding these provisions it was held, in Weeks v. Milwaukie, 10 Wis. 259, that a law which “ requires every lot owner to build whatever improvements the public may require, on the street in front of his lot, without reference to inequalities in the value of the lots, in the expense of constructing the improvements, or of the question whether the lot is injured or benefited by their construction,” is constitutional. After discussing the point at some length and presenting some further views,, which we will not take up further space in quoting, the case of Hill v. Higdon is cited with approbation, and Mr. Justice Payne says : - “ The reasoning of Mr. Chief Justice Ranney upon the question I think it impossible to answer.” (P. 261.)
The Constitution of Michigan also contains similar provisions, though not identical in language, and the term assessment is omitted in the provision corresponding to Section thirty-seven of Article IY, in ours. In Williams v. The City of Detroit, 2 Mich. 564, a law authorizing assessments for street improvements upon the lots fronting upon the street improved, was held to be constitutional. It would seem that the law in this case required the expense of the improvement in front of the lot to be assessed upon the lot, like the law of Wisconsin in-the case just cited. At all events, this was the case in Woodbridge v. The City of Detroit, 8 Mich. 276, in which case all the Judges concurred in holding that a law apportioning the assessment per front foot would be constitutional, and approved of Hill v. Higdon, 5 Ohio. But, while two of the four Judges held the law in question in the case then under consideration to embody the same principle, and
Similar laws have also been repeatedly sustained in Missouri under a Constitution which contains the provision, “ That all property subject to taxation in this State, shall be taxed in proportion to its value,” but does not contain a provision corresponding to Section thirty-seven, Article IV of the Constitution of California. In the Egyptian Levee Company v. Hardin, 27 Mo. 495, the question arose under an Act authorizing a corporation formed to reclaim lands in a certain designated district subject to inundation by constructing levees and digging canals, to raise the funds necessary for the work by assessing the sum of one dollar per acre upon the owners of the lands within the district embraced within the charter. The law was sustained. The Court say: “ That provision of our State Constitution which requires taxation to be proportioned to the value of the property on which it is laid, is only applicable to taxation in its usual, ordinary and received sense, and is therefore.limited to taxation for general purposes alone, where the money raised by the tax goes into the State Treasury, County Treasury, or the General Fund of some city'or town, and is applicable to any purpose to which the legislative body of such State, county or town may choose to apply it; and is not intended to apply to local assessment where the money raised is to be expended on tbe property taxed. These local assessments are not necessarily, under our Constitution, apportioned by reference to the value of the property assessed, but may be regulated by the value of the benefit which the improvement to which the money is devoted is expected to confer on the proprietor.”
We shall notice but one other decision upon this point, that in Municipality No. 2 v. White, 9 Lou. Ann. R. 450, arising under the following provision in the new Constitution : “Taxation shall be equal and uniform throughout the State. All property on which taxes may be levied in this State shall be taxed in proportion to its value, to be ascertained as directed by law.” An assessment for improvements, apportioned according to benefits, was held by three of the Justices to be repugnant to the provision of the Constitution just cited. Two Justices dissented. This was comparatively an early decision under these recent provisions in Constitutions, and the Court did not have the benefit of the discussions on the subject found in the cases before cited. After having determined that the power of enforcing assessments for improvements must be referred to the sovereign right of taxation, the Court seem to have taken it for granted that the term taxation, as used in the
The result of our investigation is, that there is no restriction in our Constitution upon the power of the Legislature to impose assessments to defray the expenses of public improve-^ ments in the nature of grading and planking streets, upon the property supposed to be benefited thereby in any district designated by the Legislature, or the proper officers of 'municipal governments acting under the authority of law. And that it is authorized to apportion the amount to be raised according to value, according to the benefits received, in proportion to frontage or the superficial contents, or to adopt any principle of apportionment that can be referred to the general sovereign right of taxation as defined by Mr. Justice Buggies, in People v. Brooklyn. We think this construction of the provisions of the Constitution in question based upon solid reasons; and that the arguments in support of it in the cases cited are impregnable. The chain of authorities in support of this view, also, so far as we have been able to find them, is unbroken, unless the -case in Louisiana can be considered an exception.
The matter rests, then, in the discretion of the Legislature. But it is difficult to say which principle of apportionment
Possibly it might tend to promote equality and justice to leave to the local communities, which have the supervision of
The further defense consists of various alleged defects and irregularities in the proceedings, through which the defendant is sought to be charged.
The proceedings in question were initiated by the Board of Supervisors on the 4th of August, 3862, by passing the following resolution, declaratory of their intention in the premises, pursuant to the provisions of Section three, Article IV of the Consolidation Act, as amended in 1862:
“Resolved, That it is the intention of this Board to order the following street work: That Fremont street, from Mission to Howard streets, be graded and macadamized.”
The defendant urges two objections to this resolution : Firstly, that the Board had no power under the statute to declare their intention to grade and also to macadamize a street in the same notice or resolution; secondly, that the resolution does not sufficiently describe the work intended to be done.
We do not think either of these objections is well founded. We find no provision in the Act which in terms or by necessary implication requires the Board to pass a separate resolution for each kind of work which they are empowered to order to be done under the provisions of the third section of Article IV. For can we perceive in reason or policy why such a course should be required. The sole purpose of the resolution and its publication, as required in section four, is to notify property holders that the Board are about to improve a given street, or some part thereof, by causing certain kind or kinds of improvements to be made, in order that they may have an opportunity to oppose the improvements in the manner prescribed in the Act, if they desire to-do so. Suppose the Board intended to order all the different kinds of work requisite to the full improvement of a street upon a given plan to be done, what sense or reason, in the absence of an express and clear provision to that effect, is there in requiring them to pass and
But it is contended that the Board cannot be allowed to join two or more kinds of work in the same notice, because by so doing the property holder may be debarred of his right of protest, as provided in the fourth section in case there should be one or more kinds included as against which he is not allowed to protest. There is no force in this reasoning for the conclusion attempted to be drawn does not follow. Assuming that the property holder can protest against grading, but cannot against macadamizing,, it does not follow that he cannot protest against the former because the latter is included in the notice. If he has the right to protest against a particular kind of work the proceedings can take on no form by which he can be deprived of that right, nor is he deprived thereof by a notice like the present, nor is the exercise of the right, in any way which we can perceive, thereby impeded or impaired.
Construing the resolution (as it is construed by counsel fertile defendant) as declaring an intent to both grade and macadamize (which, however, is not the sense in which we read it, as will appear hereafter,) we- also think that it satisfies the statute upon the question of description. The kind of work is sufficiently described by the use of the terms “ graded and macadamized.” The description of the work which the fourth section of. the Act calls for is given in ,the third section, in which each kind of work which the Board is authorized to order is set forth and described. The Board are not required to describe the work with any more exactness than it is described by the law itself. When the Board say they intend to grade a certain street, they have said all that is needed by way of description. No property holder can be in doubt as to what is to be done. He knows that the street is to be so filled in or excavated, as the case may be, as to make it con
The next objection to these proceedings is that the contract contains no provision to the effect that the material to be used shall be such as may be required by the Superintendent of Public Streets as directed by law. Upon this subject the statute provides that “ the materials used shall be such as are required by the said Superintendent, and all contracts made therefore must contain this provision.”
The contract, which was duly executed by the plaintiff and Superintendent of Streets, provides that the plaintiff “ will do and perform, under the direction and to the satisfaction of the Superintendent, and with materials to be furnished by the said Joseph S. Emery, all the work, etc., according to the specifications hereto annexed.” Among the specifications thus made a part of the contract is found the following: “ The above named portion of Fremont street is to be macadamized with rock from Goat Island,” etc. So it would seem that the Superintendent required that the material used should be Goat Island rock, and the contract was accordingly so drawn as to make it obligatory upon the contractor to furnish the material so required by the Superintendent. We think this not merely a sufficient but a most substantial compliance with the provision of the statute above quoted. The contractor is made to furnish and agrees to furnish a specified kind or qual
The next and last objection urged is that the.contract varies from the terms of the resolution of intention and subsequent order in pursuance thereof, because the latter require Fremont street to be graded and macadamized from Mission to Howard, while the former calls for grading and macadamizing that block “ except where done.”
In considering this point it is important to determine in the first place what is'the true intent and meaning of the resolution of intention and subsequent order of the Board. They, like all other instruments, are to be read in the light of surrounding circumstances. It appears that at the time the resolution was passed the street in question was already graded to the official grade of the city—there could, therefore, be no sense in requiring that to be done which was already done. Upon the subject of grading, it would seem, the Board had either previously exercised its power or there had been no occasion for its exercise. It further appears that when a street, which is about to be macadamized, is already graded to the official grade, it is necessary, in order to preserve the official grade, to remove the surface to a depth equal to the thickness of the rock and other materials used in macadamizing. It is also necessary to round up the street toward the centre. This excavating and rounding up may, in one sense, be called grading, but it is not what is meant by that term as used in the third section of the Act in question. Thus there is a certain amount of grading always required as incidental to the macadamizing process, but such grading is regarded as a part of that process and not as constituting a distinct and separate kind or class of street work. In view of these circumstances, therefore, we understand the Board as .using the term with reference to this-latter grading which is incidental to the work
By the same process of reasoning the objection that the contract excepts a part of the block, whereas the resolution and order of the Board directs the whole to be macadamized, is met and answered. The Board do not in terms propose to re-macadamize any part of the block, and if a portion was already macadamized their declaration must be read in the light of that fact, and construed as embracing only such portions as were not macadamized. But independent of this the notice is not thereby vitiated because it calls for more work than the contract does. It is nevertheless a good notice for that part which the contract does call for, which is all that is required.
In order to charge the property holder it was necessary to show that the Board had duly declared their intention to have the identical work done for which he is sought to be charged and thereafter ordered it to be done. This appearing, his liability to pay his share of the cost is established, and he cannot excuse himself by showing that other work called for by the declaration of intention was not done or was not included in the contract under which the work for which he is called upon to pay was done. All that he can demand is, that it shall appear that the work for which he pays has been specified in the resolution and order. Whether they specify more or .other work is a matter of no consequence, for they are none the less a notice and order as to him for the'work which has been done. The question is not what work is included and what has been done under the notice. On the contrary, the question is, does the notice include this particular work which has been done and for which thq defendant is called upon to pay.
We are of the opinion that the work in question is specified and described in the resolution and order of the Board within' the strict meaning of the statute, and that the contract follows and carries out their true intent and meaning, and that all the steps have been taken which are necessary under the law to charge the defendant.
Judgment affirmed.
Mr. Justice Rhodes expressed no opinion.